Authors: Abi Elphinstone
The girl was dark-skinned, no older than six or seven, but she was unlike any child Moll had ever seen. She wore a scrap of old red sail with a hole cut through it for her head, and a piece of matted blue sailor’s top twisted up round her waist as a belt. Slung over her shoulder was a deflated lifebuoy and on one foot she wore an oversized leather boot. She looked more like washed-up flotsam than a girl, but what irked Moll most was her hair – a nest of dreadlocks dyed red with henna, tied back from her face with a piece of rope.
This was a smuggler’s child. One of the Dreads.
‘Her?’ Moll whispered in disbelief. ‘
She
saved me?’
Mooshie nodded. ‘Apparently so.’
The girl reached for a battered oar by her feet. She clasped it like a weapon, but her face was full of fear.
Moll dipped her head. ‘Thank you.’
The girl backed up further, then jabbed the end of her oar into a rock pool and bared her teeth.
‘It’s OK,’ Siddy whispered to the girl. ‘We’re not going to hurt you.’
Alfie turned to Moll. ‘Don’t make any sudden movements. She scares easily. Hasn’t said a word since she brought you ashore.’
The girl jabbed her oar in Alfie’s direction, then her eyes slid nervously from Moll to Siddy to Mooshie.
Siddy looked at Moll. ‘She can’t see Alfie, but she knows there’s something strange going on. I think she can hear his voice. It’s got her spooked.’
The girl edged down from the rocks and crept closer to them, brandishing her oar in front of her. She took a step towards where she thought Alfie should be, then stopped and shook her head.
‘What’s your name?’ Moll asked her.
The girl opened her mouth, then tucked her head down and turned her back on them all.
Mooshie clutched Moll’s arm. ‘She’s not afraid,’ she explained. ‘The poor child’s mute; she hasn’t got a tongue!’
‘Hasn’t got a tongue?’ Moll shuddered. ‘Do . . . do you think someone cut it out?’
Mooshie held a hand over her mouth. ‘Who knows what happened. Poor lamb.’
The girl turned to face them again, her lips pursed tight, her oar beside her like a trusted friend. She jabbed a dirty thumb at her chest, then grabbed her sail tunic and shook it.
‘She’s trying to tell us who she is, I think,’ Moll said slowly. ‘Red, sail . . .’
The girl shook her head.
‘Cotton?’ Mooshie said.
‘Sack?’ Siddy suggested.
The girl rolled her eyes.
‘Scrap?’ Alfie said.
The girl stiffened suddenly, looked towards Alfie, but, not seeing him, kept searching. After a few seconds, she nodded.
‘Scrap,’ Moll repeated.
And, finally, the girl smiled.
Moll looked at the oar. ‘Did you come here by boat from Bootleggers Bay?’
Scrap shook her head and mimed several swimming strokes.
‘You swam all that way?’
Scrap nodded.
Moll looked the small girl up and down. ‘And you carry the oar—’
Scrap shrugged.
‘—just in case?’
Scrap nodded.
Moll smiled. ‘I carry a catapult just in case too. And my pa’s knife when things get really rough.’
Scrap looked at Gryff, then she tilted her head and smiled. Gryff stared back, unsure what to make of her, then Scrap made a funny face and her smile broadened. Gryff’s whiskers twitched and he narrowed his eyes.
Siddy crouched down in front of Scrap, his elbows resting on his knees. ‘So you heard trouble in the water when you were swimming near our cove and came to help?’
Again Scrap nodded.
‘Good job you did,’ Moll said.
Siddy gasped suddenly and, when he spoke, his voice came in a rush of breath. ‘Moll, the bone reading!’ He gazed at Scrap. ‘It said
follow the silence
!’
Everyone looked at Scrap and then, one by one, their eyes widened.
‘Scrap – she’s the silence?’ Moll whispered.
Mooshie raised a hand to her mouth. ‘This child looks like she’s one of the Dreads. You think a smuggler like her can lead us to the amulet?’
Moll glanced up at Mooshie. ‘There’s only one way to find out.’ She looked hard at the small girl. ‘Scrap, do you know where something called the Blinking Eye is?’
For a while, Scrap said nothing, as if thinking, then she nodded twice.
Gryff stood up and slunk towards Scrap, his ears low to his head. But Scrap didn’t move; she just watched as the wildcat stalked his circle round her. After a while, Gryff grunted and padded away – and Moll knew what that meant because the wildcat could read people like no one else.
‘Scrap’s telling the truth,’ Moll said slowly. ‘I know it sounds crazy – I don’t even understand it myself – but if Gryff believes Scrap then so do I. And, since we’ve got no other leads, I reckon she’s our best bet at finding the Blinking Eye.’
Siddy looked at the little girl. ‘Can you write the directions down for us?’
Scrap wrinkled up her nose.
Moll held on to Mooshie’s arm and raised herself upright. ‘Can you lead us there?’
Scrap nodded.
‘But what about the Dreads? What about Grudge?’ There was a tremor in Siddy’s voice. ‘He’ll come after you, won’t he?’
Scrap’s jaw stiffened and only then did Moll notice the dark bruise stamped across her shin. ‘I don’t think Scrap was just swimming around. I reckon she was running away from Grudge and his gang.’
Scrap looked down as if she was afraid to agree.
Mooshie shook her head. ‘But we can’t promise her safety, not with the Shadowmasks out there waiting. And she’s so young!’
Alfie shrugged. ‘Maybe we can’t promise Scrap safety and maybe she is too young.’ He paused. ‘But we can promise her friendship – just like you all did me – and maybe that’s what she needs now she’s come this far.’ He looked at her. ‘You’ve got to be pretty tough to escape Grudge.’
Scrap took a step closer to where Alfie’s voice seemed to come from, not afraid this time. Just curious. Then she reached out her hand, feeling for something she couldn’t quite understand.
Alfie watched as the little hand sought him out, just centimetres away. His cheeks reddened, suddenly aware of everyone watching, then he raised a tentative palm to Scrap’s. She jumped as her fingers touched his.
Alfie gasped. ‘You can
feel
me?’ he whispered.
Scrap wrapped her hand round Alfie’s fingers and nodded. And, for the first time since they’d returned to the cove, Moll saw that Alfie was smiling.
S
crap had entered the cave cautiously, but, after accepting that Mooshie wasn’t trying to poison her, she had put down her oar and eaten some sugar kelp: crisped-up pieces of seaweed that Mooshie had coated in honey. Moments later, the gypsies had got to work: sharpening weapons, preparing food and packing blankets so that they could set off from the cave as soon as possible. From what they could gather from Scrap, the Blinking Eye was a two-day journey from Little Hollows.
Scrap sat beside Alfie on the slabs of rock lining the tunnel. And, while he tried his best to focus on sharpening the knives, Scrap kept poking and prodding and squeezing him, just to be sure that he was there. Alfie glanced behind him at the fire, embarrassed at the attention, but, seeing the others talking among themselves about the journey ahead, he told Scrap his story, as he knew it. Scrap didn’t flinch at the mention of Shadowmasks and their dark magic – she didn’t need to after seeing the kelpie; she just sat and listened, dangling her little legs in the cool waters of the tunnel and swinging them back and forth.
Alfie looked at her. ‘We’re not so different, you and me.’
Scrap scratched her dreadlocks and looked at her reflection in the water.
‘People look right through both of us; they can’t see me and they can’t hear you.’
Scrap thought about it for several seconds, then nodded.
Alfie let his hand sift through the water. ‘What happened? To your tongue?’
The child hunched her legs up to her chin and chewed on her red sail tunic. Alfie was silent for several minutes, then Scrap jabbed a finger towards the knives he’d been sharpening.
Alfie stiffened. ‘Someone cut it out?’
Scrap bared her teeth for a second, then her shoulders sank and she nodded.
Alfie shook his head. ‘There are bad people out there, Scrap.’ He glanced at the little girl and noticed a tear trickling down her cheek. He looked away, uneasy for a moment, then he turned back to her. ‘It’s going to be OK; we won’t make you go back to the smugglers if you don’t want to. You can be one of us.’
Scrap shuffled closer towards Alfie’s voice until she could feel his body next to hers. They sat like that for several minutes, watching the water lapping against the tunnel, and then Alfie turned back to sharpening his knives.
‘I’ll protect you, Scrap,’ he said quietly.
At the other side of the cave, Moll and Hard-Times Bob emerged from Oak’s alcove; it was clear from their faces that Oak was no better. On seeing them, Scrap fiddled with her deflated lifebuoy, then blew gently on the whistle.
Alfie smiled. ‘You could use that to communicate with us.’
Scrap stood up on the rocks and blew the whistle again, hard, so that her cheeks swelled like balloons.
Alfie tugged it from her mouth. ‘Not so loud, Scrap!’
Mooshie covered her ears with her hands. ‘We may as well dance a jig on the top of the cave and invite the Shadowmasks to tea!’
Scrap picked up her oar and advanced to the fire, shrill bursts sounding from her whistle every few seconds. Hermit scuttled over the cave floor in panic, knocked into a lobster pot, then froze in absolute terror. But, when Cinderella Bull put a finger to her lips, Scrap lowered the whistle and watched.
The aged fortune-teller walked silently over to the collection of glass bottles on the cave wall. She picked one up and hobbled towards the tunnel. The others followed her movements because they knew that whenever Cinderella Bull went to the tunnel, she meant magic.
‘We need to get going,’ Moll hissed. ‘We don’t have time for spells.’
Hard-Times Bob put a hand on Moll’s arm. ‘If you and the others are going to leave this cove unharmed, you’ll need every ounce of magic that Cinderella Bull’s got left inside her to keep you all safe. She’s been working on this spell for some time now to prepare for this moment.’
They watched as Cinderella Bull knelt down on the rocks. She pulled the gold-penny shawl over her head and whispered into the stillness, soft, swishing sounds that seemed to flitter over her tongue and slip into the cave. A moment later, she lowered the bottle into the sea. Moll heard the water glug inside it and watched as the fortune-teller set it on the rocks, then reached inside her pinafore pocket for several small items.
Mooshie leant close to Moll. ‘A dolphin tooth to conjure speed, a fragment of rock to call protection close and a crab claw to summon strength.’
Siddy’s face filled with dread and he shoved a hand beneath his stool. Breathing a sigh of relief, he brought Hermit up on to his lap; all of his useless claws were intact.
Cinderella Bull tipped each of the objects into the glass bottle, then turned a wrinkled face back to the fire. ‘Moll, I’ll need you for this.’
Mooshie got up suddenly and hugged Moll tight, then she drew back and sat by the fire. Moll was used to Mooshie’s embraces, but something about that one made her feel uneasy; what exactly would Cinderella Bull’s spell involve?
Moll made her way towards the tunnel and Gryff stalked after her from their alcove.
‘Come close, child,’ Cinderella Bull instructed.
Moll sat cross-legged beside the fortune-teller and Gryff tucked himself into the shadows a few metres away. Moll eyed the bottle of seawater nervously. The stone had sunk to the bottom, but the crab claw and dolphin tooth floated on the surface. ‘Do I have to drink it?’ She fiddled with her jumper cuff. ‘It’s just I’d rather not if that’s OK by you; I swallowed a fair bit of water this morning when the kelpie came after me.’
Cinderella Bull smiled. ‘Not drink it, no. We’ll use it in another way – to help you pass freely from the cove.’ She said, ‘Let your legs dangle in the water.’
Moll did as she was told and the cool water folded round her shins.
Cinderella Bull picked up the bottle and handed it to Moll, then she placed a wrinkled hand on her shoulder. ‘When the next sunbeam shines into the cracks in the cave roof, hold the bottle up high.’
Moll waited and waited and then, just when she thought it would never come, a sunbeam shone down, its light so gold it was almost white. It showered on to the bottle like rain and, as it did so, Cinderella Bull began to speak, her voice low and gusting, like a gathering wind.
‘Spirits of the sea, I call you near.
Your magic I seek for this gypsy child here.
She has a journey ahead, full of danger and peril.
And I ask for your help—’
She paused and peered at Moll out of the corner of her eye.
‘—though the girl is feral.
Lend her the gift that will help her to pass
Safe from this cove. Lend her soles of glass.’
Moll turned an appalled face to Cinderella Bull. ‘Soles of glass?’