R. LaFevers - Theodosia and the Serpents of Chaos

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From School Library Journal
From Booklist Grade 4–8—A combination of Nancy Drew and Indiana Jones, Theo Throckmorton is in big trouble. The 11-year-old lives in London in 1906 and spends most of her time in an antiquities museum headed by her father and filled with objects from her mother’s archaeological expeditions to Egypt. Bossy, clever, and learned in the lore of ancient Egypt, the girl constantly worries that the work-obsessed parents who ignore and neglect her will be destroyed by virulent ancient curses that only she can detect. When her mother returns from her latest trip with an amulet inscribed with curses so powerful they could unleash the Serpents of Chaos and destroy the British Empire, Theo finds herself caught up in a web of intrigue and danger. It pits her, along with some unexpected allies, against German operatives trying to use the scarab as a weapon in their political and economic rivalry with England. Theo must draw on all her resources when she confronts her enemies alone, deep in an Egyptian tomb. There, she makes some surprising discoveries, both personal and archaeological. Vivid descriptions of fog-shrouded London and hot, dusty Cairo enhance the palpable gothic atmosphere, while page-turning action and a plucky, determined heroine add to the book’s appeal. Unfortunately, Theo’s narrative voice lurches between the diction of an Edwardian child and that of a modern teen. The ambiguous ending, with its hints at the approaching World War, seems to promise a sequel. A fine bet for a booktalk to classes studying ancient Egypt.
— Margaret A. Chang, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, North Adams
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Starred Review “You’d be surprised by how many things come into the museum loaded with curses — bad ones,” says 11-year-old Theodosia, whose parents run London’s Museum of Legends and Antiquities. The twentieth century has just begun, and Theodosia’s mum, an archaeologist, has recently returned from Egypt with crates of artifacts. Only Theodosia can feel the objects’ dark magic, which, after consulting ancient texts, she has learned to remove. Then a sacred amulet disappears, and during her search, Theodosia stumbles into a terrifying battle between international secret societies. Readers won’t look to this thrilling adventure for subtle characterizations (most fit squarely into good and evil camps) or neat end-knots in the sprawling plot’s many threads. It’s the delicious, precise, and atmospheric details (nicely extended in Tanaka’s few, stylized illustrations) that will capture and hold readers, from the contents of Theodosia’s curse-removing kit to descriptions of the museum after hours, when Theodosia sleeps in a sarcophagus to ward off the curses of “disgruntled dead things.” Kids who feel overlooked by their own distracted parents may feel a tug of recognition as Theodosia yearns for attention, and those interested in archaeology will be drawn to the story’s questions about the ownership and responsible treatment of ancient artifacts. A sure bet for Harry Potter fans as well as Joan Aiken’s and Eva Ibbotson’s readers. This imaginative, supernatural mystery will find word-of-mouth popularity.
Gillian Engberg Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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“It’s one of those Germans we were following yesterday. The one who stabbed Stokes.”

Henry’s eyes grew wide. “Crikey!” He leaned forward and shoved me out of the way so he could see the picture better.

The article was dreadfully boring, full of politics and treaty negotiations between Britain and Germany. The main thrust of it was that Britain could hold off entering into a substandard treaty with the Germans as long as we remained strong domestically. For now, the German delegation was giving up and returning home. The writer of the article made it quite clear that Britain would be able to negotiate in her own best interests only as long as her economy remained strong. Further talks were scheduled for the spring.

Of course! If Britain was in a weakened state, brought on by plague, pestilence, and famine, we would lose our bargaining power. A weakened Britain couldn’t possibly negotiate in her own best interests because she’d be dependent on other countries. Wigmere was right. How wickedly brilliant! Germany was using the power of ancient Egyptian magic to topple its adversaries. Just like Thutmose III and Amenemhab had.

I hurried through the rest of the article. It didn’t mention von Braggenschnott by name, but it did say the delegation would be leaving their residence in Carleton Terrace Gardens and returning to Germany tomorrow on the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. That cinched it — Will had said he’d followed the man tailing me back to Carleton Terrace. They had to be connected!

* * *

The easiest solution would have been to leave it all to Wigmere and his Brotherhood, but he hadn’t looked too hopeful yesterday. Plus, it was Mother who’d brought the vile thing home — it seemed as if someone in our family ought to take responsibility for it. I quailed at the enormity of the task, then forced myself to look on the bright side: surely saving Britain would impress Mother and Father. I mean, they’d notice that , wouldn’t they?

After hours of thinking, I finally came up with a possible plan. Unfortunately, there was simply no way I could do this on my own. I would need help. I loathe asking people for help. First of all, they rarely say yes. And second, even when they do, they can rarely be trusted to do as they’re told. Wigmere had been adamant about not telling my parents, which left Henry and Will.

Henry was the only other person who knew of Wigmere’s organization, even though he didn’t realize the half of it. But perhaps I could gain Henry and Will’s cooperation without telling them anything they didn’t already know. Then I wouldn’t be breaking my promise to Wigmere. Will, in fact, would be a key player in this plan of mine. If he was agreeable, that is. His part was rather dangerous, which worried me, but then so did plague, pestilence, and famine.

The weakest link would be Henry, but I wasn’t going to think about that just yet.

I looked out the window, hoping against hope it had stopped raining.

No such luck. Which meant I would have to make my way to Charing Cross Station in the freezing rain. It was the only place where I knew to find Will, and time was of the essence. I had to reach him today so we could put our plan into action for tomorrow.

The tricky part was getting out of the museum without attracting Henry’s attention. I didn’t want to risk him following me again. Last time I saw him, he had muttered something about being sick of all this Egypt rubbish and headed off toward the armor exhibits.

I grabbed my thickest coat and an umbrella and stepped out into the downpour. The wind had picked up and was blowing the sheets of rain sideways. Small streams of water ran down the gutters, and the traffic in the street was a hopeless tangle. Of course, now that I knew about the curse, the rain seemed much more sinister, as if the very drops themselves were laying a thin film of chaos over the land.

With one last, longing glance at an omnibus, I began trudging my way to Charing Cross. I so wished I had enough money for an omnibus today and a cab tomorrow. But I didn’t. And tomorrow was when we would need a ride most.

Once I reached Charing Cross Station, I realized that getting here was the easy part. Now I had to find Sticky Will.

There was an absolute wall of bodies everywhere. The smell of wet wool and smoke filled the damp air. I stepped back from the crowd and tried to guess where I would be right now if I were a pickpocket.

Well, that was obvious. Right in the middle of the potential pickings, of course. You wanted lots of people jostling about so your movements would be well hidden. And you’d want to be near the richest-looking pockets.

I took a few more steps back and found a bench to stand on. As I peered over the mob of people, I spotted a man with a very well cut suit holding an ivory-handled cane, a gold watch chain dangling from his waistcoat.

He looked like a good target to me. Not that I was planning on picking his pocket. I just wanted to find the person who might be thinking of it.

I pushed and squirmed my way through the crowd toward the man.

Just as I reached him, I saw a small, grimy hand reach out and slip itself into the man’s pocket. Honestly! How could no one notice such a thing?

“Caught you,” I said under my breath.

Sticky Will startled so badly that he dropped the man’s wallet back into his pocket.

“Blimey, miss! You scared the snot outta me!”

“Sorry about that,” I said. “I need to talk to you. Now. ” As I dragged him to the edge of the crowd, he mumbled something about me costing him a pretty penny.

I found a spot out of the rain under an awning where we wouldn’t be crushed to death before I’d explained what I needed.

“Wot’s up?” Sticky Will asked.

“First, tell me what happened to you yesterday. Were you able to follow that fellow?”

“Aye, miss. He went ter Carleton ’Ouse Terrace, too. I tried to get close enough to get yer thingamajig, but he was guarded up too tight like.”

“Did he see you?”

“No. I’m sure of it. Is that wot you came all this way to find out?”

Now that it was actually time to lay out my plan, I was suddenly tongue-tied. What if he thought I was off my nut like everyone else? I mean, Will didn’t know what was going on, and I had to get his cooperation without betraying Wigmere’s trust. I would have to appeal to his sense of adventure and national pride; hopefully, he would never find out that I hadn’t told him the full truth. “No. It has to do with that artifact we were chasing yesterday.”

Will nodded. “Go on.”

“It is vitally important that we get it back. Those German fellows who nabbed it are up to no good. The artifact has, er, special properties that make it more dangerous than most.”

His eyes widened and he leaned forward. “Wot properties?” he asked. “Is it cursed?”

I started. “Cursed? What do you know about curses?”

Will leaned back and sniffed. “Ain’t I good enough to know about curses?”

Oh, no. Not that again. “Of course you are, you twit. It’s just that so few people believe in them, I hadn’t expected you to.”

“Oy. All you have to do is read one of them penny dreadfuls to know curses is alive and well.”

I started to remind him that penny dreadfuls were make-believe, then realized it didn’t matter why he believed what I said. “Well, you’re right. It is cursed. A horrible, vile curse.”

“Blimey,” he said, his eyes now as round as saucers.

“Exactly. And in order to make sure that nothing bad happens, we have to get the artifact back from the Germans. That’s where you come in.”

“Me?” he squeaked.

“You.” I nodded. “Only someone with your skill and experience can do what needs to be done.”

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