Jacob Grey - The Crow Talker

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In a city ravaged by crime and corruption, 13-year-old orphan Caw’s only friends are the murder of crows he has lived with since his parents flung him from their house aged only five…Caw lives in a treehouse in an abandoned city park, surviving on scraps of food and only communicating with his three crows. But a jailbreak at the prison forces him into contact with other humans – particularly a girl called Lydia, who is attacked by the escaped prisoners and is saved by Caw.Caw realises that these escaped prisoners have more in common with him than he’d like… they too are FERALS – humans able to communicate with and control an animal species. And they want to bring their evil Feral master, The Spinning Man, back from the Land of the Dead. Only by joining forces with other good Ferals hiding throughout the city can Caw stand a chance of defeating them.

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A hoarse cry from Glum.

Caw flinched and cowered beside the bin, eyes searching the darkness. His heart jolted as four figures filled the end of the alley.

“Hey!” said the tallest. “Get away from our stash!”

Caw scrambled back, holding the box to his chest. Screech took flight, his wings slapping the air.

The figures stepped closer and an arc of streetlight caught their faces. Boys, perhaps a couple of years older than him. Homeless by the looks of their tattered clothes.

“There’s enough,” said Caw, nodding towards the rubbish bins. He felt awkward, talking to other people. It happened so rarely. “Enough for all of us,” he repeated.

“No, there’s not,” said a boy with two rings in his upper lip. He walked ahead of the others with a shoulder-rolling swagger. “There’s only enough for us . You’ve been stealing.”

Shall we get them? said Screech.

Caw shook his head. It wasn’t worth getting injured over a few chips.

“Don’t shake your head at me, you filthy little thief!” said the tall one. “You’re a liar!”

“Gross – he stinks, too,” said a smaller boy, sneering.

Caw felt his face getting hot. He took a step backwards.

“Where do you think you’re going?” asked the boy with the lip rings. “Why don’t you stay a while?” He stepped up to Caw and shoved him roughly in the chest.

The sudden attack took Caw by surprise and he fell, landing on his back. The box flew from his hands and chips spilled over the ground. The boys closed in.

“Now he’s throwing them on the floor!”

“You gonna pick them up?”

Caw scrambled to his feet. They had him trapped. “You can have them.”

“Too late for that,” said the leader. He ran his tongue over his lip rings. “Now you gotta pay. How much money you got?”

Caw turned out his pockets, his heart thumping. “None.”

The glint of a blade, emerging from the boy’s pocket. “In that case, we’ll take your thieving fingers instead.”

The boy lunged forward. Caw grabbed the edge of the rubbish bin and vaulted up on top of it.

“He’s quick, isn’t he?” said the boy. “Get him.”

The other three surrounded the bin. One swiped at Caw’s ankle. Another started to shake the bin. Caw staggered for balance. They were all laughing.

Caw saw a drainpipe three metres to his left and jumped. But as his fingers caught the metal, the piping broke from the wall with a burst of brick dust. He fell and hit the tarmac on his side, the air exploding from his lungs. Four grinning faces closed in.

“Hold him down!” said the leader.

“Please … no …” Caw struggled, but the boys sat on his legs and pulled at his arms. He was spread-eagled as the one with the knife loomed over him. “Which will it be, boys?” He pointed the tip of the blade at Caw’s hands in turn. “Left or right?”

Caw couldn’t see his crows. Fear pumped through his veins.

The boy crouched down, resting his knee on Caw’s chest. “Eeny, meany, miny, moe.” The knife’s tip danced from side to side.

Watch out, Caw! called Glum. The boys all looked up at the crow’s piercing cry. Then a hand reached down from above and gripped the knife-wielder by the back of his collar. The boy yelped as he was jerked away from Caw.

There was a smacking sound – skin against skin – and the knife clattered to the ground.

Where’d he come from? said Screech.

Caw sat up. A tall, thin man was holding the boy by the back of his neck. Brown wiry hair protruded from beneath the man’s stained woolly hat. He was wearing several layers of dirty clothing, including an old brown trench coat fastened around his waist with a belt of frayed blue cord. A tufty beard coated his jawline in uneven patches. Caw guessed he was in his mid-twenties, and homeless.

“Leave him be,” said the man, his voice rasping. In the semi-darkness, his mouth was a black hole.

“What’s it to you?” said the boy holding Caw’s left arm.

The man shoved the boy with the lip rings hard at the bin, letting him go.

“This guy’s crazy!” said the boy holding Caw’s legs. “Let’s go.”

Their leader picked up his knife and brandished it at the homeless man.

“Lucky you’re so filthy,” he snarled. “Don’t want to get my knife dirty. Come on, fellas.” The four attackers turned and tore out of the alley.

Caw scrambled to his feet, his breath coming hard. Looking up, he saw his crows perched together on the fire-escape railing, watching silently.

After the gang had rounded the corner, another smaller shape slipped from the alley’s darkness to stand close beside the man. It was a boy of about seven or eight, Caw guessed. His narrow face was pale and his dirty blond hair stood on end. “Yeah, and don’t come back!” he shouted, shaking a fist.

Caw darted towards the chips scattered on the ground. He started dropping them back into the box. No need to waste a good meal. All the while, he felt the gaze of his rescuer and the boy on his back.

When he’d finished, he stuffed the box inside the deep pocket of his coat and hurried to the fire escape.

“Wait,” said the man. “Who are you?”

Caw turned to face him, but kept his eyes on the ground. “I’m no one.”

The man snorted. “Really? So where are your parents, No one?”

Caw shook his head again. He didn’t know what else to say.

“You should be careful,” said the man.

“I can take care of myself.”

“Doesn’t look like that to us,” said the boy, tilting his chin upward.

Caw heard the crows’ claws shifting on the railing above him. The man’s eyes flicked up to them and narrowed. His lips turned in the ghost of a smile. “Friends of yours?” he asked.

Time to go home , said Glum.

Caw started up the steel ladder without looking back. He climbed quickly, hand over hand, his nimble feet barely making a sound on the fire escape. When he reached the roof, he took one last glance and saw the man watching him as the young boy rooted around in the bins.

“Something bad’s coming,” called the man. “Something really bad. You get into trouble – talk to the pigeons.”

Talk to the pigeons? Caw only talked to crows.

Pigeons! Screech said, as if he’d heard Caw’s thought. You’d get more sense out of a brick!

Probably off his rocker , said Glum. A lot of humans are.

Caw heaved himself on to the roof and set off at a jog. But as he ran, he couldn’t shake the man’s parting words. He hadn’t seemed crazy at all. His face was fierce, his eyes clear. Not like the old drunks who stumbled around the streets or squatted in doorways begging for money.

And, more than that, he had helped Caw. He’d put himself at risk, for no reason.

Caw’s crows flew above him, wheeling around buildings and circling back as they made their way to the safety of the nest. Home.

Caw’s heart began to slow, as the night took him into its dark embrace.

Contents Cover Title Page Copyright Dedication With special thanks to Michael Ford Epigraph “Some of the victims were found with tooth marks on their bodies. Others had been dropped from great heights or were bloated with poisons found in their blood. To this day, no one knows what – or who – was behind the strange series of murders that swept through Blackstone that fateful summer.” The Mystery of the Dark Summer by Josephine Wallace, Head Librarian, Blackstone Central Library Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 About the Publisher

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