Finally, his pumping blood began to calm. He was safe here in the shadows. Home.
He walked slowly back to his tree, limping a little on one bare foot.
Well, that was fun! said Glum sarcastically, already in the nest as Caw clambered up.
Did you see me? said Screech. The way I got him? He hopped up and down, mimicking his actions. Peck! Scratch! Claw!
Caw heaved himself on to his bed and lay on his back, letting the sweat cool on his body. He suddenly felt very tired indeed.
I was pretty brave, right? said Screech.
“You were both incredible,” Caw told them.
Milky was perched at the side of the nest, looking completely unruffled. He hadn’t joined in the fighting. His blind eyes stared in Caw’s direction.
“What’s going on, Milky?” asked Caw. “Who were those prisoners?”
The old white crow was silent and still as a marble statue.
I think he’s done talking , said Glum.
“The spider,” said Caw. “I dreamed it. And then it was there in real life, on that prisoner’s chest. You know what it means, don’t you?”
Milky cocked his head and turned away.
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
aw woke to the crows all squawking as one.The nest was rocking gently.
“What’s going on?” he said.
Get away! yelped Screech, flapping madly. Intruder!
Adrenaline flooded through Caw’s body and he sat up, reaching for a weapon. He managed to find a cracked plastic spoon, just in time to see a head poking up through the hatch.
“Wow!” said Lydia, resting her hands on the timbers of the nest. “This place is amazing! It’s way bigger than it looks from down there.”
Caw pressed himself into a corner, clutching the spoon in front of him like a knife. She was wearing a baseball cap, which made her red hair fall straight, curling under her chin. In the light of day, he realised she had a smattering of freckles he hadn’t seen the night before. Her eyes shone.
“Hey! Don’t point that thing at me!” she said.
“How did you find me?” Caw demanded. “No one knows about this place!”
Lydia beamed with pride. “I’m good at sniffing things out,” she said. “I’ve seen you sneaking around by our place before, watching us from the wall next to our house. So I figured you must live around here somewhere. And when I was out walking Benjy this morning, I found this by the park gate.”
Lydia dropped Caw’s shoe on the floor of the nest.
“I reckoned the park would be a perfect place to go if you didn’t want to be found. So I hopped over the gate and searched until I saw this funny thing stuck up in a tree. Not bad, huh?”
Suddenly Caw felt silly. But he was too embarrassed to lower the spoon.
“What are you doing here?” he said.
Lydia smiled. “I could ask you the same question. Don’t you have a home? Don’t you have parents?”
Caw shrugged. “I live here,” he said. “Just me.”
“Cool!” she said. “Are you going to invite me in?”
Caw glanced at Glum. Don’t even think about it , said the crow, puffing out his chest.
“No,” said Caw.
“Oh, come on!” she said. “Pretty please?”
Give her a little shove , said Screech. The young crow hopped forward menacingly, then skipped back again.
“No!” said Caw. “Leave me alone!”
The girl’s face fell. “All right, all right,” she said. “Chill out. Just give me a second to catch my breath, OK? Then I’ll go.”
As she tucked a lock of hair back into her cap, still with her head and shoulders poking into the nest, Caw’s fear evaporated. She was just a girl. What harm could she do?
Lydia blew out her cheeks. “OK. I’ll leave,” she said.
“Wait!” said Caw. He glanced at the crows then sighed. “You can come in for a bit,” he mumbled.
No! said the crows in unison. Caw lowered the spoon.
“Phew!” she said, grinning. “You could really have hurt me with that.”
Caw couldn’t help smiling, despite himself.
The girl scrambled up into the nest and settled cross-legged on the platform. She was wearing jeans and a pale hooded top, streaked with leaves and dirt. She took off her cap and shook her hair free, watching Screech and Glum with a look of puzzlement. Milky would be outside, Caw knew – he never slept in the nest.
“So these birds are your pets?” she said.
I am not a pet ! said Glum.
And I’m not just any bird ! protested Screech. I’m a crow.
“Sort of,” said Caw.
Sort of? said Glum and Screech together. Lydia jerked back a little. Caw realised that to her it sounded like two angry squawks.
“They live with me,” he said.
“Did you train them?”
Screech chuckled. Cha-Cha-Cha.
“So what’s it like, hiding out in this park all the time?” Lydia asked.
Caw felt a flash of annoyance. “I’m not hiding,” he said.
“OK then. So why are you always spying on me?”
Caw couldn’t hold her stare. “I wasn’t.”
“Liar,” she said, but with a smile. “I thought you were a burglar at first, but then I thought, no one’s stupid enough to rob the Warden of Blackstone Prison. Anyway, I forgive you. I’m Lydia, by the way.” She held out her hand.
Caw looked at it.
She leant forwards and took his hand, placing it in hers, then shook it up and down. “And you are?”
“I’m … Caw,” said Caw.
Lydia grinned. “What sort of a name is that?”
Caw shrugged. “It’s what I’m called.”
“If you say so.” Lydia looked around the nest. “So did you build this place?”
Caw nodded. He couldn’t help a flush of pride.
With some help! said Screech.
Lydia looked up, narrowing her eyes at the crows.
“With some help,” Caw added.
“Are you talking to the birds?”
Crows, please , said Glum.
“Well …” said Caw. He almost lied, then thought better of it. “Yes. And they’re crows.”
“OK, that’s seriously weird,” said Lydia.
Glum hissed at her.
“Sorry,” she said nervously.
“Don’t worry,” said Caw. “He’s always in a bad mood.”
Take that back! said Glum.
Lydia cocked her head. “I just wanted to come and thank you,” she said. “You ran away pretty quickly last night.”
Caw shrugged. “I just … happened to be there. It’s no big deal.”
“And your crows,” said Lydia. “I suppose I should thank them too. They were very brave.” She turned to them. “Sorry – you were very brave.”
Glum ruffled his feathers. Flattery will get you nowhere, my girl , he said.
“He says it was nothing,” said Caw. Suddenly his stomach let out a rumble. He hadn’t eaten a thing since the chips from the takeaway two days ago.
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