Chapter 1
A Peculiar Morning
Even before he got out of bed, Nicolas Bennett knew this was going to be strange day. A strange day indeed.
It was Saturday, and it was the 31st of October. Halloween. And, as it so happened, it was also Nicolas’ birthday. His twelfth birthday.
But those things weren’t strange. The strangeness was how the day began. And how it began—bizarrely and in a most unexpected, peculiar way—was with a shadow.
***
After waking, Nicolas yawned and lay quietly in his bed, watching the paleness of the early morning light cast sleepy silhouettes against his attic bedroom’s walls. Over the high lip of his bed’s footboard, Nicolas could see his room’s single, small, round window. Sparkling frost trimmed its panes and made the comforting weight of his bed’s tattered old quilt feel especially warm and safe.
On most weekend mornings, Nicolas loved to lie still in bed and spy on the world as it woke up. Bright sunrays would slip through the gloomy shades of the woods beyond his home, and birds would begin to chat busily with each other as if discussing the past week’s news. Nicolas would feel the wall behind his headboard gently rattle as his father, Peter Bennett, strode from the house to “shake out his legs” with an early morning stroll. Nicolas’ mum, Sarah Bennett, would sing softly to herself, bustling about their small kitchen and making a “fry up,” a scrumptious breakfast of thick bacon, poached eggs, fried tomatoes and mushrooms, fried bread with butter, Cumberland sausage, and hot mugs of tea. The family’s cat, Thomas (which his father called “Sir Thomas More”), would be scolding the family’s dog, Jasper (which his father called “Jasper Carrot”), for lying across the threshold of the side door, waiting for father’s return, and blocking Thomas’ way of escaping to the outside world. On most weekend mornings, Nicolas loved to lie still in bed and let the world wake up around him.
But this morning felt different. Peculiar.
The night before, a suspicious, cold fog had crawled into the nearby woods. Now, as the dawn slowly awoke, the fog’s chilly fingers lingered, groping through the hedgerow at the edge of the family’s small sheep pasture. A snap of early winter weather had blown in from the darkness of the Irish Sea, and the birds were keeping quiet in their nests. Nicolas’ father hadn’t left the house yet, and Nicolas couldn’t hear his mum bustling about the small kitchen making breakfast. The small farmhouse felt especially hushed. Silent.
Nicolas lay in his bed, looking out at the early morning, the wintry fog, and the dreary sky. He imagined he was all alone.
***
A shadow suddenly filled his room’s small window. It bobbed and jerked about in shudders and shakes, blocking out most of the morning’s first light. And, with startlingly force, the shadow began striking the window’s glass.
The flurry of violent strikes on the glass made Nicolas jump. He was sure the window was going to break, and for a moment, he even imagined he heard a loud pop and crack. The noise was thunderous in the small attic bedroom, as if someone was throwing stones at the small window. Nicolas was gripped by an overwhelming urge to plug his ears and dive safely under his bed’s thick quilt.
But he didn’t. Nicolas didn’t plug his ears. He didn’t hide. Instead, cautiously, he sat up. Straight up.
He stared at the window. The part of Nicolas that made him sit up was deeply curious, and his eyes seemed to be in control of the rest of his body. In spite of the unease twisting in his stomach, he wanted to know what had landed so unexpectedly on his windowsill and was beating so loudly on the frost-encrusted glass panes.
Then, as abruptly as it had begun, the frenzied attack stopped.
The jerking shadow twitched, nodded, and became still.
***
Nicolas’ heart was thumping. He took small, nervous gulps of air.
The attic bedroom was extra quiet. “As quiet as a tomb,” he unexpectedly whispered to himself, but even at a whisper his voice sounded loud.
Hesitantly—carefully—he pushed back his warm blankets, and with wary movements, swung his legs over the side of his bed.
The shadow in the window didn’t move.
Without taking his eyes away from the window, Nicolas fished around for his slippers and wriggled his feet inside. Gingerly, he stood up. His small attic room was cold, unusually cold, but Nicolas didn’t bother putting on the green-checked bathrobe his mum had given to him for his birthday last year. Instead, he took a few, careful steps toward the window. When he was within a few inches of it, he stopped.
Nicolas now stood so close, he could look through the window’s unfrosted middle and off to the side of the windowsill. Whatever was casting the shadow was sitting there, unmoving and hidden.
Nicolas, holding his breath, leaned forward for a look.
The thing moved. It c****d its large head to one side and filled the middle of the small, round window with a cruel beak and a wild crest of jet black feathers. Nicolas froze in place. He was staring into the beady, dark eyes of an unusually enormous crow. Each of its eyes were like smooth drops of marbled glass. They had smoky swirls of deep red, like the last trace of a dying sunset.
Seconds stretched as they passed by.
Then, with a last angry rap on the glass, the giant crow thrust away from the windowsill and flew off. The shadow and the crow were gone.
***
Suddenly, dazzling rays of sunlight streamed through the empty window. Nicolas blinked. The sun had made its way above the horizon, and the fog’s slinking fingers had shrunk back into the cover of the woods.
A sparkling web of fine cracks now bejeweled the window’s middle pane of glass.
“Stone the crows!” said Nicolas.
He reached out and touched the cold glass. The tips of his fingers could feel the cracks’ faint traces. That’ll make dad hoppin’ mad, he thought with a shake of his head.
He slipped the window’s latch and with a light bump, spun it open on its axle hinge. A gust of frigid morning air leapt into the room and sent a long shiver along Nicolas’ shoulders. He ducked his head a bit to get a look out of the lower half of the window. There, lying precariously on the thin ledge of the sill where the crow had perched, sat an odd-looking leaf. It had a broad, flat shape and was almost as thin as a piece of parchment paper. Tiny veins fanning out from its middle were the color of brightly burnished bronze. The rest of the leaf had a coppery color with edges trimmed in a dull patina of loamy green. Except for the wooden twig jutting out of its base, the leaf looked like it was metal. Nicolas picked it up, slowly turning it, and watching as the sun’s warm beams gathered and bounced off its metallic surface. He squeezed the copper leaf between his fingers. It felt brittle, but strong at the same time. He’d never seen anything like it before.
“How strange.” Nicolas traced the leaf’s bronze veins with his finger. “What a very strange thing to leave behind.” Warily, he looked out across the sky, half-expecting to catch sight of the ominous crow somewhere in the distance. “What a strange way to begin my birthday.” The boy shivered, absently refastening the window. Nicolas walked to where his bathrobe lay draped over one of his bedposts. He laid the leaf on his bed, shrugged on his robe, and stood staring at the odd object while rubbing some warmth back into his arms.
“How strange,” he said again.
***
“Thomas!” The cat leapt onto Nicolas’ bed, startling him. It sat there looking idly at him for a moment and then began to clean its spotted paws. The soft licking was loud in the stillness of the small bedroom. “Where is everyone, Thomas?” Nicolas quietly asked. Thomas paused from licking himself but didn’t look up. “Where is everyone, Thomas?” he asked again. The cat simply yawned and curled into a tight ball.
Perhaps they’re planning to surprise me, Nicolas thought hopefully. He reached down and kindly tucked his heavy quilt over the cat. Thomas, promptly agitated by the charitable gesture, walked to the other side of Nicolas’ bed and curled up again into a tight ball of tabby fur and whiskers.
Nicolas, fixated on thoughts about his birthday, ignored the cat and imagined walking down the narrow stairs from his room and into the kitchen, where his father would flip the light switch, and his mum would sing out, “Happy birthday!” and give him a big hug. Every year, he looked forward to his birthday. In previous years, Nicolas’ father had carefully collected chestnuts in early October from a horse chestnut tree in preparation for his birthday games. His mum made homemade invitations, carefully telling Nicolas to give them out after school since not all of his classmates could be invited. The invitations would always say something neat like, “You are warmly invited to celebrate Nicolas Bennett’s birthday and his ninth trip around the sun at 4 o’clock sharp, on Wednesday, 31st October.” As Nicolas’ friends would arrive on the big day, his father would have each child repeat after him, “Oddly oddly onker, my first conker,” before giving them each a “conker,” a single chestnut with a string threaded through it and a knot tied at one end to keep the chestnut in place. Shortly after the last guest arrived, the “Great Birthday Conker Tournament” would begin. The children would go at it energetically with shouts of “strings!” and “no stamps!” and the sharp crack of conkers as the chestnuts struck each other, flying noisily around the Bennetts’ small yard until Mr. Bennett, with all the seriousness of a headmaster, would examine each child’s conker and (even if the conkers weren’t entirely broken) solemnly announce the tournament’s winner as “this year’s Conker King!” Other birthday games, like pass-the-parcel and “Queenie, Queenie, who’s got the ball?” (which only the girls wanted to play), would follow, and because Nicolas’ shared his birthday with Halloween, each year his parents would spend extra money to hire a face painter so everyone could run around looking like mummies and vampires and witches and ghouls (although the girls always insisted on being fairy princesses). As a customary finish, the children would play Nicolas’ favorite game, “What’s the Time, Mr. Wolf?” They would form a long line in the Bennetts’ small pasture, and the recently crowned “Conker King” would be first to play Mr. Wolf. Mr. Wolf would call out “3 o’clock” or “9 o’clock” or “7 o’clock” when the other children would ask, “What time is it, Mr. Wolf?” With each answer, the children would all take three or nine or seven steps toward Mr. Wolf, until Mr. Wolf would suddenly shout, “It’s dinner time!” Girls would scream, and boys would yell, as they all made a mad dash back to their starting mark, trying to avoid being caught by the pursuing Mr. Wolf. Then, when all the children were exhausted and out of breath, Nicolas’ mum would sing out “cake time!” from a table set up in the yard.
Every year, only a single lighted candle would decorate the middle of Nicolas’ favorite dessert. “After all,” his mum would tell him with a sly wink, “we’re only celebrating one year each year. Last year, we celebrated last year’s birthday.” Nicolas would shut his eyes tight, always a bit little light-headed after being hunted down by Mr. Wolf, and whisper to himself one big wish before blowing out the candle. Each child would then stand in line to receive a thick slice of homemade salted caramel toffee swirl cheesecake with a small ball of vanilla bean ice cream on the side. Nicolas’ previous birthdays were always a smash, and each October, while other kids were talking about trick-or-treating and Halloween parties, Nicolas anxiously waited for his birthday celebration to arrive.
But this year, on Nicolas’ twelfth birthday, there would be no party.
***
The week before, Nicolas had asked his mum about birthday invitations. She had gently said, “Not this year, my love. Your dad and I aren’t in a good place right now, and money is a tad tight.” It was hard for Nicolas to remember any occasion when his lovely mum didn’t look happy. Her rosy cheeks were always lifted high in a wonderful smile, and her green Irish eyes sparkled, always merry and a trace mischievous. But when she had said that, her soft eyes were troubled, and Nicolas didn’t ask anything more.
On Friday, the day before his birthday, Nicolas’ parents both seemed distracted and distant. When Nicolas’ father arrived home from work, he ate a quick bite of supper and spent the rest of the evening sitting in front of the television, watching the Penrith Rugby Union Football Club play a close match in Winter’s Park. Nicolas’ mum spent most of her late afternoon and evening talking on the telephone with his great aunt, Harriet Loretta Cheesebottom, who lived over in Carlisle. For as long as Nicolas could remember, Aunt Harriet always seemed to be sick with something and to never get any better. Every time she visited, or every time Nicolas heard his mum talking with her on the telephone, all conversations seemed to revolve around a never-ending list of Aunt Harriet’s complaints and ghastly ailments: painful corns on her toes, newly discovered moles on her incredibly fat neck, aches in her back (caused by a lifetime of slouching, Nicolas’ father always said), gout in her joints (which sounded nasty even though Nicolas didn’t know what “gout” actually was), and an appalling wart on her left index finger’s second knuckle, which never seemed to go away.
No one had said much about any birthday celebration. Nicolas’ father, a typically cheerful man who was known for sweeping up his wife and son in tremendous bear hugs for no reason, kept to himself that evening. During supper, when Nicolas asked his father whether he had gathered any chestnuts this year, secretly hoping his father might say something about last minute party arrangements, Mr. Bennett had folded his fingers together and simply said, “Tomorrow’s your birthday, Nicolas. We can’t have a party this year, but your mother and I know it’s a special day, and we do ‘ave plans. We thought it might be nice for the three of us to have a spot of lunch in Penrith and then take ya to the medieval fair in the Yanwath Wood.” The fair sounded nice, but it wasn’t a birthday party. Nicolas respectfully nodded his head and had finished eating his cooked peas.
***
Now it was the morning of his birthday, and Thomas the cat seemed to be the only other member of the family who was up and about.
Nicolas took off his bathrobe and dressed. With the late October cold, Nicolas decided on a pair of old wool socks, hiking boots, long trousers, a t-shirt, and a dark green Guernsey, a fisherman’s sweater his mother had knitted for him during the summer months. “Well, Thomas,” he said cheerily, holding his arms out, “how do I look?” The cat glanced up, blinked, and yawned its sleepy approval. Nicolas took a quick look at himself in the modest mirror hung just above his single chest of drawers. Mum will say I’m a mess, but, he thought, it is my birthday after all. And with that, Nicolas pulled his shoulders back and smiled at himself.
Spinning on the ball of his foot, he went to the old travel trunk at the foot of his bed. Nicolas unlatched the two thick leather buckles and lifted its heavy lid. Inside were some of his most important, and most private, things. His great grandmother’s silver sewing thimble, which Nicolas sometimes imagined was a beer mug for fairies, sat precariously atop a wooden soldier’s head, as if the soldier had placed it there as a convenient helmet. He sometimes carried it for good luck. Nicolas dropped the thimble into his pocket.
The toy soldier—more precisely, but importantly to Nicolas, a member of the Queen’s Guard—had been his father’s when he was young. The scarlet red of the soldier’s tunic was chipped and worn away, but Nicolas thought he looked stately, and in his imagination, had commanded many a British regiment in many a war. Sitting solemnly next to the wooden guard stood the Tower of London, a model Nicolas’ father had made out of a stout chunk of Yew wood three years ago as a Christmas present. Nicolas ran his fingers along the castle’s seven huge towers: the Salt, Broad Arrow, Constable, Martin, “Royal Beasts”, Bowyer, and Flint Tower. In the middle of the Tower castle were six black buttons, which Nicolas pretended were the Tower’s resident ravens. As he often did, Nicolas softly repeated his father’s warning three years ago as Nicolas unwrapped his new Tower castle, “If the ravens leave the Tower, the kingdom will fall.”
Nicolas carefully moved the Tower to one corner of the old trunk before continuing his search. Among other odds and ends, he found a short bit of braided string made of a blue string, a red string, and a gold string, which also made its way into his pocket. Finally, he scooped up a canvas coin purse that jingled as he set it on the floor. With a single pull, Nicolas opened the drawstring and out spilled a modest plunder of old coins: three farthings, a haypenny, a penny, a thrupenny bit, sixpence, two shillings, a two bob bit, two half crowns, and the most prized of all, a 1935 “rocking horse” crown coin. The “rocking horse” design was a picture of St. George slaying a dragon. Nicolas often placed this large silver coin in his Tower castle as if it was royal treasure. Today, for some reason, he took a long moment to rub the smooth crown coin between his thumb and finger and dropped the crown coin into his pocket, along with the thimble and string.
In spite of the majesty of the crown coin, he actually liked the simple farthing coins the most. Each farthing had the profile of King George V on one side and on the other was a picture of a little bird with short wings and an upright tail. The little bird was a wren. It had always fascinated Nicolas that such a kindly looking bird would have been chosen to share a coin with the faces of kings and queens. When Nicolas had asked his father about the bird a few years before, his father told him the ancient story about the “election of the king of birds.” His father said whichever bird could fly to the highest altitude was to be made King of Birds. Naturally, the eagle outflew all other birds and soared to great heights high above the clouds. But even so, the eagle was beaten by a very small bird, the wren, that had hidden itself in the eagle’s feathers. At the last moment, it sprang from its hiding place and flew higher than the eagle. Because of this, the wren was crowned King of Birds. “Even the least can surprise everyone and become the greatest,” his father had told him with a knowing wink.
Nicolas took one of the farthing coins and let it slide into his pocket. He heard it clink happily against his great grandmother’s silver thimble and the “rocking horse” crown coin. He carefully put the other coins back in the canvas bag and returned the bag to the trunk. With that, Nicolas dropped the lid of the trunk down, re-buckled its straps, and stood up. Pointing a determined finger at the sleeping cat, Nicolas said, “Even if there isn’t a party today, I’m still happy it’s my birthday.” Thomas didn’t stir.
Nicolas lifted his chin and shoved out his jaw. “I’m a wren today,” he said firmly, feeling funny, but good, as the words came out of his mouth.
Nicolas ran his fingers through his untidy, curly hair, and pulled a warm knit cap over his head. Just as he did, a shadow again fell across the room. Quickly looking out his window, Nicolas could see a grey cloud drifting in front of the sun. He let out a breath of relief. Nicolas glanced at the strange copper leaf sitting on his bed. For no particular reason, he scooped it up and dropped it inside his trouser pocket.
Stepping quietly out of his bedroom door and down the narrow stairs, he left Thomas the cat curled fast asleep on his bed.