E-Book, Englisch, 256 Seiten
Hyder The Twelve
1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-1-78269-399-4
Verlag: Pushkin Children's Books
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 256 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-78269-399-4
Verlag: Pushkin Children's Books
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Liz Hyder has been making up stories ever since she can remember. She has a BA in drama from the University of Bristol and, in early 2018, won the Bridge Award/MoniackMhor's Emerging Writer Award.?Her first novel,?Bearmouth, won the Waterstones Children's Book Prize for Older Readers, the Branford Boase Award, and was TheTimes's?Children's Book of The Year. Tom De Freston is an artist based in Oxford with his wife, Kiran Millwood Hargrave. His practice is dedicated to the construction of multimedia worlds, combining paintings, film and performance into immersive visceral narratives.
Weitere Infos & Material
“You make your own future, Libby! It’s just nonsense! Come back!” But there’s no persuading her. You can’t reason with Libby when she’s like this. A ball of furious stubborn energy. And although she’s only just eleven, she’s far stronger than I was at her age. I can’t physically stop her like I used to, when I’d wrap my arms around her tight and wrestle her to the floor, hysterical with laughter.
Her mouth rambles as fast as her legs move and I catch snippets of her garbled tale as she goes.
“Look beyond the water on the longest night to see what your future might hold!” she says, again and again, as if bewitched. It’s the usual nonsense. A magic tower, a magic pool of water… She read about the legend in a book. Of course she did.
I switch on my torch as we walk at speed, almost trotting, along the dark leafy lane and up through the empty car park and I want her to stop. More than anything I want to hug her and tell her it’s okay, that it’s just a story and I believed any old nonsense at her age too. I want to promise her we’ll have hot chocolate when we get back like we sometimes do at the weekend for breakfast, that she’ll have forgotten all this by morning. But then we’re by the old wooden gate that leads to the coastal path and all the words fall out of my head.
I pause for a moment as Libby slips through, letting the gate creak shut behind her. The steep cliff edge is just off to my left and I’m suddenly grateful for the thick blanket of clouds that arrive overhead, stifling at least some of the moon’s power. I hate heights with all my being but I can’t let Libby head off on her own in the middle of the night, I can’t, so I take a deep breath and force myself on. The fierce wind drops to a whisper and the roar of crashing waves fills my ears as I focus on the bright ring of torchlight on the steps of the winding path ahead. I daren’t risk looking out towards the sea—if I see how high up we are, I’ll freeze in fear, I know I will.
Libby hates me bringing up The Faraway Tree but it’s the same thing all over again. Years ago, she tried to run away to the hollow tree by the big pond in the forest. An old oak that had eaten away its own insides, you could stand up in it as if it were a kind of tree cave. It had been there forever, even Mum remembered playing in it as a kid. And Libby, gullible little Libby, somehow managed to convince herself that not only was the book real, but she’d found the actual magic tree from it too. She knew we wouldn’t believe her so she planned her own solo expedition—to climb to the top and step through the clouds into another world. Seriously, that was her plan. She’d woken me in the night then too, back when I still shared a room with her. Rabbit in the headlights when I turned on my bedside lamp. Her rucksack crammed with stale half-eaten rolls she’d saved from packed lunches over the past week at school. She was six then. The amount I’ve teased her since. I thought she’d grown out of all that…
“You don’t have to come with me! Just go back, Kit!” Libby hisses as she finally turns inland, off the coastal path onto a narrow lane, and I breathe a sigh of relief to be away from the cliffs at last. A sign points towards Manorbier and I allow myself a smile, amused suddenly, because all I can think is how bloody stupid Libby’s going to look when she sees nothing but her own reflection in that water…
It’s a strange name, Manorbier. I thought it was pronounced fancily like it was French but it’s just “manor” like a big house and “beer” like the drink. The village itself is small and pretty with a deserted feel. There’s only a smattering of streetlights and not all of them are working. In the dark gaps between, I look up to see how much the moon lights up the whole sky now—a ghostly glow behind the clouds. I turn off my torch and pocket it, just in case anyone might spy the two of us, out alone in the dead of night. Even without it, I can make out the shape of cottages and the white road markings. It’s so different from London with its perma-glow of orange streetlamps. So quiet too, without the constant noise of sirens and late-night drinkers we get back home.
Home…
I swallow at the thought. A flicker of last Friday in my mind. Still images like photos, snapshots of memories. The bike flying into the canal. The splashes of water freeze-framed for a moment as it hit the surface. The look of surprise on Jemima’s face as I launched myself towards her. I shake the memory from my head. She’s hundreds of miles away. I’m safe. I’m safe. For now anyway…
“Hurry up, if you’re still coming!” Libby calls, and I follow her as she turns left and up a steep slope. That’s when I get my first view of it—the old church standing guard at the top of the hill. Its distinctive white tower, so bright. I follow Libby on the path that snakes up to it and, in the distance, I spy the horseshoe curve of Manorbier bay, and the faint glow of a dying fire on the beach.
An owl hoots in the woods nearby as we reach the crest of the hill and turn left, heading up a handful of steps to the church itself. Libby reaches for me, clasping my hand, and we look up, side by side, at the white tower looming over us. It looks as if it were crying. Tears of black run down from underneath the high-up windows, smearing the white walls below like mascara. There’s a stillness in the air but a crackle of electricity too, like you get before a storm.
Above us, the thick clouds part, and the full moon, high in the sky, emerges in all her glory, a beautiful circle of light that paints every cloud silver and makes the white tower glow even brighter. Winter solstice. The longest night of the year.
Libby takes a step towards the porch but it’s as if the light of the moon suddenly makes me see things more clearly. My skin prickles. Mum would kill us if she knew we were here and I wish I’d tried harder to wake her.
“Wait!” I say, gently pulling Libby back. “Hang on just a minute.”
“What is it?” she says.
“Where’d you say you read about this again?” I ask. “The legend of the white tower on solstice? Which book was it in?”
I see the flicker of a lie ripple across her face.
“You didn’t read it anywhere, did you?” I ask flatly. “Tell me the truth, Libby. Right now.”
“She told me not to tell anyone…” Libby says meekly, looking at her feet.
“Who did?” I ask, grabbing her by the shoulders as my blood runs cold. “Who told you not to tell anyone?”
“The girl in the shop at the caravan park! She told me to come alone. You shouldn’t have followed me! I told you to go back!” She looks at me boldly but there’s a flicker of doubt in her eyes.
“Jesus, Libby! Why didn’t you tell me this before? You know you can tell me anything!”
“No, I can’t! Ever since you went back to school after the summer, you’ve been weirder and weirder! Sitting in your room for hours, never letting me come in. And I knew you’d overreact like you always do! She was only trying to be helpful! And besides if you’re right and I’m wrong, you can tease me about it forever, just like with the bloody tree!”
Libby’s never said anything like this to me before and I feel the sting to my heart. I stand there for a moment, numb, as the moon hides back behind the clouds above. Libby pulls away, going to the church door and pushing it open, and I dash after her as she disappears inside. I’m plunged into darkness as the silence of the church turns to face me, a shiver down my spine as my eyes adjust.
Why would anyone tell a kid to go to a tower at midnight on their own?
“Libby! Please! Come on now! This is stupid. Come back!” I beg as I reach out in the dark and stumble over a pew, cursing as pain shoots up my shin. Libby laughs and it rings out like a bell, echoing around the stone walls.
“Libby! Don’t be daft! Get back here!” I cry as I reach for my torch and the beam of light reveals my beloved, infuriating sister by a door on the far side of the church.
There’s a shuffling noise behind me, and I spin on my heels, dry-mouthed, as I shine the torch around. No one. No sign of anyone except me and Libby in the whole church.
Libby rattles at the door and the sound draws my attention back to her. I walk towards her, silently breathing a sigh of relief that the door is locked, but I’m wrong. It’s just stiff with age and she yanks it open triumphantly.
I run after her, moments behind, pushing the same door open as it tries to swing shut on me, its metal handle cold in my palm. In my haste, I hit my torch on the surround, and the beam vanishes. I try the switch but it’s no good, I must have knocked the...




