Fred’s Yuletide Escape 7 – Ransom

This is the seventh of ten parts of Fred’s Yuletide Escape.  Chapters average 1000 words. If you missed the start, you can find it here.

King Fred of Marsh has decided to take off for a little adventure before his Yuletide duties start. After visiting his neighbours at Castle Wash, he planned to spend the night at the Inn of the Seventh Happiness. However, after a pleasant conversation with Willoughby the Narrator, he was kidnapped and driven off to a pirate encampment, where he has been for a couple of days.   The pirate captain wants amnesty and a home of their own, but Fred has taken advantage of a storm to run off.  Elsewhere…

Chapter 7: Ransom

The ransom demand had arrived at Castle Marsh and Castle Buckmore at the same instant, thanks to the extension of the vacuum tube message system to outlying areas.  Rapid discussions took place between Kira (Queen of Marsh), George (Fred’s brother, visiting Castle Buckmore)  and Lupin (Prince of Buckmore) using the same method.  Five minutes was not a long time to wait between bursts of conversation when it would take a whole day to travel between the two castles.

The demand read: “We have King Fred.  We want our own castle. And plenty of money to support us. Make sure we get it by Solstice or he walks the plank. From Cap’n Bones on behalf of all exiled pirates not otherwise settled.”

In his office at Castle Buckmore, Lupin toyed with the original message while he waited for a reply to his enquiry of Argon, proprietor of the Inn of the Seventh Happiness. “He must have gone to Seventh Happiness from Wash.  He wouldn’t have gone to Humber.”

“Well,” George replied, “If there was a choice he’d have gone to Seven H.  Humber’s all right, but…”

“Ah,” said Lupin as his steward, Baden, entered with another message.

“Argon reports he booked a room, but didn’t use it,” Lupin told George.

“Didn’t he think that was suspicious?” asked George.

“You’d think so, wouldn’t you,” Lupin replied.  “But who knows what goes on at a busy place like that.  Maybe he thought he’d changed his mind.”

“I’d better go down and talk to him, find out if he saw anything, if anyone else saw anything.”  George flew everywhere in a fraction of the time it took the best of coaches.

“Yes, although if we know who’s got him, and what they want, what do we have to gain?”

“We need to find him and rescue him, surely,” said George, somewhat surprised at Lupin’s reaction.

“That’s a good plan, George,” said Baden.  “If we can get him out of their clutches we can tackle the problem of rehoming them without undue pressure.”

“Ah, yes, of course,” said Lupin.  “Sorry George, not thinking straight.  What do they mean by ‘plenty of money to support us’ anyway?”

“It sounds to me like they want their own castle, with full access to the credit system,” said Baden.

“Not just rehomed wherever we can fit them in, then?”

“No.”

“But that’s… what’s the word… anarchy?”

“Well, either anarchy in that they don’t recognise any of the existing kings, or an attempt to join the system as a fully fledged entity,” Baden replied.

“I’ll get going, then,” said George.  “I wonder if they’ve discussed this with Fred?  It’s more his thing than mine.”

“Do you think he’s suggested it to them?”  Lupin was shocked.

“No,” said George and Baden together.  “He’d have developed a better plan if he had,” added George.  “I’ll update you when I’ve talked to Argon.”

“Good, good,” said Lupin as George left.

“Are there any castles we could give them?”  Lupin asked Baden.

“None in habitable condition, I don’t think.  Roc is nicely out of the way, and on the coast, but it’s a shell.  Forest was blown up, and anyway, Lord Duffield maintains it’s still his.  There are a couple up north, one not far from Palatine and the other further north, again on the coast.  I don’t know what condition they’re in.”

“Well, that’s a start, in terms of negotiation.”

~~~

“So he booked the cubbyhole, had supper with the narrator, and you didn’t see him afterwards?”

“Exactly so, Prince George,” said Argon.  “It was a busy night, we were practically full, a couple of minor royals from Cabot on their way up to Humber staying in the best suite, everyone piling in after the narrator had done his stuff…”

“It’s ok, Argon, I don’t expect you to mollycoddle every wandering princeling that comes through your bar.”  George grinned at him.  In fact, it was Victor who had mollycoddled him and Fred on their adventures when they were princelings, since Argon had been abducted himself, but he didn’t need to say so.  “I don’t suppose the narrator’s still around?”

“No, sir, he went off on his travels.  To Wash, I think.”

“I don’t suppose Victor saw anything?”

“I didn’t think to ask him.  Hold on.”

Argon disappeared into the kitchen area and George could hear him call to Victor.

“I don’t know where he is,” he admitted as he returned.  “He’s got some new idea he’s working on.”

“Here, Dad!” said Victor, coming in through the main door.  “Hi, George! Thought I saw the machine land.”

“Hi Victor.  I’m looking for Fred.”

“Oh. He didn’t stay the night.  Night before last…?”

“That’s right.”

“Yeah, he went off with Rum’s mates.”

“Who?”

“Rum.  He runs the Wash stagecoach.  Works very hard.  There, back, there, back. Goes to Forest sometimes too.”

“OK.  So he brought Fred in from Wash when he arrived?”

“Probably.  Didn’t see him arrive.  Think he said Wash though.  Where’s Fred?”

“That’s what I’m trying to find out.”  George wondered if Lupin had told Argon that Fred had been kidnapped.  Best not to say anything, in case, he told himself.  “You said he might have gone off with Rum’s mates.  Do you know who they are?”

Victor thought for a moment.  “I’ve seen them before.  On the Mare Swine.  Not seen them round here before, though.”

“They’re pirates, then.  Is Rum a pirate?”

“Used to be.  Same as Pippin.”

George took Victor’s point.  Many pirates had taken up the offer of mending their ways and taken on new roles in society.  Pippin had been on the same pirate ship as George when he had been captured, and had asked if he could work for him when he was granted a pardon.  He now ran the Flying School at Buckmore.  This Rum person had been on the Mare Swine, on which Fred and Victor had been captive, but now ran a viable stagecoach business.

“When will Rum be back here?”  George asked.

“Dinner time tonight,” Victor answered.  “He’ll be near Wash now.”

“Well, the wind’s dropped a bit, although it looks like it might be stormy later, so I might as well take the machine up for a little look around and see if I can spot anything odd,” said George, eyeing the sky from the main door.  “I don’t think there’s much else I can do.”  And after sending off a message to Lupin, and another, longer one to Kira, he took the flying machine up into the freshly washed blue sky, and headed towards the ruined Castle Forest, to the southwest, on a hunch.

(c) J M Pett 2013

Continued on Wednesday…

Children’s Book Week Day 3

flying machine

Kid-Lit-Giveaway-Hop-Button-May-2013-draft-2

Read any good children’s books recently? Stuck for ideas?  Well, this week is your big chance to hop around the world in search of good reads for kids.  You may even win copies, too!   Children’s Book Week is a celebration of the best books for children. 

Every day this week I’ll be posting here, talking about my books, my characters and other books that inspired me.   There will also be some extra activities and on every post there will be a link to my Giveaway.  You can enter some of the options every day you visit.

George and the flying machine

All the characters in my books, The Princelings of the East and the rest of the series, are guinea pigs.  They have a complex world, live in castles and other communities and have work, school and all the usual things ‘people’ do. They are based on my real guinea pigs, the first of whom were Fred and George.

I keep my guinea pigs indoors in a cage, but in the summer, and mild weather, I put them out in runs on the grass.  I call them my lawn-mowing squad, and Fred, George, Victor and Hugo were so diligent I didn’t have to mow around my vegetable patches all summer.  The guinea pigs I have at present don’t seem to do nearly such a neat job!

Yummygrass270209

One thing that amused me was the way George (on the right in the picture above) would look up and follow the track of any light aircraft, including a vintage biplane, that went over the garden.  I’m sure he couldn’t see it; maybe it was the particular sound that it made.  It gave me the idea that he might enjoy experimenting with flying in the books though.Flying machne at 7HI was thinking of other children’s books that feature aeroplanes or flying.  This is where I’m at a disadvantage because I don’t have experience of an extensive range of more recent children’s books. I can think of The Adventures of TinTin, and of course the Biggles stories by Captain W E Johns, but they are probably considered old-fashioned and non-pc now.  I loved the film of TinTin – did you see it?  What did you like best?

What other books do you like that have aeroplanes or other flying objects – excluding brooms, thestrals, flying cars and portkeys!

Tomorrow’s post will be about Hugo, or do I mean Mariusz? The mystery guinea pigs!

Things to do

PlaneSketch for colouringToday there is a colouring page for you.  This is the master sketch for the picture of George flying his machine with Fred as the passenger that appears on the back of the Trilogy paperback. Thank you to my cover illustrator, Danielle English, for providing it for us.  You might like to see more of her work here.  Right-click it to ‘save image’ and download the picture file to your own device.  It should print full size on letter paper or A4 for colouring in.  You’ll have to be neat to get Fred and George’s features!

Enter my Giveaway

KL Giveaway

Thanks to Mother Daughter Book Reviews and Youth Literature Reviews I’m taking part in a worldwide promotion, the Kid Lit Giveaway Hop. My Giveaway is part of that.

The prizes are:

  • one copy of the Princelings Trilogy (paperback) to a winner in the EU (plus Norway and Switzerland)
  • a bundle of the first three ebooks (as pictured) for a winner elsewhere in the world.
  • one copy of my latest ebook The Talent Seekers (or another of the series if preferred) to a winner (worldwide)

It’s open now and it will close at midnight 19th May (New York time). Click the Kid Lit Giveaway button above to enter – and you can enter every day!

Even more – you can go to other blogs with more books and competitions! Let’s go hopping…

Click here to find more participants and view this Linky Tools list.

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Children’s Book Week Day 2

Kid-Lit-Giveaway-Hop-Button-May-2013-draft-2

Read any good children’s books recently? Stuck for ideas?  Well, this week is your big chance to hop around the world in search of good reads for kids.  You may even win copies, too!   Children’s Book Week is a celebration of the best books for children. 

Every day this week I’ll be posting here, talking about my books, my characters and other books that inspired me.   There will also be some extra activities and on every post there will be a link to my Giveaway.  You can enter some of the options every day you visit.

Guinea pigs and eating

All the characters in my books, The Princelings of the East and the rest of the series, are guinea pigs.  They have a complex world, live in castles and other communities and have work, school and all the usual things ‘people’ do. They are based on my real guinea pigs, the first of whom were Fred and George.

Fred sometimes found it hard to resist the vegetables next to the run!

Real guinea pigs are very interested in their food, and Fred and George (the real ones) enjoyed all sorts of different vegetables,  herbs and wildplants too.  I grew a lot of different things in my garden for them. I was careful not to let them try things known to be poisonous, but a lot just isn’t known, and I felt I could trust Fred, in particular, to know what was good to eat and what was not.  I can’t do that with my latest additions, Dylan and Dougall!

In the books, though, there are all sorts of interesting concoctions that a gourmet guinea pig might enjoy.  Real guinea pigs don’t eat ice-cream, but Fred gets an inspiration watching the lights reflecting in a lavender sorbet (a lavender-flavoured water-ice).  My Fred adored lavender! They do get lots of opportunities for mixed dishes of salad food or vegetables, and one type of dish is called a melange , which is French for mixture.

When I write about drinks, I used the terms that you might understand for a type of drink.  Guinea pigs would not drink cola, or any type of soda, or beer, or wine, or tea or coffee.  But I like to think of them enjoying a few luxuries, and so Hugo (Lord Mariusz) has a business brewing and selling Wozna cola.  The inn serves ale, soft drinks, and sometimes something a little stronger.  I imagine all these drinks made from fruits and herbs and vegetables, much like a country person might make wine from the hedgerows – elderflower champagne, anyone?  I also invented a coffee drink subsitute called an espressimenta – it’s a mint drink made like an espresso!

Do you remember what Ratty brought out of his picnic basket when he took Moley out in his boat? It’s much the same in my guinea pig world.

In tomorrow’s post I’ll talk about George and his interest in engineering and flying machines!

Things to do

Did you print out yesterday’s picture to colour in?  How many different types of fruit and vegetables could you see? The answers are below the Linky List.

Enter my Giveaway

KL Giveaway

Thanks to Mother Daughter Book Reviews and Youth Literature Reviews I’m taking part in a worldwide promotion, the Kid Lit Giveaway Hop. My Giveaway is part of that.

The prizes are:

  • one copy of the Princelings Trilogy (paperback) to a winner in the EU (plus Norway and Switzerland)
  • a bundle of the first three ebooks (as pictured) for a winner elsewhere in the world.
  • one copy of my latest ebook The Talent Seekers (or another of the series if preferred) to a winner (worldwide)

It’s open now and it will close at midnight 19th May (New York time). Click the Kid Lit Giveaway button above to enter – and you can enter every day!

Even more – you can go to other blogs with more books and competitions! Let’s go hopping…

Click here to find more participants and view this Linky Tools list.

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Answers: You should have seen carrot, bell pepper, melon (it could be interpreted as a banana), apple, cucumber and the leaves and flower at the front are dandelion. Six items in all.

Children’s Book Week starts TODAY

Kid Lit Giveaway Hop - Button - May 2013 - FINALRead any good children’s books recently? Stuck for ideas?  Well, this week is your big chance to hop around the world in search of good reads for kids.  You may even win copies, too!   Children’s Book Week is a celebration of the best books for children. 

Every day this week I’ll be posting here, talking about my books, my characters and other books that inspired me.   There will also be some extra activities like a downloadable colour-in picture, especially for the under-10s, since my books are probably best for 10 and over (although they can be read to younger people).  And on every post there will be a link to my Giveaway.  You can enter some of the options every day you visit.

My Stories

My books are The Princelings of the East series.  They star Fred and George, the princelings in the title, and they, along with everyone else in the books, are guinea pigs.  I was inspired to write the books based on the characters of my pets, and if you’d like to find out more about the animals themselves, you can read their blog.

I think of them experiencing all their adventures in much the same way as Moley and Ratty in The Wind in the Willows.  They live in their own world with its own rules, and rulers, and petty squabbles, and interesting people (like Badger) and selfish ones (like Mr Toad) too.  The first three books are written as a trilogy.  Each has its own main story, but there is a thread of a wider story running through them which is concluded in the third book.  The rest of the series is set in the same world, and we meet the same characters from time to time, but the other books are complete stories of their own.  Events in the Princelings’ world (also known as The Realms) do follow on from each other though.  Everything is working towards an end point in my head!

In tomorrow’s post I’ll talk about all the food you find in the stories and why it’s just slightly different from what you or I might eat!

Things to doF and G Dinner sketch

If you’d like to colour a picture of Princelings Fred and George at dinner, right-click it to ‘save image’ and download the picture file to your own device.  I’m afraid you’ll have to print it out yourself. It should print full size on letter paper or A4.

Enter my Giveaway

KL Giveaway

Thanks to Mother Daughter Book Reviews and Youth Literature Reviews I’m taking part in a worldwide promotion, the Kid Lit Giveaway Hop.   My Giveaway is part of that.

The prizes are:

  • one copy of the Princelings Trilogy (paperback) to a winner in the EU (plus Norway and Switzerland)
  • a bundle of the first three ebooks (as pictured) for a winner elsewhere in the world.
  • one copy of my latest ebook The Talent Seekers (or another of the series if preferred) to a winner (worldwide)

It’s open now and it will close at midnight 19th May (New York time).  Click the Kid Lit Giveaway button above to enter – and you can enter every day!

Even more – you can go to other blogs with more books and competitions!  Let’s go hopping…

Click here to find more participants and view this Linky Tools list.

Powered by Linky Tools