Erhalten Sie Zugang zu diesem und mehr als 300000 Büchern ab EUR 5,99 monatlich.
School's out for summer! Olivia and her friends are going to be spending August in Edinburgh, home to the world-famous Fringe Festival. They can't wait to get there, to stay in the beautiful city and soak up the Festival atmosphere, while the Swan Circus performs every day to wild applause and rapturous reviews… With such passion, such good friendships and the summer stretching out before them, what could possibly go wrong?
Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:
Seitenzahl: 277
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2012
Das E-Book (TTS) können Sie hören im Abo „Legimi Premium” in Legimi-Apps auf:
Everything was working out fine for the Swans. They had three amazing weeks ahead of them, full of performing and adventure.
Olivia was suddenly distracted by her sister, Eel, who was pirouetting again, arms outstretched. “This is going to be the best summer ever!” she cried.
Olivia nodded. It was going to be glorious: an enchanted summer they’d never ever forget.
Have you read the other books in the series?
Olivia’s First Term Olivia Flies High Olivia and the Movie Stars
“Hugely enjoyable”The Stage
“Gripping”Guardian
Look out for:
Olivia’s Winter Wonderland
Olivia Marvell stood by the railings at the top of the Mound and looked down over Edinburgh. Below her was a group of acrobats attempting a human pyramid and wobbling dangerously like a badly set jelly on a hot summer’s day. Two teenage girls were doing a comic juggling act. One of them was juggling perfectly with what appeared to be half a dozen fresh eggs, but which Olivia suspected were rubber fakes. The other girl was throwing real eggs into the air and failing to catch them. They kept splatting on her partner’s head, whose pretend anger was creating much hilarity among the crowd.
There was also a troupe of mad tap dancers wearing kilts who were doing an intricate routine to bagpipes and being cheered enthusiastically. Olivia smiled as she watched some small children trying to join in and falling over their own – and the dancers’ – feet. She felt a mounting sense of excitement as if someone were hugging her insides very tightly.
It was a bright early August afternoon just a few days before the start of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. A mass of people swirled below, all attracted to the Mound and its merry sights and sounds, and making Olivia think of the Pied Piper. It was as if the entire world was being drawn towards the city by an invisible thread of music and bright colours. She wished her friend, Tom, was here to see it, but he was playing John in a huge sell-out West End production of Peter Pan and wouldn’t be free until the very end of August.
Olivia wheeled round as somebody touched her shoulder. It was Georgia and Aeysha.
“Hey!” she said, pleased to see her friends. “Did you get rid of all your posters?”
“All but one,” said Aeysha, unfurling a midnight-blue A3 sheet dotted with silver stars. It showed a girl on a trapeze surrounded by fairies, and a magician and a sprite walking the high wire. Emblazoned across the top in small golden Gothic letters were the words: The Swan Circus Presents, and then in even bigger letters it read: Enchantment: A Magical Circus Entertainment. They had all looked at the poster many times before but it still made Olivia feel shivery with pleasure.
“Eel and I found people to take all of ours,” she said. “Lots of shops are going to put them up in their windows. It helps that they’re so striking. The woman in one of the cafés said she might even come and see our show after Eel did a crazy tap dance and stood on her head. I can’t wait for the Swan Circus to appear in front of an audience!”
Olivia grinned at her friends and they grinned back. Aeysha winked and Georgia did a little skip. Olivia didn’t have to say anything; she could tell from Georgia’s doll-like face and Aeysha’s sparkling eyes with their thick dark lashes that they felt as excited as she did.
Her little sister, Eel – so called because she could never stand still – was busy gyrating wildly to the beat of some distant drums. She had a real talent for dance. The two sisters had seen Coppelia performed by the Royal Ballet at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden at the end of last term and Eel’s mesmerising antics reminded Olivia of the life-sized dancing doll.
Eel had just done a spontaneous cartwheel and was starting to draw quite a crowd herself, obstructing the throng attempting to negotiate the steep steps up and down the Mound. Olivia always felt embarrassed when her little sister’s dancing displays in public places attracted attention, so she grabbed her by the hand and started down the steps. Aeysha and Georgia followed.
Olivia hadn’t gone far when there was a commotion and the sound of shouting behind her. Before she could turn round, she found herself being pushed roughly aside by a girl of about her own age, who was wearing a thin yellow cotton dress with a distinctive trim of blue cornflowers around the hem. She was racing down the stone steps two at a time as if she were being pursued by all the devils in hell. Her long plaits streamed behind her like two shiny black snakes, while Olivia couldn’t help noticing that the backs of her legs were extremely grubby.
Olivia stumbled and lost her grip on Eel’s hand, and she would have fallen if it wasn’t for her own exceptional sense of balance, honed by many hours on the high-wire and trapeze, and because the quick-witted Aeysha caught her from behind with both hands and steadied her.
“Oi,” shouted Olivia crossly. “Watch where you’re going!”
Without breaking step, the girl in the yellow dress glanced round and for a fraction of a second her eyes met Olivia’s. There was something about those eyes that reminded Olivia of a hunted deer and yet something defiant also glinted there. It felt as if the girl was daring Olivia to protest again.
Then the girl hurtled onwards, followed closely by a black-and-white Border collie. The collie dog whipped past Olivia but then suddenly turned back, sat down abruptly at Olivia’s feet, raised a paw and gave a little yelp as if to say “Sorry”. He then raced after the girl.
“Did you see that? That dog’s amazing. It’s almost as if he can talk. I’d swear he was trying to apologise,” said Olivia, her eyes wide.
“He’s got better manners than his mistress, then,” said Georgia, watching as the girl in the yellow dress continued pell-mell down the steps, scattering people like skittles as she went. The collie bolted ahead of her, trying to herd the people out of the way as if they were sheep.
“I wonder why she’s in such a mad rush?” said Aeysha thoughtfully. “It was almost like she was being chased.”
“Maybe she’s got a show to get to,” replied Olivia.
“Well, we’ve got a show to put on,” said Eel, “and it’s going to be the best in Edinburgh.” Unlike her older sister, Eel was always supremely confident. Olivia hoped that in this instance her little sister was right to be quite so optimistic.
The Edinburgh Festival was the biggest arts festival in the world, and Olivia, her friends and other pupils from their school, the Swan Academy of Theatre and Dance, were going to perform at the Fringe. They had been rehearsing hard long before school had broken up for the summer, and all the children taking part had had to sacrifice their family holidays, but they didn’t mind. What was two weeks in Tenerife compared with appearing at the Edinburgh Fringe in the debut performance by the Swan Circus? It was too thrilling an opportunity to pass up; over the last sixty years many reputations had been made and lost in Edinburgh during the festival.
Lots of the Swans’ families would be coming up to Edinburgh for the final few days to see their children perform. Aeysha’s big extended family were all coming, at least twenty of them, and Georgia’s dad, who was separated from her mum, was bringing his new girlfriend, Leonie. Olivia and Eel didn’t have any relatives to visit, but Olivia hoped that Tom would make it up to watch the last few performances.
At that very moment, Olivia’s dad, Jack Marvell, the famous high-wire walker also known as the Great Marvello, and his friend Pablo, who taught circus skills at the Swan, were putting the finishing touches to the Swan Circus big top that had been erected on Calton Hill on the other side of Princes Street. Last night, they had turned on the lights on the outside of the big top for the first time, and Olivia, Eel, Georgia and Aeysha had gasped to see Swan Circus picked out in fairy lights and twinkling high above the great city. The craggy and forbidding castle perched on the other side of Edinburgh had seemed to be winking back at them. It had felt as if the whole city was bewitched.
Even in broad daylight, the scene below them was magical. It reminded Olivia of a medieval fair straight out of the pages of a history book. She could see and hear a band of Peruvian musicians, and a group of actors dressed in Elizabethan costume were wandering about just like a band of seventeenth-century strolling players. One of the actors was wearing a huge donkey’s head and Olivia guessed that the troupe were performing A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
She suddenly felt anxious. The Swan Circus performance also included a scene from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, with the fairies played by children who had been taking Pablo’s circus-skills course. Olivia knew it was good, innovative even, in the way it successfully melded circus, theatre and dance and even roller skating. But would anyone want to come and see their show when there were thousands to choose from? Some long-established theatre companies with serious reputations were at the Fringe this year. The National Theatre of Scotland was performing at the Pleasance, the Globe Theatre were taking their touring production of Pericles to the grounds of a local stately home, and Theo Deacon, a former Swan pupil and now a major Hollywood star, was in a controversial new play at the famous Traverse Theatre. The former soap star, Cassie Usher, who had played Maria in the production of The Sound of Music in which Georgia, Tom and Eel had also appeared, was performing her one-woman musical show in an inflatable upside-down purple cow in Bristo Square.
When Olivia had first seen the Fringe programme, she’d felt excited to be part of such a big festival, with so many people performing in so many places all over the city, not just in proper theatres. There was a show taking place in a telephone box on Grassmarket; one that took the form of a city-wide theatrical treasure hunt, and another on and around the swings in a children’s playground. But then she had felt intimidated. Would anyone be prepared to make the trek up Calton Hill to see an unknown theatre-circus performance by a bunch of kids when there were so many other brilliant shows on at exactly the same time and in more central locations and at famous venues? If no one came, it would mean financial disaster for the Swan Circus and particularly for her dad, Jack, who had put everything he had into the venture.
Olivia had overheard her grandmother, Alicia, who also ran the Swan Academy, saying that Jack ought to put his name on the publicity because it would help draw a crowd and get them some media coverage. Jack had been insistent that their trip to the Edinburgh Fringe wasn’t about him but about the Swans. Olivia thought that was just like her dad, who was generous to a fault. But it also demonstrated his lack of what her gran called “savvy” and others called common sense. She thought that Alicia was right, and Jack was silly not to use his fame to help sell some tickets. But he had stood firm, so his name wasn’t even on the posters.
The Swan Circus was Jack’s way of saying thank you to Alicia for taking the girls in and giving them a home and an education at her stage school after an accident had stopped him working. They had lost their travelling circus, and been left almost completely destitute. Olivia, who at first had been resentful of finding herself at a stage school, now loved learning to act and having such good friends as Georgia, Aeysha and Tom.
She wished Tom was here now to calm her nerves. Olivia missed him; it felt as if there was a huge Tom-shaped hole in her life and also in the show itself. She and Tom both had a natural gift for the high-wire. When Olivia had first arrived at the Swan and unhappiness had made her prickly and difficult, Tom had been the only person to believe in and stand by her. She missed being able to confide in him. Just then, as though he’d known what she was thinking, Olivia’s phone bleeped with a message. Just getting ready to fly in this afternoon’s matinee. Hope Edinburgh and high-wire going fine. Tom x
Olivia immediately texted back. Edinburgh fab. High-wire with dad such fun. But miss u up there with me. Need u around, ready to catch me if i fall. Liv x
Olivia’s phone bleeped again almost as soon as she had pressed send. Tom had replied. Liv Marvell never falls!
Olivia grinned. She wished it was true. All high-wire walkers fell on occasion, even the very best like her dad.
“Come on, let’s go and see what’s going on down there,” she said to the others. “We’ve still got almost half an hour before we need to meet Alicia and the others at Waverley Station.”
Her friends nodded enthusiastically. Olivia grabbed Eel’s hand again and they ran down the rest of the steps past some strange silvery statues. As they were passing one of the statues, it put out an arm and tapped Olivia on the shoulder, making her jump with shock and then double up with laughter. The statues weren’t made of stone or metal but were performers standing very, very still. Olivia and the others gathered around the one who’d moved, a young woman dressed as the Snow Queen, and peered at her closely. She didn’t even blink.
“I’d die if I had to stand still like that for hours,” said Eel.
“You’d die if you had to stand still for a second,” said Olivia. “Even in your sleep you’re constantly wriggling. My legs are bruised all over.”
For the last few nights they’d all been staying in a twin room in a cheap bed and breakfast, with Olivia and Eel sharing one bed and Georgia and Aeysha the other. But with the arrival of the rest of the Swans today they were all due to move into the big rented house that Jack had found for them on the Internet. They couldn’t wait to see what it was like. It had been such a lucky find. The first house Jack had arranged to rent had fallen through the week before they were due to arrive in Edinburgh, so being able to find something else at the last moment had felt like a miracle. Jack’s anxiety about it all had turned to triumph. Everything was working out fine. They had three amazing weeks ahead of them, full of performing and adventure.
Olivia was suddenly distracted by Eel, who was pirouetting again, arms outstretched. “This is going to be the best summer ever!” she cried.
Olivia nodded. It was going to be glorious: an enchanted summer they’d never ever forget.
The girls wandered around, breathing in all the sights and smells and sounds. There were stalls selling everything from doughnuts to jewellery, set up among the pavement artists and caricaturists. But it was the performers who interested Olivia and the others most. Eel watched the tap dancers with a critical eye and decided that the kilts were a mistake, and that the Swans could dance better. She also decided that the bagpipes sounded like a cat in pain.
“I think bagpipes sound beautiful,” said Georgia. “Like a mermaid weeping.”
Aeysha grinned. “And when did you last hear a mermaid crying, Georgie?” she asked.
A great roar went up from the crowd as four fire-eaters juggled their flaming sticks and then gobbled up the flames as if they were candyfloss. Olivia’s attention was caught by a flash of yellow in the corner of her eye. She turned and there, a few metres away, was the girl in the yellow dress. She was talking urgently to a beautiful girl of about sixteen or seventeen. The older girl was crying, and the Border collie nuzzled her legs as if trying to comfort her. Olivia was certain that the two were sisters. They had the same thick, glossy, black hair. The girl in the yellow dress kept looking anxiously around as if expecting trouble at any minute, and she was clearly trying to persuade the older girl to leave.
Suddenly, she tugged at her arm and nodded up the steps. Olivia glimpsed a thickset man pushing his way down the Mound steps, knocking aside anyone who got in his way. The Border collie ran to the steps and bounded up them at top speed. The man aimed a kick at the dog but lost his balance. He teetered on the edge of the steps before falling to the ground, like a large tree whose trunk had been axed, and was immediately surrounded by concerned passers-by.
The dog bounded back down the steps. Olivia turned to look for the sisters again. They had vanished into thin air. It was as if the dog had deliberately tripped the man up so they could get away. She wondered briefly why he was following them before being distracted by a crowd gathering at the back of the National Gallery of Scotland. She couldn’t see what they were looking at but she wanted to know what it was. The fire-eaters were reaching the end of their act so Olivia beckoned to the others to follow her. They still had ten minutes before they had to go to the station to meet the rest of the Swans off the London train. The girls worked their way through the crowd and stopped when they got the near the front.
A small boy, aged about ten, with light brown hair and eyes that crinkled when he smiled, was walking around the circle of people. He wore a black cloak over his shoulders that glittered with stars and crescent moons, and a top hat that was rather too big for him which he had to keep pushing up above his eyes. It was slightly comical and very endearing, but the boy seemed oblivious to his own charm and his face was serious.
Talking continuously, the boy walked slowly around the circle, then stopped in front of a woman, reached up behind her right ear and produced an egg still in its shell. Then with a flourish he reached behind her left ear and produced another egg – but this one was fried. The woman blushed, and the crowd giggled and gasped. The boy continued around the circle, stopping every now and again in front of someone. A bored-looking man who kept glancing impatiently at his watch suddenly burst into laughter when the boy pulled what seemed to be a never-ending chain of watches from his shirt pocket, and a pretty teenager turned quite pink when the boy lifted up her straw hat to reveal a tomato perched on her head.
Everyone clapped and cheered. The boy continued around the circle and then stopped in front of Eel, whose chestnut curls were in complete disarray.
“Bird’s-nest hair,” he said with a cheeky grin. Eel looked comically affronted, but her expression turned to wonder as the boy leaned forward, put his hands behind her head and produced a cooing dove whose ruffled breast had an iridescent mother of pearl sheen. Olivia and the others gasped out loud. The boy put the dove in a gilded cage that was sitting on a small table covered with a red velvet tablecloth. He put a black cloth over the ornate domed cage, passed his hands over the top, then removed the black cloth. There, sitting in the cage in the spot where the dove had been, was a silver-grey dwarf rabbit with the same pinky glow on its fur as the dove’s breast.
The crowd erupted. Olivia and the others stared at each other open-mouthed. It was impossible. They couldn’t believe their own eyes. How had he made the switch without them noticing?
Suddenly, there was a commotion to the right of the circle and Olivia saw that the girl in the yellow dress had barged her way to the front, much to the annoyance of those she’d shoved aside. The small magician moved around the circle and stopped close to the girl. He leaned forward and produced a marble from each of her ears. The girl looked unimpressed. Then he asked with a grin, “Are you sure you haven’t lost something?”
The girl shook her head with a jaunty confidence, before hesitating and feeling in one pocket and then another. The boy watched her with a look of friendly amusement, but the panicked girl’s face contorted with rage as her search failed to yield the thing she was looking for.
“Give it back!” she shouted in an accent that was Scottish but with just a trace of something more exotic. “Give it back, you nasty little pickpocket!”
Unfazed and still smiling, the boy held up a sapphire necklace that caught the bright sunlight and sparkled as if it was dancing. The crowd oohed, and a small child asked, “Is it real?”
“Of course not, it’s just pretend,” said her mum, smiling.
“It looks real,” said Eel.
The girl was certainly behaving as if it was real. “You’re a thief,” she shouted at the boy, her dark eyes blazing. Her voice rose to a screech. “He sent you to steal it back, didn’t he? You’re a sneaky thief.”
Confusion crossed the boy’s face. He suddenly looked uncertain and vulnerable, and Olivia felt sorry for him. She’d seen enough magicians when she’d been with the travelling circus to know that he wasn’t a thief. Filching the necklace without the girl knowing had just been part of his magic act, done to amaze the audience and make them whoop and clap.
“No, he’s not,” she said sharply to the girl. “It’s just a trick. He’s not going to keep it.”
The boy smiled gratefully at Olivia and nodded vigorously, but the girl glared at her as if she wanted to kill her.
“Who do you think you are to interfere?” she snapped. “Keep your stuck-up nose out of it.”
“Evie…”said her older sister warningly as she appeared at her side.
“You’re the one being rude, and you seem to make a habit of it,” replied Olivia hotly. She felt Georgia’s calming hand on her sleeve. The girl’s fists clenched and her eyes sparkled dangerously.
“Please,” said the boy quietly, “I didn’t mean to upset you. Take your necklace and look after it well if it’s so precious to you.” He held it out to the angry girl. She snatched it from his hand and pushed her way out of the circle.
She was followed by her sister, who had turned scarlet with embarrassment. Olivia heard her mutter, “I thought we were trying to keep a low profile, Evie,” as they passed. The crowd tutted at them, and the boy looked crushed. He knew that the mood was fatally broken; the act ruined.
“Show over,” he said quietly and began to pack up his things. The crowd drifted away towards a young ventriloquist whose dummy was dressed like a naughty schoolboy. Aeysha pulled at Olivia’s sleeve and pointed at her watch. They had about five minutes to get to Waverley Station to meet the London train.
Olivia felt reluctant to hurry away. She felt sorry for the boy and she was fascinated by his skill. But there was something more. She had an uncanny feeling that she knew him from somewhere. She wondered what show the boy was appearing in at the Fringe. Instead of following the others, she stepped towards him.
“You were amazing,” she said shyly. The boy grinned. There was something about his manner, and in particular his grin, that was really very familiar.
“So were you; you were brave to say what you did to that girl,” said the boy and he leaned forward and plucked a ruby earring from each of her ears.
“How do you do that?” asked Olivia wonderingly.
The boy put a finger to his lips. “It’s my secret,” he said. “But things are not always what they appear. You can’t always trust your eyes.”
They both jumped as a shout came from a few metres away. “LIVY!” bawled Eel at the top of her lungs.
“We’re going to be late!” yelled Georgia.
“I’ve got to go,” said Olivia apologetically and she ran to catch up with the others. She suddenly realised that she had forgotten to ask the boy his name or which show he was in, but she didn’t have time to go back now. She would have to comb through the Fringe brochure and see if she could spot a likely show.
The girls ran down into the station just as the London train pulled in.
“Phew, lucky it’s a bit late,” said Aeysha.
“That magician was totally ace,” said Georgia, “even if that girl was incredibly rude.”
“He was mega,” said Eel. “I wish he could be in our show. He’d fit in so well, and be a real draw. We could do with some real magic in a show called Enchantment. Maybe we should tell Jack and Gran about him?”
“But he’s not a Swan,” said Aeysha.
“I’m not sure that would matter,” said Olivia. “And Eel’s right, a show about magic ought to have some in it.”
“I just meant it seems odd to have somebody we don’t know and who isn’t connected with the Swan in the Swan Circus,” said Aeysha.
“Yes,” said Georgia. “Being a Swan is like being part of a real family.” She said it quite fiercely. Eighteen months ago, Georgia’s dad had left her mum and, although she loved her mum, she missed her dad and still hadn’t got used to being a family of two rather than three. Aeysha recognised something wistful in Georgia’s voice and smiled sympathetically at her friend, but Olivia wasn’t really listening. She was trying to think who it was the boy had reminded her of. It wasn’t so much how he looked but the way he moved, his mannerisms and his smile.
People were starting to get off the train and walk up the platform.
“Come on, Livy. I can see Gran and Kylie and Will,” said Eel. “And there’s your mum, Georgia!”
Eel started waving madly and almost knocked over a placard for the Edinburgh Evening News. Olivia was struck by the headline: Serial Jewel Thief Foiled. Police now have fingerprintlead. She thought it sounded like an Enid Blyton novel.
Olivia watched as Eel shook her chestnut curls like a dog, before running towards her friends and flinging herself into her grandmother’s arms, grinning broadly. In that instant Olivia realised who the boy reminded her of: Eel. And if he looked like Eel then he looked like Jack, too. Everybody always said how similar Eel and Jack were, whereas Olivia took after her mother, Toni. She remembered seeing a photograph of Jack that had been taken when he was about ten. Maybe her mind was playing tricks on her, but she’d swear that Jack and the boy were like two peas in a pod. She suddenly felt very strange and she didn’t hear her dad come up and touch her on the shoulder.
“Can you hurry everyone up, Liv? Pablo’s parked the bus on a yellow line and is fending off traffic wardens with charm and a pretend lack of English. We can’t afford to get a parking ticket.”
Olivia turned towards her father.
“Are you all right, chick?” he asked, seeing how pensive she was. “You look as if you’ve seen a ghost.”
“I’m fine,” insisted Olivia. She peered at her dad. He looked pale and vulnerable, as if he hadn’t slept well. She suddenly remembered the date. If her mum hadn’t died in a plane crash when Olivia was five and Eel just a baby, it would have been her birthday today. In all the excitement of being in Edinburgh, she had completely forgotten. She knew that Jack wouldn’t want her to make a big deal out of it, but she also knew that he still missed Toni more than he could say. She reached for his hand and squeezed it.
“You’re the best dad in the whole world,” she said, “and I love you loads.”
“It must be around here somewhere,” said Jack. His voice was tight with frustration.
“Maybe you’re not reading the map right, Dad,” said Eel helpfully. “Shall I do it? I’m very good at map-reading.”
“I think your father knows how to read a map, Eel,” said Alicia. “He managed to navigate his way out of the Idaho wilderness without your help,” she added. What she didn’t say was that the days after his light aircraft had crashed and he’d been missing, presumed dead, had been some of the worst of their lives.
Alicia sat behind Pablo, who was driving the old bus that Jack had hired for the summer. Dressed in her trademark dark-green velvet skirt, Alicia still looked as crisp as an apple even after the long journey from London to Edinburgh and even though she was suffering badly from the arthritis that had prematurely ended her stage career.
Everybody else looked wrecked. William Todd had spilled cranberry juice all down his shirt and looked as if he had had a sticky encounter with a vampire; Kylie had eaten so much chocolate on the train that she now felt both sick and homesick. Emmy Lovedale had just discovered that she had left her beloved teddy bear, Mr Bossyboots, on the train and began to wail. Georgia’s mum, Lydia, who was there as chaperone, tried to soothe her by saying she would call Lost Property as soon as they had settled into the house. The huge pile of rucksacks and sleeping bags on the floor of the bus made them look like a group of refugees.
Not that anyone minded. Alicia, or Miss Swan as the children called her, liked the Swans always to look neat and professional, but although the children would be representing the school in Edinburgh they were also on their summer holidays and Alicia knew that they needed to relax. During term-time the Swans’ lives were highly pressured: not only did they have to do all their school work and take the public exams that all children took, but they also took part in daily vocational classes, including acting, dancing and singing, and often worked professionally too, both in the West End and in movies and on TV.
The rest of the Swans began the final part of their journey in high spirits. Jack and Pablo took everyone up Calton Hill and they were all hugely impressed by the big top. They met up with Kasha and his band, who would be providing live music for the show as well as helping Pablo and Jack with the rigging. Kasha, who was sixteen, had just left the Swan. He’d already signed to a record label and would start work on his first album in the autumn. He and his friends, Ryan and Jazz, had been in Edinburgh for a couple of days helping Jack and Pablo erect the tent. They were sleeping in the living room of Kasha’s aunt’s little flat in the New Town.
Next, Jack suggested that the Swans go and settle into the rented house, have a bowl of pasta and all gather later at the tent for the technical rehearsal.
The children piled back on to the bus, laughing and jostling. Georgia and Will led a riotous singalong of “We’re all going on a summer holiday”. They squealed when they spotted a poster for their own show in a sweet-shop window, making Alicia put her hands over her ears, saying that they sounded like overexcited piglets.
“It just looks so lovely,” said Kylie dreamily, who had quickly forgotten about feeling sick.
“I’d go and see us,” said Eel.
“Let’s hope other people feel the same,” said Alicia. “We need to sell lots of tickets. It’s a big risk doing a show at the Fringe, so many companies lose a great deal of money.”
Soon they found themselves stuck in traffic on the Lothian Road just outside one of the big hotels.
Georgia nudged Olivia. “Look, it’s that collie dog again. I wonder where his mistress is.” The dog was sitting patiently down a side passage near the front of the hotel.
“Maybe she’s in the hotel?” said Olivia. “Anyway, how do you know it’s the same dog? One collie looks much like another to me.”
