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Michael is a young bookworm who really believes in magic. But even he isn't prepared for what lies behind the secret door in the school library: Treeshallow, a parallel land where all known stories originate from.
When Michael runs into the residents of Treeshallow, he finds them reminiscent of characters he's read about in books.
Michael's appearance there isn't an accident. After he sets to find the famous wizard Ramble, the two learn that the school librarian, Mr. Rogers, has been taken captive by a band of demons known as the Desrai.
But even with their combined forces, can the two save Rogers from the clutches of evil?
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022
I. Michael
1. Ghost Spheres
2. The Note
3. Treeshallow
4. Mushroom Sweets
5. Hogwash and Hokum
6. The Tale of Before
7. Small, The Dragon
8. The Journey Begins
9. Crossroads
10. The Underons
11. The Royal City
12. The King of Treeshallow
II. Ramble
13. Princess Hurella
14. Small Takes Flight!
15. Gossip and Rumours
16. Contact Locate
17. The King's Madness
18. Damaged Wings
19. Linking the Chain
20. Lord Tummet
21. Full Barrels
22. Chains and Scarves
23. Preparations
24. Defending the City
25. The Desrai Arrive
26. Swords and Thorns
27. Ramble's Magic
28. Return
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About the Author
Copyright (C) 2018 Kathryn Wells
Layout design and Copyright (C) 2022 by Next Chapter
Published 2022 by Next Chapter
Cover art by CoverMint
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.
Through stories, doorways will open that you never knew existed.
Michael launched himself through the library's sturdy double doors, narrowly missing a well-aimed apple thrown by one of the boys in the year above him. The apple's juice splattered over the tiled floor as it made contact, but at least Michael's uniform had escaped the mess for once.
Mr Rogers, the school librarian, looked up from his desk as the doors banged shut, pen poised over the enormous catalogue that contained the details of every book the library held. He examined Michael critically, taking in the boy's hurried breath and crumpled appearance, and shook his greying head. 'So, you're back again,' he said.
The old man had a short, stubbed nose that looked almost clownish against his serious eyes, and always wore a kilt, despite not being even remotely Scottish, as far as Michael knew.
It was Mr Rogers's job to make sure that every book was neatly in place at all times, unless it was being borrowed or read – a job he took very seriously. If a book stood out even an inch from the others, then Mr Rogers would rush over and put it back in position, as though he feared something might happen to him if he left it.
Michael sighed and made an attempt to straighten his shirt. 'You know this is the only place where I'm safe from them at breaktime, and anyway, this is the only place I want to be.' He eyed the bookshelves around him, paying particular attention to his favourite section: fantasy. It was to the right of Mr Rogers's desk and most of the books resembled giant slabs of paper that would take the majority of people a year to read. 'Have you got any new books in about magic yet?' he asked.
'No, the one you returned last time is the newest one we've got. What happened to the book you told me you got for your birthday yesterday? Don't tell me you've finished it already?'
Michael looked away. 'I might have stayed up all night reading it,' he said quietly. 'You won't tell Miss Rowan, will you? She'll speak to my mum for sure, and then I'll never be able to read in bed again!'
Mr Rogers laughed. 'No, I won't tell Miss Rowan. Besides, I've spent many a night reading too…though that might be why I have so many wrinkles creeping up on me.' He looked wistfully off into the distance, giving the impression of remembering his younger days. Michael coughed, and Mr Rogers gave a slight start. 'Oh, yes, where were we? Books. Now, I have got a new one in about the Greek myths. Are you familiar with them?' he asked, gazing at the shelf behind him and pulling out a book still wrapped in cellophane.
'A little bit, but I've never actually read any,' Michael said. 'They're about the gods who live on Mount Olympus, aren't they?'
'Most of them, but not all,' Mr Rogers said. 'Actually, my favourite is the tale of Medusa.'
'Medusa? Isn't she the one with snakes for hair?'
'Indeed she is; I thought you might recognise her name. It is one of the more well-known myths, after all. There are lots more in the book, some that even I haven't heard of before. Feel like giving it a try?'
Michael eyed the book hungrily. His interest was always stirred when he found a book that contained stories that most people had never heard of. Mr Rogers grinned at him, revealing two very crooked front teeth, and without waiting for an answer, unwrapped the cellophane around the book. He stamped it with the date he wanted it returned by, and then dropped it into Michael's eager hands.
Michael could smell the pages, the crisp scent of paper and freshly printed ink that only came from new books. 'Thank you, Mr Rogers,' he said, clutching it to his body and running off to find his favourite corner of the library where he could read uninterrupted until the end of break.
He opened the cover, turning the pages until he reached the chapter list. The one about Medusa was halfway through, but as Mr Rogers had said it was his favourite (and as he usually had good judgement regarding these things), Michael turned straight to it.
Medusa was a creature called a Gorgon, with the torso and face of a woman, but the tail of a snake. She had a gaze that could turn any living thing into stone if you looked her in the eyes, and her hair was made up of live snakes.
Instantly, Michael found that he was being drawn into the story, turning page after page, reading about all the people who had tried to challenge her and had been turned to stone, quite forgetting that the bell was about to ring.
When it did, he jumped violently, almost losing his place. Quickly, he took a bookmark out of his pocket and marked his page, before making his way back to the classroom where Miss Rowan was waiting.
Instead of smiling at him like she usually did, her brow creased and a frown twitched at the corners of her mouth. But that wasn't all that was strange. The polka dots on her dress were moving around, floating and rippling across the material. No one else seemed to have noticed. Then Michael realised that the dress had been plain earlier that morning, and the truth about what he was seeing began to sink in.
Not good. Trying to hide his concern, he took his seat at the back of the class, watching the polka dots dart around, getting bigger by the moment. They weren't actually dots, they were ghost spheres – balls of ghostly matter that, for some reason, only he could ever see. They were attracted to people in bad moods, and apparently Miss Rowan was in a very bad mood.
'It seems,' she said, speaking slowly and fixing her gaze firmly on Michael, 'that some of you didn't take your work on writing about what you would like to be in the future seriously. I would like to remind you all that things like wizards, spells and magical creatures do not exist, and that pretending they are real is what only the infant classes do.'
A sinking feeling hit his stomach. Although she was addressing the whole class, he knew her words were directed solely at him. For some stupid reason, he had been compelled to write about his ambition to train as a wizard. He knew that to everyone else, the idea would seem ridiculous, but he'd believed that wizards existed ever since he was a toddler. And after reading the book his father had given him for his birthday, it had only served to convince him further.
On the outside, the book looked like any other, but the details inside were so well written that it sounded like the author had actually been there. The story was simple; a wizard named Ramble, the most powerful in the Kingdom of Treeshallow, had been enlisted by the king to battle a horde of demons known as the Desrai. What was puzzling about it, though, was that Michael seemed to know things that hadn't even been written down. Like the king's daughter, who was only mentioned once because she had been taken somewhere safe away from the battle. Michael knew there was more to her tale, he knew that Ramble had once cured her of a terrible illness that had swept the town, and that her mother had contracted it too, but the disease had progressed too much for Ramble to save her.
Michael had searched the entire book afterwards, trying to find some trace of it; there simply wasn't one. Yet he was sure it had happened, just as he was sure his mother had been angry at his father that morning for falling asleep at his desk instead of sorting through the bills.
As Michael shook his mind back to reality, he noticed that Miss Rowan was now standing an inch from his desk. The ghost spheres were even bigger now, and were trying to merge into one. 'Go away,' he told them, hoping that it would work. He'd done it twice before, but there had only been one or two then, not a whole swarm.
The ghost spheres resisted, and now everyone was staring at him. Miss Rowan looked furious.
'I beg your pardon?' she said, her voice cracking.
'I'm sorry, Miss Rowan. I wasn't talking to you. I was talking to…' he faltered, unsure of what to say.
'Talking to who? Some magical creature that only you can see? A unicorn, maybe, or perhaps a dragon?'
'No, they're ghost spheres,' he uttered before he could stop himself. Why had he said that? There were times when telling the truth was necessary, he knew, but this really wasn't one of them.
Miss Rowan sneered, and the classroom erupted in laughter. It was too much for him. He jumped up as tears clogged his eyes, warping his vision so that her hair looked like snakes as hideous as Medusa's, and ran from the room.
He wasn't headed for anywhere in particular, just somewhere to get away, but his feet took him straight to the library. Crashing through the double doors once again, he swept behind the nearest bookshelf and fell to his knees.
'Michael?' Mr Rogers said, peering around the corner at him. 'What's the matter? Why are you here during lesson time?'
Michael wiped his eyes on his sleeve and looked up at him. 'I…I can't tell you. You wouldn't believe me,' he replied with a sniff.
'Oh, I'm very open minded. Why don't you try me?' Mr Rogers said, helping Michael to his feet. He took him over to the desk and pulled out another chair for Michael to sit down in, and found a tin of biscuits in one of the drawers, flourishing it around until Michael reluctantly took one.
As though the biscuit had contained a truth serum, the whole story came spilling out of his mouth before he even had time to swallow. His ability to see the ghost spheres, the story about Wizard Ramble and how he knew things about it he couldn't explain, Miss Rowan berating him for believing that wizards were real, and even his own dream to become one.
Mr Rogers listened silently, and then took a biscuit for himself. 'Well, I can tell you one thing. Wizards are real,' he said, brushing crumbs off his kilt. Michael blinked at him.
'Unfortunately,' he continued, 'Miss Rowan is one of those people who I tend to call "practical minded". Magic is too difficult an idea for her to understand, and if, like you say, she's currently possessed by these ghost spheres, there's no wonder she doesn't believe you.'
'What's so difficult about it?' Michael asked.
'She's a person who needs explanations as to how things work, and given that most people have the idea that magic simply…happens, with no hard or fast rules…she just can't accept it. I know, both you and I are aware that magic has many rules and takes a lot of skill to use, but she doesn't realise that,' Mr Rogers replied.
'You seem to know an awful lot about it,' Michael commented, narrowing his eyes. 'Why? You're not a wizard, are you?'
Mr Rogers smiled, though his eyes looked sad. 'No, I'm not a wizard. But I did know one once, a long time ago before you were born. I believe his name was Ramble, come to think of it.'
'Really? You knew him?' Michael said. 'How?'
Just then the library doors banged open, revealing Miss Rowan. Her expression emitted pure rage, and the ghost spheres on her dress had almost formed into one. Mr Rogers frowned, and then said softly, 'I think it's time for you to leave.'
At first Michael thought Mr Rogers was talking to him, but then he followed his gaze and saw that the ghost spheres were disappearing. As the last one vanished, Miss Rowan shook herself.
'Whatever am I doing in the library?' she said, and then caught sight of Michael and Mr Rogers. 'Mr Rogers, you should know better than to allow a student in here during class time.'
'I do apologise, Miss Rowan,' he replied mildly. 'I've discovered that we have woodworm on one of the bookcases over there. Michael was helping me move the books somewhere else.'
She arched an eyebrow, then gave them a warm smile. 'I suppose I can allow that,' she said finally. 'But make it quick.' With that, she waltzed out of the library, the usual lightness back in her step.
As soon as the sound of Miss Rowan's heels had disappeared down the corridor, Michael turned to Mr Rogers. 'Why didn't you tell me that you could see them too?'
'See what? The woodworm?' Mr Rogers asked, looking intently at the bookshelf as though it really did have them.
'No, the ghost spheres. You must be able to see them, because you told them to leave and they did.'
'Oh, those. Well, until today, I didn't know that you could see them, either,' he said, now going over to the bookshelf and sorting out a trilogy that someone had placed in the incorrect order.
'But that's because I didn't think anyone would believe me,' Michael explained.
'Exactly. I can't very well go around telling just anybody; they'd say I was crazy. If I had known that you could see them, I would have told you. But I didn't, so that's that,' Mr Rogers replied, returning to his desk and sitting behind it.
'But how did you manage to get rid of them so quickly? When I tried, they wouldn't even budge,' Michael said, shifting in his chair.
'When there are as many ghost spheres as that, then you must keep your mind very calm and clear. You have to think of nothing except banishing them.'
'And that's the key to it?'
'More or less. Though it does help to have more experience, I admit. I doubt that I'd have been able to do it at your age. And that was at a time when they were much more frequent,' Mr Rogers said, but then added, almost to himself, 'Yet they do seem to be on the rise again.'
He realised that Michael was staring at him and coughed, slightly embarrassed. 'Anyway, that should be enough time to convince Miss Rowan that we've been moving books. You'd better get back to class.'
Michael stood up, but then remembered that Mr Rogers had known Ramble. That the wizard really was real. 'Can you introduce me? To Ramble, I mean?'
A pained expression crossed the old man's face. 'I'm afraid I've lost track of him over the years. I have no idea where he is,' he said. 'But perhaps you might come across him by yourself one day.'
Miss Rowan didn't say anything to Michael when he got back to class, but she was cheerier in her teaching than she had been for weeks. Usually it took a person days to get back to normal after the ghost spheres lingering around them had been chased away, but she had recovered instantly. Was it really just down to experience and having a clear mind like Mr Rogers said?
As he took his seat at the back of the class and got out his maths book, Michael discovered that something else was bothering him. He thought he would still be stunned that Ramble was real, but the more he considered it, the more it seemed obvious. Hadn't he thought the details in the book were exceptional for a story that wasn't true?
Miss Rowan glanced over, noticing his vacant stare at the wall. Sensing her eyes on him, he started, snapping his pencil lead on the paper. Even if she was back to her usual cheery self, he didn't want to give her any reason to punish him, particularly when his mother always made such a fuss if he was given detention, sometimes banning him from reading for a week.
He stuck his head down and carried on with his work. After a minute, he felt her gaze move to someone else, and let out a small sigh of relieve. Before he could relax, however, she appeared next to him, holding a piece of paper.
'Please make sure you give this to your parents when you get home,' she said, and then added softly, 'I know you like to immerse yourself in stories, Michael. But you must learn how to keep your imagination separate from real life. For your own sake.'
The bell rang, and after hastily packing his things away, he ran out of the door at full speed, without looking back. As soon as he got outside, he spotted his father waiting. Steeling himself, Michael handed over the note. But after a brief scan, his father crumpled it and put it in the nearest bin.
'I don't know what happened, but clearly she has no understanding of how inspiring books can be,' his father said. 'Then again, your mother has never really understood that either,' he added, glancing about as though she might suddenly appear. It made Michael laugh, and as soon as he did, he felt a lot better. His father might not be able to see the ghostly creatures like he could or have a desire to learn magic, but he did know about books. Michael supposed that was where he got his own love for stories from. That, and spending hours during every school holiday helping out in the bookshop that his father owned in town. His mother worked there too, but she dealt with the financial side of things rather than the books themselves. She still enjoyed reading, but for some reason she never got as excited about them as Michael and his father, even if it was a book that they knew was good. His father said it was because she had trouble 'letting herself go', but Michael had never understood what that meant.
Neither of them mentioned the note to his mother when they got back. Instead, they sat down to dinner talking about a new series of books that had arrived at the bookstore. His mother rolled her eyes and smiled as the conversation eventually turned to what the difference was between a wizard and a sorcerer, something that they loved to argue over for hours.
After they had finished, and Michael had been told to go to bed, he slumped down on his mattress in his pyjamas and thought about his conversation with Mr Rogers.
Maybe if Michael asked him at lunch time tomorrow, Mr Rogers would find a way to get in contact with Ramble again so that Michael could meet him. After all, if he really wanted to become a wizard, then there would be no better teacher than him. Ramble was so strong that the demons hadn't even gotten close to the palace, even when the odds had been overwhelmingly against him.
He sighed, thinking about how great it would be to learn magic. Even with a little bit, he would be able to do so much.
'Michael, it's time for sleep,' his father said, knocking on the half open door so as not to disturb him too much. He poked his nose around it and saw Michael with his head in his hands, staring at the floor. 'What's up?'
'It's nothing, dad,' Michael said, sighing again and lying back on his pillows. There was a thump as something dropped off the bed and onto the floor. It was the book Mr Rogers had given him about the Greek myths.
'Tales of Great Olympus, huh?' his father read as he examined the cover, before placing the book on Michael's beside table. 'I was fascinated by the Greek myths too when I was your age. Which one are you reading?'
'The one about Medusa,' he said, 'but I've only just started. All I know is that Medusa is one of the three Gorgon sisters, and that her stare can turn people to stone.'
'Ah, well I won't spoil it for you. I think you'll enjoy it. Don't stay up too late, else your mother will tell me off. She reminds me a bit of Medusa sometimes,' his father replied, dropping his voice. 'Don't tell her I said that, though.'
Michael grinned. His mother was strict, but it was usually because his father got so caught up in the books he was supposed to be shelving that he would forget what he was doing and end up in a muddle.
Saying goodnight, his father winked and closed the door, leaving the bedroom light on. Michael hadn't planned to read that night; the strange events of the day had drained him and made him tired, but now he was curious about the rest of the story. Besides, if it could take his mind off the endless questions about Ramble he had circling around in his head, it would be worth it.
He sat up, punching his pillow into a comfortable position, and picked up the book from the table beside him. Opening it, he found his page and began to read.
The story moved on from Medusa to a young man named Perseus, who was the son of the god Zeus and a human woman called Danae. Zeus ruled over the other gods on a huge mountain known as Olympus, the highest one in Greece. Perseus had never met his father, and, unlike the other sons of gods in the Greek myths – such as Hercules, who had super human strength – Perseus didn't seem to have any powers at all.
As Perseus grew up, he noticed that his mother began to receive attention from King Polydectes, from a land called Seriphos. The king's generous and patient demeanour with her was only an act, as in reality he was a vile and cruel man. It didn't take long for Perseus to realise what King Polydectes was really like, and in an effort to save his mother, he tried to stop them from getting married. However, King Polydectes simply challenged Perseus to a task that he knew he wouldn't survive: to slay Medusa and bring back her head. If he succeeded, then Polydectes vowed to leave his mother alone.
Michael gasped as there was another knock on the door, startled so much that he almost dropped the book on the floor again. He had been so absorbed that he'd forgotten where he was.
'I know you're still awake, Michael,' his mother said outside the room.
Michael let out several large, fake snores. His mother laughed. 'That isn't enough to fool me. Come on, now. I know you were up late last night, and if you do the same again you'll sleep through all of your lessons tomorrow. I doubt Miss Rowan would be very forgiving if that happened.'
Michael pulled a face. He would rather not do anything to upset Miss Rowan again; that would draw the ghost spheres back to her. 'Okay, but let me finish this chapter,' he said, seeing that he only had one more page left before he reached the end.
'Alright, but no more after that. When your father and I come up to bed, I'll be checking.'
He listened to her walk away from the door and go back down the stairs, then he found the torch down by the side of his bed and turned off his main light. He dived under his covers with the book and switched the torch on, having no intention of sleeping until he found out how Perseus would get past Medusa when all she had to do was look at him and he would be turned to stone.