Contents
Guide
Copyright 2016 by Robert Beatty
Cover illustration 2016 by Alexander Jansson
Cover design by Maria Elias
Designed by Maria Elias
Excerpt from Serafina and the Splintered Heart copyright 2017 by Robert Beatty
All rights reserved. Published by Disney Hyperion, an imprint of Disney Book Group. 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 written permission from the publisher. For information address Disney Hyperion, 125 West End Avenue, New York, New York 10023.
ISBN 978-1-4847-7869-2
Visit www.DisneyBooks.com
Contents
This book is dedicated to you, the readers who helped spread the word about Serafina and the Black Cloak and, in so doing, made this second book possible.
And to Jennifer, Camille, Genevieve, and Elizabeth: my co-conspirators, co-creators, and the loves of my life.
Biltmore Estate
Asheville, North Carolina
1899
Three weeks after defeating the Man in the Black Cloak
S erafina stalked through the underbrush of the moonlit forest, slinking low to the ground, her eyes fixed on her prey. Just a few feet in front of her, a large wood rat gnawed on a beetle hed dug up. Her heart beat strong and steady in her chest, marking her slow and quiet creep toward the rat. Her muscles buzzed, ready to pounce. But she did not rush. Swiveling her shoulders back and forth to fine-tune the angle of her attack, she waited for just the right moment. When the rat bent down to pick up another beetle, she leapt.
The rat caught a glimpse of her out of the corner of his eye just as she sprang. It was beyond her ken why so many animals of the forest froze in terror when she pounced. If death by tooth and claw came leaping at her out of the darkness, shed fight. Or shed run. Shed do something. Little woodland creatures like rats and rabbits and chipmunks werent known for their boldness of heart, but what was freezing in sheer terror going to do?
As she dropped onto the rat, she snatched him up quicker than a whiskerblink and clutched him in her hand. And now that it was well past too late, he started squirming, biting, and scratching, his furry little body becoming a wriggling snake, his tiny heart racing at a terrific pace. There it is, she thought, feeling the thumpty-thumpty of his heartbeat in her bare hand. Theres the fight. It quickened her pulse and stirred her senses. Suddenly, she could detect everything in the forest around herthe sound of a tree frog moving on a branch thirty feet behind her, the reedy buzz of a lonely timberdoodle in the distance, and the glimpse of a bat swishing through the starlit sky above the broken canopy of the trees.
It was all for practice, of course, the prowling and the pouncing, the stalking of prey and the snatching hold. She didnt kill the wild things she hunted, didnt need to, but they didnt know that, darn it! She was terror! She was death! So why at the last moment of her attack did they freeze? Why didnt they flee?
Serafina sat down on the forest floor with her back against an old, gnarled, lichen-covered oak tree and held the rat in her clenched fist on her lap.
Then she slowly opened her hand.
The rat darted away as fast as he could, but she snatched him up and brought him back to her lap again.
She held the rat tight for several seconds and then opened her hand once more.
This time, the rat did not run. He sat on her hand, trembling and panting, too confused and exhausted to move.
She lifted the terrified rodent a little closer on her open hand, tilted her head, and studied him. The wood rat didnt look like the nasty gray sewer varmints she was used to catching in the basement of Biltmore Estate. This particular rat had a scarred tear in his left ear. Hed encountered some trouble before. And with his dark little eyes and the tremulous whiskers of his long, pointy nose, he seemed more like a cute, chubby brown mouse than the proper vermin on which she had earned her title. She could almost imagine a little hat on his head and a buttoned vest. She felt a pang of guilt that shed caught him, but she also knew that if he tried to run again, her hand would snatch him up before she even thought about it. It wasnt a decision. It was a reflex.
As the little rat tried to catch his breath, his eyes darted to and fro for a way out. But he didnt dare. He knew that as soon as he tried to run, shed grab him again, that it was the nature of her kind to play with him, to paw him, to claw him, until he was finally dead.
But she looked at the rat and then set him on the forest floor. Sorry, little fellowjust practicing my skills.
The rat gazed up at her in confusion.
Go ahead, she said gently.
The rat glanced toward the thistle thicket.
There aint no trick in it, she said.
The rat didnt seem to believe her.
You go on home, now, she told him. Just move slowly away at first, not too fastthats the way of it. And keep your eyes and ears open next time, even if you got a beetle to chew on, you hear? There are far meaner things in these woods than me.
Astonished, the torn-eared wood rat rubbed his little hands over his face repeatedly and bobbed his head, almost as if he was bowing. She snorted a little laugh through her nose, which finally startled the rat into action. He quickly got his wits about him and scampered into the thicket.
Have a good evenin, now, she said. She reckoned hed bolster his memory of his courage the farther he got away from her and have a good story to tell his wife and little ones by the time he got home for supper. She smiled as she imagined him telling a great and twisty tale with his family gathered around, how he was in the forest just minding his own business, gnawing on a beetle, when a vicious predator pounced upon him and he had to fight for his every breath. She wondered if shed be a beast of ferocious power in the story. Or just a girl.
At that moment, she heard a sound from above like an autumn breeze flowing through the tops of the trees. But there wasnt a breeze. The midnight air was chilled and quiet and perfectly still, like God was holding his breath.
She heard a delicate, almost gossamer, whisper-like murmur. She looked up, but all she could see were the branches of the trees. Rising to her feet, she brushed off the simple green work dress that Mrs. Vanderbilt had given her the day before and walked through the forest, listening for the sound. She tried to determine the direction it was coming from. She tilted her head left and then right, but the sound seemed to have no position. She made her way over to a rocky outcropping, where the ground fell steeply away into a forested valley. From here she could see a great distance, miles yonder across the mist to the silhouettes of the Blue Ridge Mountains on the other side. A thin layer of silvery white clouds glowing with light passed slowly in front of the moon. The brightness of the moon cast a wide-arcing halo in the feathery clouds, shone through them, and threw a long, jagged shadow onto the ground behind her.