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David Almond - Skellig

Here you can read online David Almond - Skellig full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2011, publisher: Random House Children's Books, genre: Romance novel / Children. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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David Almond Skellig
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    Skellig
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    Random House Children's Books
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    2011
  • ISBN:
    9780385729888
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Unhappy about his baby sisters illness and the chaos of moving into a dilapidated old house, Michael retreats to the garage and finds a mysterious stranger who is something like a bird and something like an angel.

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Skellig by David Almond FOR FREYA GRACE Chapter 1 I FOUND HIM IN THE - photo 1

Skellig

by David Almond

FOR FREYA GRACE

Chapter 1

I FOUND HIM IN THE GARAGE ON A Sunday afternoon It was the day after we moved - photo 2

I FOUND HIM IN THE GARAGE ON A Sunday afternoon. It was the day after we moved into Falconer Road. The winter was ending. Mum had said wed be moving just in time for the spring. Nobody else was there. Just me. The others were inside the house with Dr. Death, worrying about the baby.

He was lying there in the darkness behind the tea chests, in the dust and dirt. It was as if hed been there forever. He was filthy and pale and dried out and I thought he was dead. I couldnt have been more wrong. Id soon begin to see the truth about him, that thered never been another creature like him in the world.

We called it the garage because thats what the real estate agent, Mr. Stone, called it. It was more like a demolition site or a rubbish dump or like one of those ancient warehouses they keep pulling down at the wharf. Stone led us down the garden, tugged the door open, and shined his little flashlight into the gloom. We shoved our heads in at the doorway with him.

You have to see it with your minds eye, he said. See it cleaned, with new doors and the roof repaired. See it as a wonderful two-car garage.

He looked at me with a stupid grin on his face.

Or something for you, lada hideaway for you and your pals. What about that, eh?

I looked away. I didnt want anything to do with him. All the way round the house it had been the same. Just see it in your minds eye. Just imagine what could be done. All the way round I kept thinking of the old man, Ernie Myers, that had lived here on his own for years. Hed been dead nearly a week before they found him under the table in the kitchen. Thats what I saw when Stone told us about seeing with the minds eye. He even said it when we got to the dining room and there was an old cracked toilet sitting there in the corner behind a plywood screen. I just wanted him to shut up, but he whispered that toward the end Ernie couldnt manage the stairs. His bed was brought in here and a toilet was put in so everything was easy for him. Stone looked at me like he didnt think I should know about such things. I wanted to get out, to get back to our old house again, but Mum and Dad took it all in. They went on like it was going to be some big adventure. They bought the house. They started cleaning it and scrubbing it and painting it. Then the baby came too early. And here we were.

Chapter 2

I NEARLY GOT INTO THE GARAGE that Sunday morning I took my own flashlight and - photo 3

I NEARLY GOT INTO THE GARAGE that Sunday morning. I took my own flashlight and shined it in. The outside doors to the back lane must have fallen off years ago and there were dozens of massive planks nailed across the entrance. The timbers holding the roof were rotten and the roof was sagging in. The bits of the floor you could see between the rubbish were full of cracks and holes. The people that took the rubbish out of the house were supposed to take it out of the garage as well, but they took one look at the place and said they wouldnt go in it even for extra money. There were old chests of drawers and broken washbasins and bags of cement, ancient doors leaning against the walls, deck chairs with the cloth seats rotted away. Great rolls of rope and cable hung from nails. Heaps of water pipes and great boxes of rusty nails were scattered on the floor. Everything was covered in dust and spiders webs. There was mortar that had fallen from the walls. There was a little window in one of the walls but it was filthy and there were rolls of cracked linoleum standing in front of it. The place stank of rot and dust. Even the bricks were crumbling like they couldnt bear the weight anymore. It was like the whole thing was sick of itself and would collapse in a heap and have to get bulldozed away.

I heard something scratching in one of the corners, and something scuttling about; then it all stopped and it was just dead quiet in there.

I stood daring myself to go in.

I was just going to slip inside when I heard Mum shouting at me.

Michael! What you doing?

She was at the back door.

Didnt we tell you to wait till were sure its safe?

I stepped back and looked at her.

Well, didnt we? she shouted.

Yes, I said.

So keep out! All right?

I shoved the door and it lurched half shut on its single hinge.

All right? she yelled.

All right, I said. Yes. All right. All right.

Do you not think weve got more to worry about than stupid you getting crushed in a stupid garage?

Yes.

You just keep out, then! Right?

Right. Right, right, right.

Then I went back into the wilderness we called a garden and she went back to the stupid baby.

Chapter 3

THE GARDEN WAS ANOTHER PLACE that was supposed to be wonderful There were - photo 4

THE GARDEN WAS ANOTHER PLACE that was supposed to be wonderful. There were going to be benches and a table and a swing. There were going to be goalposts painted on one of the walls by the house. There was going to be a pond with fish and frogs in it. But there was none of that. There were just nettles and thistles and weeds and half-bricks and lumps of stone. I stood there kicking the heads off a million dandelions.

After a while, Mum shouted was I coming in for lunch and I said no, I was staying out in the garden. She brought me a sandwich and a can of Coke.

Sorry its all so rotten and were all in such rotten moods, she said.

She touched my arm.

You understand, though. Dont you, Michael? Dont you?

I shrugged.

Yes, I said.

She touched me again and sighed.

Itll be great again when everythings sorted out, she said.

I sat on a pile of bricks against the house wall. I ate the sandwich and drank the Coke. I thought of Random Road where wed come from, and all my old pals like Leakey and Coot. Theyd be up on the top field now, playing a match thatd last all day.

Then I heard the doorbell ringing, and heard Dr. Death coming in. I called him Dr. Death because his face was gray and there were black spots on his hands and he didnt know how to smile. Id seen him lighting up a cigarette in his car one day as he drove away from our door. They told me to call him Dr. Dan, and I did when I had to speak to him, but inside he was Dr. Death to me, and it fit him much better.

I finished the Coke, waited a minute, then went down to the garage again. I didnt have time to dare myself or to stand there listening to the scratching. I switched the flashlight on, took a deep breath, and tiptoed straight inside.

Something little and black scuttled across the floor. The door creaked and cracked for a moment before it was still. Dust poured through the flashlight beam. Something scratched and scratched in a corner. I tiptoed further in and felt spiderwebs breaking on my brow. Everything was packed in tightancient furniture, kitchen units, rolled-up carpets, pipes and crates and planks. I kept ducking down under the hoses and ropes and duffel bags that hung from the roof. More cobwebs snapped on my clothes and skin. The floor was broken and crumbly. I opened a cupboard an inch, shined the flashlight in, and saw a million wood lice scattering away. I peered down into a great stone jar and saw the bones of some little animal that had died in there. Dead bluebottles were everywhere. There were ancient newspapers and magazines. I shined the flashlight onto one and saw that it came from nearly fifty years ago. I moved so carefully. I was scared every moment that the whole thing was going to collapse. There was dust clogging my throat and nose. I knew theyd be yelling for me soon and I knew Id better get out. I leaned across a heap of tea chests and shined the flashlight into the space behind and thats when I saw him.

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