Book Description
The adventure continues in the Ranger's Apprentice companion trilogy!
Hal and the Herons have done the impossible. This group of outsiders has beaten out the strongest, most skilled young warriors in all of Skandia to win the Brotherband competition. But their celebration comes to an abrupt end when the Skandians' most sacred artifact, the Andomal, is stolen--and the Herons are to blame.
To find redemption they must track down the thief Zavac and recover the Andomal. But that means traversing stormy seas, surviving a bitter winter, and battling a group of deadly pirates willing to protect their prize at all costs. Even Brotherband training and the help of Skandia's greatest warrior may not be enough to ensure that Hal and his friends return home with the Andomal--or their lives.
Hal and the Herons have done the impossible. This group of outsiders has beaten out the strongest, most skilled young warriors in all of Skandia to win the Brotherband competition. But their celebration comes to an abrupt end when the Skandians' most sacred artifact, the Andomal, is stolen--and the Herons are to blame.
To find redemption they must track down the thief Zavac and recover the Andomal. But that means traversing stormy seas, surviving a bitter winter, and battling a group of deadly pirates willing to protect their prize at all costs. Even Brotherband training and the help of Skandia's greatest warrior may not be enough to ensure that Hal and his friends return home with the Andomal--or their lives.
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
John Flanagan lives in Manly, Australia.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
We can’t keep this up,” Stig said.
Hal
looked at him, eyes red-rimmed from salt water and exhaustion. He’d
been at the tiller of the Heron for the best part of ten days now. The
storm winds had continued to sweep out of the southwest throughout that
time, keeping them on a constant starboard tack—which was all to the
good, as there had been no opportunity to repair the yardarm broken in
the final brotherband race.
As
first mate, Stig had tried to give Hal short breaks whenever he could.
But the wind-driven waves had grown so high and steep that they were
regularly breaking over the small ship and flooding her. Everyone on the
crew was forced to bail continuously. They worked in teams of four, an
hour on, an hour off. When a team’s shift was over, the boys would fall,
soaked and exhausted, to the deck, trying to snatch a few minutes’
sleep, heedless of the freezing seawater constantly smashing over them.
So Stig hadn’t had much time to help Hal—not that Hal liked to hand over
control. He felt the responsibility for the safety of his ship and crew
deeply.
Stig glanced doubtfully back over the wake the Heron was carving. There was no pursuit in sight. But they’d be there somewhere.
“D’you think we’re far enough away from Hallasholm now?” he asked.
In
the hope of recovering the Andomal, Skandia’s most sacred artifact, the
boys had left the Skandian capital against the orders of the Oberjarl,
Erak Starfollower. And they’d taken Hal’s ship, Heron, which Erak had
planned to confiscate. The boys were in no doubt that Erak would order a
pursuit, and if they were caught, Stig didn’t like to think what their
punishment might be.
“I don’t want to risk them catching us,” Hal said.
Stig shrugged, and looked at the angry seas around them.
“They won’t catch us if we sink,” he said. “But that won’t do us a lot of good.”
“True,” Hal said. “They may not have even left harbor yet. This storm’s been blowing nonstop since we got away.”
Whether
they were being pursued or not, it was definitely time to look for a
safe anchorage. Hal sensed that the wind had increased in force in the
past half hour. White spray was being blown from the top of the waves.
He gestured for the bigger boy to take the tiller, then ducked under the
canvas screen into the small sheltered nook in the stern of the ship
where he kept his navigation equipment and notes—notes he had
assiduously collected during the brotherband training period.
He
studied the chart for the eastern coast of the Stormwhite Sea for some
minutes before he found what he wanted. The majority of bays and coves
along this coast faced south—almost directly into the wind and sea. But
then he spotted a small, almost insignificant gap that cut into the
coastline, with its entrance facing north and with high ground on the
southwestern side to provide shelter from the wind and sea. It looked an
ideal place to set up a camp until the weather improved.
He
carefully wrapped the notes in their waterproof oilcloth cover and
ducked out into the open again. A breaking wave drenched him and set him
spluttering. Then he grabbed hold of the backstay and climbed onto the
stern bulwark, balancing easily against the ship’s plunging motion,
studying the coastline a few kilometers away.
There!
He could make out one of the landmarks noted on the chart, a high
headland, cliffs on either side, and denuded of trees. The dark granite
rock was obvious against the gray-green of the pines that covered most
of the coastline.
He
dropped lightly to the deck and took the tiller once more. Thorn,
sitting huddled in his soaked sheepskin jacket with his back to the
mast, had noticed his movements. He came aft now to join the two boys.
“Thinking of putting in to shore?” he asked.
“There’s a little sheltered bay about three kilometers southwest,” Hal said. “I’m heading for that.”
Thorn
nodded. Not that Hal, as skirl of the Heron, needed his approval in any
way. A skirl, even a young one, had absolute authority on his own ship.
But Hal was glad that Thorn agreed. It would be foolish to ignore his
opinion. The old sea wolf had seen a lot more storms at sea than either
Hal or Stig.
In the
event, they very nearly missed the entrance to the bay. Visibility was
bad, with the air full of flying spray and rain, and the small gap
between the headlands guarding the entrance had a high, timbered hill
directly behind it, making it look as if the coastline was
uninterrupted. At the last moment, Thorn’s keen eyesight noticed a flash
of sandy beach in the gap as Heron rose on a wave. He threw out his
shortened right arm, pointing with the wooden hook Hal had fashioned for
him.
“There it is!”
Stig
and Hal exchanged a quick glance. There was no need to give Stig
orders. He scrambled forward, beckoning Stefan and Jesper to join him at
the ropes holding the reefed sail taut against the wind. As Hal brought
the ship round to port, so that the wind was coming from astern, the
three crew members eased the sail so that it stood out almost at right
angles to the hull.
Heron,
with the wind and sea now behind her, began to swoop over the rollers
like a gull. It was an exhilarating sensation but Hal kept a watchful
eye astern for rogue waves. If one came at them harder and faster than
the others, the ship could easily be swamped from behind. There was no
relaxing in this sort of weather.
After
several minutes, he saw Thorn glance at him in an unspoken question and
he nodded. They’d come close enough to the coast now to swing back to a
course that would take them into the bay. As he heaved on the tiller
and brought the bow round to starboard, Stig and the other two hauled in
on the sail, setting it taut to the wind. The motion of the ship
changed again, going from surging and swooping ahead of the wind back to
the rolling, shuddering impacts of the waves coming from the beam. Hal
glanced ahead and gauged his leeway—the amount the wind was setting the
ship downwind and off course. He adjusted the ship’s heading until he
could see that he’d clear the entrance to the bay easily.
They
glided into the bay. As the high surrounding cliffs masked the wind and
waves, the Heron rode more upright, cutting smoothly through the calm
waters. The boys relaxed as the motion eased. They sprawled on the
rowing benches, setting aside the buckets they had been using to bail
the water out. Only now, looking at them, did Hal realize how close they
had been to utter exhaustion. He’d decided to look for shelter not a
minute too soon, he reflected.
At
the bottom of the bay was a strip of sandy beach, with wooded hills
rising behind it. Hal pointed the bow toward it and the Heron responded,
the bow wave chuckling down the hull, audible now that the noise of the
storm had abated.
“Welcome to Shelter Bay,” he said to Stig.
“Is that what it’s called?”
Hal gave him a tired grin. “It is now.”
Initially,
they slept aboard the beached ship, with its heavy tarpaulin cover
rigged as a tent to protect them from the weather. They had spent the
previous ten days bracing themselves against the wild movements of the
Heron, even when they slept. It was a welcome change to be able to relax
completely, without having to subconsciously guard against a sudden
lurch or roll that might pitch them against the hard timbers of the
hull. But by the second morning, they set to work constructing a more
permanent shelter, similar to the framed tent they had built for their
brotherband training.
When
they had retrieved their weapons and personal belongings from their
brotherband campsite, Stig had experienced a flash of inspiration. He
had stripped the canvas cover they had used as a roof and bundled it up,
stowing it aboard the Heron.
“Never know when it might come in handy,” he’d said.
Now
Hal and the others appreciated his foresight. They cut and trimmed
saplings from the forest to make wall and roof frames, then stretched
the canvas tightly over the top to make a snug roof. The walls were
lower than their original tent’s but the pitched roof gave them ample
headroom inside. Mud-daubed, woven sidewalls did a reasonable job
keeping out the worst of the weather, although invariably there were
chinks that let in the keening wind when it hit full power. But t...
Product Details
- Reading level: Ages 10 and up
- Hardcover: 432 pages
- Publisher: Philomel (May 1, 2012)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0399256202
- ISBN-13: 978-0399256202
- Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.4 x 1.6 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
No comments:
Post a Comment