Guest
Contents
* * *
Title Page
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Afterword
Sample Chapters from GIRL IN THE LOCKED ROOM
Buy the Book
Read More from Mary Downing Hahn
About the Author
Connect with HMH on Social Media
Clarion Books
3 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10016
Copyright © 2019 by Mary Downing Hahn
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to trade.permissions@hmhco.com or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
Clarion Books is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
hmhbooks.com
Cover illustration © 2019 by David Curtis
Hand-lettering © 2019 by David Curtis
Cover photographs: © Arcangel/Wendy Stevenson (forest); © Shutterstock/Suzanne Tucker (cradle); © Eky Studio/Shutterstock (background); © Shutterstock/Marcin Perkowski (bird)
Cover design by Opal Roengchai
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Hahn, Mary Downing, author.
Title: Guest : a changeling tale / by Mary Downing Hahn.
Description: Boston ; New York : Clarion Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, [2019] | Summary: Young Mollie traverses eerie, perilous lands to retrieve her baby brother, Thomas, from the Kinde Folke, malicious sprites who snatched him and left a hideous changeling in his place.
Identifiers: LCCN 2018059112 (print) | LCCN 2018061248 (ebook) | ISBN 9780358067337 (E-book) | ISBN 9780358067313 (hardcover)
Subjects: | CYAC: Changelings—Fiction. | Brothers and sisters—Fiction. | Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. | Fantasy.
Classification: LCC PZ7.H1256 (ebook) | LCC PZ7.H1256 Gue 2019 (print) | DDC
[Fic]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018059112
v1.0819
For Collin and Joseph
1
* * *
I WAS IN A TEMPER fit to blow the lid off a kettle of boiling water. And who wouldn’t be? Since sunup, I’d been doing chores. I’d milked the cow, hauled two buckets of water from the well, fed the chickens, and then fought the hens for their eggs. Now I was down on my knees, sweat-soaked and bug-bitten, yanking weeds from the vegetable patch. My hands were caked with mud, and my nose was burned as red as a strawberry. Midges hummed around my face and bit my ears.
Wiping the sweat from my eyes, I yanked a thistle out by its roots, only to see two more hiding in the beans. I scowled at my baby brother, Thomas, who lay nearby on the grass.
“You,” I muttered. “If it weren’t for you, I’d be down the lane, skipping rope with the village girls. But, oh no, I must watch you and do chores as if I were a servant. You’ve ruined my life, that’s what you’ve done. It’s a wicked thing to say, but sometimes I wish you’d never been born!”
Thomas smiled at me and cooed as if I’d praised him. Ashamed, I clapped my hand over my mouth and hoped Mam hadn’t heard me, but she was in the cottage, singing at her loom, weaving soft blankets to keep Thomas warm when winter came.
I watched Thomas playing with his toes and chuckling to himself. Truth to tell, he was a sweet baby. I’d be lying if I said he wasn’t. He never fussed, never cried, he ate what he was fed, and slept the whole night through.
And he was beautiful, even though no one said so. When visitors came, they leaned over the cradle and frowned and scowled and shook their heads.
“’Tis a pity he’s so ugly and puny,” they’d say.
“Oh yes, he’s a sickly one. He’ll not live past his first year.”
“And such a nasty temper he’s got.”
“No good will come of him.”
“If I caught a fish half as ugly as that poor babby, I’d throw it back.”
It was as if each visitor tried to come up with a worse insult than the one before.
And all the while, Mam and Dadoe and I smiled and nodded in agreement, for all of us, even the youngest, knew it was bad luck to compliment a baby. Since the day my brother was born, I’d been warned not to speak of his pretty curls or his blue eyes or his dimples. I mustn’t boast of his sweet nature or praise him in any way.
It was the Kinde Folke we feared. Although no one in our village had seen them for many a year, they could be far away or just outside the cottage door. They were sly and full of tricks, and no matter what we called them, they were far from kind, though no one ever dared say that aloud either. If we spoke of them at all, it was to say they were wise, they were beautiful, they were brave and noble and honest in their dealings.
When in truth, if we offended them, they burned our barns and cottages, stole our livestock, sent plagues to sicken us, cursed our fields with thistles, lamed our horses, and dried up our cows’ milk.
Worst of all, if the Kinde Folke learned of a beautiful baby boy’s birth, they’d steal him away and leave one of their own sickly creatures in his place. And what misery the changeling would bring to its new mother. As if it weren’t bad enough that her own sweet baby was gone, changelings screamed and cried and bit and pinched and broke things. She’d have no rest, that poor mother, no joy.
And so we did our best to keep Thomas safe. I watched him while Mam did her housework, and she and Dadoe watched him at night. We never even whispered sweet things to him for fear the Kinde Folke would come for him.
Their spies were everywhere. Long-eared rabbits listened in the hedges, and sharp-eyed crows watched from chimney tops. Toads in ponds, fish in streams, foxes slinking by, any and all might carry messages to the Kinde Folke.
I stabbed my trowel into the dirt and dug out a stubborn thistle. I shouldn’t have spoken so crossly to Thomas. He was too young to understand my words, but he must have heard the anger in my voice.
A crow cawed, and I looked up to see him perched in a tree over my head. He ruffled his black wings and stared down at me. His dark eye reflected a sliver of light. Keeping watch on me, he cawed again. It sounded as if he were laughing at me.
Suddenly anxious, I glanced at Thomas. He’d just learned to sit up, and he was looking at me to make sure I’d noticed. The small chain he always wore around his neck lay in the grass. Its silver locket sparkled in the sunlight.
Dropping the trowel, I ran to fetch the locket. “Old Granny Hedgepath gave you this, Thomas. You’re not to take it off. You’d best do what that old witch says, or she’ll eat you for dinner.”
Thomas laughed and clapped his hands. What did he know of witches and their ways?
I tried to slip the necklace over his head, but he grabbed the chain and held it out for me to take. Giving things to people was his new game. Most people, including me, gave them back, but Matthew down the lane had run home with the wooden cow Dadoe had carved for Thomas. I’d gone to his house and asked him for it.
“Babby give it me,” Matthew wailed. Luckily for Thomas, but not for Matthew, his mam snatched the toy cow, handed it to me, and gave Matthew a smack.
I took the chain from Thomas and smiled. Without thinking, I said, “Oh, Thomas, you’re so sweet. How could I ever be vexed with you? You’re the best baby in the world. And the prettiest.”
When I tried again to slip the chain over h
is head, he ducked away laughing.
I held the necklace out, but instead of continuing the struggle, I sat in the grass and admired the necklace. The silver chain was finely made, and the heart-shaped locket was decorated all over with a cunning pattern of vines and flowers. I sighed. It was much too pretty to waste on a boy.
In truth, I’d wanted the locket from the day Granny Hedgepath fastened the chain around my brother’s neck. “Make sure Thomas wears this always,” she’d told Mam. “Never remove it. He must eat and sleep with it around his neck. Even when you bathe him, make sure the locket stays fastened. It will protect him from mischief.”
Placing her bony hand on Thomas’s head, Granny added, “May the Kinde Folke of the forest find joy elsewhere and ignore this poor ugly baby.”
I was watching Granny from my shadowy corner, neither moving nor speaking. It frightened me to look at her, but she drew my eyes like the evil cockatrice. Her white hair was wild and uncombed. Sticks and leaves poked out of its tangles. She had long yellow fingernails, as sharp as a hawk’s talons, and her eyes were sunken so deep in their sockets, I couldn’t tell their color.
Some said the old woman was a healer, others said she was a witch, but everyone in the village agreed she knew magic and spells and walked in Mirkwood at midnight. They also knew not to anger her.
Suddenly Granny turned to me in my corner. “Why are you sulking there, girl? I see your sly eyes, I hear the beat of your jealous heart. The necklace is for your brother. You have no need for it.”
She spoke as if I were a wicked girl, a bad sister, someone not to be trusted. Even though it was rude, I turned my head away and scowled at the floor. How had Granny guessed I wanted that necklace? It belonged around my neck, not my brother’s.
After Granny left, Mam said, “You shamed me, Mollie. I’ve taught you to smile and curtsy when you see Granny Hedgepath, but you did neither. What must she think of you?”
“I don’t care what she thinks. Did you not hear what she said to me? She was hateful and rude.”
“No, it was you who was hateful and rude.” Mam looked at me. “I hope you haven’t made an enemy of that old woman.”
“I don’t care if I have. I’m not afraid of her.” If Mam had had Granny’s skill, she’d have known I was indeed scared of the old woman. I knew full well I should have been polite, but my tongue had a way of getting away from me. I said what I thought and didn’t think about the consequences until it was too late.
Now, far from Granny’s prying eyes, I held the necklace up and watched it sparkle in the sunlight. “You want me to wear this, don’t you?” I asked Thomas. “That’s why you gave it to me.”
He smiled so widely, I saw the buds of new teeth pushing up through his pink gums. Surely Thomas wouldn’t come to harm if I wore the necklace for just a few moments. With care I undid the clasp and fastened the chain around my neck. How beautiful it was.
I should have given the necklace back to Thomas, but instead I tucked it inside my dress. I liked the smooth feel of the locket against my skin. Just for a little while, I thought. What harm could come to Thomas with me so near?
It seemed at least a dozen thistles had sprouted while my back was turned. Their thorny stems hurt my hands, and their roots held the soil tightly. I tugged and tugged until my back hurt from bending over. If I did much more weeding, I’d be an old woman before I even grew up. I’d hobble around in ragged clothes and end up as crazy as Granny Hedgepath.
While I worked, a large cloud drifted across the sun and plunged the garden into its shadow. At the same time, the breeze dropped and a strange silence fell. No leaves rustled. Chickens stopped clucking and disappeared into their coop. No birds sang. No bees hummed in the clover. The colors of flowers and grass, trees and sky faded to gray.
Worried, I got to my feet to check on Thomas. Suddenly the world seemed to spin and lurch. Colors blurred and ran together. I saw two of everything. The sky was beneath me, the grass above me. Too dizzy to stand, I fell to the ground. The last thing I heard was a crow laughing.
2
* * *
WHEN I OPENED MY eyes, I was lying flat on my back in the garden. I got to my feet slowly, lightheaded from the heat and as weak-legged as if I’d run to the top of Cat Tail Hill and down the other side.
The cloud was gone, and the sun shone. Hens pecked in the dirt; a robin sang from its perch on a fence post; bees buzzed. A cool breeze blew through the leaves. The crow had left its perch.
My brother was just as I’d left him, sound asleep on the quilt. Bending over him, I tickled the sole of his foot to wake him, but instead of laughing and stretching out his arms to be picked up, he began to cry. His face turned an ugly shade of red. His screams sounded more like a cat than a baby. When I tried to lift him, he kicked and hit me.
Pulling the locket out of my dress, I offered it to him, but he screamed at its touch.
“Thomas!” I cried. “Thomas, it’s me—Mollie. What’s wrong? Why are you crying?”
Thomas ignored me and continued to scream and kick. After a struggle, I finally got a grip on the squirming baby and carried him, shrieking with rage, into the cottage.
Mam ran to meet us. “Whatever’s the matter with Thomas? Is he bee-stung? Spider-bit?”
When she tried to take him in her arms, he fought her just as he’d fought me. He screeched and howled as if he’d never stop.
“Quick, Mollie,” Mam said, “fill a tub with cool water. He’s suffering from the heat.”
On shaky legs, I ran to the well and drew a pail of water. Mam hadn’t noticed that Thomas wasn’t wearing the necklace. I’d put it around his neck later when he’d calmed down and no one was looking.
While I filled the tub, Mam stripped Thomas of his clothing and plunged him into the water. For a moment, the surprise silenced him. Mam examined him but found no sign of sting or bite. Soon he began to scream again.
Mam wrapped him in a soft blanket and rocked him in her arms. Nothing she did calmed him. If anything, Thomas screamed louder.
“Fetch Granny Hedgepath, Mollie!” Mam cried. “Make haste!”
Full of fear and dread, I ran into the lane, up Cat Tail Hill, and down the other side. Behind me was Thomas, perhaps dead already, and before me was Granny Hedgepath. Only out of love for Thomas would I go to her door and knock.
“What do you want, girl?” The old woman’s voice was as harsh and as merciless as the crow’s. “Can’t I have a moment’s peace without some fool child hammering at my door?”
“Please, Granny, it’s Thomas,” I said, gasping. “He’s screaming like a banshee and won’t let Mam or me touch him. Mam sent me to fetch you. Can you please come? He’s only a wee baby.”
“Tush. Most likely it’s nothing more than a spider bite or a bee sting.”
She began to close the door, but I cried, “Mam already looked him over. There’s not a mark on him. Thomas never cries, he’s the best—”
“Oh, fie, girl, shut your mouth. You never know who’s listening, do you?” Granny Hedgepath frowned, but she hobbled inside to get her medicine bag.
From the open door, I saw an old table and a spindly chair. Dried herbs dangled in bunches from the rafters. The rest of the cottage hid in shadows, which seemed unnaturally thick in the corners.
Granny stepped outside as quiet as a mouse in a room full of cats. Scowling and muttering to herself, she pinched my arm. “Come along, come along, Sam Cloverall’s girl. You’ll see nothing in my cottage but what I want you to see.”
I ran beside the old woman to keep up with her long strides. Although I spoke not a word, Granny continued to mumble and mutter. It was clear she disliked me, but what did it matter? I’d come to her to get help for Thomas. Once he was cured, I’d never visit her cottage. Whatever went on inside, I wanted nothing to do with any of it.
Long before we reached the gate, we heard Thomas screeching. “It’s as if he’s become ‘pretend’ Thomas,” I said. “You know how we all say he’
s awful so they won’t—”
Granny turned to me, her face fierce with anger. “Hush! Not another word from you, girl.”
I covered my mouth with my hand to keep from saying something sassy and followed the old woman into our cottage.
Pushing Mam aside, Granny bent over Thomas. She poked and prodded; she looked; she even sniffed. Finally, she straightened up and stared Mam in the eye. “You must be brave and not flinch from what I’m about to tell you, Agnes Cloverall.”
Mam trembled, and her breath came in gasps. “It’s brain fever,” she moaned. “Our Thomas will be dead before dawn.”
“’Tis not brain fever. Indeed, ’tis far worse than that.” Granny seized Mam’s hand and held it tight. “This baby is not Thomas,” she said. “They came for yours and left theirs in his place.”
“No,” Mam cried. “Look at him, of course he’s our Thomas. Don’t you think I know my own baby?”
Granny waved her hand in front of Mam’s and my eyes. “Look again, Agnes Cloverall, and tell me what you see in that cradle.”
Mam and I stared at the cradle. What lay there was long and scrawny, its face as wrinkled as an old man’s and its eyes as yellow as a cat’s. Tufts of hair finer than milkweed spores sprouted from his head. He glared at us, kicked his skinny legs, and howled like a wild thing.
Never had I seen a creature so ugly.
Mam screamed. “No, it cannot be. Oh, let it not be, Granny!”
I longed to take Mam’s hand and comfort her, but I backed away in shame. This was my doing. I’d said what I shouldn’t have said. I’d taken his necklace and worn it myself. If Mam learned what I’d done, she’d never forgive me. I pressed my hand to my chest and covered the tiny bump of the locket under my dress.
Mam turned to Granny, her eyes wild with fear and rage. “Get this creature out of my house,” she cried. “It mustn’t sully Thomas’s cradle.”
Granny took Mam’s arm and forced her to look at the creature. “It’s a hard thing I’m asking you, Agnes Cloverall, but you must keep him. Treat the changeling with kindness. Nurse him, sing to him, rock him as if he were your own sweet Thomas.”