Spotlight On:
Ewan Pendle and the White Wraith
Title: Ewan Pendle and the White Wraith
Author: Shaun Hume
Blurb:Ewan Pendle was weird. Really weird. At least, that's what everyone told him. Then again, being able to see monsters that no one else could wasn't exactly normal.
Thinking he has been moved off to live with his eleventh foster family, Ewan is instead told he is a Lenitnes, one of an ancient race of peoples who can alone see the real Creatures that inhabit the earth. He is taken in by Enola, the mysterious sword carrying Grand Master of Firedrake Lyceum, a labyrinth of halls and rooms in the middle of London where other children, just like him, go to learn the ways of the Creatures.
- Excerpt -
Sleep
was a restless affair for Ewan. The thought that he had to get up extra
early and, therefore, had to fall asleep as quickly as possible in
order to get a decent amount
of shuteye, only kept him awake for longer. When Max’s snoring started,
he didn’t think he would get any rest at all.
In the early hours of the morning, when sleep
finally did come, it was anything but peaceful. Ewan was visited by
dreams of wide open green fields with a singular white blurry figure set
on the pristine horizon. Every time Ewan tried to
get closer to the figure and see who, or indeed what, it was, it would
only get blurrier until it finally disappeared altogether and turned
into a wisp of smoke that then became a massive and monstrous pale
cloud, dominating the sky above him.
‘Ewan … Ewan.’ Blown over by a mighty gust
of wind, Ewan tumbled to the ground. A voice was demanding he get up and
follow the cloud as it shot across the sky like a floating city.
‘Ewan – Pendle!’
Ewan woke suddenly to see a wide and shimmering head glaring down at
him through the darkness. It was Moham. ‘On your feet,’ he said in the
quietest voice Ewan had ever heard him utter. Although his voice was
dim, it carried with it no less foreboding of what the result would be
if its request was not immediately carried out.
‘Pain Yard – five minutes,’ said Moham, then turning and walking away.
Ewan dressed as quickly as he could and then
tiptoed past all of the other snoozing cadets and out of the dormitory. A
few smouldering embers in the gigantic fireplace puffed sympathetically
as he crossed the darkened common room. The
empty corridors of Firedrake were still asleep too, and Ewan did his
best not to wake them as he tried to achieve a balance between speed and
silence. He thought with a little shudder that right now Betony could
have probably sneaked up on him and snapped his
neck before he had even known that he was no longer alone.
As he stepped outside a few minutes later, the
chill early morning air bit at Ewan’s face and neck like a million tiny
flies, all of them trying to take the largest chunk or leave the most
painful mark as they nibbled at his skin. Moham
was standing in the centre of Pain Yard, curiously staring up at the
peach coloured sky. Ewan approached him slowly, but the tall Master did
not unclench the grip his singular visible dark eye had on the
brightening sky until Ewan was close enough to touch
him.
‘Laps,’ said Moham in a low voice. Ewan complied immediately.
As Ewan set out on his first lap of the long and
wide rectangular Pain Yard, he bent his eyes towards the high walls of
the Lyceum, there being nothing else but sand and Moham in the Yard
itself to look at. For the first half a dozen floors
or so, all four walls that frowned down onto the Yard were the same
height. But after this the roofs were mismatched and the tiles and
gutters chased each other up and down and in all directions.
Firedrake Lyceum was slowly waking, the tips of its highest flat glass eyes blinking and glinting in the sun.
Ewan knew that the widows in the boy’s Grade One
dormitory looked down onto the Yard, but he had no idea that the girl’s
did too. Casting a wistful look up in the direction of his bed and the
beds of the other sleeping Grade One cadets,
Ewan spotted someone waving to him from a long and thin window set into
the honey coloured stone of the Lyceum, like a shiny welt on rough skin.
Ewan focused his sharp hazel eyes.
Mathilde was sitting on what must have been the
wide inside sill of one of the windows of the girl’s dormitory. Still in
her pyjamas and cross legged, she offered a vehement wave and a wide
smile that Ewan couldn’t quite make out but was
still sure was there. Suddenly the wind didn’t seem so fierce, the
barked instructions from Moham for him to lift his knees didn’t thump
against his eardrums so thickly, and Ewan picked up his pace.
For a whole hour Moham made Ewan run, and for that whole hour Mathilde sat and watched, offering another short wave
every time he looked up. It was strange that the thought which came to
Ewan so clearly now had only just
arrived, because he had been through a lot already with Mathilde and
Enid. But as he lifted his head back up for his regular
once-every-five-minute look towards the high windows of the dormitories,
something warm trickled down Ewan’s throat, settling itself
in his stomach and welling up like a bowl being slowly filled with warm
soup.
This, Ewan thought, must be what it feels like to have friends.
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