Table of Contents
Title Page
Table of Contents
Dedication
Copyright
Epigraph
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
A Scottish Glossary
The Picture Child Preview
Lost Stone
Lost Child
For Jenny and Gordon McIlreavy
and their parents,
part of our Scottish sojourn
Copyright © 1999 by Jane Yolen
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc., 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.
First Magic Carpet Books edition 2002
www.HarcourtBooks.com
Magic Carpet Books is a trademark of Harcourt, Inc., registered in the United States of America and/or other jurisdictions.
The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:
Yolen, Jane.
The wizard’s map/Jane Yolen.
p. cm.
“Tartan magic, book one.”
Summary: Three children visiting relatives in Scotland become involved in the plans of a diabolical wizard. [1. Magic—Fiction. 2. Wizards—Fiction. 3. Scotland—Fiction. 4. Twins—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.Y78Wm 1999
[Fic]—dc21 98-33889
ISBN 0-15-202067-5
ISBN 0-15-216365-4 (pb)
Text set in Galliard Old Style
Display type set in Goudy Medieval
Designed by Judythe Sieck
DOM 10 9 8 7
4500283750
Printed in the United States of America
Tartan:
Plaid cloth.
In Scotland each clan
has its own distinctive pattern.
One
Impatience
Are we almost there?” Jennifer asked for what must have been the hundredth time.
“Honestly,” Mom said, “the one thing you kids don’t seem to have is any patience. We’ll be there soon enough.”
They went around a deep bend in the rain-slick road and only Molly, asleep in her car seat, seemed oblivious to the swervings of the car.
Then Peter asked the same question, only he said it slightly differently. “Are we there yet?”
“I hate to repeat myself—” Mom began, but Pop interrupted her by pointing out the befogged car window at a sign that read FAIRBURN. It was a dangerous thing to do, since he was driving on the left side of the road for the first time. “There it is—Fairburn.”
The car swerved perilously again.
Jennifer looked out of the window to where stone walls seemed to anchor the fields. The few trees stood like green sentinels before a grey outcropping of rock. All were drenched with the rain.
“That hill?” asked Peter. “That’s Fairburn?” His voice held as much scorn as a thirteen-year-old could muster. He hadn’t come happily across the Atlantic to Scotland for the summer, leaving his friends and teammates behind.
“Don’t be silly,” Jennifer said. As Peter’s twin, she was allowed to say such things but rarely did. He was the more aggressive of the two, having entered the world with an angry yell, while she—or so her mother always said—had slid out quietly, smiling. “That’s where it all begins.”
By “all,” Jennifer merely meant the little town at the foot of the Highlands, and their summer away from Connecticut. What she didn’t know was that this was also the beginning of an adventure that would take them through the dark turnings of a wizard’s cave and into Time itself.
“Tidy yourselves,” Mom said, moving comfortably back into the rhythms and slang of her Scottish childhood. “I want Gran and Da to have a fine first impression of you.”
Gran and Da weren’t Mom’s real grandparents. They were actually some older cousins who had helped raise her after her own parents had died in a car crash. In fact they were the only family Mom still had. She phoned them once a month, but had only been back to visit a couple of times since moving to America to go to college. And that, Jennifer knew, had happened an awfully long time ago.
Jennifer never really listened closely to her mother’s stories about the dead Douglas side of the family, preferring to hear about the living. Therefore she knew much more about her father’s relatives, especially Granny and Granfa Dyer, who lived only three states away and had built Peter and Jennifer and Molly a medieval castle out of wood painted to look like stone, big enough for three children to stand up in and gaze out over the towers.
Only four-year-old Molly still played in the castle, of course, moving her dolls in and out for regular royal tea parties and wearing one of Granfa Dyer’s cardboard crowns atop her dark curls. Jennifer sometimes wished that she could still participate in their old make-believe games; only, she knew that if she did, Peter would laugh at her. Peter and all his friends. Since she desperately wanted them to think well of her, she’d left the castle and her dolls behind.
As the car shot by the hill—which was marked with a sign warning about slippery conditions in the rain—Pop floored the gas pedal. That sent the car careening around a curve, and for several perilous seconds it hugged the right side of the road. Then when the road suddenly straightened, Pop appeared to remember they were in Scotland and he pulled the wheel abruptly to the left.
Jennifer let out a little shriek and Mom moaned, but Peter merely shrank down inside himself further than he’d been before, as if he were more embarrassed than scared. They were all so busy reacting to the car’s erratic movement that they were startled when the actual town of Fairburn rose up ahead of them, a grey presence in the slackening rain. It seemed surrounded by a stone wall and looked like a medieval fortress in a movie.
“Braveheart” Jennifer said.
“Rob Roy” Peter corrected. He was closer to the right century. Except most of Fairburn’s wall had tumbled down ages earlier, and only the West Gate and a few sections still remained.
Half a dozen Japanese tourists, dressed in waterproof coats and hats, were standing on the fallen-down part of the wall, busily snapping photos of one another. Two young men in colorful kilts and short dark jackets, their knees well burnished by the cold rain, strolled by.
“Bet that will keep out any enemies,” Peter said sarcastically.
“What will?” asked Jennifer.
“That wall,” Peter explained.
“What enemies?” Jennifer persisted.
Peter was about to answer her back with some sharp, quick, petulant response, when Molly—who’d been drowsing since they left Edinburgh Airport—woke up in the car seat with a start.
“Rainbow!” she cried.
And there, over all of Fairburn, was a sudden fantastic rainbow enclosing the town as gracefully above as the wall did below. The rainstorm, it seemed, was over.
“Welcome home,” Pop said, talking to the entire family.
Molly was the only one who smiled.
Two
Welcome
They turned down a street with the strange name of Burial Brae, and
then right onto another much narrower road with as odd a name—Double Dykes. The car bumped unrelentingly over the cobblestones until Jennifer thought her teeth would fall out from the pounding. At last Mom gave a litde screech.
“There!” she cried. “There!”
“There” was a lane marked ABBOT’S CLOSE. Jennifer recognized it at once, having written the address down for all her friends a dozen times: Scot’s Cottage, 13 Abbot’s Close, Fairburn, Fife, Scotland. Mom had explained that Fife was like a state but was called a kingdom so Jennifer had told all her friends that she was spending the summer in a cottage in a Scottish kingdom, and they’d all been suitably impressed.
But when the car pulled up to number 13, it was not anything like a cottage at all. Rather it was an enormous, whitewashed, two-story building with a small window in the attic and a grey slate roof that slumped like a farmer’s hat.
“I thought a cottage was something small and cozy...” Jennifer began.
“Or with two rooms and a big fireplace,” added Peter. It often happened that they had similar ideas about things.
But Molly said what they had all been thinking ever since spotting the house. “Magic!” she breathed.
Just as Molly spoke, the door opened and two people walked out, their arms opened wide in welcome.
Mom screeched again. “It’s Gran and Da!”
“Well, who else would it be,” Peter mumbled, and Jennifer elbowed him hard. He was so surprised—for Jennifer was usually the compliant one—that he didn’t protest, but shut up at once.
Gran and Da had round faces, browned and seamed from the sun, topped with hair as flat white as the walls of their cottage. Gran was wearing a long greenish tartan skirt and a sweater set, Da heavy brown trousers, a plaid shirt, and a tweed jacket.
“They look like Niddy and Noddy,” Molly said. She meant they looked like her Scottish dolls, the ones that went in and out of Granfa Dyer’s casde a dozen times a day. And except for the color of their hair, she was right.
“That’s the Douglas plaid,” said Jennifer, remembering the gifts that Gran had sent ahead to them.
“Well, don’t expect me to wear it,” Peter remarked sullenly, to the entire car.
But Mom ignored them all, throwing open her door and running into Gran’s and Da’s arms as a child would. They did not seem startled by her buoyant enthusiasm, but covered her face with kisses.
“I thought,” Pop said slowly, “that the Scots were supposed to be a reserved people.”
Suddenly, as if remembering that she was a grown-up, Mom led Gran and Da over to the car. Opening the back door, she got Molly out of the car seat and held her up to Da, who took her in his arms. “Look at those curls, that heart-shaped face. Why—she’s the spit of your mum.”
“And this,” Mom said, pulling Peter out of the car, “is Peter.”
Peter grunted and put out his hand to forestall any kisses. Da shook it with his free hand, but Gran ignored Peter’s hand and smothered him in her arms.
Jennifer got out of the car herself and stood quietly, smoothing down her sweater. “I’m Jennifer,” she said.
“My wee namesake,” said Gran.
“She looks like you did at her age,” said Da to Gran. “The straight red hair falling over her eyes. There’s magic in those green eyes. Magic.”
Jennifer suddenly felt terribly uncomfortable. It was one thing for someone Molly’s age to speak of magic. She was just four years old, after all. That sort of thing was expected. But for a grownup to talk about magic so matter-of-facdy was plain embarrassing.
“Color magic, at the very least,” Gran agreed. “And maybe more.”
Jennifer looked over at Peter, hoping to catch his eye. But he was too busy stalking down the road, trying to get his equilibrium back, to notice. He hated being hugged, especially by strangers, and it might take him a five full minutes of walkabout, which is what Pop called it, before he was sociable again. So Jennifer did the only thing she could do in the circumstances—she looked down at the cobblestones and blushed.
“And she takes a compliment like you do, too,” Da said. “That’s a braw blush, like a rose.”
They laughed, and Mom and Pop unaccountably laughed with them. Jennifer thought with sudden misery that grown-ups could always be counted on to make a joke at a kid’s expense, and she turned on her heel, following Peter down the road. The grown-ups’ laughter, like a shadow, trailed behind.
When she was too far away to be heard by the others, Jennifer called out in a strained voice, “Peter! Peter! Wait!”
He didn’t stop, but he did slow down so that she could catch up. She noticed that his normally ruddy face was blanched. He looked the way he did when he was coming down with a fever: drawn and white.
For a while they walked side by side in silence along the cobbled lane. Not even the wind troubled the trees. Jennifer thought suddenly, This sure isn’t Connecticut. She didn’t know anyplace in America quite this quiet. Straining to hear some ordinary sound, she finally smiled when at last she heard the far-off yapping of a dog.
“Peter,” she said again, this time in her normal voice.
He turned and looked at her, and his face seemed suddenly older, unfamiliar, dark with unexpressed emotion. Jennifer shuddered without meaning to. Then, as if a wing, or the shadow of a wing, had passed across him, his face lightened, color flooded back into it, and he drew his right hand through his lank brown hair.
“I bet we’re all just tired,” he said. “I mean, all that time in a plane. I sure didn’t get any sleep.” He was never one for a real apology.
“You slept like a log,” Jennifer said. “Snoring, too. I heard you.”
“Heard me?” Peter laughed his old Peter laugh, and Jennifer was relieved to hear it. “How could you? You were fast asleep yourself.”
“I didn’t sleep at all,” Jennifer argued.
“Not even a bit?”
“Well, a wee bit,” Jennifer said, using one of the few Scottish words she knew and had practiced.
And they turned together without comment—the “twin thing,” their father always called it—going back to the cottage and whatever waited for them there.
Three
Gran's Garden
Exhausted from the long trip, they all napped and then woke to late-afternoon sunshine. After a hearty dinner, which Gran called “tea,” and a cream cake for dessert, which Da unaccountably called “pudding,” they got to wander around the walled garden behind the cottage.
“You’ll not see the likes of that garden elsewhere,” Da said, to Gran’s blush. “Herbal magic is Gran’s specialty. Folks come from miles around to view it.”
“Not miles, now. Just neighbors.”
“Must be miles, then,” muttered Peter. “There aren’t any neighbors.” No one but Jennifer heard him.
“Tomorrow,” Mom promised, “we’ll show you the town. It’s got a castle.”
Molly clapped. “A real castle!”
Laughing, Pop raffled her curls. “I thought you had a real castle at home, squirt.”
Molly looked up at him with disdain. “That’s just painted wood,” she said.
“Which doesn’t make it any less real,” Pop replied.
But Molly gave him another look, which combined disdain with a kind of pint-sized ferocity, and he dropped the subject.
“Why not now?” Peter asked.
“Everything’s closed down. It’s night,” Gran said.
Jennifer looked out the window, where, even though it was nine o’clock, the sun was still high overhead. Summer in Scotland had what Mom had called “white nights.”
Night! It was bright as day.
***
The garden was larger than their entire Connecticut front and back yards combined. It came in two parts. Next to the house there was a formal garden, the borders planted with purple-clustered flowers interspersed with pansies, whose little monkey-faced flowers nodded in the breeze. Low mounds of heather, spidery bursts of a
nemones, a riot of lavender, and grave thrusts of iris and loosestrife crowded together in one colorful plot. Old rosebushes filled another, their spindly arms still supporting a profusion of blooms.
There was a knot of herbs in a small raised area by the kitchen door. Jennifer could identify mint and parsley, which grew in their garden at home. Gran was just pointing out some more—“Chervil, rosemary, sage, and catnip”—when Mom steered Gran away.
“How strange,” Jennifer said to herself. “Catnip in with the herbs!” But then the rest of the garden was so wonderful, she gave it no more thought.
Scattered along the paved stone path were old stone troughs filled with blue and purple lobelia trailing bright flowers over the sides. An armless cherub stood sentinel at one of the branchings of the path, at its feet a pot of multicolored petunias.
“Come see!” Jennifer called to Peter, but he was much too busy trying to send a wooden croquet ball through a series of wire wickets on the strangely flattened lawn, hitting the ball with quick, angry slaps of the mallet.
“Trust Peter,” Jennifer muttered to herself, “to find a game.”
She looked to see what the rest of the family was doing. Pop was discussing something earnestly with Da, pointing to the cottage roof, his hands making conversation as well. Mom and Gran were sitting together on a wicker settee, with Molly between them. Molly was asleep again, and the two adults chatted companionably over her. Mom’s right hand rested on Molly’s back, rising and falling with Molly’s every breath.
Since no one was paying the slightest attention to her, Jennifer headed down toward the back garden by herself, the one Gran had called “the old garden.”
The stone walkway to the old garden wound through the rose arbor and around a great holm oak whose massive trunk was bound around by an ironwork seat. Jennifer paused to look at the seat because the three wrought-iron legs had been twisted and shaped into fanciful designs. One leg looked like a slender coursing dog, another like an elongated dragon with its wings swept back against its sides, the third like an attenuated unicorn standing on its rear legs with its horn poking up into the seat. Jennifer ran her fingers over the designs. The metal was strangely cold to the touch and made her tremble.