Amanda on the Danube: The Sounds of Music
Page 1
Praise for the Amanda Travels Series
“A mysterious travel adventure with a brave, inquisitive, compassionate heroine. This is a fast-paced, fun read! Amanda will take you on a wonderful, visual, descriptive adventure.”
—Author PJ Sarah Collins & Daughter, Elena Collins, Age 11
“Young readers will have great fun travelling alongside Amanda Ross in this fast-paced mystery that will keep readers guessing until the very last chapter.”
—Jan L. Coates, Author, Finalist - Governor General’s Literary Awards
“A charming and fast-paced story that will delight its young audience as Amanda and Leah travel along the historic Danube River to deliver a very unique and mysterious violin.”
—Suzanne de Montigny, Author
“A mysterious violin case, two boys and other intriguing characters among ancient castles make this a page turning adventure for young readers.”
—Margriet Ruurs, Author
“The intrepid Amanda and her friend Leah are off on another lively adventure. A recommended read for 10 to 14 year olds.”
—Norma Charles, Author & Teacher/Librarian
“There is A LOT of action packed into this little book!”
—Mother Daughter Reviews
Book of the Month: “Amanda in England: a delightful romp through modern-day London. Recommended for readers in late elementary school or for anyone who loves solving playful mysteries that do not reveal their secrets easily.”
—Long and Short Reviews
“I love how Ms. Foster puts the reader right in the action and kids get to learn about the exciting places Amanda goes.”
—This Kid Reviews Books
The Amanda Travels Series:
Amanda in Arabia: The Perfume Flask
Amanda in Spain: The Girl in the Painting
Amanda in England: The Missing Novel
Amanda in Alberta: The Writing on the Stone
Copyright © 2016 Darlene Foster
Cover and internal design © 2016 Central Avenue Marketing Ltd.
Photography: © iStock - pongschole1; NatuskaDPI; Askold Romanov
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Published by Central Avenue Publishing, an imprint of Central Avenue Marketing Ltd. www.centralavenuepublishing.com
Published in Canada
Printed in United States of America
1. JUVENILE FICTION/Travel 2. JUVENILE FICTION / People & Places - Europe
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Foster, Darlene, author
Amanda on the Danube : the sounds of music / Darlene Foster.
(Amanda ; 5)
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-77168-102-5 (paperback).--ISBN 978-1-77168-103-2 (epub).--ISBN 978-1-77168-104-9 (mobi)
I. Title.
PS8611.O7883A81 2016 jC813’.6 C2016-902753-8
C2016-902754-6
To Mom,
With Love
1
Pleeease, Mom. Can we go? Please. Please?” Amanda Ross stared at the computer screen. “Come and look at this website. The boat looks awesome, and the scenery along the river is amazing.”
Mrs. Ross approached the laptop. “A river cruise on the Danube would be nice, Amanda, but I don’t think your dad and I can get the time off.”
“But, Mom, it would be so much fun and you’d get to meet Leah’s parents. They’re real cool. I know you’d like them.”
“Those river cruises are quite expensive. I’m not sure we can afford it.”
“It says here in Leah’s email that if we book now, we can get a big discount. I really want to see Leah again.”
Amanda’s mom sighed. “It was nice of the Andersons to invite us. I could use a holiday. I’ll discuss it with your dad and we’ll see. Don’t get your hopes up, sweetie.” She patted Amanda’s head.
Amanda sent an email back to Leah, “This just might work out.”
“Guten Tag, fräulein.” The young, blond flight attendant smiled at Amanda as she left the plane.
‘I like it here already,’ Amanda thought as she saw a large sign.
WILLKOMMEN TO NUREMBERG
“Can you believe we’re in Germany, Mom?”
“Just stay close to us, Amanda. I don’t want you getting lost in this big airport.”
“Mom, you seem to forget I have been to big airports before. This isn’t any bigger than the ones in London, Madrid or Dubai.”
Mrs. Ross rolled her eyes. “Are you going to remind us this entire trip that you’ve travelled more than we have?”
“This way to the baggage.” Don Ross pointed to a sign.
After a comfortable sleep in a squeaky clean hotel with the biggest, fluffiest pillows Amanda had ever seen, the Ross family was ready to start their trip down the Danube River.
“There’s our boat!” shouted Amanda as she peered out the cab window. “The Sound of Music. That’s our boat. I wonder if Leah and her parents are here already.”
The cab dropped them off beside a long, low boat with The Sound of Music written in large letters on the side. The ‘f’ was replaced with a treble clef.
Once on board, they entered an elegant lobby furnished with blue velvet chairs and couches. “This is sooo adorable,” Amanda said. “You love The Sound Of Music movie, Mom, and there are pictures of the von Trapp family all over the walls.”
Her mom’s face lit up when she saw the familiar scenes.
Suddenly, everything went black and Amanda couldn’t see a thing.
“Hiya, Canadian girl.”
Amanda recognized that English accent. She peeled off the hands covering her glasses and turned around. “Leah!” She gave her tall, blonde friend a huge hug.
“We only just got here ourselves. Mum and Dad are putting the luggage in our room. Your room is just across from us.” Leah flashed a wide grin at Amanda’s parents. “I’m so glad you could make this trip. We are all going to have loads of fun. Come, Amanda, let’s explore the boat.”
“See you later.” Amanda barely looked at her parents as she tripped down the narrow hallway behind Leah.
First stop was a large room completely surrounded by windows. Round tables with crisp white tablecloths, set for a meal—without a fork or knife out of place—indicated it was the dining room. Sparkling chandeliers hung from the ceiling.
“Wow! Every table has a view. This will be a fab place to eat.” Amanda looked around. “I hope we can all eat together.”
“Mum has already made sure of that. We got here early so we got to pick which table we wanted for the entire trip.” Leah pointed to a table at the very front of the boat. “Ours is that table for six, the one with the best view.”
Amanda noticed an undone shoelace on her runner and bent down to tie it. Her purse slipped off her shoulder and fell to the floor. As she picked it up, she spotted small red dots sprinkled on the beige and blue carpet.
“What’s this? Do you think someone spilled ketchup?”
Leah bent down to look closer. “Yes, it could be tomato sauce.”
More red spots appeared further along. “Something must have dripped from a plate when they were clearing the tables,” remarked Leah.
“I t
hink it might be…blood.” Amanda followed the spots to a set of stairs.
Leah shook her head. “There goes your overactive imagination again.”
“I think we should follow the spots. I have a funny feeling about them.” Amanda proceeded down the short flight of stairs. Leah followed her. The faint red dots led them to a closed door with STORAGE written on it. Amanda reached for the handle.
“Wait a minute, Amanda. I don’t think we are meant to go in there,” Leah said.
“What if someone’s in there and hurt?”
Amanda turned the handle. The door opened to a small, dark room. She could make out shelves packed with items like toilet paper, tissues, paper towels, soaps and shampoos. She was about to close the door when the sound of a groan stopped her. Finding a light switch, she noticed a shoe sticking out from under a shelf.
“There’s someone in—”
“What are you girls doing? That room is only for staff. If you need any supplies, just ask any one of us.” A young man appeared behind them.
“S-Sorry. We’re just finding our way around,” Amanda stammered. She closed the door.
“Is this your first time on a river cruise?” asked the young man with a kind smile.
“Yes,” said Amanda. “We should get back to our parents.”
“Enjoy the cruise and remember if you need anything, just ask. I’m Michael, the cruise director.”
When they returned to the cabins, the girls were happy to find out that they shared a room adjoining Leah’s parents’ suite.
“OMG. We have our own entrance and our own keys!” Amanda looked around. The comfortable room with a large side window overlooked the peaceful canal and emerald green banks. “And look at that great view!”
“This is going to be an amazing trip. We’ll get to see all kinds of things for the first time. I’m so glad your parents agreed to it.” Leah grabbed Amanda around the waist and did a little dance.
“I’m super excited too,” Amanda said when she caught her breath. “I just wonder who’s hiding in the storage room. Do you think he’s hurt?”
2
That evening, after a delicious meal of wiener schnitzel, roasted potatoes and a dessert of plum cake called pflaum kuchen, everyone moved to the lounge for the entertainment. Young men in lederhosen, leather shorts with decorated suspenders, and young women in dirndls, colourful dresses with poofy sleeves and aprons finished off with a pretty bow, performed a vigorous dance called the Schuhplattler. Amanda enjoyed the lively music and the dancers who slapped their knees, thighs and soles of their feet while hopping around in a circle.
Next, a man in a tuxedo with a violin tucked under his chin appeared. Amanda closed her eyes while he played a calm, peaceful tune. She imagined a deep, blue, slow moving river, as it passed by green pastures and quiet villages.
She looked beside her and noticed tears in her mother’s eyes as she held her father’s hand. Amanda sighed. It made her happy to see her parents relaxed and content together, instead of rushing off to work or meetings.
Michael, the young man they met earlier, stood in the centre of the lounge and spoke into a microphone. “Thank you, Jozsef, for that lovely rendition of The Blue Danube, by Johann Strauss II. Tomorrow, after a tour of the city of Nuremberg, we will leave this canal and head out onto the Danube. Is that not what you came for?”
Everyone clapped and cheered.
Amanda stayed up late chatting with Leah. They had so much to talk about since they last saw each other. It’s hard when your BFF lives in England and you live in Canada. Amanda was so excited, she could hardly sleep that night.
Sometime in the early hours of the morning, Amanda woke up to the strains of The Blue Danube. ‘Who would be playing a violin at this hour,’ she thought and fell back to sleep.
After breakfast, they boarded a tour bus that took them around the city of Nuremberg. Elsa, the tour guide, explained the difference between ‘berg’ and ‘burg.’
“A berg is a hill or mountain. So if a name of a place ends in ‘berg,’ like Nuremberg, it usually means it was built on a hill. A burg is a fortified town. If a name of a place ends in ‘burg,’ it has, or used to have, a wall around it.”
Amanda loved little pieces of information like that. Writing it down in a notebook, she planned to share it with her teacher and classmates back home in Canada.
The bus passed a colourful cemetery with more flowers than graves.
“Oh my goodness! What a beautiful graveyard! I wish we could get off the bus and look more closely at those tombstones,” Amanda exclaimed.
Leah shook her head. “I just don’t get your weird fascination with graveyards.”
The knowledgeable Elsa provided interesting information about the history of the city including its part in World War II. Amanda paid close attention because in school they were learning about twentieth-century wars. Elsa was also funny and shared some amusing stories and jokes. Amanda liked her and thought being a tour guide would be a fun job.
The bus stopped in front of The Beautiful Fountain situated in the town square Elsa called the Hauptmarkt. Amanda, happy to get off the bus, stretched and looked around.
The fountain was indeed beautiful. It looked like a tall, three-tiered wedding cake, decorated with many colourful figures. Elsa explained that if you spun the two brass rings on the fence surrounding the fountain, and made a wish, your wish would come true.
“One young woman wished that her boyfriend would ask her to marry him and the next day he did. So I guess it works.” Elsa flashed a generous smile.
Amanda and Leah each took a turn spinning the brass rings while silently making a wish. They were interrupted when they heard a commotion on the other side of the fountain. A young boy with curly blond hair ran out from behind the fountain and through the market square. Two crew members from the boat chased after him. The boy darted in between stacks of hats on display.
Crash!
One of the piles tumbled to the ground. Hats spilled over the path like spiders escaping from a jar. The crew members dodged feathered alpine hats and tripped over Deutschland baseball caps with the black, red and yellow German flag. They lost sight of the boy, shook their heads and returned to the group.
Elsa explained, “You have time to have lunch, shop and look around on your own. Remember to be back at the boat by two o’clock as that is when we will depart. Be sure to watch the metallic clock and glockenspiel on the top of the Church of Our Lady, at noon.”
“Noon is only ten minutes from now. I don’t want to miss it.” Amanda noted the church at the end of the market square.
The girls stopped to help the merchant pick up his hats. In return, he let them try some on. Leah put on a hat that looked like an upside down cone with a gigantic feather on the side. Amanda giggled and took a picture.
The vendor pointed to the church and said, “The glockenspiel. Watch!”
Bing! Bong! Bing! Bong!
The huge blue and gold mechanical clock with a sun painted in the middle chimed twelve times. A large figurine, wearing a gold robe and a crown, sat in an alcove below the clock. Seven smaller medieval figures in red robes, trimmed in fur, came out of a side door. They slowly circled around the larger figure, bowing and then leaving through a door on the other side. Throughout the performance, the sound of bells played a pleasant tune.
“That was totally awesome!” remarked Amanda. “It’s like a giant music box. It says under the figure, 1509. That is so incredibly old. I’m so glad we got to see it.”
“The figure, in the middle, is the Holy Roman Emperor Karl IV. The seven electors come out to pay homage to him every day at noon,” explained the hat seller with a strong German accent.
Out of the corner of her eye, Amanda thought she saw someone with curly blond hair sneak around the side of the church. “I wonder why they were chasing that boy.”
“Who knows?” Leah looked across the square. “Lebkuchen Haus! We must get some gingerbread. I absolutely love ging
erbread!”
Beside the Gingerbread House, a younger boy in a flat cap played a violin. Amanda threw a coin in his open violin case.
“Danke schön,” He smiled shyly as he looked up at her with big blue eyes.
Amanda smiled back. She noticed a dirty bandage on his thumb.
Leah purchased two large, round cookies and handed one to Amanda. “You just have to try this.”
Amanda took a bite though the sweet clear glaze and tasted a spicy mixture of molasses, ginger, cinnamon and cloves. “This is sooooo yummy. Thanks, Leah.”
“I see you found our famous lebkuchen or gingerbread,” Michael commented behind them. “Did you know that Nuremberg was once the ‘gingerbread capital’ of the world?”
“I’m not surprised,” said Amanda. “These are the best I’ve ever tasted. By the way, what is a glockenspiel?”
“It’s an instrument that looks kind of like a xylophone and makes a sound like bells playing. Glock is German for bell and spiel means to play,” explained the young man as he surveyed the area.
Amanda noticed there was no trace of the boy playing the violin.
3
I thought we would find you two here at the Gingerbread House,” said Mrs. Anderson. She ruffled Amanda’s short, brown hair. “Remember how much you loved the gingerbread when we lived in Germany, Leah.”
“You lived in Germany?” Amanda raised her eyebrows.
“Oh, yes. I was quite little then. We’ve lived in loads of places because of Dad’s job.”
“Lucky you.” Amanda thought it would be fun to live in different countries.
“It wasn’t always great. I would make a friend and then we would move.”
Amanda’s parents showed up carrying shopping bags.
“Your mom has already found a pair of shoes she can’t live without.” Mr. Ross grimaced. “Look, we’re getting tired. We should go back to the boat. Evelyn needs a rest after all this shopping.”
“We’ll join you,” said Mrs. Anderson. “I’m feeling a bit tired myself. You girls can look around the market some more and take the tour bus back to the boat on your own.”