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The Storm Keeper's Island

Page 1

by Catherine Doyle




  Praise for The Storm Keeper’s Island

  ‘The Storm Keeper’s Island will blow you away. Magical in

  every way … Wise, warm and wonderful’

  Eoin Colfer, author of the Artemis Fowl series

  ‘Doyle has taken an ancient story and found something

  new and bold and wild in it … Only real bone-deep

  writers and storytellers do that’

  Katherine Rundell, author of The Explorer

  ‘Funny, dark and blazingly beautiful, The Storm Keeper’s

  Island is a thrillingly inventive adventure’

  Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Girl of Ink & Stars

  ‘Flickers with a rare and wonderful magic …

  An unforgettable story’

  Abi Elphinstone, author of Sky Song

  ‘Gripping, poignant and beautifully written …

  Destined to become a modern classic’

  Louise O’Neill, author of The Surface Breaks

  ‘A book of storms and heart and magical islands that sing

  your name through the rain and beckon you through

  layers of time … A stunning story of courage and hope’

  Cerrie Burnell, author of Harper and the Scarlet Umbrella

  ‘Deep and lyrical … Love and hope communicated is

  perhaps the greatest magic of all, and that’s what

  Catherine achieved in this book’

  Hilary McKay, author of The Casson Family series

  ‘An incredibly special and magical book! I was spellbound’

  Katherine Woodfine, author of

  The Sinclair’s Mysteries series

  ‘The Storm Keeper’s Island is unforgettable – the kind of

  story that will grab you by the heart and not let go’

  Katie Tsang, co-author of Sam Wu Is NOT Afraid of Ghosts

  ‘Funny, heartrending, terrifying … I’m on

  tenterhooks for the next book’

  Lauren James, author of The Loneliest Girl in the Universe

  ‘A warm-hearted tale full of magic, friendship and humour’

  Alex Bell, author of The Polar Bear Explorers’ Club

  ‘A magical rush of an adventure story about family,

  bravery, and harnessing the storm within …

  Fionn is a hero to really root for’

  Anna James, author of Pages & Co.

  For my grandparents,

  Captain Charles P. Boyle and Mary McCauley Boyle

  of Arranmore Island

  CONTENTS

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Epilogue

  About The Author

  PROLOGUE

  In a field full of wild flowers, a boy and a girl stood side by side beneath an ancient oak tree. The sky was angry, the thunder growling like an angry beast.

  ‘Are you ready?’ asked the boy nervously.

  The girl raised her chin, her wheat-blonde hair sweeping down her back in a curtain. ‘I’ve always been ready.’

  They pressed their palms against the gnarled trunk. The tree began to quiver, its branches stretching as it shook itself awake. There was a brief silence and then a crack exploded above them. A whip of lightning leapt from the clouds and split the centre of the tree in two. Flames erupted along the bark, climbing across the branches and devouring the leaves until everything was a bright, brilliant gold.

  ‘Betty?’ said the boy uncertainly. ‘Should we –’

  ‘Sssh!’ hissed the girl. ‘It’s about to say something.’

  The tree began to whisper. It was much louder than the boy expected – the crackle and hiss of surrounding flame slowly turning into words. ‘Ssssspeak or be sssspoken to.’

  The girl asked her question. As the tree considered it, she grew restless, tapping her fingers against the charred bark. The air grew heavier, a veil of mist curling the strands around her face.

  The tree did not speak to the girl again.

  Instead, it turned its attention to the boy and climbed inside his head. He fell to the ground, twisting and writhing, as a vision unfurled in the blackness of his mind.

  He was standing on the edge of a headland with the clouds gathering in his outstretched hands and the wind wreathing his body. He felt the sea rushing through his veins, leaving salt crystals in the lining of his heart.

  He knew that he was changed forever.

  Betty had been wrong.

  The island had chosen him.

  He tried to blink himself awake but the tree tightened its grip on his mind. Another vision pushed its way through. Something they had not asked to see.

  ‘Watch,’ hissed the tree. ‘Pay attention.’

  A boy appeared before him. He was a little younger, but he was wearing the same nose and the same eyes. In one hand, he held an emerald as green as the island grass. In the other, a crooked staff that pointed out to sea. They stood apart from each other, looking but not really seeing as ravens filled the sky in plumes of feathers. The earth cracked beneath their feet and a shadow crept across the island and buried them in darkness.

  The boy woke up. Back in the field of wild flowers, it was pouring with rain.

  ‘Betty,’ he said, a droplet landing squarely in his mouth. ‘You won’t believe what I’ve just seen.’

  The girl was standing over him, her narrowed eyes like burning coals. She kicked him in the ribs. ‘Don’t you mean what you just stole!’

  ‘Stop!’ He twisted away from her as she kicked him again. ‘I need to tell you something. Can you stop, please? Ow! Listen to me. I saw ravens, Betty. I think …’

  The girl wasn’t listening. She was stalking away from him, through wild flowers and sodden grass, her chin tipped to the weeping sky.

  The boy wanted to call her back, to tell her this was much bigger than her – that it was bigger than both of them – but she had disappeared into thin air, leaving only the faintest ripple behind.

  The boy tried to swallow his fear. Somewhere deep inside the earth, the darkness was rising again, a darkness more terrible than anything the world had ever seen.

  It was too late to stop it now.

  Chapter One

  THE SLEEPING ISLAND

  Fionn Boyle sat hunched on a plastic chair with his arms tucked into his sides and his chin tucked into his chest, and tried not to be sick all over his shoes.

  The ferry groaned. Fionn couldn’t help noticing the rust around its edges, the flaking blue paint, how the horn sounded like a dying cow. He tried not to imagine how much seawater he would have to swallow to drown from the inside out. Tara wasn’t watching him just then but Fionn knew sisters could smell fear. If he hurled his lunch up, he’d never hear the end of it.

  To make matters even more grim, Fionn was wedged between two nattering old ladies, and his phone was dead in his pocket. No coverage. Not even one bar. Sometimes the old ladies would stop and chew on a secret like it was too big to swallow.
Sometimes Fionn could feel their gazes prickling on the side of his face, like they were waiting for him to join in. Mostly the waves roared and drowned out all of it.

  That was the worst of all: the ocean right underneath him. In his most gruesome nightmares, it would suck him up and gulp him down and he would wake suddenly, dripping in sweat.

  The sea air burned in his lungs and stung his cheeks as he watched the mainland fade away, first to a green smudge on a grey horizon, and then to nothing at all.

  Already, Fionn missed the Dublin smog, the clang of roadworks and the half-finished tram tracks cutting up the city and flinging tourists from footpaths. He never thought about whether he liked it or not – the noisiness of a city constantly in motion – only that it was familiar, and to Fionn familiarity meant home.

  This was anything but familiar.

  Tara stood at the bow of the ship, her feet planted on the railings like she was about to launch herself into the ocean. Her dark hair whipped through the air, loose and tangled, like ropes. She turned, searching the cluster of passengers for him. ‘Come here, Fionny! Look at these waves! They’re huge!’

  Fionn shook his head. The ferry bobbed and his stomach went with it – up and down – until the contents of his lunch started to climb up his throat.

  ‘Don’t be such a baby!’ Tara taunted.

  Fionn and his sister were close in age. Fionn could even remember a time when they felt almost like friends. He supposed they’d had something in common until the day she turned thirteen and he stayed eleven, and suddenly she was much too wise and too clever to hang around and play video games with him any more.

  I’m mature now, Fionny. My interests have changed.

  Fionn didn’t know how Tara measured maturity but he was the one cooking dinner for the three of them most evenings, while Tara pawed Nutella out of the jar like Winnie-the-Pooh and shrieked the walls down any time she saw a spider.

  Tara smirked over her shoulder and then stepped higher on the boat railings, peering over the waves, until it looked like she was going to dive in, just to show him she could. Fionn thought it might be nice if she tipped over, and drowned a little. Not enough to die, just enough so that a fish could come along and eat the part of her brain that caused her personality to be so terrible.

  He went back to staring at the blurry horizon – a fixed point to help with the sickness. His mother said it would help with the motion of the boat. That was the last thing she told him before their goodbye back in Dublin, when her eyes were clear and her smile was sad. Then all of a sudden they were in their neighbour’s car, Fionn’s nose pressed up against the window, as they trundled across the country and left her behind.

  Fionn waited for the island to appear. The one she used to tell them about when he was younger, her eyes glassy with some faraway look. Sometimes the island was a beautiful place. Sometimes it was a sad, unforgiving place that held nothing beyond the memory of his father, long ago lost to the sea. All Fionn ever knew for sure was that Arranmore haunted her, and he could never figure out whether that was mostly a good thing or mostly a bad thing. Only that places can be just as important as people. That they can have the same power over you if you let them.

  Tara left her perch at the front of the ferry, skipped across the deck and bent down until they were almost nose-to-nose. ‘Do you have to look so depressed about all this?’

  Fionn didn’t like the way his sister threw the word around like that. Depressed. Like it was a colour he was wearing. Like it was something you could be, and then not be, by choice. Besides, it was easy for her to be excited about this. She had visited the island last summer and had somehow managed to make friends.

  ‘I don’t want to go,’ he grumbled. ‘I’m not going to pretend I do.’

  ‘You never want to go anywhere,’ Tara pointed out. ‘All you do is sit inside and play video games that you’re bad at anyway. You’re so boring.’

  Fionn wanted to say he wished he could stay behind with their mother, that he could sit beside her even when it felt like she couldn’t see him. He wanted to say he wasn’t bad at video games; that he was, in fact, excellent.

  Instead, he said, ‘Shut up.’

  Tara slid a Mars bar from her pocket – the result of a petrol-station shopping spree on the way to the ferry, old Mrs Waters snapping open her floral purse full of coins, smiling at them with her toothy grin. Get whatever you want, my loves.

  She took a bite, her words soupy from half-chewed caramel. ‘It’s an adventure, Fionny.’ She glanced from side to side, then dropped her voice. ‘This place is magical. Just wait and see.’

  ‘You only think it’s magical because you met a boy last year,’ said Fionn with deep, abiding disgust.

  Tara shook her head. ‘No, actually, I think it’s magical because there are secrets on the island.’

  Fionn tried to waft the smell of chocolate away from his nose. ‘What kind of secrets?’

  ‘Can’t tell you!’ she said, eyes gleaming with triumph.

  Fionn sighed. ‘I can’t believe I’m going to be stuck with you all summer.’

  ‘Well, I wouldn’t worry because I obviously won’t be spending any time with you.’ She wrinkled her nose, her freckles hunching together. ‘You can hang out with Grandad.’

  ‘I already like him better than you,’ said Fionn quickly.

  ‘You don’t even know him yet.’

  Fionn opened his fist to reveal his crumpled-up ferry ticket. ‘I like this piece of paper better than you.’

  Tara brandished her Mars bar at his nose. ‘You’re so immature.’

  ‘I am not.’ Fionn waited for her to look the other way and then threw the piece of paper at her. He watched it tangle in the ends of her hair and felt a little better then. Across the bay, a seagull dipped and swirled, its wing skimming the waves. It released a savage cry, and as if called to attention, the island rose to meet them.

  Pockets of dark green grass bubbled up out of the sea, climbing into hills that rolled over each other. Gravel roads weaved themselves between old buildings that hunched side by side along the pier, where the sand was dull and brassy. The place looked oddly deserted; it was as if the entire island was fast asleep.

  Arranmore.

  It was exactly how Fionn imagined it: a forgotten smudge on the edge of the world. The perfect place for his soul to come to die.

  Tara flounced back to her perch and Fionn felt himself deflate, like a giant balloon. He watched the faraway blurs on the island turn into people, shops, houses and cars, and too many fishing boats to count. He tried to picture his mother here, in this strange place, wandering along the pier, ducking into the corner shop for bread or milk. Or even standing on the shore, looking out at the ocean, with her arms pulled around her. He couldn’t imagine it, no matter how hard he tried.

  When the ferry had finally groaned its way into port, Tara bounded on to the island without so much as a backwards glance. Fionn hovered on the edge of the pier, his spine stiff as a rod. Something was wrong. The ground was vibrating underneath him, the slightest tremor rattling against his soles as though his footsteps were far heavier than they really were. The breeze rolled backwards and twisted around him, pushing his hair into his eyes and his breath back into his lungs, until he had the most absurd sensation that the island was opening its arms and enveloping him.

  Fionn searched the jagged lines of the headland. In the distance, at the edge of the bay, where briars and ferns tussled on a low, sloping cliff, a cottage poked out of the wilderness. The smoke from its chimney curled into the evening air like a finger.

  The wind pushed him across the pier. The smoke kept rising and twisting, grey against the sun-blush sky.

  It was beckoning him.

  Fionn could almost hear the whispering in his ears: a voice he had never heard before, a voice thrumming deep in his blood and in his bones. A voice he was trying very hard to ignore.

  ‘Come here,’ it was saying. ‘Come home.’

  Chapte
r Two

  THE CANDLE MAKER’S COTTAGE

  Malachy Boyle’s house was breathing; Fionn was almost sure of it. It was rising and falling behind the tangled briars, peeking out at them every so often. The smoke was still curling into the sky, but there was no sign of Fionn’s grandfather.

  ‘Hurry up,’ Tara grunted. Her suitcase was spitting rocks at Fionn as she hauled it up the narrow road. ‘I want to get there some time this century!’

  ‘Does he not know we’re coming?’ Fionn was half watching the road and half watching the house up ahead. ‘Shouldn’t he have met us down at the pier?’

  ‘He’s old,’ said Tara.

  ‘Can he not walk?’

  ‘Do you want him to carry you, like a baby?’ The determined thu-thunk of her suitcase punctuated her words. ‘Or can you not climb a hill by yourself?’

  ‘I’m not by myself, am I?’ Fionn snapped. ‘I’m with Lucifer herself.’

  ‘Shut up,’ Tara hissed.

  ‘I just think it’s rude,’ Fionn mumbled. ‘We’re supposed to be his guests. And we don’t even know where to go.’

  ‘I know where to go. I’ve been here before, only last time I didn’t have you slowing me down.’

  Fionn rolled his eyes. They had been delayed by almost five minutes when a bee landed on Tara’s shoulder. It chased her around the headland, and she went shrieking and hopping, like it was some great big grizzly bear.

  ‘Lead on then, Columbus,’ he said, stomping up after her.

  Fionn didn’t think his expectations could possibly get any lower. And yet.

  The cottage was small and squat, wedged deep into the earth, and swamped in a mess of trees and thorns. The edges of stonework peeked out in parts, where the white paint was peeling. The roof was made of slates, but around the edges, some had chipped and fallen into cracked gutters. The windows were cloudy with dirt and the sills were stuffed with headless flowers, their stems bending over into the garden like they were searching for their lost petals.

 

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