Knight's Castle

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Authors: Edward Eager

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Knight's Castle
Edward Eager
Table of Contents

Title Page

Table of Contents

Copyright

Dedication

1. The Blow

2. The Beginning

3. The Magic City

4. The Dolorous Tower

5. The Greenwood Tree

6. The Giants' Lair

7. The Quest

8. The Ending

About the Author

Copyright © 1956 by Harcourt, Inc.
Copyright renewed 1984 by Jane Eager and N. M. Bodecker

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
submitted online at
www.harcourt.com/contact
or mailed to the following address:
Permissions Department, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company,
6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

www.HarcourtBooks.com

First Harcourt Young Classics edition 1999
First Odyssey Classics edition 1990
First published 1956

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Eager, Edward.
Knight's castle/by Edward Eager; illustrated by N. M. Bodecker.
p. cm.
"An Odyssey/Harcourt Young Classic."
Sequel: The time garden.
Summary: Four cousins, Roger, Ann, Eliza, and Jack, have an extraordinary
summer when, after an old toy soldier comes to life, they find themselves
transported back to the days of Robin Hood and Ivanhoe.
[1. Magic—Fiction. 2. Space and time—Fiction. 3. Cousins—Fiction.
4. Knights and knighthood—Fiction.] I. Bodecker, N. M., ill. II. Title.
PZ7.E115Kn 1999
[Fic]—dc21 99-24557
ISBN 978-0-15-202074-3
ISBN 978-0-15-202073-6 (pb)

Printed in the United States of America
D F H J L K I G E C
MV
T V X Y W U S
(pb)

For my son
FRITZ,
friend of knights
and castles

1. The Blow

 

It happened just the other day, to a boy named Roger.

Most of it happened to his sister Ann, too, but she was a girl and didn't count, or at least that's what Roger thought, or at least he thought that in the beginning.

Part of it happened to his cousins Jack and Eliza, too, but they didn't come into it till later.

Roger and Ann lived with their mother and father in a pleasant small house in a pleasant small city, and until the blow fell life was very pleasant.

Their father was an understanding parent, often quite helpful and willing about such important things as building a rabbit hutch in the backyard or hanging the swing from the biggest oak tree. And even though he said he wasn't good with his hands (which was true), still part of the rabbit hutch stayed together quite nicely (though all the rabbits got away through the part that didn't), and one year the swing didn't fall down till nearly the end of summer.

And best of all, their father always read to them for an hour after dinner, even though they'd been able to read perfectly well to themselves for years now. This practice sometimes led to hot argument, because Roger was getting to be rather a yeomanly type and wanted to hear books like
The White Company
and
The Scottish Chiefs
, while Ann was becoming all too womanly, and leaned toward
Little Women
and the Betsy-Tacy books. And their father would complicate matters by always wanting to read books like
Five Children and It,
which he said was great literature. And Ann agreed that, next to the Betsy-Tacy books, it was.

Roger enjoyed science fiction books, too, but there their father drew the line. He said they were like having bad dreams on purpose, and if the Flying Saucers really
have
landed, he didn't want to know about it. Roger called this Not Taking a Realistic Attitude. All the same, he really liked the magic books his father and Ann loved so, and back in the days when he was a child, before he got to be eleven, he had even hoped that some day something magic would happen to
him.
But nothing ever had, and that seemed to Roger to prove that there was no such thing. Or if there ever had been, probably modern science had done away with it long ago.

Their father always said how could he be sure, and besides, even if there weren't any such thing as magic, wasn't it pleasant to think that there might be? And in the discussion that would follow, their mother would sometimes pass through the room and cry out, and say honestly, their father was as much of a child as
they
were, which Ann thought quite a compliment, though she was not sure their mother meant it as one.

Ann was eight, and believed nearly everything.

When their mother wasn't passing through the room and crying out, she was quite an understanding parent, too, except about the way Roger kept wanting more model soldiers when he had two hundred and fifty-six already, and the way all two hundred and fifty-six were always to be found all over the floor of his room, which she said passed all understanding.

And sometimes when Roger would start picking on Ann because she was a girl, and younger, their mother would get really cross, and say there would be none of that in
this
house! Their mother said she knew just how Ann felt because
she
had been a girl once, too, and the youngest of
four
children, and what she had endured worms wouldn't believe!

But at other times she talked about what fun she and her sisters and brother had had; so Roger decided she couldn't have suffered so very much. And when he asked his Uncle Mark about it, his Uncle Mark said their mother had been a terror to cats and ruled the household with a rod of iron. And when he asked his Aunt Katharine, his Aunt Katharine said their mother had been a dear little baby, but went through a difficult phase as she grew older. He couldn't ask his Aunt Jane, because she was hardly ever there, being usually occupied hunting big game in darkest Africa or touring the English countryside on a bicycle.

But he decided their mother's childhood had probably been very much like their own, partly good and partly bad, but mostly very good indeed.

And so time went on, with few clouds to stir life's untroubled sea, until the day the blow fell.

The blow fell on a day in June. School had been over for only a few days, and the whole bright vacation lay ahead, waiting for them to make up their minds where to spend it. Their mother wanted to tour New England and stop at all the antique shops looking for old spice boxes, which she liked for some reason, and their father wanted to revisit an island in Canada, where he'd spent a wonderful summer once, back when the world was young.

Roger wanted to go somewhere yeomanly, like Sherwood Forest, but since everybody else seemed to think that was a bit far, he decided the Rocky Mountains were the next best thing. Ann didn't know where she wanted to go yet, but she thought probably Wampler's Lake, to be near her best friend Edith Timson. They were to have a big family conference about it that evening and decide.

But that afternoon their father came home from the office at half past three instead of half past five, and he didn't explain why, but said hello to Roger and Ann, just as though everything were perfectly usual, only somehow he didn't sound as though everything were.

And a few minutes later he and their mother went into the living room and shut the door, and their voices went on and on, for what seemed like practically forever.

Roger and Ann didn't know what to think of this odd behavior, but then they got interested in seeing who could draw the most horrible Frankenstein monster, and forgot about it. And after they'd drawn, and compared, and argued about which was most truly horrifying, Roger tried to persuade Ann to join him in a war of model soldiers. Only Ann was never terribly interested in model soldiers; so they played
Monopoly
instead.

But after a few minutes of this, Ann got to thinking about that door being closed, though she didn't say anything about it to Roger. And after a few minutes more, Roger found himself wondering about those voices going on and on, though he didn't say anything about it to Ann.

And five minutes later all subterfuge failed, and they looked at each other and nodded with one accord, and put their
Monopoly
game away (which was unusual of them) and went and stood on the stairway. The living room door was still closed, and from where they stood they could hear only an occasional unrevealing word, but the voices sounded serious.

"I sense divorce in the air," said Roger, who had been seeing too many old movies on television lately.

Ann shook her head. "They don't sound angry, just kind of worried. Do you suppose Father's done something
criminal?
" (Ann had been seeing old movies on television, too.)

"Not Father," said Roger. "He's too nice and not half crafty enough. The police would catch him right away."

"Maybe they
have,
" said Ann. But it turned out neither guess was right.

For the voices stopped and the door opened at last, as voices and doors will, and their mother and father came out, and looked at them with false bright smiles, and said it was time for dinner. And dinner was their mother's specially good meat loaf and popovers, but somehow the two children couldn't enjoy any of it, and every popover was as lead.

Finally Roger put his fourth popover down on his plate half-eaten, and burst into speech. "It's not fair," he said. "It's not fair, not telling us what's the matter, when anybody could see something ¿s!"

"We're not babies," Ann chimed in. "We can stand it, no matter how terrible."

"It's not terrible," their father said. "Only I'm afraid we won't get to the Rocky Mountains this summer, or Wampler's Lake, either."

And then he said he guessed he'd go and serve the dessert, and while he was out of the room their mother told them.

She told them their father had something wrong inside, and he was going to have to go to a hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, to have it made well. And because she didn't want to be separated from their father at a time like this, their mother was going to Baltimore, Maryland, too. And because it was all going to cost a lot of money, they wouldn't be able to send the children somewhere else for their vacation, and so she and Roger and Ann were going to have to spend the next few weeks in Baltimore, Maryland, and no one could tell how many weeks it would be, but maybe it would be the whole summer.

"Your father hopes you won't be too disappointed about the mountains and the lake," she finished.

Roger didn't say anything for a minute. Then he got red. Then he said, "It isn't that. It's Father."

"I know," said their mother.

"Is it serious?" said Roger.

"Doctor Reese is almost certain he'll be all right," said their mother.

"Almost," said Roger.

"I know," said their mother.

Ann didn't say anything. But when their father came in a second later with the dessert, which happened to be Royal Anne cherries and sponge cake, she ran to take the tray from him, as though its weight might be too much for his feeble strength.

And Roger jumped up and pulled their father's chair out for him, as though he might not be able to manage it alone.

And when they took their places at the table again, Ann didn't eat, but sat looking at their father with an expression on her face that Roger would have called icky if he hadn't had a sneaking suspicion that he was looking the same way himself.

Their father ate two Royal Anne cherries. Then he looked up and saw Roger and Ann. He swallowed hard, as if he were swallowing a pit in one of the cherries. Then he grinned.

"Look, kids," he said. "We may as well get this straight. I don't have a pain, and I'm not weak and pining away and having to be waited on. I've just got something mixed up inside that has to be straightened out, and we're going where the doctors are who can do that best. And we won't any of us have time to worry, because we've got to leave in three days and it'll take all that time to get ready."

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