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Authors: Jaleigh Johnson

The Mark of the Dragonfly

BOOK: The Mark of the Dragonfly
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Text copyright © 2014 by Jaleigh Johnson
Jacket art copyright © 2014 by Nigel Quarless
Map illustration copyright © 2014 Brandon Dorman

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Delacorte Press, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York.

Delacorte Press is a registered trademark and the colophon is a trademark of Random House LLC.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Johnson, Jaleigh.
The mark of the dragonfly / Jaleigh Johnson. — First edition.
pages cm
Summary: Since her father’s death in a factory in the Dragonfly territories, thirteen-year-old Piper has eked out a living as a scrapper in Merrow Kingdom, but the arrival of a mysterious girl sends her on a dangerous journey to distant lands.
ISBN 978-0-385-37615-0 (hc) — ISBN 978-0-385-37645-7 (glb) — ISBN 978-0-385-37646-4 (ebook) [1. Fantasy.] I. Title.
PZ7.J63214Mar 2014
[Fic]—dc23
2013019716

Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

v3.1

To Tim, for being the hero of my favorite story. You know the one
.

Scrap Town Number Sixteen
Merrow Kingdom

Micah brought the music box to her on the night of the meteor storm. Piper never slept on these nights, when debris from other worlds fell from the sky. Restlessness kept her awake in bed, staring at the slanted ceiling of her tiny house. She counted the widening cracks in the gray scrub-pine planks and then counted the seconds as they ticked by on the tarnished silver watch she wore around her neck. Beneath her cotton nightdress, the metal lay warm and comfortable against her skin. Micah’s knock made her lose count, but the watch ticked on steadily.

She pulled on a pair of her father’s old boots, slung his brown coat over her nightdress, and opened the door. Wind blew a harsh breath of snow and ice crystals into her face. Piper wiped her eyes and fixed a look of annoyance on the boy huddled in the doorway.

“I must be seeing things,” Piper said. “This can’t be Micah Howell standing at my door, dragging me out of bed in the drop dead of night. Look at me—I’m stunned stiff. I’m speechless.”

Micah snorted. “That’ll be the day, then. Let me in, Piper, will ya?” He stomped snow off his boots. “Stinks out here, and it’s so cold my teeth are cracking together.”

“That’s your own fault for being out on a storm night. Most scrappers have the sense to stay inside.” He was right, though. The air already reeked of brimstone. The storm was coming. Piper moved to let him in, then shut the door behind him. He immediately ran to the cast-iron stove to warm his hands. Piper nudged him aside and adjusted the dampers. “Hand me a log before you make yourself at home,” she said. It was her habit to pretend to be bothered by her friend, even though she was happy to see him.

Micah handed her a piece of wood from the basket near the stove and reached into the bulky sack he had slung over his shoulder. “I brought it, just like I said I would.”

“That’s great, kid, but I thought you were going to bring it a few hours ago—you know, before I made a comfortable nest in the middle of my bed.” Piper tended the stove, and then she went to the window and looked out at the sky, which had begun to lighten, though it was still several hours until dawn. The moon waxed a sickly greenish color, as it always did before the meteors fell,
making the clouds around it look like swelling bruises on the sky.

Piper’s skin itched. She had the urge to go outside and watch the fields, to see the first of the meteors streak from the sky, but it was too cold, too dangerous. And besides, she’d promised to fix Micah’s toy.

A musical box—Piper rolled her eyes. Machines couldn’t make proper music. You needed a person for that.

She lit an extra kerosene lamp and placed it on the small kitchen table. Piston rings, bolts, and cylinders littered its surface. Piper shifted these aside, wishing she had a bigger work space, one she didn’t also have to eat at. “Let’s see it, then.”

Micah set the music box between them. “Isn’t she beautiful?” he said, his fingers lingering on the lid. It was decorated with a painted figure of a woman in a white silk robe. She reclined on a strip of grass, her long black hair falling around her waist. At her back grew a tree full to bursting with pink blossoms that hung over her like a veil.

Whoever had made the music box was a skilled artist. Piper could practically smell the flowers, each one hand-painted in white, coral, and cerise. In a few places, the paint had cracked and faded, but those were hardly noticeable. Overall, it was an incredible piece. Micah had been lucky to find it.

“But she won’t sing?” Piper lifted the lid to get a look
at the musical components. She’d seen contraptions like these before. A series of pins arranged on a metal cylinder struck the teeth of a steel comb while the cylinder turned, making the tinkling notes of a song. She’d heard this type of music and had always thought the sound was a little annoying. “Did you clean the inside after you dug it out of the crater?”

“Course I did.” The boy was indignant. “You think I’m stupid?”

Piper glanced up from the box and raised an eyebrow.

“Ha-ha. You watch—the coin I get from that thing will feed my family and me for a month. She’ll look smart in one of those fancy mansions in Ardra. Don’t you think she will, Piper?” His excitement faltered, and he looked at her anxiously.

“Yeah, it’ll look smart. Just make sure you find a buyer with a stiff hip at the market,” Piper said. “They’re the ones who’ll be looking for these kinds of pretties.” She felt the cylinder and its tiny pins. Micah had done a decent job cleaning it, but flecks of dirt still caked the comb, and something was keeping the cylinder from turning. She heard the soft, strangled notes of a song trying to play.

“Why a stiff hip?” Micah asked. He had a thin face and a stubby nose that always scrunched up when he was confused.

“It means he’s got a lot of coin on his belt.” Piper swayed back and forth in her chair like a drunk man
to illustrate what she meant. “Poor thing, he can’t walk right with all that money weighing him down. You have to know what to look for or you’ll never make any decent coin.”

“I’ve sold stuff before,” Micah said. “I did all right.”

“A handful of trinkets at most—you’re still a puppy at this game.”

“Am not!” At eleven, Micah hated it when he was made to feel young.

Piper went on as if she hadn’t heard him. “Every trader’s got a different story. Greasy fingers means you’re dealing with a machinist.” She waggled her stained fingers at him significantly. “She’ll be looking for spare parts. The ones who come in from Ardra will want iron, always iron. If you have books or pictures to sell, you want an archivist. Stiff hips have money to waste. You can sell them just about anything if you can convince them it’s a one of a kind.”

BOOK: The Mark of the Dragonfly
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