Feather Boy Read Online Free Page B

Feather Boy
Book: Feather Boy Read Online Free
Author: Nicky Singer
Pages:
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completely crystalline idea about a problem. An idea which often bears no relation to whatever I scribbled down in the night, but it’s still there like some perfect jewel on my pillow. Of course, it’s not always like that. Much more often I have to go back to the diary, reading and re-reading until something jumps out at me – a word, a colour, a phrase, a clue. Something to work with. Naturally, I always hope for the jewel. But somehow I can’t see that happening with Chance House.
    Once I’ve decided to use the dream alarm, the evening normally passes mournfully slowly. But not tonight. It only seems a moment before I’m in bed. Then it’s just a matter of going through the ritual. I lie on my back, close my eyes, and relax my body, starting with my feet. When all my limbs are so heavy that the mattress seems dented with them, I turn to my mind. This is when it can get tricky. I think about the problem – in this case Chance House – but I try not to direct my thoughts. It works better if I can keep everything loose and unfocused. If images come, and they do, I attempt to follow them, but not to pursue them, so they can choose their own way. It normally takes a while for the vague, meandering flow to begin. But Chance House conjures itself at once, arriving exact and massive in my imagination. It’s a huge edifice of dirty cream brick. Wide, concrete steps lead to a forbidding door. The door handle is a twisted ring of metal, fashioned like a rope. I imagine myself walking up the steps, grasping the handle in both hands and passing boldly into Edith’s past and my future. But that’s not what happens. I do walk up the steps. But the moment I touch the door, there is a flash and a bang and the house disappears. Or that’s what I believe at first. A little while later, as I stand in the dark, it occurs to me that maybe I have disappeared.

4
    Next thing I’m aware of is Mum shaking me by the shoulders.
    “Robert,” she says gently.
    At once I’m in action mode, it can’t be more than three seconds before I’m bolt upright, pencil in hand.
    “Room,” I write in my dream diary. “Small, cosy, warm, not unlike my bedroom.”
    “Robert?”
    “People: me, Mum. Atmosphere: everyday, normal. Colours: pale but bright, morning colours.”
    Mum gets up and opens the curtains. It is bright. In fact, it is morning.
    I grab for my clock, focus. Focus again.
    “You set the alarm for three am,” says Mum. “Yousilly chump.” She smiles, touches me lightly on the head.
    “What!”
    “Lucky I noticed, eh?” says my mother.
    I fall backwards on to the bed. She re-set the alarm. She re-set the alarm! I don’t believe it. I pull the duvet over my head.
    “Come on now,” she says, “seven-thirty. Chop chop.”
    She leaves.
    I wail, I moan, I thump the mattress. Then I get dressed.
    “I’m on lates,” says Mum over breakfast. “Do you want me to walk you to school?”
    “No,” I say. “No, thanks.” Niker says only girls and wusses are walked to school.
    Mum notes what I eat (one slice of toast with strawberry jam), what I drink (nothing) and then she follows me to the bathroom and fiddles about while I clean my teeth. She watches me put my library book and football boots in my school bag and then I watch her as she takes them out again. She puts the boots, which are mud-free, in a plastic bag, examines the library book, remarks, “Haven’t you read this before?”and then replaces both items in the bag. After which she checks the time.
    “You don’t have to go yet,” she says.
    It’s twenty to nine. The journey to school – via The Dog Leg – is about five minutes. “I like being early,” I say. “I get to use the computers.” Actually Mr Biddulph doesn’t get in till nine-thirty and the computer room is locked like Fort Knox. But Mum doesn’t know that.
    “I’ll get you a computer one day,” she says. “I’ll save up.”
    “I didn’t mean that.”
    “I know you didn’t,
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