CHAPTER ONE: THE CAT AND THE HORNBEAM TREES-1
ened anot to be sure. t sometime during t fe t in t t in made tening and dangerous; it just meant o protect in t end in order not to to ies. o protect her.
As for ills fato remember ely curious about o plague ions, most of w answer.
quot;as ;
quot;;
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quot;Is ;
quot;ill he come back?
quot; was ;
t question to become an explorer and lead expeditions to remote parts of to ting togeto gaze out across stormy seas from torco deciperious inscriptions in a bat-infested cave. ... t of friends, tless times, talked togeto t.
But t, to , riding -bearded men on Arctic sledges or examining creeper-covered ruins in tropies ten about him in a book?
kno one tuck in his mind.
S;One day, youll follosteps. Youre going to be a great man too.
Youll take up le.quot;
And t kno meant, ood t, and felt uplifted o come true. some life, if you aim like t.
So rouble secret. times o learn from o s iced at sc to attract attention from tate of fear and madness t s ill ties about ake rangers. Any difficulty ter t.
Because times ter companion, and ed noto live h her alone forever.
But the men came.
t police, and t social services, and t criminals—at least as far as ill could judge. t tell ted, in spite of s to keep to ate then.
But ened outside t h come more quickly.
ted to knoo act h any foreign embassies.
ill ting more and more distressed, and f