Seeds of Time
When a girl with a broken spirit finds a passage through
the fabric of Time, can she prevent a tragedy in her own past?
Set in present-day British Columbia, SEEDS OF TIME tells the story
of Darrell Connor, a young girl struggling to find her way after
the loss of her father and her leg in a terrible accident. Sent
against her will to a strange new school, the friendship she begins
to forge with classmates Brodie and Kate is jeopardized when she
somehow slips through the fabric of time. Emerging in 14th century
Scotland during the darkest days of the Black Plague, Darrell’s
questions turn to terror when her new friends become stranded in
the past. Is a stray dog the key to her passage through time? And
can the hard lessons of history help her find her friends and make
herself whole again?
An excerpt from the novel...
Her aching arm and head and the resulting nausea in the cave were
nothing compared to the series of shocks Darrell received as she
stepped out into the open. Delaney led the way, bouncing out into
the sunlight joyfully. Darrell took a step forward, and then stopped.
Her leg felt heavy, and she knew something was wrong, but her eyes
were drawn in amazement toward Delaney. The dog spun around, waiting
for Darrell to follow, tail wagging. His energy and the light from
his eyes were unmistakable.
“Your coat,” whispered Darrell, and she sank to the
ground in surprise. “What’s happened to you, boy?” For
something certainly had happened to Delaney since he had slipped
into the cave with Darrell less than an hour before. His coat had
been golden, long and gorgeous. His gently waving tail had begun
as deep gold and faded to white at the end of its long feathers.
However, the dog in front of Darrell now bore no resemblance to
the Delaney who had been with her moments before.
His coat was brown and curly. He was clipped unevenly and one
side of his fur was singed back, almost to the skin. His ears slid
forward in a most un-Delaney-like way. He was smaller and looked
terribly thin. And yet Darrell knew, looking into his eyes, that
this was Delaney. She swallowed.
“Delaney, sit!” she commanded, her voice hoarse with
shock. The dog sat, wagging.
She swept her arm down in the special signal she had taught Delaney,
indicating that he should lie down and stay. The dog dropped to
the ground like a shot and looked up at her, raising alternating
eyebrows.
“Good boy, Delaney,” Darrell whispered. He wagged
his tail and wiggled nearer. Darrell closed her eyes and rubbed
them with her fingers, and then looked at Delaney again. He looked
back at her, eyes warm and brown. Darrell rolled on to one knee
and prepared to stand up when she received her second jolt in under
a minute. This one knocked her back down onto the ground, her heart
pounding. She looked down and saw that she was no longer wearing
jeans. Instead, she was wearing a long skirt of thick brown wool.
At the hem of the skirt, her left foot protruded, encased in a
worn brown leather boot, soled in wood and caked with a combination
of mud and sand. Where her right foot should be was a splintered
stub of wood, like the end of a crutch.
Darrell let out a choking sob. Her head began to swim. She put
her face in her hands and closed her eyes tightly, then as quickly
opened them again. Everything looked the same. She reached down
and pulled the hem of the dress up slowly to see the stump of her
right leg tightly bound to a wooden splint, ending in a peg leg
like a pirate would wear. No plastic foot. No prosthesis at all,
really. Just a wooden peg, bound tightly to the base of her leg.
Looking around, Darrell became aware that more than just she and
Delaney had changed. As she lifted her head and gazed about for
the first time, she realized that she was sitting on a beach against
a rocky outcropping, looking up at the walls of what looked like
a very dirty and ancient town. Along the shore the rotting hulls
of many wooden boats lay like the corpses of sea creatures, thrusting
their broken ribs toward the sky. She swallowed again and struggled
to her feet.
Delaney barked and ran up the rocky beach, so unlike the one she
had been standing on when she entered the cave. Unsure of what
else to do and feeling dazed and sick, Darrell followed the dog
who no longer looked like Delaney up some stone steps and in through
the walls of the ancient town.
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