BY THE SAME AUTHOR
Inside Grandad
The Ropemaker
The Lion Tamer’s Daughter and Other Stories
Chuck and Danielle
Shadow of a Hero
Time and the Clock Mice, Etcetera
A Bone from a Dry Sea
AK
Eva
Merlin Dreams
A Box of Nothing
Giant Cold
Healer
The Seventh Raven
City of Gold
and Other Stories from the Old Testament
Tulku
Hepzibah
Annerton Pit
The Blue Hawk
The Dancing Bear
Emma Tupper’s Diary
Chance, Luck and Destiny
The Weathermonger
Heartsease
The Devil’s Children
Suth’s Story
Noli’s Story
Po’s Story
Mana’s Story
THE GIFT ARRIVED FOR ALFREDO’S SEVENTH name-day. It wasn’t like his other gifts—the basket of candied cherries, the hobbyhorse, the toy drum—not a gift for a child at all. He opened the little leather pouch and pulled out a fine yellow chain, like the one his big brother, Giorgio, had been given to wear round his neck for his First Communion, but instead of a cross on the end this one had a funny little animal, made of the same yellow stuff as the chain.
He stared at it. The body was like that of one of the little brown lizards that lived in the cracks in the brickwork of the bakehouse, except that it had a long tail that curled under its belly, right round behind and over, with the end hanging down beside its front leg with a sharp hook at the tip. And the spread toes had small hooked claws, and not the sucker pads of the bakehouse lizards.
The head and face were even more different, not like any lizard’s, but round and wrinkled, like the face of the little gray ape Alfredo had seen at the great Shrove Tuesday fair, sitting on a hurdy-gurdy with a leash round its neck. Except that the monkey had had a huge wide grin, but this thing’s mouth was a little round hole.
“That’s a funny animal,” he said. “What is it?”
Nobody answered. He looked up, puzzled, aware of an uncomfortable silence in the room.
“What is it, Mother?” he said again.
Mother sighed and looked questioningly at Father.
“It’s a present from my brother, your uncle Giorgio,” said Father. “To bring you luck.
”“You’re not going to let him wear it?” said Mother.
“Better than not letting him,” said Father, in the voice he used to settle an argument.
“He came to my christening too,” said Giorgio, “but he never came to my name-day, or gave
“He didn’t pay much attention to anyone,” said Mother.
“Never does,” said Father. “Better that way. And you are named for my grandfather, not your uncle. ”
There was an edge in both his parents’ voices that Alfredo didn’t notice but remembered later, looking back to what had happened on his name-day. At the time he was busy puzzling over the gift his uncle had sent him.