Page 14 - Sample Flip Builder Project
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Days of Fear and Wonder

                              By Patricia Swan


                              This, truly, I promise you, is how it really was, or seemed to

                              be. It is what I remember. This was not Hobbiton, Ruritania,

                              or the Lost Land of Lyonesse, but the drab, post-war North
                              East of England, where I was born...


                              There was a mountain, bone ash and storm cloud grey, tall

                              as Everest, conical like Fuji; a monstrous, looming presence

                              alive with fire and smoking crevasses. Flames might burst
                              forth  anywhere, lava mushrooms bloom without warning

                              then collapse to swallow bold, unwary children. Sometimes
                              there’d be rock slides or avalanches and the villagers would

                              cover survivors’ eyes lest little bodies be exposed, mouths
                              wide in final, unheard screams. In the cool seasons, when

                              the fires retreated into the mountain’s heart, brave men

                              would sometimes attempt the summit. None succeeded.
                              Some never returned, but once in a long while a man would

                              stumble back into the village carrying pieces of the
                              mountain: letters, messages imprinted on stone, the

                              mountain’s memory of ferns and flowers, sometimes a fish or
                              newt, never a child. Never, and the people would be unsure

                              whether to rejoice or mourn the mountain’s forgetting.

                                     On the far side of the mountain lay a desert:
                              deceptive, shifting dunes, valleys of cloying mud and

                              pockets of quicksand. On the near side, not far from the

                              village, was a lake, black and bottomless, its stagnant water
                              reflecting the mountain and its fires, never the sun. The lake

                              swallowed sunlight as the mountain swallowed children.
                              Once, long ago it was said, the lake too was a child-eater,

                              but no child now reached its baleful shore. It had protected

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