Christine Brodien-Jones

Going by Dr. Marriott's description, Zoe imagined it to be small and elegant as she peered into dozens of shelves, rummaging through the contents. There were globes and charts and atlases, pocket watches and hand-painted Indian silk, gold-plated cutlery, litter coffers of spice, inlaid combs, silver fasteners, trinket boxes, blown-glass figurines, turn-of-the-century postcards with foreign stamps, and portraits of Victorian authors in elaborate frames. But nowhere did she discover a stone of any kind, with or without runes.

Christine Brodien-Jones

I need to buy some postcards to send to Mom and Dad,' said Ian, heading up the steam to the Captain's Quill Bookshop. 'I also want to send some funny ones to Jackson and some of my other friends.'' I'll get one for my mom,' said Zoe. But as she sorted through the postcards, she remembered her mom was traveling all summer without a fixed address, and email was a no-go because Granddad didn't own a computer. She didn't have the addresses of her friends with her, either-not that she had many friends.

Christine Brodien-Jones

Just because there were times you were frightened doesn't mean you weren't brave.

Christine Brodien-Jones

Kids in aprons appeared, putting tureens of vegetable soup on the tables and plates of boiled eggs, potatoes and lentils, bowls of endive-and-radish salad, small rounds of cheese and loaves of brown bread, all looking quite delicious, in Zoe's opinion.

Christine Brodien-Jones

Without doubt, it is the greatest act of courage that is often the most fearful.

Christine Brodien-Jones

Zoe let the poetry flow over her, like shadows on water, sunlight against stone: timeworn words shaped like stars, like shells, like the ruins of lost temples, soft as the breaths of mystics.

Christine Brodien-Jones

Zoe's mom liked to send silly postcards that made her laugh, but they usually dwindled as the summer wore on.

Christine Brodien-Jones

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