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      The Ragwitch

      Garth Nix

      

      TO SHAHNAZ,

      MY FAMILY, AND FRIENDS

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       7 A Friend of Beasts / Lyssa

       8. A Guide / The Namyr Steps

       9. The Wind Moot / Glazed Folk

       10. The Memory / A Village by the Sea

       11. The Sed Festival

       12. The Beast /To the Water Lord

       13. Golden Fire / The Water Lord’s Catch

       14. Sleye Midden / Sharks

       15. Anhyvar / Aleyne

       16. A Picnic With Lyssa / Master Caqael and Friends

       17. Reddow Cairn

       18. Julia Is Summoned / Dancing With Fire

       19. Within Her Mind/ Rhysamarn

       20. The Potato Harvest / The Raqwitch Attacks

       21. The Challenge / Thruan

       22. The Worm / Dreams and Shadows

       23. The Spire / The Forge

       24. The Last Battle

       Epilogue

       Also by Garth Nix

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       1. The Midden

      “COME ON, PAUL!” shrieked Julia as she ran down the dune, the sand sliding away under her bare feet. Below her lay the beach, a white expanse bordered by mounds of seaweed. Beyond the seaweed lay the sea, a great mass of slow, tumbling waves, each solemnly dumping another load of the green-brown kelp.

      Julia didn’t wait for an answer to her call – a brief backward glance showed Paul atop the dune, staring single-mindedly into the sea. She kept on running, breaking into an erratic skip to avoid the stinging bluebottles cast ashore to die in the morning sun.

      Entranced by the view, Paul slowly moved his gaze along the beach, like a swivelling human telescope. He looked mainly to the north, where grey rocks thrust out into the sea, forming a spit, full of intricate pools and dangerous channels.

      Above the spit, a strange hill rose out of the sand, a reddish hill, crowned with thousands of gleaming white fragments and shells. The hill dominated the shore, rising high above the lesser dunes that flanked it.

      “Come on!” shouted Julia again. Paul looked down and saw that she was already walking towards the spit. He quickly switched from looking to walking mode and took a diagonal path to meet her, half sliding down the face of the great dune.

      “Isn’t it fantastic?” burbled Julia, as Paul finally arrived at the spit, panting from his exertions. She spoke without looking at him, intent on the tiny fish that swirled about her toes in the rock pool.

      “Yeah, great!” answered Paul enthusiastically. “Do you want to go out on the spit? We might see a dolphin from the end.”

      “Not now. Wouldn’t you rather climb that?” asked Julia, pointing at the hill.

      “What sort of hill is that?” asked Paul. “I’ve never seen a hill like that on a beach!”

      “It’s a midden. Daddy told me about it last night. You can just see it from the house.”

      “What’s a midden?”

      “An Aboriginal midden,” explained Julia, “is sort of a really old rubbish tip. It took thousands of years to build up, just by people dropping shells in the same place. That’s what those white things are.”

      “But what about the red dirt?”

      “Oh, that,” whispered Julia, her eyes widening in mock fear. “The dirt is the remains of old, old bones.”

      “Maybe I don’t want to go up there after all,” said Paul, echoing Julia’s tone of mock fear. Deep inside though, he was a little frightened. The Midden looked quite safe in the bright sunlight, but at night, it could easily be a different, more chilling place.

      “Let’s go then,” shouted Julia, springing to her feet and bounding up towards the Midden. Not quite so eager, Paul slowly got to his feet and walked after her.

      It took several minutes to climb to the top, as the shell fragments cut their bare feet, making it like walking across a field of broken glass. Still, it was possible to thread a precarious path through the shell patches by keeping to the sections of plain red earth.

      On top of the Midden, the sea breeze was much stronger and the scent of salt was heavy in the air. From their vantage point, they could see clearly for kilometres, both to the north and south. With their newly extended horizon, an ocean-racing yacht had just become visible out to sea.

      “The Sydney to Hobart race goes by here,” said

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