Jack

Read Jack Online

Authors: Liesl Shurtliff

THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Text copyright © 2015 by Liesl Shurtliff

Jacket art copyright © 2015 by Jim Madsen

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children's Books, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York.

Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Shurtliff, Liesl.

Jack : the true story of Jack and the beanstalk / Liesl Shurtliff. — First edition.

p. cm

Summary: Relates the tale of Jack who, after trading his mother's milk cow for magic beans, climbs a beanstalk to seek his missing father in the land of giants.

ISBN 978-0-385-75579-5 (trade) — ISBN 978-0-385-75580-1 (lib. bdg.) — ISBN 978-0-385-75582-5 (pbk.) — ISBN 978-0-385-75581-8 (ebook)

[1. Fairy tales. 2. Adventure and adventurers—Fiction. 3. Missing persons—Fiction. 4. Giants—Fiction. 5. Humorous stories.] I. Title.

PZ8.S34525Jac 2015

[Fic]—dc23

2014013403

eBook ISBN 9780385755818

Random House Children's Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

v4.1

a

For my brother Patrick,

who was often told he was a naughty boy, but grew up pretty great

CHAPTER ONE
A Sprinkling of Dirt

W
hen I was born, Papa named me after my great-great-great-great-great-great-GREAT-grandfather, who, legend had it, conquered nine giants and married the daughter of a duke. Mama said this was all hogwash. Firstly, there was no such thing as giants. Wouldn't we see such large creatures if they really existed? And secondly, we had no relation to any duke—if we did, we'd be rich and living on a grand estate. Instead, we were poor as dirt and lived in a tiny house on a small farm in a little village. Nothing great or giant about it.

But Papa wasn't concerned with the details. He
believed there was greatness in that name, and if he gave it to me, somehow the greatness would sink into my bones.

“We'll name him Jack,” Papa said. “He'll be great.”

“If you say so,” said Mama. She was a practical woman and not particular with names. All she needed was a word to call me to supper, or deliver a scolding. I got my first scolding before my first supper, just after birth, for as soon as Papa pronounced my name, I sprang a sharp tooth, and bit my mother.

“Ouch!” Mama cried. “You naughty boy!” It was something she would call me more often than Jack.

Papa had the nerve to laugh. “Oh, Alice, he's just a baby. He doesn't know any better.”

But Mama believed I
did
know better. To her, that bite was a little omen of what was to come, like a sprinkle before the downpour, a buzz before the sting, or the onset of an itch before you realize you're covered in poison ivy.

Maybe I was born to be great, but great at what?

At five months old, I learned to crawl. I was fast as a cockroach, Papa said. One minute I was by Mama's skirts, and the next I was in the pigsty, rolling around in the muck and slops. Mama said she had to bathe me twice a day just to keep me from turning into a real pig.

I learned to walk before my first year, and by my second I took to climbing. I climbed chairs and tables, the woodpile, trees. Once Mama found me on the roof, and snatched me up before I slid down the chimney into a blazing fire.

“Such a naughty boy,” said Mama.

“He's just a boy,” said Papa.

But I didn't want to be “just a boy.” I wanted to be great.

At night, Papa would tell stories of Grandpa Jack: how he'd chop off giants' heads and steal all their treasure and rescue the innocents. I knew if I was going to be great, I'd have to go on a noble quest and conquer a giant—or nine—just like my seven-greats-grandpa Jack.

There was only one problem. I'd never seen a giant in all my twelve years.

“S
top staring at the sky, Jack,” said Papa. “The work's down here.”

It was harvesttime, same as every year. Work, work, work. Boring, boring, boring. And after the work was done, we were still poor as dirt.

Papa whistled a merry tune as he cut the wheat. I grumbled as I gathered it up in a bundle and tied it around the middle. We did this over and over, until we'd made a pile as tall as Papa. I thought we'd be nearly done, but when I looked up, I saw acres of uncut wheat. “Snakes and toads,” I grumbled. How I hated the sight.

“Ain't she the prettiest sight you ever saw?” Papa called the land
she,
like a lady he was trying to woo. Most of the time it seemed like the land just spat in Papa's face, but he was ever faithful. Papa loved the land.

Me? I could live without it. I preferred a sword to a
scythe, and a noble steed to a cow. I'd go on a quest to fight giants and get gold and riches. Then I'd never have to milk another cow or harvest a crop on a hot day.

I looked toward the house, where Mama was hanging the wash on the line. Annabella was flitting around her like a butterfly, her braids bouncing on her shoulders, not a care in the world, until…

“Eeeeaak!”
Annabella screamed, and frantically shook her apron. A fat grasshopper flew out and disappeared into the tall grass.

I stifled a laugh. Annabella is my sister, four years younger. I guess when I hit three or so, Mama decided I was a lost cause and tried again, taking every precaution to do things differently. So firstly, she had a girl, and secondly, she didn't allow Papa to name her or make any declarations of greatness. She was Mama's sweet girl.

I remember seeing Annabella for the first time after she was born, all pink and bald and toothless. Mama cooed at her like she'd finally gotten what she always wanted. A boring lump that didn't bite or even move.

“Back to work, Jack,” said Papa.

I sighed. Papa cut and I gathered and tied. Work, work, work. Boring, boring, boring. I considered feigning illness so I could take a break.

But what luck! Someone else disrupted the work for me. Mama was walking toward us now. Annabella bounced at her side, and on the other side was our nearest neighbor, but certainly not our dearest friend, Miss Lettie Nettle.

She looked none too pleased at this moment. Her eyebrows were pushed together, and the folds around her mouth hung down around her chin like one of those sad-faced hounds, only she was an angry hound. She glared right at me. Mama anxiously twisted her apron in her hands.

I scratched my head and scoured my brain. Had I pulled any pranks on Miss Lettie lately? I didn't think so….

Papa looked up and stopped whistling. He wiped his forehead with a handkerchief and glanced down at me, as if he knew what was coming.

“Good day, Miss Lettie,” said Papa.

“Don't you ‘Good day' me. It's a terrible day,” said Miss Lettie.

“Oh? What's the trouble?”

“My cabbages have been stolen.”

“Stolen?”

“Yes. Stolen. The whole lot of them!”

Miss Lettie Nettle's pride and joy was her field of cabbages. They always took first prize in vegetables at the harvest festival. If there was an early frost, Miss Lettie covered her cabbages with blankets. I'd even heard her singing lullabies to her fields.

“Well now, that is a tragedy,” said Papa. “We always look forward to your big, beautiful cabbages.”

“Tragedy? This was no tragedy, it was thievery!” Miss Lettie glared at me again. I blinked.

“She believes it was Jack who stole them,” said Mama.
Annabella smirked a little. She always enjoyed watching me get in trouble. I searched for a beetle to put on her head.

“Now hold on a moment, Miss Lettie,” said Papa. “What makes you think Jack had anything to do with your missing cabbages?”

Miss Lettie Nettle looked at Papa like he was brainless. “Because he
always
has something to do with it. Remember when he brought me a sack of sugar? I thought that was right sweet and neighborly, until it turned out to be
salt
!”

Ha! I forgot about the sugar-salt switch. Snakes and toads, the look on her face when she bit into a salty plum pudding was incredible! I never knew a face could twist in so many directions.

“I nearly choked to death!” said Miss Lettie. “And no one could ever forget the day he took my…my
underthings
and hung them out in public!” Miss Lettie turned as purple as a purple cabbage.

“I remember,” said Papa solemnly, but I could tell he was biting his cheeks, holding back a smile. “I also remember that Jack confessed his crimes and paid penance. He's a truthful boy. So why don't we ask him? Jack, son, do you know anything about Miss Lettie's cabbages?”

I shook my head. “No, sir.”

“You little liar!” said Miss Lettie. “This has your hand written all over it.”

“I didn't set foot in your field! I don't even like cabbages.”

“That much is true,” said Papa. “Jack here doesn't
like anything remotely green. I remember trying to feed him some green beans as a baby, and he spat them all over my face.” Papa chuckled. Miss Lettie did not.

“He's not a baby anymore,” she said. “He's a great big lying, stealing, conniving, rotten—”

“If Jack says he didn't do it, then he didn't.” This time it was Mama who spoke, her face solemn as an oath. I breathed out a sigh of relief. Mama didn't often defend me, but if she said I was innocent, then I was innocent. Her word was truth and law, and everyone knew it, even Miss Lettie Nettle.

Miss Lettie scrunched up her face. “Well then,
who
stole my cabbages?”

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