Read The Undrowned Child Online
Authors: Michelle Lovric
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic
Finally, deepest thanks, as ever, to all the Clink Street writers, who welcomed The Undrowned Child from the start.
About the Author
MICHELLE LOVRIC has always lived a waterbound life. She was born by the ocean in Sydney and lived for many years by the sea in Devon. Now she divides her time between a palazzo on the Grand Canal in Venice and a Georgian wharf on the Thames in London.
The Undrowned Child is Michelle’s first book for young people, though she has written three novels for adults and compiled over one hundred anthologies on a wide range of subjects, especially cats. She runs a poetry and fiction workshop and also writes reviews, travel features and stories … always about Venice, of course.
You can visit Michelle at michellelovric.com.
Table of Contents
This is a work of fiction. All incidents and dialogue, and all characters with the exception of some well-known historical and public figures, are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Where real-life historical or public figures appear, the situations, incidents, and dialogues concerning those persons are fictional and are not intended to depict actual events or to change the fictional nature of the work. In all other respects, any resemblance to persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.
Contents
Venice in 1899
Maps
Title
The fog that fell upon Venice that evening was like a bandage wrapped round the town. First the spires of the churches disappeared. Then the palaces on the Grand Canal were pulled into the soft web of white. Soon it was impossible to see anything at all. People held their hands out in front of them and fumbled their way over bridges like blind men. Every sound was muffled, including the sighs of the steam ferries nosing through the black waters. It would be an exceedingly bad night to fall in the water, for no one would hear a cry for help.
Some fragments of anantique Venetian prophecy
June 1, 1899
at the Hotel degli Assassini, June 1, 1899
May 27, 1899
Maria was supposed to be Teo’s best friend; for this trip, anyway. But the truth was that Teo was as fond of Maria as she was of cod-liver oil.
at the hospital, the evening of June 1, 1899
around midnight, June 1, 1899
just before lunchtime, May 30, 1899
an hour before dawn, June 3, 1899
Not everyone agreed with the mayor that Venice was perfectly safe.
break of dawn, June 3, 1899
midmorning, June 3, 1899
June 4, 1899
the morning of June 5, 1899
the afternoon of June 5, 1899
dawn, June 6, 1899
after breakfast, June 6, 1899
a fiery-hot morning, June 6, 1899
an awkward breakfast, June 7, 1899
midnight, June 7, 1899
just past midnight, June 8, 1899
one o’clock in the morning, June 8, 1899
two o’clock in the morning, June 8, 1899
half past two in the morning, June 8, 1899
three o’clock in the morning, June 8, 1899
just before dawn, June 8, 1899
the first glimmerings of dawn, June 8, 1899
June 8, 1899
late at night, June 8th, 1899
in the hotel dining room, early morning, June 9, 1899
June 10, 1899
nighttime, June 10, 1899
the early hours, June 10–11, 1899
early morning, June 11, 1899
late at night, June 11, 1899
nearly midnight, June 11, 1899
midnight, June 11, 1899
all through the night of June 11–12, 1899
a quarrelsome dawn, June 12, 1899
all through the hours of darkness,June 12–June 13, 1899
the morning of June 13, 1899
nighttime, June 13, 1899
the morning of June 14, 1899
the heart of the day, June 14, 1899
in the heat of the afternoon, June 14, 1899
the afternoon draws on, June 14, 1899
late afternoon, dusk and night, June 14, 1899
a hot, misty dawn, June 15, 1899
not the morning that was hoped for, June 15, 1899
a moment of optimism, June 15, 1899
beneath the waves of the Grand Canal, June 15, 1899
the countdown, June 15, 1899
midday, June 15, 1899
the rest of the day, June 15, 1899
dawn, June 16, 1899
a splendid morning, June 16, 1899
a beautiful afternoon, June 17, 1899
an amicable breakfast, June 18, 1899
Places and things inTHE UNDROWNED CHILDthat you can still see in Venice
Acknowledgments
About the Author