Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Ruby Red
Ruby Red
Ruby Red
Ebook309 pages4 hours

Ruby Red

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Gwyneth Shepherd's sophisticated, beautiful cousin Charlotte has been prepared her entire life for traveling through time. But unexpectedly, it is Gwyneth who in the middle of class takes a sudden spin to a different era!
Gwyneth must now unearth the mystery of why her mother would lie about her birth date to ward off suspicion about her ability, brush up on her history, and work with Gideon—the time traveler from a similarly gifted family that passes the gene through its male line, and whose presence becomes, in time, less insufferable and more essential. Together, Gwyneth and Gideon journey through time to discover who, in the 18th century and in contemporary London, they can trust.
Kerstin Gier's Ruby Red is young adult novel full of fantasy and romance.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 10, 2011
ISBN9781429921213
Author

Kerstin Gier

Kerstin Gier is the bestselling author of the Ruby Red trilogy, as well as several popular novels for adults. She lives in Germany.

Related to Ruby Red

Titles in the series (3)

View More

Related ebooks

YA Science Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Ruby Red

Rating: 3.9988123250593826 out of 5 stars
4/5

842 ratings94 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Precious Stone Trilogy by Kirsten Gier starts off with Ruby Red, an intriguing novel filled with mystery, fantasy and traces of science fiction. We meet Gwen, a sixteen year old girl who's said to be mundane in every way, especially when compared to her self-righteous cousin. Fortunately for Gwen, she's special. Gwen can see ghosts and time travel - much to everyone's dismay - and that makes her the Ruby. She pushes her cousin out of the limelight and forces Gideon (the Diamond) to take notice of her, even though they kind of despise one another. Things quickly change from hatred to toleration - and then to love? - which isn't exactly how real life works, but somehow it didn't feel too out of this world.

    Now, yeah okay, I usually make fun of stuff like this because it's filled with tropes (and I do so enjoy making fun of tropes), but Ruby Red wasn't as bad as all that. It's a rather short novel, but it's fast-paced, and it sets up the story for the next book. I think some things did get lost in translation (Ruby Red is originally a German book), especially the characters' true voices. All in all though, I enjoyed the book. The movie (in German) isn't too shabby either.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I love time travel and so this book was right up my alley. The idea of a person being able to time travel on their own is pretty awesome. Gwyneth is not expected to be the time travel in the family because of a deception on her mother's part so she is unprepared when it happens to her. I think her reactions are pretty spot-on for having no idea what to do when she lands in a different time period. Gwen is a pretty cool girl and I was cheering for her from the beginning. I didn't like how most of the adults and her cousin treated her and, even though Gideon is the love interest, he rubbed me wrong at first too. But Gwen actually has some backbone and does her best in every situation. I was really hoping that the other two books had been translated from German into English already but the next book, Sapphire Blue, doesn't come out till the spring of next year. Sadness. I can't wait to read more about Gwen and Gideon and their mission and see if Gwen will finally tell everyone how she can see ghosts. Love this book doubly since it reminded me (for some reason) of Connie Willis' To Say Nothing of the Dog, one of my favorite time travel books. The Little Bookworm
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Gwyneth Shepherd, born in 1994, is now 16, the age at which those few who inherit the time-travel gene start to travel at unexpected times into the past. This can obviously be quite inconvenient as well as dangerous, so a sub rosa society evolved: “The Guardians” – who not only act to keep the trait itself a secret, but help exert control over the traveling impulse. They developed a “chronograph” to send gene-carrying people to specific periods on a regular basis, thus rendering the activity more predictable.Gwyneth never gave much thought to time travel. Although her family descended from the chronologically sensitive line, it was always expected that her cousin, Charlotte, would be the one with the gene. Anyway, Gwen has a “power” of her own – she can see, and communicate with, ghosts from the past (even though no one believes her but her best friend Lesley). According to the writings of The Guardians (quoted at the beginning of each chapter), there is often a pair of travelers alive at any one time – a male and a female. Eighteen-year-old Gideon has already been active for two years. Suddenly, the chosen female turns out to be Gwen, not Charlotte, and Gwen is thrust into a life for which she was not prepared at all.How and why Charlotte was groomed for the role instead of Gwen is part of the mystery that is unraveled as the story progresses. And there are mysteries aplenty! How does the chronograph work, and where is the missing original chronograph? Where are the two time travelers who disappeared in the previous generation? Why did the Guardians predict that the twelfth traveler (who is Gwyneth) would be the last? And who is the Count with the Transylvanian sidekick who seems to be in charge of the process?Evaluation: As Alyce said in her review that convinced me to buy this, it’s clear right in the beginning this will be an entertaining book. It’s not as intellectual or well-written as the time travel books of Connie Willis, but it’s fun and more geared (in terms of dialogue and plot developments) to teens (…and to big superannuated teens like me).Note: There is a sequel, Sapphire Blue, which I will certainly be reading, and an eventual third because of course it is a trilogy!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    (First of 3: Ruby Red trilogy. Fantasy, YA) (Re-read)I re-read this before I continue on with Sapphire Blue, the next in the series. I realised I hadn't finished my review last time to post it. This is what I wrote:'I really enjoyed this story, possibly because it was reminiscent of the books I used to read as a teenager, with its very English flavour (though the original was written in German and translated into English by Anthea Bell (sister of BBC's Martin Bell)). In fact, I enjoyed it so much, I think I may buy the whole series. I seem to be a sucker for LT recommended YA trilogies coloured (individually) red, blue and green and written by authors named a variant of Kirstin. (I also went out and bought the Graceling trilogy after borrowing the first one from the library.) :0)The story is told from the point of view of Gwynneth. she has always been overshadowed by her perfect cousin Charlotte (not to be confused with her sister Caroline), who has inherited a time travelling gene. Charlotte has been trained all her life in the 'mysteries' and now she is the right age, the family is anticipating her first jump. But it is Gwynneth who unexpectedly time travels and who turns out to be the last prophesied gene carrier, and now she is thrust unprepared into the 'mysteries' that her mother was hoping to protect her from.'I still enjoyed the story on this re-read, though of course without being quite so much on tenter hooks. I like the way Gier / Bell have captured the flavour of being a teenager, and of being in London.Of course, being a time travelling story, it covers London in different time periods. I can't claim personal experience there, but it does convey the differences from present-day London (the fashions, the smells, the traffic)(coach traffic is different from car traffic). All in all, an excellent book; a little adventure, a little fantasy, a little humour, a little romance, and all well written. Apparently I was undecided between a 4.5 star rating and a 5 (and still am this time around) but I finally decided on a 5, so I'll go with my first decision.5 star Oh, and Gwynneth (almost) shares my birthday. So does Kerstin Gier (a surprisingly rare occurrence). Definitely a 5 star then.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    If I read this when I was younger, I would have loved it. It has everything - an interesting leading lady, an ancient mystery, and time travel. Unfortunately, I'm not young anymore. Which means, the leading lady is annoying teenager, the story a bit simple, and the ending, well, is not an ending. There are two other stories that continue the series, but since nothing was resolved in the first book, it didn't feel like a complete story.As for the technical bits - writing was well done, the translator did an excellent job. It is a bit simple - but considering its a YA book, I won't hold it against it.I won't be continuing this series, but if I find the other books, I'll probably continue with it.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book turned out to be quite an entertaining little time travel story. Light, humorous and easy to read, the reader is given glimpses of London during previous times. Although there didn't seem to be much happening at times, I was surprised how quickly I finished it. Gwyenth is an endearing protagonist, unlike most of her stuffy family, who has lived in the shadow of her cousin, Charlotte. I also liked Great Aunt Maddy and Mr George who were both rather eccentric and kind-hearted towards Gwyenth. The book ended quickly with an intriguing epilogue, leaving the reader wanting more.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    If I had to choose just a quick phrase to describe Ruby Red, I'd definitely go with utterly enchanting. Even if I hadn't received this book for review I would have likely bought it just based on the cover. (I admit it, yes.) The deep red, the gorgeously raised silver accents, it is too beautiful for words. Then I flipped the book over and read the synopsis that cemented my attachment to this book. I cannot express enough how much I was in love with this book before I even opened it to the first page.

    Of course, then I did open it, at which point I was swept away into a brand new world. Gwyneth Shepard is an amazing character. I loved her tenacity and her quick wit. The banter between her and the infuriating (albeit rather handsome) Gideon de Villiers is fantastic. I appreciated the fact that Kerstin Geir allowed her character to be so human and flawed. Gwyneth wasn't raised to be a time traveler, she isn't the "pretty" sister, and people are doubting her at every turn based on a past she can't remember. At the heart of it all, she's just a normal girl who can do extraordinary things. Coping with that isn't easy for her but, despite some slight negativity, she vows to do the best that she knows how. I loved her for that.

    If the characters themselves weren't enough though, the expertly woven story really brought it home for me. The time periods that Gwyneth and Gideon travel to are richly detailed, and accurate. The story behind the beginnings of these time travelers is well fleshed out, and it leaves just enough to the imagination to keep you wanting to read on to the next in the series. It was nice that, despite the numerous characters across time periods, there was always something to help me realign myself with the overall story. Add in a bit of intrigue, deception, and an ending that had my mouth hanging open, and you have a book that I fell so deeply in love with that I'm likely going to read it again. 2012 cannot come soon enough I tell you. I need to know what happens next!

    So yes, I loved this book with all my heart. Ruby Red is a beautifully executed mix of historical fiction and science fiction that is sure to delight. To all my readers who enjoy books of this nature, you need to pick this up. The story that Kerstin Gier has woven for us is not to be missed!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was an international bestseller before it was even published in the United States. And even in translation, it’s not surprising. This book is so easy to love. Spunky heroine? Check. Mysterious goings-ons? Yup. Crazy family secrets? You bet. Hot English dude? Present. It’s sort of the whole package. Or at least one-third of the package as this is the first book in a trilogy (surprise, surprise).Meet 16-year-old Gwyneth. She’s had the pleasure of growing up in a family of time travelers--one of the two great time traveling families, in fact--but she isn’t one herself (or so everyone has reason to believe). All signs point to her cousin as being the one carrying the traveling gene. And so it is her cousin who has spent her entire life preparing to be plopped down in various parts of the past and complete a top secret project that has spanned centuries and is nearing its culmination. So when it turns out that it’s Gwyneth who will be carrying on the family tradition and it’s on her shoulders that the pressure rests, she finds herself ill-prepared to face the challenges of the past, especially in the form of the Count of Saint Germain. Luckily, it’s nothing a bit of courage, quick-thinking, strong support network, and the help of the handsome Gideon can’t fix. At least we hope. The action and suspense really builds by the end of the book, only to culminate in a rather abrupt cliffhanger. Luckily, the first chapter of the next book is included in this version, so readers can get a peek at the sequel, Sapphire Blue. Although most will find themselves wishing they could read the German edition that is already available in Europe.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I love Gwyneth. I love Lesley. And I trust no one. This book was filled with mystery and mythology from the beginning. Gwen is a part of an aristocratic family with a time-traveling gene. Charlotte, Gwen's snobby, know-it-all, thinks she's better than everyone cousin, was supposed to have the time-travelling gene (if you can't tell I don't like Charlotte). Gwen is thrown into the world of the past from the 1700s to the 1900s. With little to no training. Her time-traveling partner, Gideon, goes back and forth of treating Gwen nice to hating her. And with the Guardians of the Secret Lodge telling Gwen nothing about the mysteries, Gwen is not sure who to trust.

    The writing was beautiful and enchanting, filled with interesting characters, from the past to the present. I did get annoyed with how Charlotte was acting and how the Guardians were treating Gwen like a traitor, but it did make the book more believable.

    The book pulls you in from the beginning and doesn't let you go. As soon as you finish the first you will want to read the second. With so many twists and turns, and filled with believable characters you will want to read the book in one sitting, just like I did.

    4/5
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    nicely written. good entertainment.although he character of Gweneth does seem like a nice girl, but her giggly attribute seems out of the package.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    YAY! People who time-travel who aren't prepped within an inch of their lives for it! My kind of girl- I really like Gwen a *lot* and can't wait to see how she fits in with her Aunt's prophetic waking dreams.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Time Travel! Confusing prophecies! England! Oh my! It's almost like an episode of Doctor Who! Gwen is a normal teenager girl with a big family secret. She comes from a family of time travelers and her cousin Charlotte is supposed to be the next family member with the inherited gene and Gwen has been told what to do and how to help Charlotte, except Charlotte's not the time traveler Gwen is. Gwen is confused and shocked the first time she travels back and she panics because this is not how it was supposed to happen Gwen was the normal ignored teenager in her family and Charlotte had prepared her entire life to travel back in time. So suddenly Gwen finds herself trying to catch up and learn what she's supposed to know and deal with the infuriating Gideon all the while her mother keeps telling her not to trust anyone in the secret society of time travelers.

    I really enjoyed this book personally. I discovered it on a shelf at Half Price Books and I fell in love. Gwen is your pretty basic teenager for the most part just trying to catch up with suddenly being special because she's a time traveler. I would recommend this book to anyone who love the idea of time travel, whether they be Doctor Who fans, readers of The Time Travelers Wife, or have seen Back To The Future Parts 1-3 a million times.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was a really easy read book. It was build around a very fascinating idea and had a couple of interesting characters, and I guess this is the first book where I almost sympathized more with the bad guy than the main character. He is clever and good looking, right? I wish the author had worked more on the history part, because I am sorry to say that this book comes with a lot of drama, plot holes and missing logic. I had understood the plot line from page 60, and still the main character's questions are put on repeat though out the book, just in case you didn't get it the first time. And no, there's no way you're going though a cab window with a 18th century dress... The ending add up for some of irritation that build up in me from the first 100 pages, adding a extra star here at the review, but with a easy language this was for me nothing els than an other page turner.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Didn't really start to get into this until about 60% through the book, however, once everything clicked for me I really enjoyed.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Really enjoyed this book! :)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    this book is about Gwen. She lived all her life believing her cousin, Charolette, had the time travel gyne. But instead found out it was her. She falls in love with her time travel buddy, Gideon Diveillers. She meets the man who invented time travel. He tried to choke her. Since Charolette had been trained to do time travel stuff. now Gwen needs to learn all of it. And her teachers have to teach it all over again. she goes back in time and gets jumped by a group of men sent by an unknown leader. Thats where this book ended and Sapphire Blue started.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Time travel is inherited in this British fantasy. A secret society has grown up around the time travelling family members. Now Gwyneth is surprised to find that she is the lastest member of her family to have inherited the gene. Everyone thought it would be her cousin Charlotte - and Gwyneth hasn't been trained at all.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    AMAZING!! PERFECT MIXTURE OF ROMANCE ACTION AND BETRAYAL WITH SOME INTERESTING TWISTS!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It has a very interesting beginning it seems just so normal the way Gwen is describing always being around her cousin Charlotte waiting for her to get the adventures and the amazing things her abilities entail. She is so heavily ignored and compared to her cousin whom so far has not done anything other than being born on a very specific day, therefore, she is showered with all kinds of responsibilities and attention. You do get annoyed with the whole family being so discriminative, I mean they are all family yet the whole discussion of powers and such is kept like such a secret and no information is given to anyone else even from the family. So unfair really.
    Gwen is a very typical 15 year old, annoying, she thinks she knows better than others what she's capable of... Yet when she is faced with her family's big secret trust upon her she suddenly is not so sure. She is confused and does not know who to trust or what to do, she is unprepared for everything that is going on around her and yet she throws herself right in the middle fiercely. She is recklessly brave. Definitely makes you care about her.
    This is a good introductory book, it gives very little explanations to the abilities and overall politics of the society of time travelers but it does a fine job of picking your interest. It is a very character driven story and the magic-abilities are not overly explained so b aware of that as you go in.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I give this a 3.75. It was an enjoyable quick read. Only downside to it was that it felt like the story was only finally just getting started and then the book was over.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    If you have even an inkling of what time travel is, you would be completely annoyed by the way time travel is portrayed here. Too many plot holes to count.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Lively YA involuntary time travel - but controllable with unique device - series introduction. The dangerous very limited family specific ability has alway been in the background of Gwyneth's life but when is strikes her everything changes. And she would be wise not to trust anyone, especially herself!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    While overall I loved it, uncritically, I found the abrupt ending odd - it didn't feel so much like a resolution of any of the plot threads as it did a chapter ending. Very much looking forward to reading book 2 and seeing if it seamlessly picks up the story. As to the story itself - time travel! Intrigue! Weird conspiracy theory! All of these are things I love.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I found that the whole book felt like a prologue, it started getting interesting just as it ended. I understand that it's a series and the author wanted to leave you desperate for the next book, it just felt too forced and sudden.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this book in one sitting. I liked the premise, the time travel and the writing. I did feel like the author spent a lot of time building up the world and up to Gwen's introduction into the society and didn't give me enough actual time travel. I could tell that she was building up for a trilogy all along. I'm not particularly fond of that habit with authors but I'm willing to overlook it here because it was a really good book. I'm looking forward to the rest of the series.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I spent the whole book waiting for the heroine to become less insufferable. It never happened.
    I like competent, BAMF protagonists best, but if I can't have that, I can be happy with an average Jane. With this protagonist, though, the author seems to go out of her way to show us how incompetent and unqualified for the job she is. I'm so glad to have the information that she doesn't know what came first, if steam or electricity! So she sucks at history, then. Ok. So what is she good at? Maths? Drawing? Martial arts? Repair work? Has excellent people skills? ...nothing, as it turns out. And I don't mean 'Mary-Sue world champion' kind of good, I just mean that she could have some kind of hobby she would be reasonably competent at and that would unexpectedly come in handy at some point in her adventures. But no. Her only good side is apparently her "swan neck". That must also be why the love interest cares about her at all, in spite of him at first declaring that she is so average. We're meant to be enraged by his arrogance here, but he's absolutely right, because she was written as having zero discerning characteristics whatsoever. Even her random moments of courage (there are like two or three) come completely out of nowhere after she's timid on many other occasions, and, notably, never protests people treating her like crap and speaking of her like she wasn't present. Also, the romance of "he's an arrogant jerk at first but then he starts treating the heroine slightly better and suddenly e's irresistible" is so overdone it's painful. Plus, the final romantic moment really came completely out of nowhere, even more than the moments of courage. This girl is an idiot, and I would have thought she was an idiot not only at 16, but at 10, too. I'd give anything for the story to be about Charlotte instead - she at least seemed to be reasonably competent. Or about their grandmother, she seems awesome. Or about the seamstress, she is the best of all, and the only truly likable character in the story. Give me a Mary-Sue protagonist over this any day!
    (I like the basic idea behind the world and the setting could actually be interesting, but given it's all a single pov...)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Ruby Red follows a young girl named Gwyneth who soon discovers that it’s her ,and not her cousin Charlotte, that inherits the family time travel gene. It follows Gwen and her path of trying to handle this new life that literally happened over night. She has to deal with the know-it-all Gideon who is her time traveling partner. This book makes you laugh,cry, get angry, and just so much more. I’m so happy I decided to enter Gwen’s world and I want to thank Kerstin Gier for making a fantasy book that I can actually get in to.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I really give this book 3 1/2 stars. I enjoy the characters and the plot of the story I just feel like the wasn't very much that happened in this book, I was waiting for and kept feeling like it was leading up to something really big. I will continue with the series to see how it ends.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I had been meaning to read this for a while, and built up high expectations--and I wasn't disappointed!
    I really enjoyed the story and would recommend it to most people.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Love this book. it is charming

Book preview

Ruby Red - Kerstin Gier

PROLOGUE

Hyde Park, London

8 April 1912

AS SHE FELL to her knees and burst into tears, he looked all around the park. Just as he’d expected, it was empty at this early hour. Jogging wouldn’t be fashionable for a long time yet, and it was too cold for the beggars who slept on park benches with nothing but newspaper over them.

He carefully wrapped the chronograph in its cloth and slipped it into his backpack.

She was huddled beside one of the trees on the north bank of the Serpentine, on a carpet of faded crocuses.

Her shoulders were shaking, and her sobs sounded like the desperate cries of an injured animal. He could hardly bear it. But he knew from experience that it was better to leave her alone. So he sat down beside her in the dew-covered grass, gazed at the smooth surface of the water, and waited.

Have tissues been invented yet? she finally sniffed, turning her tearstained face to him.

No idea, he said. But I can offer you a monogrammed hanky—dead right for this period.

"G.M. Did you pinch it from Grace?"

She gave it to me, don’t worry. You can blow your nose on it all you like, Princess.

She smiled wryly as she handed him the handkerchief. Now it’s ruined. Sorry about that.

Oh, never mind! he said. Just so long as you’ve stopped crying.

Tears shot straight back into her eyes. We shouldn’t have abandoned her. She needs us! We’ve no idea if our bluff will work … and no chance of ever finding out now.

We’d have been even less use to her dead.

If we could only have hidden away with her somewhere far off, under other names, until she was old enough to—

He interrupted her, shaking his head firmly. They’d have found us anywhere we went; we’ve discussed that a thousand times already. We didn’t abandon her. We did the only right thing: we made it possible for her to live in safety. At least for the next sixteen years.

For a moment she said nothing. Somewhere in the distance a horse whinnied, and voices drifted over from West Carriage Drive, although it was nearly dark now.

I know you’re right, she said at last. It just hurts so much to know we’ll never see her again. She gently rubbed her red-rimmed eyes. At least we’re not going to be bored. Sooner or later they’ll track us down, even here, and set the Guardians on us. He’s not about to give up either the chronograph or his plans, not without a fight.

He smiled, seeing the light of adventure come back into her eyes. Maybe we’ll outwit him after all. Either that, or in the end the other device won’t work. Then he’ll be finished.

Right. But if it does work, we’re the only ones who can stop him.

That’s just why we’ve done the right thing. He stood up and brushed the earth off his jeans. Come on! This damn grass is wet, and you’re supposed to be taking things easy.

She let him pull her to her feet and kiss her. What are we going to do now? Look for a place to hide the chronograph? she asked, looking undecidedly at the bridge separating Hyde Park from Kensington Gardens.

"Yes, but first let’s raid the Guardians’ deposits and stock up with cash. Then we could take the train to Southampton. The Titanic leaves on Wednesday. For her maiden voyage."

She laughed. So that’s your idea of taking things easy! But right, I’m with you!

He was so glad she could laugh again that he kissed her once more. I was really thinking.… You know that out at sea a ship’s captain can marry people, don’t you, Princess?

"You want to marry me? On board the Titanic? Are you out of your mind?"

It would be so romantic.

Except the bit with the iceberg. She laid her head on his chest and buried her face in his jacket. I love you so much, she murmured.

Will you be my wife?

Yes, she said, her face still buried against his chest. But only if we leave the ship in Queenstown, Ireland, at the latest.

Ready for the next adventure, Princess?

Ready when you are, she said softly.

Uncontrolled time travel usually announces itself a few minutes in advance, but sometimes hours or even days ahead. The symptoms are sensations of vertigo in the head, stomach, and/or legs. Many gene carriers also speak of a headache similar to migraine.

The first journey back in time—also known as the initiation journey—takes place between the sixteenth and seventeenth years of the gene carrier’s life.

FROM THE CHRONICLES OF THE GUARDIANS,

VOLUME 2: GENERAL LAWS OF TIME TRAVEL

ONE

I FIRST FELT IT in the school canteen on Monday morning. For a moment it was like being on a roller coaster when you’re racing down from the very top. It lasted only two seconds, but that was long enough for me to dump a plateful of mashed potatoes and gravy all over my school uniform. I managed to catch the plate just in time, as my knife and fork clattered to the floor.

This stuff tastes like it’s been scraped off the floor anyway, said my friend Lesley while I mopped up the damage as well as I could. Of course everyone was looking at me. You can have mine too, if you fancy spreading some more on your blouse.

No thanks. As it happens, the blouse of the St. Lennox High School uniform was pretty much the color of mashed potatoes anyway, but you still couldn’t miss seeing the remaining globs of my lunch. I buttoned up my dark blue blazer over it.

There goes Gwenny, playing with her food again! said Cynthia Dale. Don’t you sit next to me, you mucky pup.

As if I’d ever sit next to you of my own free will, Cyn. It’s a fact, I’m afraid, that I did quite often have little accidents with school lunches. Only last week my pudding had hopped out of its dish and landed a few feet away, right in a Year Seven boy’s spaghetti carbonara. The week before that I’d knocked my cranberry juice over, and everyone at our table was splashed. They looked as if they had measles. And I really couldn’t count the number of times the stupid tie that’s part of our school uniform had been drenched in sauce, juice, or milk.

Only I’d never felt dizzy at the same time before.

But I was probably just imagining it. There’d been too much talk at home recently about dizzy feelings.

Not mine, though: my cousin Charlotte’s dizzy spells. Charlotte, beautiful and immaculate as ever, was sitting right there next to Cynthia, gracefully scooping mashed potatoes into her delicate mouth.

The entire family was on tenterhooks, waiting for Charlotte to have a dizzy fit. On most days, my grandmother, Lady Arista, asked Charlotte how she was feeling every ten minutes. My aunt Glenda, Charlotte’s mother, filled the ten-minute gap by asking the same thing in between Lady Arista’s interrogations.

And whenever Charlotte said that she didn’t feel dizzy, Lady Arista’s lips tightened and Aunt Glenda sighed. Or sometimes the other way around.

The rest of us—my mum, my sister Caroline, my brother Nick, and Great-aunt Maddy—rolled our eyes. Of course it was exciting to have someone with a time-travel gene in the family, but as the days went by, the excitement kind of wore off. Sometimes we felt that all the fuss being made over Charlotte was just too much.

Charlotte herself usually hid her feelings behind a mysterious Mona Lisa smile. In her place, I wouldn’t have known whether to be excited or worried if dizzy feelings failed to show up. Well, to be honest, I’d probably have been pleased. I was more the timid sort. I liked peace and quiet.

Something will happen sooner or later, Lady Arista said every day. And we must be ready.

Sure enough, something did happen after lunch, in Mr. Whitman’s history class. I’d left the canteen feeling hungry. I’d found a black hair in my dessert—apple crumble with custard—and I couldn’t be sure if it was one of my own hairs or a lunch lady’s. Anyway, I didn’t fancy the crumble after that.

Mr. Whitman gave us back the history test we’d taken last week. You obviously prepared well for it. Especially Charlotte. An A-plus for you, Charlotte.

Charlotte stroked a strand of her glossy red hair back from her face and said, Oh, my! as if the result came as a surprise to her. Even though she always had top marks in everything.

But Lesley and I were pleased with our own grades this time, too. We each had an A-minus, although our preparation had consisted of eating crisps and ice cream while we watched Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth and then Elizabeth: The Golden Age on DVD. We did pay attention in history class, though, which I’m afraid couldn’t be said for all our other courses.

Mr. Whitman’s classes were so intriguing that you couldn’t help listening. Mr. Whitman himself was also very interesting. Most of the girls were secretly—or not so secretly—in love with him. So was our geography teacher, Mrs. Counter. She went bright red whenever Mr. Whitman passed her. And he was terribly good-looking. All the girls thought so, except Lesley. She thought Mr. Whitman looked like a cartoon squirrel.

Whenever he looks at me with those big brown eyes, I feel like giving him a nut, she said. She even started calling the squirrels running around in the park Mr. Whitmans. The silly thing is that somehow it was infectious, and now, whenever a squirrel scuttled past me, I always said, Oh, look at that cute, fat little Mr. Whitman!

I’m sure it was the squirrel business that made Lesley and me the only girls in the class who weren’t crazy about Mr. Whitman. I kept trying to fall in love with him (if only because the boys in our class were all somehow totally childish), but it was no good. The squirrel comparison had lodged itself in my mind and wouldn’t go away. I mean, how can you feel romantic about a squirrel?

Cynthia had started the rumor that when he was studying, Mr. Whitman had worked as a male model on the side. By way of evidence, she’d cut an ad out of a glossy magazine, with a picture showing a man not unlike Mr. Whitman lathering himself with shower gel.

Apart from Cynthia, however, no one thought Mr. Whitman was the man in the shower-gel ad. The model had a dimple in his chin, and Mr. Whitman didn’t.

The boys in our class didn’t think Mr. Whitman was so great. Gordon Gelderman, in particular, couldn’t stand him. Because before Mr. Whitman came to teach in our school, all the girls in our class were in love with Gordon. Including me, I have to admit, but I was only eleven at the time and Gordon was still quite cute. Now, at sixteen, he was just stupid. And his voice had been in a permanent state of breaking for the last two years. Unfortunately, the mixture of squealing and growling still didn’t keep him from spewing nonsense all the time.

He got very upset about getting an F on the history test. That’s discrimination, Mr. Whitman. I deserve a B at least. You can’t give me bad marks just because I’m a boy.

Mr. Whitman took Gordon’s test back from him, turned a page, and read out, Elizabeth I was so ugly that she couldn’t get a husband. So everyone called her the Ugly Virgin.

The class giggled.

Well? I’m right, aren’t I? Gordon defended himself. I mean, look at her pop-eyes and her thin lips and that weird hairstyle.

We’d gone to study the pictures of the Tudors in the National Portrait Gallery, and in those paintings, sure enough, Queen Elizabeth I didn’t look much like Cate Blanchett. But first, maybe people in those days thought thin lips and big noses were the last word in chic, and second, her clothes were really wonderful. Third, no, Elizabeth I didn’t have a husband, but she had a lot of affairs, among them one with Sir … oh, what was his name? Anyway, Clive Owen played him in the second film with Cate Blanchett.

She was known as the Virgin Queen, Mr. Whitman told Gordon, because… He paused and looked anxiously at Charlotte. Are you feeling all right, Charlotte? Do you have a headache?

Everyone looked at Charlotte, who had her head in her hands. I feel … I just feel dizzy, she said, looking at me. Everything’s going round and round.

I took a deep breath. So here we go, I thought. Lady Arista and Aunt Glenda would be over the moon.

Wow, cool, whispered Lesley. Is she going to turn all transparent now? Although Lady Arista had repeatedly told us that under no circumstances were we ever to tell any outsider what was special about our family, I’d decided to ignore the ban when it came to Lesley. After all, she was my very best friend, and best friends don’t have secrets from each other.

Since I’d known Charlotte (which in fact was all my life), she’d always seemed somewhat helpless. But I knew what to do. Goodness knows Aunt Glenda had told me often enough.

I’ll take Charlotte home, I told Mr. Whitman, as I stood up. If that’s okay.

Mr. Whitman’s gaze was fixed on Charlotte. I think that’s a good idea, Gwyneth, he said. I hope you feel better soon, Charlotte.

Thanks, said Charlotte. On the way to the door, she swayed slightly. Coming, Gwenny?

I grabbed her arm. For the first time I felt quite important to Charlotte. It was a nice feeling to be needed for a change.

Don’t forget to phone and tell me all about it, Lesley whispered as we passed her.

Feeling slightly better outside the classroom, Charlotte wanted to fetch some things from her locker, but I held her firmly by the sleeve. Not now, Charlotte! We have to get home as fast as possible. Lady Arista says—

It’s gone again, said Charlotte.

So? It could come back any moment. Charlotte let me steer her the other way. Where did I put that chalk? As we walked on, I searched my jacket pocket. Oh, good, here it is. And my mobile. Shall I call home? Are you scared? Silly question, sorry. I’m so excited.

It’s okay. No, I’m not scared.

I glanced sideways at her to check whether she was telling the truth. She had that snooty little Mona Lisa smile on her face. You could never tell what she was hiding behind it.

"Well, shall I call home?"

What use would that be? Charlotte replied.

I just figured—

You can leave the thinking to me, don’t worry, said Charlotte.

We went down the stone steps to the place where James always sat. He rose to his feet when he saw us, but I just smiled at him. The trouble with James was that no one else could see or hear him—only me.

James was a ghost. Which is why I avoided talking to him when other people were around, except for Lesley. She’d never doubted James’s existence for a second. Lesley believed everything I said, and that was one of the reasons she was my best friend. She was only sorry she couldn’t see and hear James herself.

But I was glad of it, because when James first set eyes on Lesley, he said, Good heavens above, the poor child has more freckles than there are stars in the sky! If she doesn’t start using a good bleaching lotion at once, she’ll never catch herself a husband!

Whereas the first thing Lesley said when I introduced them to each other was Ask him if he ever buried treasure anywhere.

Unfortunately James was not the treasure-burying type, and he was rather insulted that Lesley thought he might be. He was easily insulted.

Is he transparent? Lesley had asked at that first meeting. Or kind of black and white?

James looked just like anyone I’d ever met. Except for his clothes, of course.

Can you walk through him?

I don’t know. I’ve never tried.

Then try now, Lesley suggested.

James was not about to let me try that.

What does she mean, a ghost? The Honorable James Augustus Peregrine Pympoole-Bothame, heir to the fourteenth Earl of Hardsdale, is taking no insults from young girls!

Like so many ghosts, he refused to accept that he wasn’t alive anymore. Try as he might, he couldn’t remember dying. James and I had met five years ago, on my first day at St. Lennox High School, but to James it seemed only a few days ago that he was sitting in his club playing cards with friends and talking about horses, beauty spots, and wigs. (He wore both a beauty spot and a wig, but they looked better on him than you might think.) He completely ignored the fact that I’d grown several inches since we first met, had acquired breasts, and braces on my teeth, and had shed the braces again. He dismisssed the fact that his father’s grand town house had become a school with running water, electric light, and central heating. The only thing he did seem to notice from time to time was the ever-decreasing length of our school uniform skirts. Obviously girls’ legs and ankles hadn’t often been on show in his time.

It’s not very civil of a lady to walk past a highborn gentleman without a word, Miss Gwyneth, he called after me now. He was deeply offended that I’d brushed past him.

Sorry. We’re in a hurry, I said.

If I can help you in any way, I am, of course, entirely at your service, James said, adjusting the lace on his cuffs.

I don’t think so, but thanks anyway. We just have to get home, fast. As if James could possibly have helped in any way! He couldn’t even open a door. Charlotte isn’t feeling well, I explained.

I’m very sorry to hear it, said James, who had a soft spot for Charlotte. Unlike that ill-mannered girl with the freckles, as he called Lesley, he thought my cousin was delightful, a vision of beguiling charm. Now he offered more of his flowery flattery. Pray give her my best wishes. And tell her she looks as enchanting as ever. A little pale, but as captivating as a fairy.

I’ll tell her, I said, rolling my eyes.

If you don’t stop talking to your imaginary friend, snapped Charlotte, you’ll end up in the nuthouse.

Okay, then I wouldn’t tell her. She was conceited enough as it was.

James isn’t imaginary, just invisible. There’s a great difference.

If you say so, replied Charlotte. She and Aunt Glenda thought I just made up James and the other ghosts for attention. Now I was sorry I’d ever told Charlotte about them. As a small child, though, I couldn’t manage to keep my mouth shut about gargoyles coming to life—scrambling down the fronts of buildings before my very eyes and twisting their Gothic faces for me to see. The gargoyles were funny, but there were also some dark, grim-looking ghosts, and I was afraid of those. It took me a couple of years to realize that ghosts can’t hurt you. All they can really do to people is scare them.

Not James, of course. He was not frightening in the least.

Lesley thinks it may be a good thing that James died young. With a name like Pympoole-Bothame, how would he ever have found a wife? I said, after making sure James was out of hearing distance. I mean, who’d marry a man with a name that sounds like Pimple-Bottom?

Charlotte rolled her eyes.

He’s not bad-looking, I went on. And he’s filthy rich too—if he’s telling the truth about his family. It’s just his habit of raising a perfumed lace hanky to his nose that doesn’t exactly make me swoon.

What a shame there’s no one but you to admire him, said Charlotte.

I thought so myself.

And how stupid of you to talk about how weird you are outside the family, added Charlotte.

That was another of Charlotte’s typical digs. It was meant to hurt me, and as a matter of fact, it did.

I’m not weird!

Of course you are!

"You’re a fine one to talk, gene carrier!"

Well, I don’t go blabbing on about it all over the place, said Charlotte. You’re like Great-aunt Mad Maddy. She even tells the postman about her visions.

You’re a jerk.

And you’re naive.

Still quarreling, we walked through the front hall, past the janitor’s glazed cubicle, and out into the school yard. The wind was picking up, and the ominous sky held the promise of rain. I wished we had grabbed our coats from our lockers.

Sorry I said that about you being like Great-aunt Maddy, said Charlotte, suddenly sounding remorseful. I’m excited, but I am a bit nervous as well.

I was surprised. Charlotte never apologized.

I know, I replied almost too quickly. I wanted her to know that I appreciated her apology. But in reality, I couldn’t have been further from understanding how she felt. I’d have been scared out of my wits. In her shoes, I’d have been about as excited as if I were going to the dentist. Anyway, I like Great-aunt Maddy, I added. That was true. Great-aunt Maddy might be a bit talkative and inclined to say everything four times over, but I liked that a lot better than the mysterious way the others carried on. And Great-aunt Maddy was always very generous when it came to handing out sherbet lemons.

But of course Charlotte didn’t like

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1