*?F
Ultra-Violet Catastrophe!
r
or The Unexpected Walk with
Great -Uncle
story by
-« s
Magnus Pr ingle
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*?F
Ultra-Violet Catastrophe!
r
or The Unexpected Walk with
Great -Uncle
story by
-« s
Magnus Pr ingle
pictures by
MARGARET MAHY BRIAN FROUI)
k-
II "* ltra-Violet Catastrophe! or
The Unexpected Walk with
Great-Uncle
story
by
Magnus
Pringle
MARGARET MAHY
pictures by
BRIAN FROUD
PARENTS' MAGAZINE PRESS
NEW YORK
Text copyright i 1975 by Margaret Mahy. Illustrations copyright t 1975 by J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd.. London. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States ot America.
Ultra-Violet Catastrophe!
'
mother stood underneath a big looking up into its branches. f called. "Are you there?'
ally's
tree
"Sally 'she
"She
isn't here," Sallv
thing has eaten her. "Sally,
It's
come down
called back.
"Some-
dangerous up here." at
once!" her mother
called again. Sally shut her eyes Sally.
and answered, "I'm not
I'm Horrible Stumper the tree pirate."
But it was no use. Horrible Stumper the tree pirate had to come down out of the leaves and the smell of spring and turn into Sally once more.
Sally slim her eyet
was washed around the face and scrubbed around the knees. She had to put on her best dress and her long white socks. Her hair was brushed until it shone and her ears went all red and hot. She was being taken to visit her mother's cousin, Aunt Anne Pringle. Aunt Anne lived in the country, but not on a farm. Her house was called "Sunny Nook," and it was full of things Sally was not allowed Sally
to touch.
"She doesn't said crosslv.
"She
like
me
fusses
even to
and
fusses
breathe, " Sally all
the time!'
manage somehow," replied her mother. "I know Aunt Anne is fussy, and I know there are no children to play with, but you can't expect everything to suit you all the "You'll have to
time.
.
.
"It's
Oh
dear,
your knees
still
look dirty."
the scratches," Sally explained. "I could
paint faces
on
my
knees and then the scratches
wouldn't show."
"Come
on!" said
Sallv's
mother
sharp voice. "Hurry up, or we'll be
in rather a late."
They caught the bus in time. Sally had hoped that they would
miss
it.
Anne met them at the door of Sunnv Nook. Sally could tell at once unt
that she tiny,
and
more
like a freshly
any
had not improved. She was
terribly clean
real person.
and
neat.
She looked
dusted china ornament than
She smiled
at Sally,
and then
talked over her head to her mother. "I
have Father staying with
me
for a month,"
awkward. Old men can be so difficult, and he's very set in his ways, you know. The things he says! Sometimes I don't understand just what he's getting at, he uses
she said.
"It's
rather
such funny long words."
mother made an 'Tm-sorrv-to-hearthat" clicking sound with her tongue. They went into Aunt Anne's tiny sittingroom. Sally's
There on the flowery couch was a very clean, scrubbed-and-scoured, washed-up and
brushed-down Sally
him
little
old man.
thought Aunt Anne must have rinsed
out, then starched
then polished
him with
and ironed him, and
a soft cloth.
Aunt Anne. "I told you a dear little girl was coming to visit." Sally's mother thought she saw a Horrible Stumper look coming onto Sally's face. She "This
began
is
to
Sally, Father," said
talk
quickly.
this
"Sally,
is
Great-
Uncle Magnus Pr ingle." Great-Uncle Magnus looked
under
his
wrinkly
at Sally
eyelids.
"Ultra- Violet Catastrophe to you, lady,"
he
said
mvsteriouslv.
loud— loud but not like
guns
from
His
crackly.
It
young
voice
was
was rather
at sea.
"Oh, don't
Aunt Anne
start talking that
fretfully.
rubbish!" said
why don't you two
"Look,
take each other for a walk?"
Mother and Aunt Anne
led Sally
and Great-
Uncle Magnus out of the house and pointed them down the road towards the corner. "Be good and keep clean," said Aunt Anne.
jf\^
*
I^V
1 "fl
rJ.
\A V
\Us-t •
Jx^
and Great-Uncle Magnus walked along the country road in the counally
«-
? )i
try sunshine smelling smells of wet grass
They came with
the country
and cows.
to a thick dark
hedge speckled
white flowers.
little
Suddenly Great-Uncle Magnus stopped.
"Do you asked.
U
I do,
through
like to
and
good
a
go through hedges?" he years
it's
since
hedge."
Sally stared at Great-Uncle at
been
I've
Magnus, amazed
such thoughts in a great-uncle. "I see a
hole in
this
hedge,"
went on Great-
Uncle Magnus, "and I'm going through
would be a help to have you give me on the other side." "Shall
I
then?" asked
o;o first
Sallv.
it... it
a
hand
"In case
of danger?"
"That would be kind of you," said Great-
Uncle Magnus.
"I
have
this
creaky knee, you
good knee, mind you.
see. It's a
years, but
it is
I've
had
it
for
creaky."
Sally scrambled
through the hole
in
the
hedge, smelling
its
hedge smell
special
went. The hedge tried to hold onto
hedges do, but she got through
she
as
her,
as
After her
safely.
came Great-Uncle Magnus, breathing hard. "Ah," he said, as Sally helped him up, "that was good. That was refreshing. Now what have
we
here?"
On
hedge the ground
the other side of the
was swampy from the grass,
yesterday's rain. In
muddy water was
between
oozing. Grass tufts
stuck out of puddles. "It's
a
long time since
I
went wading,"
said
Great-Uncle Magnus thoughtfully.
"What
are
'Taking
you doing?" cried
my
shoes and socks
Sally. off,"
the great-
uncle replied, and so he was. Sally grinned. She sat
down
beside Great-
Uncle Magnus and took off her shoes and her long white socks, too. She had to help the greatuncle with a tightly tied shoelace.
Aunt Anne always ties my shoelaces were choking the shoes to death," said
'Your as if
she
Great-Uncle Magnus.
Great-Uncle Magnus's pale
"Ah!" he sighed,
mud, eh? Nothing
muddy
Sally to find
about
sank greedily
mud.
into the
that
feet
feel,
"there's
something about
else has quite
that— that—
has it?"
was amazed again. She had not expected a great-uncle who felt the same way
mud
as
she did.
"Ultra -Violet Catastrophe,"
murmured
the
great-uncle to himself.
"What does "It's
that
the sound
I
mean?" asked
say
it
for,
Sally boldly.
not the meaning,"
Great-Uncle Magnus explained. "Some people say 'Goodness
much— they
That doesn't mean for the sound. But / like to sounds even better and more
Gracious.'
say
it
say something that
important."
"Words usually mean some Sally carefully.
"For instance,
real thing," said I
say 'Horrible
means a tree pirate. Don't your good-sounding words mean anything?" "They do mean something scientific,"
Stumper' and
admitted scientific
it
Great-Uncle
Magnus.
"Something
and too hard to explain."
He
started
way through the grass and mud. muddy patch on the back of his
to splash his
He had
a
where he had been sitting down. "You see," he said, as he went along, "Annie's a good girl and she means well — but she treats me like one of her potted plants. She waters me and puts me in the sun and leaves me alone. Serve her right if I grew up the wall and put out flowers! After a while I begin to think I'm really turning into a potted plant, and trousers
then
I
sing to myself or use long
Violet Catastrophe,'
I
say,
words— 'Ultra-
or 'Seismological
Singularity.'"
"That's a hard one," said Sally with great respect.
"Too hard
for a potted plant!" Great-Uncle
Magnus nodded. "No mere potted use
words
like
that.
Then
I
plant
know
would
that I'm
Magnus Pringle all the time." They came down to a clear stream flowing over brown stones. On the bank above the stream a green tree spread wide rough arms.
Great-Uncle Magnus's sharp old eyes looked
up
into the green arch
above them.
vears since
"It's
one
years and
a tree,
Great-Uncle Magnus. "I'd climb
vears," said this
climbed
I
wasn't tor
if it
my
of the
fear
tree
pirates."
"Oh, well — I'll you," Sally
go up and check for offered eagerly. "This is too good a
tree to waste! it
And
just
once I'm up,
your knee creaks, or
if
it's
can help you
I
too hard for you or
anything."
"There's nothing like a
Magnus remarked
tree."
Great-Uncle
tew minutes later, still down below, 'it's good to look up in the air with the leaves all around. What do you think?" "'Ultra-Violet
answered
Sally
a
Catastrophe.'
/
think."
boldly
what I was thinking myselt." said GreatUncle Mamius. "Seismological Singularity! I "Just
think
I'll
He
sing a
bit."
pointed his nose to the sky and began: "Boiled
beef
and
carrots.
Boiled beef and carrots" Sally felt
up there Great-Uncle Magnus.
very happy,
tree listening to
sitting
in the
Everything
felt
very alive
branches and bark and
its
...
the tree with
its
spring leaves bright
against the blue sky. Sally pointed her nose at
the sky, too,
and
felt
the sun shine through the
on her face. The here were like sunny
leaves in hot spring freckles tree at
home and
rooms
in
at the
open
the tree
rustling houses. She
looked
down
stream below.
"Is it years
and years since you made
a
dam
across a creek?" asked Sally.
"How said
did
you
wonderingly.
guess?" Great-Uncle "It
was
Magnus
certainly a long time
some good stones down there, too." Somehow, neither Sally nor Great-Uncle Magnus were as tidy as they had been when ago.
I
they
set out.
see
Making a dam did not improve things. When you are making a dam it is easy to get damp and muddy around the edges. They built a good dam out of mossy green and brown stones. But the cunning water found
a
way
over, or around, or
through, and kept them busy and silent for quite a long time.
I
,,3
set
2ZE«
>
\H .
hen
I'M /
.
a
sudden noise made Great-
Uncle Magnus look up. > ^j^-
He
cleared
his throat carefully.
"Sally,"
just look
he
said,
"don't be frightened, but
behind you and
tell
me what you
looked under her arm
see."
bank behind her. A large brown-and-white cow was standing there, watching them. She had a very young brown-and-white calf beside her. She had very sharp horns. As Sally looked, she put her head down and pointed her horns at them. She gave a grumbling, angry "Moo!" "Having a new calf can make a cow very cross," Great-Uncle Magnus said, gathering up his socks and shoes. "Not that I'm frightened " of a mere cow, but still "A cow with a calf isn't as mere as other Sallv
cows,
I
at
the
don't think," said Sally, gathering her
socks and shoes, too.
The cow them. Sally
come down the bank at and Great-Uncle Magnus moved started to
was amazed at the speed a greatuncle can put on when there is an angry cow coming down a bank after him. quickly. Sally
There was no hedge on the other side of the creek, but there was a barbed-wire fence. Socks
and shoes were
tossed
scrambled over
As
hem
it.
of her dress
Then
across.
Sally
she did so, she heard the
tear open.
A moment
later
Great-Uncle Magnus's trousers ripped, too. Sally at
and Great-Uncle Magnus stood staring
each other, while the
cow mooed
angrily at
them from
the other side of the fence.
calf called,
and she hurried back to
that very
Sallv's
calling
down
And,
at
like other anxious,
the road.
Great-Uncle Magnus shook "I can't see mvself,"
your mother
it.
her
mooing mother and Aunt Anne came
moment,
cows,
Then
is
he
said,
head slowly.
his
"but
I
don't think
going to be pleased with your
appearance." "I
don't think
with yours,
Aunt Anne
either," Sally told
both wet and
muddy and
will be pleased
him.
stained
They were
and
torn.
here was a most terrible
"How
could vou, Father,
you!" Aunt "It
Anne
happened,
just
Uncle Magnus
fuss!
how
could
cried.
Annie,"
said
Great-
humble voice. Aunt Anne made them stand on newspapers in the path, while she brushed them and cleaned them as much as she could. "It's
in a
just as well you're
going home
at the
end of the week," she said to Great-Uncle Magnus. "I couldn't stand another adventure like this!"
"Very
sorry,
Annie,"
said
Great-Uncle
more humbly. Then he looked at Sally's mother. "Why don't you and Sally come to visit me when I go home?" he asked. "I've got a little place by the shore, and a little boat I putter about in. I catch a few fish from Magnus,
the
still
end of the wharf. You wouldn't be bored."
said Sally's mother.
"We'd love to come,"
Aunt Anne, being used skirts.) "I can see you two get
(She wasn't as upset as to
mud
and torn
on well
together," she added.
"We've got
a lot in
Magnus agreed. They had been was
common," Great-Uncle on
so long
their
walk, there
scarcely time for Sally to have a bite to eat
before getting ready to go home. Sally
and Great-Uncle Magnus looked
at
each other and could not find the right words to say
goodbye, even though
it
was only
for a
short time.
"Hurry,
Sally,
we'll
miss the bus," called
suddenly
knew
the exact thing to say.
her mother. Sally
"Ultra-Violet Catastrophe!" she shouted back, as
her mother
waved
to
Aunt Anne with one
hand and tugged her with the Great-Uncle
Magnus
brightened
"Horrible Stumper to you, replied. "I
couldn't
ever
country walk with a better
other.
young
hope
to
tree pirate
up.
lady!"
go on
he a
than you."
Margaret Mahy grew up "where the hills
river
met the
covered with dense
When
she
in a little
sea, close
New
town
under the
Zealand bush."
was very young, Ms. Mahy wrote
stones for her school magazine and for the children's
page of a
local
newspaper. She had
a brief career in nursing,
then returned to
college and library work.
Today she
is
a
li-
brarian and continues to write her fanciful stories for children in a "lovely
by the
sea"
where she
lives
daughters. She has twice
new house
with her two
won
the
New
Zealand Library Association's Esther Glen
Award, and many of her
tales
have been
published in the United States, including a
previous book for Parents' Magazine Press,
The Witch
in (he
Cherry
Tree.
Brian Frond was born England, and
a
is
Winchester,
in
graduate of the Maidstone
College of Art. In addition to
number of trated
tales
for children,
book jackets
a
growing
he has
illus-
realm of adult fan-
in the
tasy as well. Mr. Froud's plans for the future
include "building 30-foot models of castles
and peopling
a
wood
and gnomes." The
with models of dwarfs
artist
Ultra-Violet Catastrophe!
Parents'
Magazine
Press.
is
lives
in
his first
London.
book
for