Kitabı oku: «Rascal: Racing Against Time»
Collect all of Rascal’s adventures:
RASCAL: LOST iN THE CAVES
RASCAL: TRAPPED ON THE TRACKS
RASCAL: RUNNiNG FOR HiS LiFE
RASCAL: FACING THE FLAMES
RASCAL: SWEPT BENEATH THE WATERS
RASCAL: RACING AGAINST TiME
First published as Tramp: Racing Against Time by Puffin in 2004
This edition first published in Great Britain in 2015
by Egmont UK Limited
The Yellow Building, 1 Nicholas Road, London W11 4AN
Text copyright © 2004 Chris Cooper
Illustration copyright © 2015 James de la Rue
The moral rights of the author and illustrator have been asserted
First e-book edition 2015
ISBN: 978 1 4052 7533 0
Ebook ISBN: 978 1 7803 1673 4
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Stay safe online. Any website addresses listed in this book are correct at the time of going to print. However, Egmont is not responsible for content hosted by third parties. Please be aware that online content can be subject to change and websites can contain content that is unsuitable for children. We advise that all children are supervised when using the internet.
For my mum
CONTENTS
Cover
Front series promotional page
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 1
Winter had arrived and the days were at their shortest. By the time Rascal saw lights up ahead, it had been dark for a few hours. A small flame of hope sparked inside the dog at the sight of them – perhaps he’d find a place to rest and shelter from the cold there? But it was hard to keep that hope alive. As night had fallen, so had the temperature. The chill wind buffeted him, and the occasional flake of snow in the air hinted at even worse weather on the way. Pushing through his tiredness, Rascal continued towards the glow of the electric lights.
It wasn’t easy to be cold and alone like this again. The dog had been forced to delay his long journey several weeks earlier, when his back leg had been fractured by a car. Luckily for Rascal, Judy, a volunteer for the local animal shelter and a true dog lover, had taken him in. He had grown accustomed to being warm and well-fed at her house while his leg mended.
And yet, Rascal hadn’t been able to shake the restless feeling at the back of his mind. Judy was a great owner, but she wasn’t his owner. She was kind and loving to him, but she was that way with all dogs. That’s why Judy volunteered to act as a foster owner for any dogs from the shelter that needed special attention. Every time Rascal found himself relaxing and starting to enjoy life with Judy, an image of his old master, Joel – his true master – would pop into his mind, No, he knew he had to continue on his journey home, just as soon as he could.
At last, the day came when Rascal was taken to the vet’s and the splint on his leg removed. He touched the floor gingerly with his back paw. It felt good to walk on all fours once again, even if the muscles of the injured leg felt weak through lack of use.
It was time to move on.
Judy was sitting in her favourite chair with the newspaper when Rascal came up to her and pawed her knee.
‘You’re not looking for more food, are you?’ she asked. ‘I’ve never seen a dog eat as much as you did this morning!’
Rascal just looked at this woman who had shown him such kindness. In a rush he leaned forwards and gave her face a lick.
‘Get off, you great soppy thing!’ laughed Judy.
Rascal wandered out to the garden – out of Judy’s line of vision. He looked at the fence ahead of him. He had jumped over this fence once before, but that had been before his back leg had been injured. It might not be so easy now.
Rascal took a breath and charged towards the fence. As before, he sailed over. The instant he landed on the pavement on the other side, he knew that his status had changed. He was not a pet any more. He was a stray dog again, trying to find his way home.
The rest of the day was a blur of sore feet and aching bones and a growing emptiness in his stomach, as Rascal headed west. It didn’t take long to leave the town behind him, and then he was crossing open land. A large highway ran straight west, and he kept it in sight as if navigating along the banks of a mighty river.
Knowing that he must find shelter before he could give in to sleep, Rascal carried on long after the sky had darkened. And that’s when he saw the lights up ahead . . .
CHAPTER 2
They belonged to a small café, set back from the highway, and a small motel just beyond that.
Rascal could smell the food from a long way away. Although he had eaten as much as he possibly could at Judy’s house that morning, he was back to his usual condition – starving. Perhaps he could find something to eat in the rubbish bins round the back of the café?
But, as he neared the building, the front door opened and someone stepped out. He was young and his long hair was pulled back in a loose ponytail. The light jacket he wore wasn’t enough to keep out the cold evening air.
The man had a kind, open face and Rascal thought that it was worth a try to see if he had any food. The dog gave a friendly bark.
‘Hey, boy,’ said the man, rubbing his hands together to warm them.
Rascal barked again, wagging his tail. Then he sat down expectantly.
The man hesitated, then grinned. ‘I get it,’ he said. ‘It’s food you’re after, right?’
He opened the plastic container he had been carrying under one arm, and smiled.
‘You do realise these leftovers were going to be my lunch for tomorrow?’
He pulled a few strips of bacon out and tossed them to Rascal, who scoffed them down in an instant. They were cold, overdone almost to a crisp, and completely and utterly delicious.
‘I guess that’s why they call them doggy bags,’ laughed the man. He began to walk across the parking lot to the motel that adjoined the café. ‘You’d better go home now, doggy,’ he said over his shoulder. ‘Radio said worse weather’s on the way . . .’
Rascal watched as the man entered one of the rooms on the ground level of the motel. Then the dog took up position outside the café entrance. Maybe he would be just as lucky with the next person who came out? He waited and waited, but no one came.
At last, a face did appear at the café door. It was a woman, but she didn’t come out; she just locked the door from the inside, gave Rascal a suspicious look, and then turned round, clicking off the light at the front of the café. There would be no more food tonight.
Rascal turned his attention to finding a place to sleep. The doorway of the café offered little protection against the wind. Rascal padded round to the side of the building. There was a large rubbish skip here. It wasn’t much, but the narrow gap between it and the wall offered a little shelter. Wearily, Rascal crawled in.
It was so cold now that Rascal could hardly get to sleep. When he finally did drop off, his dreams were shot through with frost and snow.
It wasn’t hard for the sound of a door slamming to pull Rascal from this fitful sleep. He opened his eyes. In the distance, the man from the café, the one who had given him some food, was leaving his motel room. He went along the walkway, pulling change from his pocket, until he reached a vending machine.
Rascal hauled himself out and made his way across the parking lot. The man was heading back to his room when he saw the dog.
‘What are you doing still out?’ the man asked.
Rascal wagged his tail, but he was too cold and tired to muster much of a bark.
A frown clouded the man’s face. ‘Haven’t you got a home to go to?’ he asked.
Rascal took a step closer. Now that he was in the light, the man could have a better look at him.
‘I don’t think you do,’ he murmured thoughtfully. He glanced in the direction of the motel lobby. ‘What they don’t know won’t hurt them,’ he said at last. ‘Come on.’
Rascal followed him along the walkway. The man unlocked the door to his room and held it open for Rascal. The dog padded into the warmth of the small room. He instantly settled into a corner.
‘Just don’t bark,’ said the man, making sure the curtains were completely drawn so that no one might spot his guest.
Rascal was half asleep when the light was clicked off. Seconds later he heard the sound of bed springs as the man sat up.
‘Hey!’ hissed a voice from across the room, and Rascal could almost feel its grin in the dark. ‘You don’t snore, do you?’
Ücretsiz ön izlemeyi tamamladınız.