The Indian in the Cupboard Trilogy. Lynne Banks Reid

The Indian in the Cupboard Trilogy - Lynne Banks Reid


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with Omri for pinching it. He was using it now to examine the fine details of the building. “I knew you were good at making things,” he said. “But this is amazing. You must have fingers like a fairy to tie those witchy little knots. What’s that?” he asked suddenly.

      They’d all heard it – a high, faint whinny coming from under the bed.

      Omri was galvanized into action. At all costs he must prevent their finding out now! He flung himself on his knees and pretended to grope under the bed. “It’s nothing, only that little clockwork dolphin I got in my Christmas stocking,” he burbled. “I must have wound it up and it suddenly started clicking, you know how they do, it’s quite creepy sometimes when they suddenly start – clicking—”

      By this time he’d leapt up again and was almost pushing the two older boys out of the room.

      “Why are you in such a hurry to get rid of us?” asked Gillon suspiciously.

      “Just go, you know you have to get out of my room when I ask you—” He could hear the pony whinnying again and it didn’t sound a bit like a dolphin.

      “That sounds just like a pony,” said Adiel.

      “Oh, beard it’s a pony, a tiny witchy pony under my bed!” said Omri mockingly.

      At last they went, not without glancing back suspiciously several times, and Omri slammed the door, bolted it, and leant against it with closed eyes.

      “Is it a pony?” whispered Patrick, agog.

      Omri nodded. Then he opened his eyes, lay down again, and peered under the bed.

      “Give me that torch from the chest-of-drawers.”

      Patrick gave it to him and lay beside him. They peered together as the torch-beam probed the darkness.

      “Crumbs!” breathed Patrick reverently. “It’s true!”

      The pony was standing, seemingly alone, whinnying. When the torchlight hit him he stopped and turned his head. Omri could see a pair of leggings behind him.

      “It’s all right, Little Bull, it’s me!” said Omri.

      Slowly a crest of feathers, then the top of a black head, then a pair of eyes appeared over the pony’s back.

      “Who they others?” he asked.

      “My brothers. It’s okay, they didn’t see you.”

      “Little Bull hear coming. Take pony, run, hide.”

      “Good. Come on out and meet my friend Patrick.”

      Little Bull jumped astride the pony and rode proudly out, wearing his new cloak and headdress. He gazed up imperiously at Patrick, who gazed back in wonder.

      “Say something to him,” whispered Omri. “Say ‘How’. That’s what he’s used to.”

      Patrick tried several times to say ‘How’ but his voice just came out as a squeak. Little Bull solemnly raised an arm in salute.

      “Omri’s friend, Little Bull’s friend,” he said magnanimously.

      Patrick swallowed. His eyes seemed in danger of popping right out of his head.

      Little Bull waited politely, but when Patrick didn’t speak he rode over to the seed-tray. The boys had brought it out from behind the crate; they’d been careful, but the ramp had got moved. Omri hurried to put it back, and Little Bull rode the pony up it, dismounted and tied it by its halter to the post he had driven into the compost. Then he went calmly on with his work on his longhouse, hanging the last few tiles.

      Patrick licked his lips, swallowed twice more, and croaked out, “He’s real. He’s a real live Indian.”

      “I told you.”

      “How did it happen?”

      “Don’t ask me. Something to do with this cupboard, or maybe it’s the key – it’s very old. You lock plastic people inside, and they come alive.”

      Patrick goggled at him. “You mean – it’s not only him? You can do it with any toy?”

      “Only plastic ones.”

      An incredulous grin spread over Patrick’s face.

      “Then what are we waiting for? Let’s bring loads of things to life! Whole armies—”

      And he sprang towards the biscuit tins. Omri grabbed him.

      “No, wait! It’s not so simple.”

      Patrick, his hands already full of soldiers, was making for the cupboard. “Why not?”

      “Because they’d all – don’t you see – they’d be real.”

      “Real? What do you mean?”

      “Little Bull isn’t a toy. He’s a real man. He really lived. Maybe he’s still – I don’t know – he’s in the middle of his life – somewhere in America in seventeen-something-or-other. He’s from the past,” Omri struggled to explain as Patrick looked blank.

      “I don’t get it.”

      “Listen. Little Bull has told me about his life. He’s fought in wars, and scalped people, and grown stuff to eat like marrows and stuff, and had a wife. She died. He doesn’t know how he got here but he thinks it’s magic and he accepts magic, he believes in it, he thinks I’m some kind of spirit or something. What I mean,” Omri persisted, as Patrick’s eyes strayed longingly to the cupboard, “ is that if you put all those men in there, when they came to life they’d be real men with real lives of their own, from their own times and countries, talking their own languages. You couldn’t just – set them up and make them do what you wanted them to. They’d do what they wanted to, or they might get terrified and run away or – well, one I tried it with, an old Indian, actually died of – of fright. When he saw me. Look, if you don’t believe me!” And Omri opened the cupboard.

      There lay the body of the old Chief, now made of plastic, but still unmistakably dead, and not dead the way some plastic soldiers are made to look dead but the way real people look – crumpled up, empty.

      Patrick picked it up, turning it in his hand. He’d put the soldiers down by now.

      “This isn’t the one you bought at lunchtime?”

      “Yes.”

      “Crumbs.”

      “You see?”

      “Where’s his headdress?”

      “Little Bull took it. He says he’s a Chief now. It’s made him even more bossy and – difficult than before,” said Omri, using a word his mother often used when he was insisting on having his own way.

      Patrick put the dead Indian down hurriedly and wiped his hand on the seat of his jeans.

      “Maybe this isn’t such fun as I thought.”

      Omri considered for a moment.

      “No,” he agreed soberly. “It’s not fun.”

      They stared at Little Bull. He had finished the shell of the longhouse now. Taking off his headdress he tucked it under his arm, stooped, and entered through the low doorway at one end. After a moment he came out and looked up at Omri.

      “Little Bull hungry,” he said. “You get deer? Bear? Moose?”

      “No.”

      He scowled. “I say get. Why you not get?”

      “The shops are shut. Besides,” added Omri, thinking he sounded rather feeble, especially in front of Patrick, “I’m not sure I like the idea of having bears shambling about my room, or of having them killed. I’ll give


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