The story so far:
Morgan and Isla Hopscotch are aboard their houseboat Seaside Cruiser and they are slowly travelling downriver. They are accompanied both by their grandchildren Freya and Coco Chocolate and by their wards Grady and Esther Chocolate.
The children have a copy of a map supplied by Captain Horatio Seadog and it seems to show an island surrounded by a circle of numbers - plus a riddle. Attempting to interpret the riddle, the children have concluded that they have to determine four particular numbers and these will be supplied by four Sylvanians who live or work near the river. So far they think they've identified three of the four people they need to meet. These are Beth Puddleford, river warden Wade Waters and fisherman Clayton Spotter...
o 0 O 0 o
Mrs Beth Puddleford was clearly expecting them.
"I would have called you if you hadn't stopped," she said.
Isla winked at her. "Oh, the children are good at puzzles."
"Then do they know what they need from me?" said Beth.
"I do. Twenty-one. Make sure you remember it."
Coco looked at the map and the numbers encircling the island. "Got it."
o 0 O 0 o
They later came across Wade Waters, taking a break from his duties keeping the river bank safe. He had a further number. Ten.
The children thanked him and then they filed back aboard to resume their journey.
"So who are we looking for next?" asked Morgan.
"Clay Spotter, we think," said Freya.
"But there should be someone else too," said Coco.
"I'm sure you'll figure it out," Morgan chuckled.
o 0 O 0 o
They did find Clay Spotter, fishing as one might suspect. The children clambered over the rocks to reach him.
He gave them the number seven so that they could mark it on the map and then he asked them how they were doing.
"We need one more number," said Freya.
"Ah well," said Clay, "I'm sure you'll meet someone else before you leave Mellowdene's waters."
"Nice try," said Clay, "but Horatio only gave me a single number and a request to watch out for you. Besides, you'll get more fun if you do it properly."
"Maybe," said Coco. "Thanks Mister Spotter."
o 0 O 0 o
The journey continued but no other names came to mind. Isla had taken the wheel to give Morgan a rest. Grady was up front too, surveying the river ahead.
"You seem to be doing well with the riddle," said Morgan.
"Well, it's good we've got three numbers, but we need a fourth for two lines to cross and find the treasure," said Coco.
"We still don't know that it is treasure, dear," Isla called back. "It says 'happiness' in the rhyme."
"I'd be happy with treasure," said Grady.
"That's not my point," said Coco. "We are travelling down the river and we might miss the fourth person before we figure out the clue."
Isla nodded, peering ahead from her place at the wheel. "That's a fair point. I was thinking it was about time we stopped a while. There looks to be a decent place coming up. Your grandad and I will take a break there and we can all work on the clue."
o 0 O 0 o
The Seaside Cruiser came to rest near a small pooled area and everyone gathered to discuss matters.
"We've spoken to Mister Waters, Mister Spotter and Mrs Puddleford. I can't see another hidden name," said Coco.
"We're not going to solve it, are we?" said Esther, and she and her brother plonked themselves down in disappointment.
"I don't know," said Freya, frowning. "Look at that mark on the paper between the words 'green' and 'waters'. Could it be a comma?"
She glanced expectantly at her grandmother but no advice was forthcoming. Her cousins, sensing hope, were more helpful.
"That might mean 'green' could be something separate," said Esther, coming to her feet.
"The village green?" said Grady, "Who would we ask there?"
"Lena Dandelion's daddy keeps the grass tidy," said Freya.
"But we've left the village green far behind," said Coco. We've missed the last number!"
Morgan spoke up. "I don't think Denzel Dandelion is the answer, Coco, given all the other people have river connections."
"I think we need our minds to relax and see if any ideas come naturally," said Isla, standing and going to the door. "Anyway, I think we have a visitor."
There was indeed a visitor. The pooled area was home to the Bullrush frog family and the father - Walter - was coming to pay his respects.
"Hello Morgan, Isla, children," he said. "Horatio said you might call. Were you wanting something from me? A number perhaps?"
He turned his smiling emerald visage to the children. They didn't vocalise it but they had the same thought - face green! They nodded and managed to get the words out - "yes please, Mister Bullrush."
"Okay," said Walter. "You need the number thirteen."
When the excitement subsided they returned to the map and their spirits dropped. The number Walter provided wasn't what they expected.
Connecting the four numbers, the two lines intersected to the side of the island. If X marked the spot, it was in the water. Furthermore, in the excitement to mark that spot they had forgotten an important fact. Nobody recognised the shape of the island.
"Do you know that island, Mister Bullrush?" asked Esther.
"I'm afraid not," he said, "It's nowhere around here. Maybe there's another clue written somewhere."
"All the other clues are in the poem," said Grady, "so maybe we need to take another look."
Morgan chuckled. "I see it. Look at the first line, children."
Coco read it out. "If I should swap land for the sea..."
Freya squealed. "It's not an island. It's a lake. The Lake!"
o 0 O 0 o
You may think this isn't a particularly adventurous name for a body of water and of course it isn't. It undoubtedly has other names but "The Lake" suffices for most native born Mellowdenians as they don't tend to travel too far. Because of its relative proximity they will have only seen this one lake and a more specific name would have been considered pointless. However, for your benefit perhaps a little bit of geography is in order.
The river bordering Mellowdene County continues a way further and then it forks. Most refer to the left fork as East River and this route finds its way to the sea, passing the communities of Whisper Wood and Thistledown. The right fork (South River) takes a little longer to reach the sea bearing southeast, and this is the regular route Captain Seadog follows to reach the coastal waters that in turn leads to Possum Creek. About a third of the way along South River there is another fork, and this narrower water course leads to the large body of fresh water called The Lake.
On the move again, the Seaside Cruiser chugged past Tall Tree Forest and with that, Mellowdene Country was behind them. The rabbits enjoyed the scenery, sang songs and kept an eye out for the first fork in the river. They were on their way!
Eventually they reached the second fork...
...leading to the placid lake itself.
It wouldn't be long until they got to their destination.
o 0 O 0 o
Morgan steered the cruiser towards that part of the shore nearest to the spot marked on the map.
The boat was secured and they went ashore.
As soon as they were on dry land, they followed what seemed an established trail.
"Yes, that's the place," Coco said, referring to the map and in response the children walked just a little quicker.
"What could be inside?" said Freya.
"Something to make you happy, I expect," said Isla for she had caught sight of movement within the cabin. When two figures emerged, Freya and Coco squealed with joy and the other children chuckled in that reflected happiness.
It was Frasier's parents - Rhys and Patricia - and they held out their arms for their grandchildren.
They had secretly returned from their extended holiday and been made aware that Freya and Coco had particularly missed them.
Coco summarised it best when he said, "You see, it was a treasure map!"
o 0 O 0 o
Teri finished the tale, saying how Rhys and Patricia had a picnic feast awaiting.
Morgan Hopscotch had learned from Horatio Seadog that he was due to transport the Chocolate grandparents back to Mellowdene. When Isla had been told of this she had suggested that all four grandparents should do something special to cheer up the children, something fun to engage them. They went back to Horatio and he had hatched the idea of the treasure map and riddle. He had secured the help of the other villagers.
As for Grady and Esther, they were kept in the dark so that they could enjoy the quest alongside their distant cousins. Their prize was not only to see the joy of the reunion; it was ensured that the feast included their favourite food.
"Rhys and Patricia have finished their holiday, then?" asked Cecile. "How long has it been?"
"Nearly two months, but now they're home," said Frasier. "They took lots of photographs. I foresee a few evenings of slide shows."
"A few evenings?" I asked.
"It was a LOT of photographs," said Teri.
"We might need a holiday to recover," laughed Frasier, "Do you think your parents might give us a berth on the Seaside Cruiser?"
"I suppose that 'before the slide show' is out of the question," said Teri, a smile tugging at her mouth.
You see? We're not the only silly family in Mellowdene.
o 0 O 0 o
Hi Jackson!
ReplyDeleteI loved the first part of this story, but I liked the second part even more. It looked like it was going to take the kids a while to finish solving the riddle but they got it right in the end. They are very clever !
I love stories with happy endings and this is definitely one of them. Coco was right! Of course it was a treasure map! Grandparents are a real treasure.
I'm sure they had a great afternoon with a picnic included. Good company and tasty food is a perfect plan!
The pictures are wonderful! It looks like they are sailing on a real river. I love the photo of Clay Spotter fishing and the one with Beth Paddleford on the rock above the water. Did you take this pictures in real nature? They look very realistic.
Thank you for this lovely story!
Have a nice day! Hugs!
Thank you, Cutata! I'm happy you enjoyed part two of this story.
DeleteI took a number of photos in my garden (Puddleford, Waters, Spotter, lakeside being the most obvious) and added some river style water in post-editing. For Clay Spotter's first pic I erases the soil in a garden bed and underlayed the water beneath so it peeped through the weeds (now river vegetation). Sometimes experiments work!
I'm sorry Blogger/browser/unknown elements stopped you commenting in your usual way, but thank you for letting me know on the forum. I can't understand it. Your comments were registered and I can see them within the Comments section of the Blogger dashboard but for some reason they weren't displayed in the blog itself. I tried adding the ability to post as Anonymous, but the same occurrked irrespective of me using the Samsung browser or Chrome. They get through but don't display.
As nothing has changed my end I can only assume the problem is at Blogger's end. I hope the issue is resolved.
Update: I explicitly marked your post as "not spam" and it miraculously appeared. Maybe Blogger has become overly sensitive and cannot detect innocent posts!
Take care.