It takes a year and a day to circle the oceans of the world and it was much too far. The baby swam slowly and often needed lifts on his father’s back and no one can really give himself to healing the world when they are worried about their child.
The kraken had heard about the Island and the caring aunts as he heard about everything, and at last he had decided to see if it was a good place to leave his son. But he had not been quite happy. Aunts were fine things but these were aunts without children and the baby kraken needed people of his own age. Or rather people who were a bit older but could remember the troubles and the games and the tantrums of being very young.
Which was why the first word he said when he arrived was “Children?” and why now he watched Fabio and Minette most carefully out of his golden eyes. If they were not suitable as childminders, he meant to give up his journey and go home. Once you have children nothing matters more than their safekeeping. Every parent in the world knows that.
The baby kraken was not at all like his father. He was still soft and blobby as though his body hadn’t quite decided what was going to happen to it. Bulges came out of him sometimes, which were almost arms and legs but not the kind of arms you could do very much with, and not the kind of legs that were much use for walking. He would lose these later and become streamlined and suited to the sea, but at the moment he was rather like a large beanbag and one never knew what kind of shape he would decide to be.
And yet one could see that he was the mighty kraken’s son. He had the same large wondrous eyes, the same wide mouth which smiled easily, the same interested nostrils which seemed to hoover up the scents of land and sea.
Like his father, he too could make the creatures of the sea come to him and when he rested in a rockpool, the barnacles and whelks and brittlestars all seemed to glow with happiness and health.
But there was one thing he could not do.
“Can he hum?” Fabio asked on the first day.
They were having lunch. Lambert had bolted his food and rushed back to his room where he lay on his bed with the curtains drawn. He still believed that he was being drugged and that the strange creatures he was seeing were not really there, but seeing a whole island that wasn’t really there was driving him a little crazy.
Aunt Etta shook her head. “He’s too young. A kraken humming is a bit like a boy’s voice breaking; it just happens when he’s ready. It’s a pity, because that’s how krakens speak to each other across distances.”
“Is there any way of teaching him to do it sooner?” asked Minette. “Could his father…?”
But Aunt Etta said, no — it would just happen when the time was right. She didn’t add that his father was worried, knowing that there was no way his child could call him once he went away.
But if he couldn’t hum, the kraken was beginning to speak. The trouble for Fabio and Minette was what he spoke. With his father he spoke Polar but other languages got mixed up with it, and when he started off in English he quickly wandered off into Norwegian or Swedish or even Finnish which the children did not understand at all.
But Fabio himself had needed to learn English not so long ago and he remembered that what he had learnt first was the name of things to eat.
After that it was easy. For the young kraken did not just feed on the plankton in seawater like his father — he was still growing and needed solid food which he ground up with his gums rather like an old man with no teeth.
“This is a sausage,” Fabio would say, holding up one of Art’s bangers and the kraken would repeat “Soss”, or “Spag” when it was spaghetti of which he was very fond, and of course he soon learn to say “More” or “No!” which all young creatures learn to say very early.
By now he was letting the children play with him in the water, throwing a ball or pretending to hide behind a rock. He would even follow them in the dinghy — but always after a short time he went back to his father and stayed very close to his side, for the bond between those two was very, very strong. And though the great kraken was more certain with every day that passed that he had found the right place to leave his son, his heart was heavy at the thought of the parting that must soon come.
Chapter 14
The next island on which Stanley Sprott landed did not have any naked people on it. It did not have any people on it at all. What it had on it was sheep.
They came to it through driving sheets of rain. It was the wettest rain they had ever come across and it looked as though it must stop soon because the sky would have emptied itself, but it didn’t. And on the low-lying, sodden island were hundreds — no, thousands — of soaking sheep.
“There’s nowhere to land,” said the skipper.
But when they’d circled the island twice they found a narrow inlet and, chugging up it, they saw a shingle bay where the dinghy could be beached.
No one had wanted to land among the pink nudists and no one wanted to land among the wet sheep.
“The boy won’t be there,” said Des. “No one could last on this dump.”
But Mr Sprott had a bee in his bonnet about a honeycomb of underground caves and tunnels full of mad aunts who were holding Lambert.
“They might have brought the sheep to put people off,” he said, “or they might come up and shoot them for meat”—and he ordered the Hurricane to put down her anchor.
Leaving Casimir to guard the boat they rowed to the island and went ashore.
It was not a pleasant place. Sheep are not often cheerful once they are grown up and these sheep were the wettest, gloomiest sheep you could imagine. They stood pressed together, the water running down their noses, giving off a smell of wet wool and lanolin. Some of them had foot rot and though sheep-pats are not as squelchy as cow-pats, they are not agreeable to walk on in the rain.
“We must go round and round the island in smaller and smaller circles; that way we won’t miss any openings. It’s like looking for a ball in a field,” said Stanley Sprott.
So they trudged round and round, the water dripping down their necks, slipping and sliding on the wet grass and on the wet other things, while the sheep huddled together, too miserable even to lift their heads, and occasionally made a gloomy bleating noise which did not sound much like Baa but more like the crying of doomed spirits in hell. If the mad aunts had brought them to put people off they hadn’t done so badly.
“There won’t be any caves,” said Des. “The soil’s wrong for caves.”
But Stanley Sprott only told him to keep his mouth shut.
Then, almost in the middle of the island, they did find an opening which led underground.
“Down you go,” said Mr Sprott, very excited. “Make sure they know you’re armed. We’ll keep you covered.”
So Des went down into the hole and came back almost at once looking very sick.
“Well? What’s down there?”
“More sheep,” said Des, rubbing his behind. “Rams. Two of them and as mad as hatters.” He turned round so that Mr Sprott could see the jagged holes in his trousers. “Lucky they didn’t get through to the flesh. It can give you rabies, being butted by rams.”
While Stanley Sprott had been pursuing his son among nudists and sheep, the police had been following in a fishing boat. Now, though, they ran into bad weather; fog came rolling in from the west and the skipper of the fishing boat found that his radar was jammed. He insisted on turning into the next port to get it fixed, and this meant that the Hurricane steamed on without being tailed.
There was only one island left that fitted Lambert’s description. It was a long way away but it had to be the right one; it had to!