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“Tired as they were, they almost ran up the last part of the stair, and
found themselves in another cave; but it was completely different to the one
with the snake in it. As far as they could see by the light of the box, it
was crammed with old bric-a-brac: bits and pieces of every possible
description, some of them valuable but most of them not, thrown together in
a horrendous jumble, stacked up high above their heads, and covered in dust
and cobwebs. There were walking-sticks, pith helmets, books, dolls, carpets,
bottles, pens, games of Monopoly, stuffed animals, false teeth, family
photographs, toy trucks, maps, birthday cards, pram wheels, diaries,
screwdrivers, umbrellas, plugs, pianos, old coins, kettles, picture frames,
odd shoes, Gladstone bags, wooden legs, rocking chairs, someone's PE kit,
and so on and so on and so forth and so forth – like the contents of the
biggest, dirtiest and most badly-organised second-hand shop in the world.”

The children encounter a shape-shifter called Ratatosk, who tells them about
the snake they have seen, a tree called Yggdrasil, some owls, and the Queen
of the Night. Dora rediscovers one of her old dolls, and Ratatosk explains
how possessions get lost so easily, and why things don't always work when
they ought to. 

The sixth chapter of twelve.

"We are enjoying The PUzzle Box very much!" - William, www.artselector.com

http://www.edwardpicot.com/puzzlebox/

- Edward Picot
http://hyperex.co.uk - The Hyperliterature Exchange
http://edwardpicot.com - personal website

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