A Seal Pup Called Pearl - Helen Peters - E-Book

A Seal Pup Called Pearl E-Book

Helen Peters

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Beschreibung

The thirteenth in a fantastic series of animal stories for younger readers by Waterstones Children's Book Prize-shortlisted author Helen Peters, with beautiful black-and-white illustrations by Ellie Snowdon. Jasmine's dad is a farmer, and her mum is a large-animal vet, so Jasmine spends a lot of time caring for animals and keeping them out of trouble. Unfortunately, this often means she gets into hot water herself... When a newborn seal pup is abandoned on the riverbank, Jasmine and Tom are determined to care for her until she's old enough to be released. But there are other dangers for baby seals, and when Pearl's life is threatened again, nobody knows what the future will hold. Will Pearl ever be able to return to the sea? Brilliant storytelling that will make you laugh and cry, this is Dick King-Smith for a new generation. Perfect for readers aged seven and up. Check out Jasmine's other adventures: A Piglet Called Truffle, A Kitten Called Holly, A Sheepdog Called Sky and many more!

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For Sara

H. P.

For Olivia

E. S.

Chapter One

A Real Seal

On the first morning of the summer holidays, Jasmine and her best friend Tom took Jasmine’s sheepdog, Sky, for a walk along the riverbank. The fields of Oak Tree Farm, Jasmine’s home, stretched out ahead of them. Although they were on a public footpath, there was nobody else in sight.

“Oh, look, Tom!” said Jasmine, as they rounded a bend.

A family of swans was gliding through the water, two parents followed by six fluffy grey cygnets.

Sky strained towards them.

“No, Sky,” said Jasmine, keeping a firm hold on his lead. “Leave the swans alone.”

“Those cygnets are so cute,” said Tom. “All swimming in a row.”

They continued along the path until a movement on the opposite bank caught Jasmine’s eye. Her mouth fell open in astonishment. She stopped and stared, trying to make sense of this incredible sight. Could it really be true?

Wide-eyed in amazement, she grabbed Tom’s arm and pointed across the river.

Tom gasped.

Jasmine couldn’t speak. She couldn’t have been more surprised if she had seen a mermaid lying on the riverbank.

Stretched out on the grass, just above the mud that was exposed at low tide, lay a large seal. It had big dark eyes and long white whiskers. Its coat was grey, mottled with white, changing to a creamy colour on its throat and front. It had long rear flippers and surprisingly small front flippers.

It was quite extraordinary to see such an exotic sea creature lounging casually on the bank. On our farm! thought Jasmine in wonder. A seal on our farm!

The children were hidden by the bushes on their side of the river, and the seal didn’t seem to have noticed them. It gazed out across the fields.

Tom turned to speak, but Jasmine put her finger to her lips. Signalling to him to follow, she tiptoed back along the path, keeping a tight hold on Sky’s lead. Luckily he didn’t seem interested in the seal.

Once they were a safe distance away, the children turned to each other and grinned in delight.

“I can’t believe it!” whispered Jasmine. “It is a seal, isn’t it? A real seal?”

“It actually is,” said Tom in awe. “An actual seal on your river! It must have swum up from the sea.”

“Do they do that? I didn’t know seals came this far away from the sea.”

“Remember when we went to London Aquarium? There were pictures of seals in the River Thames, right in the middle of London. That’s much further from the sea than we are.”

“Wow,” breathed Jasmine, peeping through the bushes. “It’s so amazing.”

“It’s massive, isn’t it?” said Tom, peering through another gap. “I didn’t know seals were so big.” He took his phone out of his pocket. “I’ll take some photos.”

“We mustn’t disturb it,” Jasmine said. “If it sees us, it will get frightened and leave.”

“I won’t go any closer. I’ll use the zoom. And the sound’s off.”

“And we’re downwind of it here,” said Jasmine, “so it won’t smell us.”

While Tom took photos, Jasmine feasted her eyes on the seal, trying to fix every detail in her mind’s eye.

The seal rolled on to its side. They watched, fascinated, as it heaved its large body around on its little front flippers. Then, as it turned away from them, Jasmine almost squealed. She clamped her hand over her mouth just in time.

“Oh!” she breathed. “A baby!”

Chapter Two

The Secret Seal Society

The mother seal turned so that she and her pup lay face to face on the riverbank, nuzzling each other’s noses. The mother sniffed her pup’s face and head.

“Such a gorgeous pup,” whispered Jasmine.

The baby seal had enormous round dark eyes, a doggy nose and long whiskers. Its coat was much darker than its mother’s, but otherwise its body was a miniature version of hers.

“It’s beautiful,” said Tom. “Do you think it’s a newborn?”

“Maybe she came here specially to give birth,” said Jasmine. “She might have wanted to be somewhere quiet.”

The mother rolled on to her side again. The children watched, spellbound, as the pup found her teat and began to suckle.

After a while, Jasmine turned to Tom. “What time is it?”

Tom looked at his watch. “Nearly nine.”

“I’d better call Mum and tell her we won’t be back for a while. She was going to make us breakfast.”

“Won’t she be at work by now?”

“No, she’s starting later today. Can I use your phone?”

Tom took it out of his pocket. “No signal. It’s usually better higher up.”

“Mum will be so excited there’s a seal here,” said Jasmine, as they walked up the hill away from the river. “I wonder if she’s ever treated one. I bet she hasn’t.”

Jasmine’s mum, Nadia, was a vet, and she loved encountering new and unusual animals.

“Mum, you won’t believe what we’ve just seen on the river!” said Jasmine, when Nadia answered the phone. She told her mother all about the seal and her pup.

“Wow, that’s incredible!” said Nadia. “I know they swim up rivers sometimes, but we’ve never had one here before. How wonderful.”

“Do you want to come and see them? They’re so beautiful.”

“I’d love to,” said Nadia, “but the less they’re disturbed, the better. Seals are easily spooked when they’re on land, especially mothers with pups. Don’t get too close, will you, and don’t let them see you.”

“Of course not. We’re watching from behind a bush, and we’re downwind of them.”

“Was there anyone else on the footpath? Any dog walkers?”

“Not at the moment.”

“Good. Let’s hope nobody else sees them, then. Don’t tell anyone about them, will you?”

“We won’t breathe a word,” said Jasmine. “We’ll be the Secret Seal Society.”

“Perfect.”

They sent Nadia some photos of the seals, and then they walked back down the hill. As they drew closer to the river, Jasmine was alarmed to hear voices. She gave Tom a fearful glance, and they quickened their pace until they reached the gap in the bushes where Jasmine had first spotted the seal.

She gasped in horror. A bright-orange kayak was pulled up on the opposite riverbank. The mother seal was nowhere to be seen. A young man and woman in wetsuits were crouching on the bank next to the baby seal. As the children stared in fury and disbelief, the woman posed with her head next to the pup’s and stroked its coat, smiling for the camera as the man took photos. The pup lifted its head and gave a sad cry.

It started to wriggle along the riverbank, using its little front flippers to pull itself forward.

Boiling with rage, Jasmine wanted to yell at the couple, but that would frighten the seals even more. Instead, she waved her arms above her head to get their attention. Tom did the same.

Eventually the woman noticed them.

“Hi!” she called. “Isn’t this amazing? I can’t believe it! Isn’t it the cutest little thing?”

The man turned to the children with a grin and waved at them.

Jasmine was so angry she thought she might burst. She pressed her finger to her lips to tell them to be quiet, and then she pointed to a muddy slope further along the bank, by a weeping willow tree. She beckoned fiercely and mouthed Come here.

The woman frowned, looking puzzled, so Jasmine repeated the instruction.

The man raised his palms in a questioning gesture. Jasmine beckoned again.

The couple looked at each other with raised eyebrows. They obviously thought they were dealing with a lunatic, but when Jasmine beckoned them urgently for a fourth time, they shrugged and got into the kayak. The pup was still wriggling along the riverbank, looking around in all directions and calling for its mother.

Oh, please let the mother hear and come back, thought Jasmine. The poor little pup must be terrified. Had its mum just gone out to fish, or had those stupid people scared her away? Jasmine looked at them with contempt as they paddled across the river. If they scared her away, she thought, I’ll kill them.

“What’s up?” asked the man, as the kayak reached the bank.

“Get out of the water,” Jasmine whispered fiercely. “And stop talking.”

The couple looked startled, but they got out of the kayak with some difficulty and pulled it up on to the bank.

“What’s going on?” asked the woman.

“What’s going on?!” hissed Jasmine. “You’ve just disturbed the seals, and now the mother might reject her pup! Don’t you know you should never disturb wild animals?”

“Hey, calm down,” said the man in a patronising tone that made Jasmine want to smack him. “The seal’s fine. We barely touched it.”

“Where’s the mother?” Jasmine demanded. “Where did she go?”

He jerked his thumb downriver. “She went into the water when she saw us. I guess she’s off hunting. Bringing some fish back for the baby.”

Trembling with fury, Jasmine gave him her most withering look. “The pup isn’t even weaned yet. It doesn’t eat fish. All it needs is its mother’s milk. So now it will starve to death if she doesn’t come back.”

“No need to get so upset,” said the man. “What business is it of yours anyway?”

“I live on this farm,” said Jasmine, “so any animal on this farm is my business. That seal had chosen this site as a safe place to have her baby, and you’ve just destroyed their peace. Now she might never come back, and her pup will be orphaned.”

They all looked across the river at the pup, who lifted its head and gave a desolate cry that made Jasmine’s heart ache.

The woman looked uncomfortable. “I’m sure the mum will be back soon,” she said.

“Oh, are you? And what if she’s not?”