Ten stories all about journeys

Down Where the Dead Play Their Lutes

Vol. 3, Story 1

by Matt Mills Read time: 25 minutes

When Hop was little, her Uncle Crumble would play the lute and sing a lot of nonsense about the ocean.

The Tourists

Vol. 3, Story 2

by Natalie Mills Read time: 11 minutes

They came this far so that they could see the mountain, and their first thought, both of them, was how small it looked.

The Memory Thief

Vol. 3, Story 3

by Matt Mills Read time: 15 minutes

Many years ago, in the city of Holem, there was a man with a very peculiar skill: he could remove memories.

That Always Happens

Vol. 3, Story 4

by Natalie Mills Read time: 5 minutes

It is our third night in Asia, and I make a friend at the bar the way friends are made here—one foreigner sees another and starts talking.

Mervin Q. Peevler & The Monkeywrench Express

Vol. 3, Story 5

by Matt Mills Read time: 25 minutes

Everybody knew that if you wanted unicorn blood, you had to go see Mervin Q. Peevler.

Daytime Moon

Vol. 3, Story 6

by Natalie Mills Read time: 9 minutes

A crescent moon stamped the night sky warily, now more obvious in the dark than it had been earlier in the day when it was just an opal sliver on a pale blue sheet.

The Star Map

Vol. 3, Story 7

by Matt Mills Read time: 33 minutes

It was a hot, dry afternoon when Christina’s husband did that extraordinary thing, that thing no one else in Rustvale had done for as long as anyone could remember: he left.

ThE THINGS WE KNOW BUT NEVER SAY

Vol. 3, Story 8

by Natalie Mills Read time: 17 minutes

This was the best cargo in months. It didn’t smell or leak, and it wasn’t illegal. It might not even be worth it for pirates to steal, so they might get away without losing a page.

The Oyster Girl

Vol. 3, Story 9

by Matt Mills Read time: 6 minutes

It was on the prince’s first voyage out, when he was only ten years old, that he first saw the oyster girl.

White Vida

Vol. 3, Story 10

by Natalie Mills Read time: 20 minutes

Every step up the mountain got harder. At first she couldn’t feel her hands or her legs as she moved, and eventually she couldn’t even see them. But the worst part of the storm was that she couldn’t see her friend’s face anymore.