Children's
published

Pip and the Color-Bell

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In a seaside town where a magical bell keeps colors bright, young Pip sets off to find the bell when the town begins to lose its hues. With a lantern-bird and a finding-brush, he discovers an island of forgotten things, meets a lonely Greyweaver, and learns the power of sharing and mending.

Children's
7-11 age
Fantasy
Adventure
Friendship
Creativity
Sea town

The Morning the Colors Whispered

Chapter 1Page 1 of 17

Story Content

Pip woke to the sea calling like a throat of glass. It was the sort of morning that made metal taste sweet at the back of his mouth: brine and lemon peel and old paint. He padded across the wooden floorboards of the little workshop behind Master Hobb's clock-shop, feeling the familiar wiggle of gears beneath his feet. Shelves leaned like sleepy trees; jars of pigments glowed like tiny moons; a kettle hissed in the corner and threw up the smell of tea and pipe-smoke.

He put a thumbprint of amber paint on the side of a small brass bird and smiled because brass birds liked fingerprints—they made them look lived in. 'Morning, Sprocket,' he said to the shop cat, who was doing a careful sun-roll on a stack of sanded clock faces. Sprocket blinked, showed a doubtful whisker, and batted a stray cog toward Pip. They had been partners for three years, which in Pip's counting meant Sprocket had been on more ship rides and paint-splashes than any cat in Brindle Bay.

Outside, the square had always been loud with color. Children chalked hopscotch maps in bright loops. Banners hung between lampposts like necklaces. In the middle of the square stood the Color-Bell: a round, singing thing riveted in a wooden frame. When the bell chimed, paint in jars seemed to hum along; even the fog off the water went pink and soft. It was careful magic and old town promises all wound into one bright object.

Pip liked to run his fingers along the bell's rim when the bell hummed. Once, as a smaller child, he had pressed his ear to the metal and heard a pattern like a lullaby that had been turned into wind. He could not fix clocks yet the way Master Hobb could, but he knew which brushes made clouds glow and which tiny screws made a sundial wink.

That morning, as he lifted his hand, a silence bumped under his knuckles. The bell was there—its brass rim darker than he remembered—but it made no sound. The square felt thin, like a page someone had folded and hidden inside a book. Pip frowned, and a cold, tidy worry slid down his spine.

'Where's the song?' asked a voice from the doorway. Master Hobb stood framed by steam, his apron a clean moon. He rubbed his chin, and the bruise-blue bruise of sleep sat on his eyelids. He had been keeper of clocks and small comforts for as long as anyone could remember.

Pip opened his mouth to answer and could not find words. The colors outside looked tired; even the chalk had a slightly dusty hush. 'It's—' he began, but the sound of his own voice seemed to fall like a pebble into the square, making hardly a ripple. The Color-Bell did not answer.

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