The Unicorn in the Barn
By Jacqueline Ogburn and Rebecca Green
4.5/5
()
About this ebook
For years people have claimed to see a mysterious white deer in the woods around Chinaberry Creek. It always gets away.
One evening, Eric Harper thinks he spots it. But a deer doesn’t have a coat that shimmers like a pearl. And a deer certainly isn’t born with an ivory horn curling from its forehead.
When Eric discovers the unicorn is hurt and being taken care of by the vet next door and her daughter, Allegra, his life is transformed.
A tender tale of love, loss, and the connections we make, The Unicorn in the Barn shows us that sometimes ordinary life takes extraordinary turns.
Jacqueline Ogburn
Jacqueline K. Ogburn has published ten picture books, including The Bake Shop Ghost. This story is her first novel. The resident of a suddenly hip neighborhood in Durham, N.C., she works for a local major university. She and her husband, Ben Deahl, have two daughters and a cat who sometimes disappears, but has yet to speak English.
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Reviews for The Unicorn in the Barn
16 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5My 10 yr old son got this in one of this OwlCrate Jr and refused to read it because it looked too childish. This does end up looking like more of a kids book than a book aimed at middle grade readers. The print is very large and there are pictures throughout. I however don’t mind larger print :-) so I went ahead and read the book. This ends up being a cute and touching story about a boy who is dealing with his gma’s decline when he stumbles across something amazing in the barn that a veterinarian has purchased from his gma.I really enjoyed the idea of a veterinarian that takes care of mythical beasts in her small town barn. I loved how Eric finds his place in life by helping to care for these amazing creatures. This is a deliberately paced story that has a very simple plot and simple language but it’s a good book for what it is.Much of the story is focused around Eric’s family dynamics. The whole family is struggling with the decline of Eric’s gma. Eric’a gma held the family together after Eric’s mother left (for somewhat ambiguous reasons). Now it’s Eric, his teenage brother, and his dad holding things together. None of these guys are very emotionally demonstrative and Eric is struggling with how to move on now that his gma isn’t there but is in a nursing home struggling with her health.When Eric starts spending a lot of time with the neighboring vet and her daughter, Allegra, the two families end up helping to support each other.The drawings throughout are really well done and I enjoyed them as well.Overall this was a cute story, that is touching and heartfelt. I enjoyed it. However I do agree with my son, this is definitely intended for a younger audience. Although the main character in the book is 11 years old, the story is very simple both in the language structure used and the plot developed. I would recommend for younger middle grade readers or even younger children.
Book preview
The Unicorn in the Barn - Jacqueline Ogburn
Copyright © 2017 by Jacqueline K. Ogburn
Illustrations © 2017 by Rebecca Green
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to trade.permissions@hmhco.com or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
hmhbooks.com
The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:
Names: Ogburn, Jacqueline K., author. | Green, Rebecca, illustrator.
Title: The unicorn in the barn / written by Jacqueline Ogburn ; with illustrations by Rebecca Green.
Description: New York, New York : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, [2017] | Summary: Fifth-grader Eric’s life transforms when he encounters a unicorn in the woods around Chinaberry Creek and discovers a special veterinary clinic that cares for supernatural exotic patients.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016014202
Subjects: | CYAC: Unicorns—Fiction. | Veterinary hospitals—Fiction. | Supernatural—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Animals / Mythical. | JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Multigenerational. | JUVENILE FICTION / Fantasy & Magic. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Death & Dying. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Friendship.
Classification: LCC PZ7.O3317 Un 2017 | DDC [Fic]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016014202
ISBN 978-0-544-76112-4 hardcover
ISBN 978-1-328-59585-0 paperback
eISBN 978-1-328-69889-6
v2.0419
To my Uncle Jackie, who has always loved animals
—J.K.O.
To Mori and Junie B, my own two magical creatures
—R.G.
Not to hurt our humble brethren is our first duty to them, but to stop there is not enough. We have a higher mission: to be of service to them whenever they require it.
—St. Francis of Assisi
Chapter One
MY DAD ALWAYS TOLD ME, Never surprise somebody swinging a hammer; something is liable to get smashed.
Still, when I first saw Allegra Brancusi, I couldn’t help myself. She was slapping a No Trespassing sign up against a tree—my tree. The one with my treehouse in it.
Hey, stop that!
I shouted. She was raising the hammer to drive in the nail and, sure enough, that hammer went flying back over her shoulder and nearly clipped me on the arm.
She whirled around and glared at me. You shouldn’t sneak up on people like that. It’s rude.
It’s not like I had done a commando crawl through the bushes for the sole purpose of sneaking up on her. I had just walked down the path like always. Not my fault I couldn’t see her until I got to the top of the ridge. I’m posting these signs and you can’t stop me,
she said, shaking the yellow-and-black poster in my face.
I can see that. What I want to know is why. This is Harper’s Woods and I’m a Harper. That’s my treehouse up there and you can’t keep me out.
I glared back.
Well, Mr. A. Harper, it should be called Brancusi Woods now and I’m Allegra Brancusi, that’s why.
She swung her arm out, using the poster as a pointer. My mother bought this farm. She told me to post these No Trespassing signs on this side of our property, in a line starting at that telephone pole.
The telephone pole was the third one down from our mailbox, next to the road at the bottom of the hill. It had a ring of yellow-and-black signs wrapped around it. There was a stretch of weeds that used to be a cornfield, and right behind it, the edge of the woods. Sure enough, a line of posters marked trees every few feet, up to where we were standing. She was right about where the property line started, but not about where it ran. I set her straight right then.
So, Allegra Who-si, didn’t your mom tell you about surveyor’s stakes?
She shook her head. Your property line starts at that pole, but it doesn’t run straight up to the top of the ridge. See those stakes with the orange ribbons? That’s where the line is.
I pointed at the stake about fifty yards down the hill and to another stake ten feet beyond that and another beyond that. Her eyes followed my finger and she bit her bottom lip, looking uncertain now. How do you know that?
she asked.
I helped the surveyor set them out. We had to sell the farmhouse, but my dad promised we’d keep the top of this hill. Bobby Knapp did the surveying; you can ask him.
I picked up the hammer and handed it back to her. If anybody is trespassing here, it’s you.
Oh,
she said, taking the hammer and poking it through a loop on the leg of her carpenter jeans. It was the first time I ever saw a girl do that—actually use one of those loops for what you’re supposed to. She looked back at the line of stakes, then picked up her backpack and stuffed the poster back inside. Fine,
she said. I’ll ask my mom about the stakes.
Yeah, well, you should check things out before you go hammering on other people’s trees.
I crossed my arms and waited.
Whatever,
she said, shrugging her backpack across her shoulder. She stomped off down the hill toward the big white farmhouse that used to be my grandmother’s.
I grabbed on to the board nailed about four feet up the trunk and scrambled into my treehouse. It’s not much to look at, but it’s been my favorite place since I was six. It’s a small wooden square stuck to the side of the tree, just big enough for me to stretch out in. I built up the sides to about three feet high and I have a tarp in it to keep the rain off my stuff. The boards are this nice silvery gray color now.
The best thing is, it’s on this ridge, so you can see real well all around. It’s the perfect place to watch everything. I can even see where the little creek runs to the north. When the wind is still, I can hear the water.
Down to the west is my house, a brick ranch. It’s pretty close to the road, but still has a nice stand of trees curving around it, like the woods are holding the house in its arms. My dad built it when he married my mom. On the other side of the rise, farther back in the woods, sits the farmhouse with a wraparound porch and a bunch of outbuildings. My many-times great-granddaddy, Cletus Harper, built the front part, just two little rooms and a fireplace, near about two hundred years ago. Harpers have been adding on to it ever since.
I peered over the side to watch Allegra trudge down the path out of the woods and into the backyard of the farmhouse. When Grandma was living there, I must have walked that path at least four or five times a day. I hadn’t been down it in months, not since Grandma had to move into the nursing home and we had to sell the farmhouse. The girl disappeared around the back corner of the house. I heard the screen door slam, so I guess she went inside.
After a few minutes, I figured she wasn’t coming back, so I stretched out on the boards. I let my eyes close to little slits, until the leaves and patches of light looked like big white and green blotches moving just beyond my eyelashes.
I must’ve fallen asleep, because when I opened my eyes, everything was dark. The half-moon gave enough light to see some of the branches. Rising up on my knees, I shuffled around to look down at our house. My brother Steve’s car wasn’t in the carport. He was probably still at work. Ghostly blue light flickered from the den window. I guess Dad fell asleep too, in front of the TV again. My stomach growled. I had missed dinner, if anybody had bothered to fix it.
Leaves shushed and rustled over by the creek. It sounded like something big and cautious, maybe a deer, was passing. I just turned my head to look, so as not to make any sound and spook it. Even the weak lights from the house had dulled my night vision, so I couldn’t see anything at first. Then a pale shape moved near a clump of blackberry canes. It was too big to be a raccoon and too quiet to be a stray calf.
Maybe it was the white deer. People had talked about a white deer around here for ages, although nobody could say for sure if it was a buck or a doe. Every season, some hunter swore he shot it, but it always got away.
The boards creaked softly as I moved into a better position to watch. The animal stepped away from the underbrush, definitely the wrong size and shape for a calf. It came closer to the treehouse, moving slowly. My eyes had adjusted to the moonlight.
It wasn’t a deer.
White and glowing, with slender legs and a long curved neck, at first I thought it was a pony. Then it raised its head and I knew. Ponies don’t move so quietly through the woods. Ponies don’t have coats that shimmer like a pearl. And there’s never been a pony born with an ivory horn curling from the center of its forehead.
It was a unicorn.
It was the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen.
Looking at it, I got the most amazing feeling of comfort and happiness and excitement, all rolled up into one. Like when Grandma would sing me a lullaby, or when I smacked a baseball way out to left field, or when the air is charged, just before lightning strikes.
I had never seen anything so amazing. I could have sat there looking at it all night. Then I noticed a strange smell, like roses and pine and new turned dirt.
The unicorn picked its way carefully around the trees with a funny gait, two steps and a hop. Its head drooped and after each hop, it huffed, a sound almost like a snort. As it moved down the ridge, I realized that it was lame. The unicorn stumbled and I sucked in my breath, but it didn’t fall. It reached the bottom of the hill. I wanted to help, but wild things are dangerous, especially when they’re hurt. And what could be wilder than a unicorn?
Something so beautiful should be perfect; it shouldn’t be hurting. I couldn’t just watch it suffer. I started to climb down when it nickered, a long, low call.
A light flicked on inside the farmhouse; then the back porch light came on too. A tall lady walked out of the house and stopped in the yard. She beckoned to the unicorn, then pulled open the barn door and stood to one side. The unicorn stopped, caught in the light from the barn, glowing like the moon. I thought it might bolt. It stared at the lady for a long moment before dropping its head and limping through the door. Once it was safely inside, the lady slid the door shut.
Chapter Two
WHEN THE DOOR CLOSED, everything dimmed. It wasn’t just that the barn light was cut off. Suddenly everything looked watery and dingy, like the reflections in an old mirror where the silver backing has gone bad.
I glanced at my house. The TV still flickered. I climbed down from the treehouse and set out for the barn. My feet still knew the way in the dark, and made soft little padding sounds in the dirt.
At the edge of the woods, instead of going straight, I circled around the old chicken coop and tractor shed. I had heard that the lady who bought the farmhouse and some of the land was a vet, an animal doctor, and she planned to make a clinic downstairs. People wondered why she bought so much of the land if she wasn’t going to farm, but it made sense now. I’d never heard of a vet who had unicorns for patients. There was a small window to the left of the barn door. If she was taking care of the unicorn, then she would be too busy to notice me if I peeked in there.
Carefully, I leaned on the windowsill and peered inside. The vet was squatting next to the unicorn, examining the bottom of its right front hoof. The creature was calm, studying the lady’s face, listening to her talk. The lady acted just like she was explaining something to a person. I couldn’t make out the words, but her tone was gentle and even. The unicorn huffed once and nodded as the vet reached for something in a