![]() ![]() And there Book 4 ends with its usual closing phrase, “To be continued.” and readers being left to ponder the meaning of the page’s last paragraph: ![]() The trio travel on until they encounter “twenty or more Chaneque Sitting in a circle” but no Grandpa in sight. She asks to see the coin and volunteers to hold it for him, but Avery recalls his grandfather’s admonition from Book 1 that “you must keep that coin right with you, until you’re ready to come back home”, and he drops it back into the pouch.Įn route to where Grandpa supposedly is, Teapot says that she wants to make a stop to introduce Avery to one of her friends which, to Avery’s fearful shock and surprise, turns out to be a jaguar called Jags. In addition to tending to Avery’s mosquito bites, Teapot tells him that he is not “the first visitor of your kind”, and that “Your grandpa is my very good friend, Avery, and I have been expecting you.” She also says that Avery’s grandfather is waiting for them, and that they are in the Maya Forest in Mexico. When Avery asks what would have happened had an evil Chaneque found him, Teapot responds that he would have lost his mind, had his soul eaten and “died a very slow and painful death.” If, while watching you I saw that you caused damage or showed any disrespect to our home, I would have carried on my way and left you to the clutches of the evil Chaneque. You are very lucky that I found you first. There are two kinds of Chaneque one is good and one is evil. Some call us spirits, some say we are creatures, and some call us entities. ![]() “Teapot was the size of a very small child, not even half as tall as me, But, there was something that told me, she was not a child.” When Avery gets a closer look at this being, he sees that she only has one ear, a long bony tail, and her bare feet “were oddly upside down.” Teapot explains that she is one of the Chaneque whose responsibility it is to take care of the world:Īs you can see, we are not human. There, Avery encounters a “girl” called Teapot. As the note only bears his name, Avery concludes that his grandfather is signaling that he is now the Coinkeeper, and Avery impetuously reaches into the bag and grabs a coin, an action which immediately finds him shirtless, barefoot, and wearing only “ratty old shorts” in the middle of a mosquito-infested jungle. Avery sees the bag of coins, with a note attached, on Grandpa’s bed. When a week passes without Avery’s seeing a light shining in his grandfather’s shed after dark, he slips out one night, flashlight in hand, and enters the shed which he finds unlocked. I’m marrying off those older sisters of yours, as soon as I find practical suitors.” “Things are going to be changing around here. Book 4 (See “Excerpt) begins seconds after Grandpa had revealed the Kid’s real identity at the conclusion of Book 3, and this book also links back to Book 1and the day that Avery’s grandfather paid off the mortgage on the family home and gave Avery’s mother “so much money that she would never ever have to worry.” With her newfound wealth, Avery’s mother starts to act and dress differently, and she tells him that she’s going to hire a nanny “who can look after the little ones so you can focus on and improve your schooling.” Sounding somewhat like Cinderella’s stepmother, Avery’s mother also announces her plans for his two sisters. ![]()
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