Cogston House

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First published 2022 © Twinkl Ltd of Wards Exchange,
197 Ecclesall Road, Sheffield S11 8HW

Copyright © Twinkl Ltd. 2018

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording or by any information and retrieval system, without permission
in writing from Twinkl Ltd.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and


incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a
fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead,
or actual events is purely coincidental.

Twinkl is a registered trademark of Twinkl Ltd.


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Twinkl Educational Publishing
Contents

Beneath
theIvy Page 1

Jack's
Tale Page 13

Beyond Page 27
the Silence
Out to
Safety
Page 40

How it ends, only you can decide...

Under the
Curse
Page 44
Beneath
the Ivy
Jack strode up an overgrown path away from
the park as though relishing a mission through
the jungle, dodging the occasional stinging
nettle with an effortless skip or jump.

“Come on, Luca. This is going to be epic!”

1
The Curse of Cogston House

Dipping his head and swiping away leaves like


some intrepid explorer, he manoeuvred under a
tree branch, which hung over the narrow track.

Luca dawdled behind. Only a few minutes


earlier, he had been perfectly happy practising
his limited gymnastics moves upside down on
the monkey bars. Now, he was torn between
making the effort to keep up with his friend and
deliberately getting left behind.

“Speed up – we’re nearly there!” Jack called


eagerly over his shoulder.

Luca wasn’t at all sure that they should be


leaving the park swings, where they had been
allowed to hang out without their parents
since both recently celebrating their eleventh
birthdays in the same week. He was even less
sure that he wanted to be venturing towards
‘The Top End’, as everyone called that part of
the park grounds. He spun round to look behind
him. The monkey bars were now way out of
sight and the watery evening sun above was
being muscled out of position by ever-darkening
shades of grey, layering over each other in the
sky like a collage.

2
Beneath the Ivy

“Maybe it’s getting too late for today. We could


go another day,” Luca suggested hopefully. He
looked down towards his watch. Scowling at
the time – 10:31 – he shook his wrist vigorously.
Clearly, the watch wasn’t working, as it was
only just beginning to go dark. He was going to
need a new excuse. “Why don’t we come back
tomorrow, when it’s lighter? I think it’s going
to rain, from the look of those clouds, and Dad’s
making bolognese for tea. We don’t want to
miss that!”

Being two days older than his friend clearly


gave him no superiority at all.

“Forget about your stomach for a minute! I can


see the scaffolding through this gap!” enthused
Jack, trampling undeterred over the thorny
undergrowth.

Luca followed him unhappily along the


gradually dwindling path. Hands up in front of
himself and elbows tucked in, he was now having
to place his trainers precisely onto prickly stems
to pin them down with his soles and avoid any
contact with his bare arms or legs.

3
The Curse of Cogston House

4
Beneath the Ivy

On the other side of a tangled row of


bushes, the broken-looking building loomed.
Fifty-foot-high scaffolding encased the
crumbling walls of Cogston House like a rusty
exoskeleton. The long, metal poles, bolted
together at regular right angles, seemed as
though they were the only things keeping the
whole house from falling apart.

About a hundred years ago, the house had


apparently been quite a grand sight, belonging
to a rich family who owned the entire park.
Until about thirty years ago, it had still been
inhabited but, for decades now, it had wasted
away, shedding scraps of brickwork and hiding
itself under a cloak of creeping ivy. Even from
the outside, it had a look of being infested with
sadness.

Everyone had a story about Cogston House. No


one quite knew what was true and what was
rumour, and Luca didn’t want to stick around
to find out.

“Ow!” he squealed, as Jack reached back and


hauled him through the gap he had just made
in the twisted greenery. Luca rubbed at a fresh,

5
The Curse of Cogston House

pale scratch on his arm.

Unconcerned, Jack stood triumphantly, his


hands on his hips, admiring the enormous
house. His eyes swept over the building as if
they belonged to an ancient explorer who had
finally unearthed a once mythical monument.

“Told you it would be epic,” Jack grinned.

“Epic? Looks like it’s barely still standing up.”

At home, Luca had heard his stepmum say


that it was about time Cogston House was
renovated, and that it would be good for the
area if it was properly restored with access
opened up again. In reply, his dad had said that
it would be better to take a wrecking ball to it,
after everything that had gone on. Luca didn’t
know exactly what ‘everything’ meant, but he
was now regretting mentioning the place at all
to Jack.

The house had always been there, as long as both


boys could remember, but it was just somewhere
that they had never visited. Of course, it had
been Jack’s idea to go and investigate, after

6
Beneath the Ivy

Luca had brought it up that day at the swings.


No doubt, Jack would know some story about
the place, and if he didn’t, he’d be making one
up anyway.

“Have you heard the story of what happened to


those two girls here?”

‘Right on cue,’ thought Luca. ‘Here it comes.’

“I heard it from my cousin’s next-door


neighbour,” Jack went on. “Her mum knew one
of the girls from school, years ago, and her
grandad worked in the factory that the Cogston
family owned.”

“What are you going on about?” Luca asked


with a shake of his head, distracted by pulling
furry goosegrass buds from his shoulders.

Before an answer came, the crack of snapping


wood grabbed Luca’s attention and he looked
up, eyes widening, to see Jack grinning back at
him from a narrow doorway at the side of the
house. The splintered length of rotten wood in
his hand matched a large panel, daubed with
graffiti, which hung limply at an angle where a

7
The Curse of Cogston House

proper door should have been.

“Come through here and I’ll tell you,” said Jack.

“Oh, I really don’t think we should be doing


that,” Luca responded, looking around in
search of any other signs of life. He flicked a
creepy-crawly from his arm with his finger
and rubbed frantically at a telltale tickle on his
head, which suggested that more critters were
making a new home in his hair. By the time
that he’d dealt with them, Jack’s feet were just
disappearing after the rest of his body into the
building.

A few raindrops were released from the


bulging, grey clouds. Inside Luca’s head, a
slow drumbeat was gathering momentum and
a voice was screaming at him to turn round,
yet his dry mouth barely let out a murmur in
protest. Inwardly, he wished that an invisible
force field would propel him backwards from
the narrow opening in the doorway but,
instead, he swallowed hard and copied Jack’s
crouching motion to squeeze through the broken
doorframe.

8
Beneath the Ivy

Standing upright again inside, Luca looked


around. The first thing that he noticed was
the stale air, which seeped into his mouth and
nostrils. Repulsed by the mouldy stench that
hung in the atmosphere, he focused on inhaling
through the tiniest slit in his mouth to avoid
breathing it in any more than he had to.

Beneath his feet, the floor was covered in rubble,


like a building site, and dry leaves nestled
together in dirty piles, crunching when he trod
on them. It was as though the outside had
crept inside. Huge rugs were spaced along the
hallway, not laid flat or neatly, as they once
might have been – they were worn, crumpled,
damp-smelling and thick with dirt. Luca
shuddered at the thought of how many tiny
creatures were camping out among the fibres of
the threadbare material. Looking up, he noted
that every single window was cracked or broken.
Spindly branches of a yew tree scratched and
tapped at one high window and, lower down,
a cool breeze whistled through a jagged hole,
causing him to shiver.

The hallway was darker than he would have


liked. A lampshade dangled from the ceiling at

9
The Curse of Cogston House

10
Beneath the Ivy

a crooked angle but there was no bulb. Instead,


some light forced its way in through the many
dirty windows; some found an easier passage
through small holes in the walls and roof. Dust
particles floated in the still air and there was
just enough light to allow the boys to see the
shape of the hallway and the decrepit furniture.

All around them, items from the house’s former


life still remained. Huge pictures in decorative
frames hung on the walls: portraits of miserable
old men, which seemed to have been painted in
shades of only brown or beige. Although Luca
could see the shadowy outlines of doorways
leading off from the hallway, the darkness
swallowed up any objects that lay farther down
the corridor.

“Woah, look – a winding staircase!” Jack gasped,


moving forwards through the blackness. His
voice rang through the house like a siren.

“What about it?” whispered Luca, gazing


towards the gloom at the end of the hallway. The
skeletal remains of a chair sat solemnly in the
corner, spilling out springy insides from within
a rotten frame. Its back was loosely attached

11
The Curse of Cogston House

to the rest of its body and one splintered leg


splayed out in an awkward fashion.

“Well, it’s just like in the story.”

“I still don’t know what story you’re going on


about.”

Luca edged forwards gingerly, his steps short,


until he was close enough to Jack to see him
clearly in the dim light. Jack was running his
hand, fascinated, along the weathered, wooden
panels of an enormous staircase, which wound
grandly up to yet more darkness. As he turned
back towards Luca, he began to recount his tale.

12
Jack's
Tale
The house has not always been in this state. At
the time when two girls, Alice and Eliza, came
in here to shelter from the rain, the Cogston
family had not lived in the place for years but a
caretaker was still supposed to be looking after
it. According to the story, he was one of the old
servants who just stayed on after everyone else
had left or died.

13
The Curse of Cogston House

Alice was the taller of the pair, and the more


cautious; Eliza was always the adventurous one.
They were both well behaved in general, never
looking for trouble or even mischievous. They
were, perhaps, just a little too nosy.

Back then, no walls were crumbling and no


windows smashed. Everything was just still
and silent. It was as though whoever had lived
there had just upped and left, one day. The same
gloomy-looking portraits lined the walls, watching
everything that occurred beneath them.

The girls explored a little inside, Alice following


Eliza closely. They peered cautiously into the
downstairs rooms leading off the wide hallway,
but neither dared to venture up the spiral
staircase. A fancy pair of chairs here, a mute
grand piano there. In some way, the eerie silence
of the house demanded silence from them, too.
Alice let Eliza lead the way, trailing just a couple
of soft steps behind.

After only a few minutes of exploring, swallowing


gulps of thick, dusty air, Alice noticed that they
had gradually travelled a surprising distance
from the big, heavy entrance door behind them.

14
Jack's Tale

Somehow, the house had enticed them deeper


and deeper inside. As she traipsed along behind
Eliza, she realised that her feet were moving to
a rhythm that had, so far, escaped her notice.
Steady and comforting, the girls were treading
to a beat, like soldiers marching in time with a
drum. Alice snatched a piece of Eliza’s coat to
stop her in her tracks and stood silently, listening.

Tick.
Though their feet were no longer moving, a beat
continued. Straining to listen, the girls cocked
their heads and frowned at one another as the
soft ticking of a clock reached their ears.

15
The Curse of Cogston House

Tick.
The noise followed them through the house,
breaking the silence wherever they investigated.
As the sound of a swinging pendulum from one
tall grandfather clock faded away behind them,
it was replaced by a wall clock in the next room.

Tick, tock.
The eerie sounds combined to make a strangely
sinister clock chorus. Ageing grandfather clocks
stood proudly, evenly spaced on opposite sides
along the hallway, like soldiers stiffly standing
guard. Each room had its own sentry, too,
watching from a wall or mantel.

Tick, tock.
The volume of one mantelpiece clock rose slightly
as Alice walked by, and slowly died again as
she left it behind. A nearby door, slightly ajar,
allowed the resonance of another clock to pick
up the rhythm.

Alice’s footfalls had just begun to slip back into


the soothing pulse of the ticking house when her

16
Jack's Tale

attention was drawn to the nearest, exquisitely


polished timepiece.

She stopped. The realisation that invaded her


mind made her stomach lurch unpleasantly.

All over the vast house, thick blankets of dust


clung to every item of furniture – except for the
clocks.

Tick, tock.
Alice ran a finger along the smooth edge of a
beautifully ornate carriage clock, and found not
a scrap of dirt on its surface. She looked up at the
filthy, mottled glass of the ground-floor windows
and then back at the gleaming, spotless face of
the clock.

A few moments later, when both girls were


back out on the main corridor, Eliza stopped
walking suddenly. She turned her head slightly
to the left, listening hard. “Can you hear that?”
she whispered.

Alice stood still and silent for a moment, too.


She looked back towards the staircase, tracing

17
The Curse of Cogston House

the line of the banister with her narrowed eyes,


squinting up towards the dark vacuum above. In
the inky blackness, it was impossible to focus her
vision but, just for a second, she had been sure
that something had moved. Her mind swam with
images of a hunched, silhouetted figure hovering
just beyond the last, barely visible step. Then,
she remembered that she was supposed to be
listening.

“I don’t think I can hear anything,” Alice


muttered.

“Exactly,” her friend agreed. “No ticking.”

With a sudden shiver, Alice realised what Eliza


was listening for – she hadn’t heard the presence
of something, farther away. She was listening
for the absence of it, right beside them.

Alice stood motionless, staring up at the nearest


grandfather clock, the latest in a long line of
sombre watchmen standing against the dark,
panelled walls. Despite no other signs of life,
the rest of the clocks had all been working. They
were even, as far as Alice had noticed, showing
the correct time.

18
Jack's Tale

The one in front of them, right now, had stopped.

“10:31,” said Eliza, looking back at Alice over


her shoulder. The clock was either three hours
ahead or nine hours behind the correct time. Eliza
seemed to contemplate this for a moment and
then, just as suddenly as the clock had attracted
her attention, she lost interest and moved on
down the hallway.

Alice, meanwhile, stared up at the clock a little


longer. Something about its silent presence was

19
The Curse of Cogston House

strange, but she couldn’t quite put her finger on


what it was. She placed one hand on the frame
and leaned closer. Turning her head, she pressed
her ear against the polished wooden panel, as
though listening for a pulse. The silence of the
house was deafening.

Seconds passed.

Without warning, an ear-splitting sound


splintered the silence, like a pair of huge cymbals
being smashed by drumsticks. Alice’s vision went
black.

Eliza had been creeping farther along the


passageway when a horrendous noise startled
her. She spun round to find herself perfectly alone
in an empty hallway. The house looked exactly
the same as it had a moment earlier – but Alice
was nowhere to be seen.

Eliza’s face contorted from confusion into panic.


Her arms appeared frozen by her sides but her
hands began to visibly shake. All adventurous
spirit whisked out of her, she whispered meekly,

20
Jack's Tale

“Alice?”

Whipping her body round to face the other way,


she spoke again, this time louder and more
urgently.

“Alice!”

Eliza aimed her call, with increasing volume,


in different directions. She dived in and out
of the nearest rooms, all efforts to be stealthy
abandoned.

“Alice! Alice!”

Frantically, Eliza screamed Alice’s name again


and again, fat tears forming in her eyes. She
took one more look from left to right and then
darted down the hallway and out of sight, back
into the pouring rain.

Alice watched it all but could not speak.

Standing in almost complete darkness, her eyes


strained to adjust. Directly in front of her face,

21
The Curse of Cogston House

she could see through a murky, circular window.


It was so close to the end of her nose that the
thick glass seemed to blur and distort the objects
on the other side into gruesome, deformed
versions of themselves. She blinked rapidly as
her befuddled brain pieced together the picture
in front of her.

She could see Eliza. Stretched and blurred by


the small window, she was standing in the
corridor, just as she had been only a moment

22
Jack's Tale

earlier. The walls of the hallway seemed to


curl sickeningly towards Alice at the top and
bottom as she rolled her eyes around to test the
limits of her vision. There was a stuffy, musty
smell around her and she reached up to hold
her nose…

Nothing happened. Alice’s hands didn’t appear


in front of her. She focused hard on moving her
arms from where they hung by her waist, but
it was as though they didn’t belong to her any
more. She was rigid, but for the swivelling of her
wide, panicked eyes.

A cramped feeling began to smother her like a


mass of vines and leaves wrapping around a
tree trunk. Cold beads of sweat formed on her
forehead. She watched Eliza run from door to
door and heard her calling, “Alice! Alice!”

Opening her mouth wide, Alice screamed for her


friend until her throat stung. She didn’t need to
see Eliza running away down the hallway to
know that no sound had escaped from her lips.

From her prison, she watched in silent horror.


Eliza had fled from the house but Alice couldn’t

23
The Curse of Cogston House

force her own mouth to open, let alone call her


friend back. In front of her wide, tear-filled eyes,
on the other side of the brown glass, she could
see a circle of numbers and the old-fashioned
hands of a clock. A short, stubby arrow pointed
upwards and slightly to the right; a thinner,
more ornate bar hung down almost vertically.

From deep within her stomach, the desire to


scream and wriggle and fight was burning like
a pilot light – but it was fighting with another
feeling. A terrifying thought rose within Alice as
if it were freezing her from the feet upwards.

Eliza was gone. Now, she was completely alone.


Trapped.

Nothing moved. Cogston House was as silent as


the grave. Perhaps the only thing worse than
hearing her best friend desperately calling her
name was being alone in this endless quiet.
Alice’s eyes searched through the darkness,
scouring the corridor that faded into more murky
gloom. She could make out the hallway right in
front of her, the door opposite and, beyond it,
the enormous winding staircase. As she looked,
blinking through the tears that had begun to

24
Jack's Tale

stream hopelessly down her face, she was met


with a sight at the top of the staircase that all
but turned her to stone...

Something was moving.

Alice watched numbly. Her heart was in her mouth


and her breath came in sharp, rattling gasps.

Descending the stairs one careful, agonising,


creaking step at a time, a hunched silhouette
shuffled out from the darkness. A small, extremely
old man was moving slowly but purposefully
towards Alice. His head was bowed, showing a
white, bald circle surrounded by wisps of light
grey hair.

“Help!” Alice tried to scream again, but nothing


could be heard except for a strangled silence.
With no voice but the one inside her own head,
she begged the stranger to notice her and set her
free...

A mottled, wrinkled hand reached forwards,


holding a key.

A knot twisting in her stomach, Alice held her

25
The Curse of Cogston House

breath, staring down at the top of the man’s


head. There was a satisfying click as the key
wriggled into place. Grinding and creaking as it
rotated, the key was wound once…

...twice…

...three times, a brief pause between each half


turn.

With each rotation of the key, Alice felt her


chest become tighter and her back straighten,
as though a puppeteer were tugging at invisible
strings. Only her eyeballs scuttled from side to
side, like marbles being jiggled in a tiny box.

All of a sudden, everything was still once again –


still, but not silent. Alice could hear a pounding
in her ears as her heartbeat became louder and
more rhythmic. The thin sliver of a third metal
clock hand in front of her face had begun to move
and, as the deafening sound of her own heart
ticking overwhelmed her, she had the chilling
realisation that this particular clock was no
longer broken.

Tick, tock.
26
Beyond
the
Silence

Luca stared in horror at Jack as his voice


deliberately faded away for effect, mimicking
ticking sounds.

“What happened next?”

27
The Curse of Cogston House

Jack smirked. “Who knows? That’s how the


story goes. It’s probably just made up.”

“But the curved staircase, the hallway, the


pictures! They’re all here, like you described.”
Luca’s head flicked from side to side, searching
for more details to match the story. He’d never
felt totally convinced about coming into the
house in the first place; now, he was absolutely
convinced that he wanted to leave.

The boys had not yet ventured beyond the


bottom of the staircase, which opened out into
the centre of the hallway. Jack seemed pleased
with himself as he sniggered and kicked at a
scattering of broken stones in front of his feet.
Hands in his pockets, he wandered farther into

28
Beyond the Silence

the grip of the building with nonchalance, as


though strolling through his own house.

Luca stood frozen for a moment and listened. He


didn’t dare move for fear of preventing himself
from hearing a sound elsewhere.

At first, there was nothing. Then, as he cocked


his head to one side for a better chance of
hearing, a faint sound broke the silence...

Tick.
All of the hairs on the back of Luca’s neck stood
on end.

“I’ve had enough,” he called out. “I think we


should get out of here.”

“Ha! I knew you’d say that,” replied Jack,


wandering farther down the passage.

Luca had a sandstorm swirling in his throat.


Desperately, he swallowed, trying to wash
away the dryness, and dithered in the centre
of the passage. Every second that he hesitated,
Jack edged farther away from him.

29
The Curse of Cogston House

Tick.
With each horrendous noise, Luca’s breathing
quickened.

Tick.
He was panting, now. Where was it coming
from? Slowly, with dread filling him from toe
to tip, he turned his head to track the source of
the noise.

Tick.
Jack’s story flashed through his head and Luca
felt as if all the oxygen were being sucked out
of him.

TICK.
Then, his heart in his mouth, Luca’s eyes fell
upon an explanation...

The high window that he had noticed earlier


was being accosted by a long branch, which
was being thrown around rhythmically in
the breeze. He watched, matching the ticking

30
Beyond the Silence

sound to the thin fingers of wood swaying and


connecting with the murky glass.

Tapping, not ticking.

Luca breathed again.

“Hang on!” he pleaded with Jack.

While Luca had been standing listening, Jack


had continued to explore. Luca shook creepy
thoughts from his mind like a wet dog shaking
itself dry after a swim. His stomach grumbled

31
The Curse of Cogston House

rudely, making him wish that he were back


home eating delicious spaghetti bolognese and
savouring the heavenly smell of fresh garlic
bread. Instead, he was still surrounded by the
stinking innards of Cogston House.

‘Jack said that the story probably wasn’t


even true,’ Luca told himself. He followed in
the direction of his friend with a little less
trepidation, heading farther along the hallway,
deeper into the house. Hoping that Jack hadn’t
gone too far without him, he began to pick up
his own pace even more.

As the hallway bent into a corner and Luca’s


walk broke into a trot, Jack loomed into view.
He was standing motionless and his body had
tensed.

Luca rounded the corner and stopped abruptly.


When he saw what Jack was looking at, the
bottom almost dropped out of his stomach.

Clocks.

Not just one, but a row of tall grandfather


clocks, extending down the hallway as though

32
Beyond the Silence

standing in a queue. Creeping up the corridor


towards them was a wave of soft ticking sounds.

“Clocks!” Luca spluttered, taking a few steps


backwards. “That’s it – I’m definitely out of
here.”

“Wait – look at this, though,” Jack responded.

Tick.
Luca was no longer in the mood for waiting or
looking. Turning to the side, he began to edge
back the way he had come, round the staircase
and towards the first hallway.

Tick.
He suddenly felt the urge to keep his eyes on
everything: his friend, the staircase, the darkness
that felt like it was closing in on him. He didn’t
dare look where he was going.

Tick.
Stepping crab-style along the dusty hallway,
he scraped through crinkly leaves, which were

33
The Curse of Cogston House

disintegrating under his feet. Considering his


struggle to identify the quiet tapping of a branch
on the window moments ago, it was staggering
how the crescendo of ticking was, now, echoing
loudly through his head.

Tick, tock. Tick, tock.


“Jack!”

Jack had stepped closer to one of the clocks.


“This one has stopped,” he called out. “You’re
not going to believe what time it says...”

Luca didn’t need to be told. Something inside


him was already screaming the time.

“...10:31.”

Jack was standing, transfixed, staring into the


face of the huge grandfather clock. Still backing
away, Luca threw a glance up the staircase
and then back towards Jack. His friend was
peering forward to scrutinise the clock. What
was holding his attention? Why couldn’t he just
leave, like Luca was?

34
Beyond the Silence

“Jack!”

“Yeah. Yeah…” Jack murmured. Mesmerised, he


was reaching out a hand and placing it on the
front of the clock.

Tick, tock. Tick, tock.


Luca kept moving, his back against one wall
and his eyes constantly scanning. Jack was
becoming more out of focus, blending into the
encroaching darkness as Luca shuffled noisily
away.

“AAAAGH!”

Something huge and solid had collided with


Luca’s back. Cursing himself for not looking
where he was going, he spun round and grabbed
hold of a heavy clock that had appeared behind
him. It was not in any danger of toppling but
chimed and groaned at being disturbed. As
he clutched it with sweaty palms, he felt its
weighty mechanism rocking inside.

Tick, tock. Tick, tock.

35
The Curse of Cogston House

36
Beyond the Silence

He steadied himself and exhaled the breath


that he hadn’t realised he’d been holding on to.
Turning back to face the corridor, he panted,
“It’s OK. I’m OK, Jack.”

Jack did not respond.

37
The Curse of Cogston House

Out
to Safety
Page 40

How it ends,

38
Beyond the Silence

only you can decide...

Under
the Curse
Page 44
39
Out
to Safety

In the moment that Luca had turned, his friend


had entered a kind of trance and was leaning
his entire body against the clock as though
listening to its heartbeat.

“Jack!” Luca bellowed. Without hesitation,


Luca rushed to his friend, grabbed his wrist and
began to drag him towards the staircase and
the doorway beyond.

Panting, he hauled Jack with all his might.


They had only just made it to the foot of the
spiral staircase when –

Creak.

Every muscle in Luca’s body froze.

40
Out to Safety

A stomach-turning sound had floated down


from the darkness that seemed to swallow
the top of the stairs. This was no branch on
the window – the sound bore the weight of a
heavy foot on rotting floorboards. Jack blinked,
staring horrified at Luca as his eyes began to
regain their focus. Unable to resist, Luca gazed
into the gloom at the top of the stairs… and
thought that he saw a shadow flicker.

They ran.

Without a backward glance, the pair sprinted


down the long, darkening hallway towards the
exit. Not caring about adding to the scratches
on their arms or backs, they dived through the
makeshift doorway that led back outside into
the now pelting rain.

41
Luca’s chest burned and his legs screamed
at him as he ran faster than he ever had
before, wiping his eyes furiously as prickly
tears began to form. Pale-faced and panting,
the boys threw themselves at the gap in the
hedge and scrambled back through The Top
End towards the swings, not stopping until
the smell of spaghetti bolognese and garlic
bread reached them.
Under
the Curse

“Jack?”

Jack was no longer there. In the moment that


Luca had turned, his friend had vanished.

“Jack?” he called again, in an uncontrollably


high voice.

Luca ran partially back along the hallway


towards the spot where his friend had been
a second earlier. He spun round and shouted
again. Was this a practical joke? Was he hiding?
Maybe Jack had sneaked past him and out of
the house in Luca’s moment of distraction.

Luca was about to call Jack’s name for a third


time when –

44
Under the
Under the Curse
Curse

Creak.

Every muscle in Luca’s body froze.

A stomach-turning sound had floated down


from the darkness that seemed to swallow the
top of the stairs. This was no branch on the
window – the sound bore the weight of a heavy
foot on rotting floorboards.

Not moving an inch and not daring to look,


Luca mentally plotted the path up the stairs,
calculating. There was no way that Jack could
have raced up there so quickly.

But if it wasn’t Jack…

Luca wanted to search for his friend. At the same


time, a voice inside told him that his friend was
probably outside, right now, laughing at him.
Unable to resist, Luca stared into the darkness
at the top of the stairs… and thought that he
saw a shadow flicker.

45
The Curse of Cogston House

46
Under the Curse

47
The Curse of Cogston House

Luca ran.

Not stopping until he had reached the end of


the hallway and not caring about adding to the
scratches on his arms or back, he dived through
the makeshift doorway that led back outside
into the now pelting rain.

Through a murky, brown window, Jack watched


him go. He couldn’t move, and he couldn’t make
a sound.

The stairs creaked again as a silhouetted figure


descended, one step at a time. One pale hand
was outstretched, holding a key.

48
Under the
Under the Curse
Curse

49
The Curse of Cogston House

50
Under the Curse

51
We’ve created a wide range of materials
to support teaching on this book.

Visit twinkl.com/originals
Everyone had
a story about
Cogston House.
No one quite knew
what was true and
what was rumour.
Cogston House stands at The Top End of
the park, propped up by scaffolding and,
according to local rumour, long since
abandoned. However, when two boys
decide to enter the mysterious mansion,
they discover that all is not as it seems…
Follow Jack and Luca into Cogston
House, and hear a chilling tale about the
building’s terrifying history. This spooky
Originals short story comes with two
endings so that you can decide how this
adventure concludes.

We provide educators around the world with entire


schemes of work, lesson planning and assessments,
plus online educational games, innovative augmented
visit twinkl.com reality and lots, lots more.

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