In late autumn the little island of Lindisfarne was chilly and bare and
quiet, with the tourists long gone. This was the time of year that Dan
Reid loved best, when the island once more belonged only to its people
and its wild creatures - the birds he loved to watch, and the grey seals
his grandmother called 'the sea people'. Much as Dan loved autumn on the
island, it could be a sad time too, for it was now the seal hunters
culled the herds. Dan was a fisherman's son, and he knew that the seals
could ruin his father's catch and were, as well, so crowded together
that the colony faced slow starvation; all the same, he loved the
graceful inquisitive creatures and hated to hear the shots across the
water from the neighbouring Farne Islands. Next year he must join his
sister Kate at the mainland school, staying there all week long; this
was his last full autumn on Lindisfarne, and it turned out to be a time
of secrets. Dan loved and trusted his family, but he couldn't tell even
them about the hiding-place at Castle Point. His secret there swallowed
up his pocket money, ate into his sleep, got him into trouble at school;
but Dan couldn't give it up.