Hag.
She had infuriated the ancient creatures.
âThere is no BUT,â screeched the First Norn.
âNo BUT whatsoever,â yelled the Second.
âNot anywhere is there a BUT,â cackled the Third.
The bed shook with their rage.
âThe others have failed the test,â they pronounced. âOn you falls the Glory of the Task. You are the ogre-slayers.â
The room went dark. There was the eerie creak again as the great bed was wheeled away. And the party from Number 26 was left alone.
CHAPTER
5
THE BRIEFING
I think we need a nice cup of tea,â said the Hag when they returned from the meeting.
But even after three cups of tea and five slices of bread and butter in the kitchen of Number 26, they still felt terrible. One minute they had been looking forward to Mr. Barberâs Holiday Campâand the next they were branded as ogre-slayers and given this appalling task.
âItâs because thereâs a princess involved,â said Ulf gloomily. âThatâs why the Norns appeared. Princesses always bring them out.â
The wizard was worrying about his mother.
âShe wonât like it. She wonât like it at all,â he muttered.
âI donât know how to slay things,â said the Hag in a worried voice. âItâs not what I do.â
Ivo put a hand on her arm.
âBut think what an exciting adventure itâll be. And we wonât only be slayersâweâll be rescuers. Rescuing the princess has to be good.â
âNot for you, it doesnât,â said the Hag sharply. She was still feeling very guilty because she had let Ivo become mixed up in something so dangerous. âYou wonât be a slayer and you wonât be a rescuer; youâre going back to the Home first thing on Monday.â
âNo Iâm not,â began Ivo. âIâm a familiar andââ
But at that moment there was a loud pecking noise at the window, and looking up they saw, caught in the rays of the street lamp, a large black bird perched on the sill. The Hag was just going to open the window when the bird flew
through
the glass panes, circled the room, dropping evil-smelling black feathers, and settled with its unpleasant-looking feet on the butter.
âA harpy,â said Ulf, looking at the creatureâs swiveling yellow eyes. Harpies are messengers from the Underworld and have to be taken seriously. âWhat can we do for you?â
The bird did not answer. Instead it opened its beak, let a piece of paper fall onto the table, and flew off again through the unopened window.
While the Hag scooped the butter into the trash can, Ulf read out the message.
In strange wavery letters it said:
Â
ALDINGTON CRESCENT UNDERGROUND STATIONâMIDNIGHT TONIGHT
Â
Everyone looked at everyone else.
âThat stationâs been shut forever, since the end of the war,â said Ulf. âIt was badly bombed, and the whole lineâs been abandoned. We canât go there.â
âBut we have to,â said the Hag. âItâll be the briefing, telling us what to do. Youâll have to wait here for us, Ivo. Iâll leave a night-light on andââ
âNo!â Ivoâs voice was very strong. âYou said you wanted a familiar and youâve got a familiar. Familiars serve for life, I told you. Iâm coming.â
âButââ
âLet the boy come,â said Ulf. âHeâs too far into it now. On Monday he can go back.â
It was as the troll had said. The station entrance was sealed off by a great iron gate covered in rust. It looked as though it had been there forever.
âWell thatâs that,â said the Hag. âWeâd best be getting back while the buses are still running.â
But Ivo had gone up to the gate. He put a hand on the lockâjust touching itâand now slowly, creakily, the gate began to open. Only a crack at first . . . then all the