The Scent of Magic

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by Cliff McNish




  The

  Scent Of Magic

  ‘The language used is rich and evocative, full of visual and sensory imagery . . . it captures the readers interest and imagination from the beginning and holds it with ease to the end.’

  School Librarian

  ‘In The Scent of Magic a witch mother swears vengeance for the defeat of her daughter . . . McNish has a powerful imagination.’

  The Times

  ‘The Scent of Magic continues the Doomspell story, but if anything the characterisations are deeper, the plot even more intriguing, and it is all carried off with a verve, pace and sheer passion for pure storytelling that make McNish’s novels so compulsive.’

  Amazon.co.uk

  By Cliff McNish

  The Doomspell Trilogy

  The Doomspell

  The Scent of Magic

  The Wizard’s Promise

  The Silver Sequence

  The Silver Child

  The Silver City

  The Silver World

  For older readers

  The Hunting Ground

  Savannah Grey

  Breathe: A Ghost Story

  Angel

  For younger readers

  Going Home

  My Friend Twigs

  The Winter Wolf

  The Scent

  of Magic

  Cliff McNish

  Doomspell Books

  The Scent of Magic eBook

  First published in Great Britain in 2001 by Orion Children’s Books.

  This eBook first published in 2010 by Orion Children’s Books.

  Reissued in 2017 by Doomspell Books.

  Text copyright © Cliff McNish 2001

  Illustrations copyright © Geoff Taylor 2001

  The right of Cliff McNish and Geoff Taylor to be identified as the author and illustrator of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the copyright, designs and patents act 1988.

  All characters and events in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  This ebook produced by Jouve, France

  www.cliffmcnish.com

  For Ciara, for everything

  Contents

  Cover

  Title

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Praise

  Also by Cliff McNish

  1 Eyes

  2 Ool

  3 Magic without Rules

  4 The Camberwell Beauty

  5 Fish without Armour

  6 The Hairy Fly

  7 The Blue-Sky Rainbow

  8 The Stone Angel

  9 Games without Limits

  10 The Finest Child

  11 Ambush

  12 Ocean

  13 Battle

  14 Victim

  15 Arrivals

  16 Imprisonment

  17 The Trap

  18 The Butterfly Child

  19 Awakening

  20 Flight

  A Chapter from The Wizard’s Promise

  1 Schools Without Children

  1

  Eyes

  ‘Rachel, wake up, get out of the dream!’ Morpeth shook her gently, then more roughly when she did not move. ‘Come on, wake up!’

  ‘What?’ Rachel’s eyes half-opened.

  Briefly Morpeth saw the remains of her nightmare. It dug into her cheek, as big as a dog: the gnarled black claw of a Witch. As Morpeth watched the thick green fingernails faded on Rachel’s pale face.

  ‘It’s all right,’ he said hastily, gripping her shoulders. ‘Don’t be afraid. You’re safe, at home, in your room. There’s no Witch.’

  Rachel jerked awake and sat up, her breath coming in hurried gasps.

  ‘Oh, Morpeth,’ she murmured, ‘never wake me up like that. When I’m dreaming … I might … I could have hurt you.’ She buried her face in a pillow, waiting until the cold jagged sensation of the fingernails had gone. ‘You should know better,’ she said at last. ‘A spell might have slipped out.’

  ‘Would you rather your mum faced those claws?’ he answered. ‘At least I can recognize them.’

  Rachel nodded bleakly. ‘But it’s dangerous, even for you. Always let me wake up naturally, when I’m ready.’

  Morpeth grunted, pointing at the sunlight filtering through the curtains. ‘I waited as long as I could. Half the day’s gone, and your mum was just about to get you up.’ He picked a few strands of weed from her hair. ‘Interesting smell these have.’

  ‘Oh no,’ groaned Rachel, noticing the staleness for the first time. ‘I was in the pond again last night, wasn’t I?’

  ‘I’m afraid so.’

  Rachel bit her lip. ‘That’s twice this week.’

  ‘Three times.’

  ‘I suppose I had the gills?’

  ‘Yes, the usual scarlet ones, on your neck.’

  ‘Ugh!’ Rachel felt below her ears in disgust. ‘How long was I under the water this time?’

  ‘About an hour.’

  ‘An hour!’ Rachel shook her head grimly. ‘Then it’s getting worse. All right, I’m up.’ She listened for a second. ‘Will you check the corridor and bathroom are clear?’

  Morpeth nipped out, returning moments later. ‘Nobody about, and here’s a couple of fresh towels. I’ll stuff last night’s sheets in the wash, shall I?’

  Rachel smiled, taking the towels. ‘Morpeth, you’re my guardian angel.’

  Slipping quietly into the bathroom, she used a long hot shower to remove the stink of the pond. Returning to her room, she sat beside the dressing-table mirror, half-heartedly brushing out her long straight dark hair.

  Then she stopped. She put the brush down. She turned slowly to the mirror and examined her slim, lightly freckled face.

  The eyes that gazed back were no longer quite human. Her old hazel-green eyes, matching her dad’s, had gone. Replacing them were her new magical eyes. Spells clustered in the corners, behind the lids. They liked it there, where they could look out onto the world. Throughout the day they crowded forward, eager for her attention. Each spell had its own unique colour. Yesterday’s spell-colours had started off scarlet and gold, surrounding her black pupil. This morning there was no pupil at all. There was only a deep wide blue in both eyes, the shade of a summer sky. Rachel had seen that colour many times recently. It was the colour of a flying spell, aching to be used.

  Staring at her reflection in the mirror, Rachel said, ‘No. I won’t fly. I made a promise, I’m keeping it. I won’t give in to you!’

  ‘Give in to who?’ asked a voice.

  Rachel turned, startled. Her mum stood behind her, staring anxiously into the mirror.

  ‘Mum, where did you come from?’

  ‘I’ve been here awhile, just watching you. And them.’ Mum studied Rachel’s spell-drenched eyes. Their colour had now changed to a mournful grey. ‘Those spells,’ Mum said angrily. ‘What are they expecting from you? Why won’t they just leave you in peace for once?’

  ‘It’s all right, Mum,’ Rachel mumbled vaguely. ‘I’m … I’m still in charge of them.’

  Mum wrapped her arms around Rachel’s neck. Holding her tight, she said in the softest of voices, ‘Then tell me why you’re trembling? Do you think after twelve years I can’t tell when my own daughter�
�s hurting?’

  A single tear rolled down Rachel’s cheek. She tried to dash the wetness away.

  ‘Let it out,’ Mum said. ‘You cry it out. Those terrible spells. How dare they do anything to harm you!’

  For a few minutes Rachel leaned back into her mother’s embrace. Finally she said, ‘I’m all right, really I am. I’m fine. I am.’

  Mum squeezed Rachel again and simply stood there, obviously reluctant to leave.

  ‘You won’t keep staring in that mirror?’

  ‘No more staring today,’ Rachel answered, forcing a smile. ‘Promise.’ As Mum walked slowly to the door, she said, ‘You’re missing Dad, aren’t you?’

  Mum halted at the door. ‘Is it that obvious?’

  ‘Only because I miss him too. I hate it when he’s away.’

  ‘His last foreign contract this year’s nearly finished,’ Mum told her. ‘He’ll be back in a month or so.’

  ‘Thirty-eight days,’ Rachel said.

  Mum smiled conspiratorially. ‘So we both count!’ She turned to leave. ‘Hurry down, will you? I’ve had just about enough of Eric and the prapsies today. I do love your brother, but he’s nine going on six half the time, the things he teaches those child-birds.’ She tramped back downstairs, muttering all the way.

  Rachel finished dressing and made her way to the kitchen. As soon as she entered the prapsies covered their faces.

  ‘Lock away your sparky eyes!’ one shrieked, glimpsing her.

  Oops, Rachel thought, quickly switching the glowing spell-colours off.

  The other prapsy flapped irritably in front of her face. ‘Eric could have been blinded!’ it squeaked. ‘His handsome face could have eye-holes burned in it!’

  Rachel knew better than to react in any way. She put some bread on the grill and watched it brown, as if toasting bread fascinated her.

  The prapsies hovered next to her nose, pulling faces. They were odd, mixed-up things, the joke creation of a Witch who had once used them as messengers. Bodily they were identical to crows, with the typical sleek, blue-black feathers. But instead of beaks they had noses; and instead of bird-faces, theirs were plump, dimpled and rosy-cheeked, with soft lips. Each prapsy had the head of a baby.

  Mum swished by, waving the child-birds out of her way. They parted, then came back together, hovering perfectly over Rachel’s head. One blew a raspberry; the other accidentally dribbled on her toast.

  ‘How delightful,’ Rachel said, throwing the slice in the bin. ‘I wish I knew how they grew their baby-faces back again. I preferred it when they just squawked.’

  Both prapsies showed her their toothless gums.

  ‘Gaze at us, chimp face!’ they cooed. ‘We’re so gorgeous. We’re so beautiful! Ask Eric.’

  Eric sat nearby at the kitchen table, casually turning the pages of a comic.

  ‘You all right, sis?’ he asked, glancing up. ‘Enjoying the boys’ company?’

  ‘I’m fine,’ she said dryly. ‘But I’d prefer not to be within kissing distance. Do you think you might call the boys off long enough for me to butter my toast?’

  ‘Sure thing.’ He whistled.

  Instantly both prapsies flew onto his shoulders. They perched there, scowling at Rachel.

  ‘And shut them up for ten minutes,’ Mum said in her deadliest voice. ‘Or it’s crow stew tonight.’

  Eric pretended not to hear, but he did finger-zip his mouth. The prapsies sucked their lips in tight to prevent any more insults escaping.

  Eric was a short stocky boy with a tough expression he often practised. His most striking feature was his hair – a blond mass of curls. Eric hated his hair. Mothers liked to touch the soft waviness of it. In a couple of years he was determined to get the locks hacked off. A skinhead. For now he had to be content with the prapsies messing it up as often as possible with their claws.

  ‘I suppose the prapsies slept with you again last night?’ Rachel said witheringly.

  ‘Of course.’ Eric grinned – and so did the prapsies – imitating him with eerie precision.

  ‘I’ve watched them,’ Rachel went on. ‘They sit on your bed, with those big baby eyes. It’s spooky. They copy everything you do. When you turn, they turn. They even imitate your snoring.’

  ‘Ah, it’s true,’ Eric chuckled, ‘They adore me.’ He clicked his fingers. One prapsy immediately nudged the page of his comic over with its small upturned nose.

  ‘Pathetic,’ Rachel muttered. ‘Three morons. Where’s Morpeth?’

  ‘I could tell you,’ Eric replied. ‘But what’s in it for me?’

  ‘He’s in the garden,’ Mum said, clipping Eric round the ear. She handed Rachel some freshly buttered toast. ‘Eat a crust before you go out, won’t you?’

  After breakfast Rachel wandered into the back garden. It was a bakingly hot July day, with almost all of the summer holidays still left. Morpeth lay spread out by the pond. He was a thin boy, with startlingly blue eyes and thick sandy hair sticking out in all directions. An ice-cool drink lay within easy reach of his bronze arm.

  Rachel smiled affectionately. ‘I see you’ve settled in for the summer.’

  ‘Thanks to Dragwena, I missed out on several hundred summers,’ Morpeth said. ‘I’m catching up as best I can.’ He pulled a can of coke out of the pond and handed it to Rachel. ‘I’ve been saving this. How are you feeling?’

  ‘Pretty grim,’ she said, easing into the garden hammock.

  ‘You certainly smell better. I suppose you scrubbed with soap?’

  ‘Yes, Morpeth, I did,’ Rachel said, laughing. ‘Why? Don’t you?’

  ‘Still can’t stand the slimy feel,’ he admitted. ‘That funny sweet smell too, there’s something wrong about it. Of course, we didn’t have soap when I was a boy. Everyone smelt awful and no one cared a bit.’

  Rachel couldn’t quite get used to this new child-Morpeth. She had met him a year before on another world: Ithrea. Rachel shuddered even now to think of that desolate world of dark snow. A hated Witch, Dragwena, had ruled there. Morpeth had been her reluctant servant.

  For centuries he had been forced to watch as Dragwena abducted children from our world. Rachel and Eric were the last to be kidnapped. When she arrived, Rachel discovered that all children possess magic they cannot use on Earth. That was why the Witch wanted them – to serve her own purposes. Morpeth had tutored Rachel, and she blossomed, discovering that she was more magically gifted than any child who had come before – the first strong enough to truly resist Dragwena. Eric, too, had a gift, and this time it was one no other child possessed. Uniquely, he could unmake spells. He could destroy them. In a final terrifying battle Rachel and Eric had fought the Witch’s Doomspell and witnessed the death of Dragwena at the hands of the great Wizard, Larpskendya.

  As Rachel gazed at Morpeth now, it was difficult for her to remember that for hundreds of years he had been a wrinkled old man kept alive only by the Witch’s magic. Somehow he had defied the worst of Dragwena’s influence, and when Rachel and Eric arrived he risked his life over and over for them. In gratitude, the Wizard Larpskendya gave Morpeth back all the lost years of childhood Dragwena had taken from him. He returned, as a boy, home – but not his own home. His original family were long dead, of course. So Rachel’s parents had secretly adopted him – and here he was, a year later, a man-boy in a summer garden. A few other creatures had chosen to return from Ithrea with Rachel and Eric. Only the prapsies remained. The wolf-cub, Scorpa, Ronnocoden the eagle, and a few worms, had soon disappeared, deciding to make a new life amongst their own kind on Earth.

  ‘What’s wrong?’ Rachel asked, noticing that Morpeth looked slightly uncomfortable.

  ‘It’s these shorts,’ he pouted. ‘Your mum forgets that I’m five-hundred-and-thirty-seven years old. I don’t like stripy pants.’

  ‘You couldn’t wear your old leathers from Ithrea forever, Morpeth. You’ve outgrown them.’

  ‘But they felt good,’ he said. ‘These shorts just look stupid. They don’t fit p
roperly, either. Your mum always assumes I’m the same size as Eric.’

  ‘Are they too tight?’

  ‘Too loose,’ Morpeth said meaningfully.

  ‘Mm. Dangerous.’ Rachel smiled. ‘Must tell Mum about that … of course, you could go to the shops and buy your own.’

  Morpeth gave her a grouchy shrug. Shopping meant setting foot out of the house and across the dreaded street. Traffic unnerved him. There had been no cars when he was a boy, or aeroplanes. The sheer noisiness of modern life made him constantly edgy, and he avoided roads whenever possible.

  For a few minutes Rachel lay in the hammock next to the pond, simply enjoying the sunshine and the light breeze blowing over her legs.

  ‘Morpeth,’ she said at last, ‘I was in bed for fifteen hours last night. I can’t wake up. These things my spells are doing while I’m asleep … what’s happening?’

  ‘You know the answer to that,’ he said bluntly.

  Rachel shook her head. ‘I know my spells want to be used,’ she said. ‘But they’ve behaved until now. What’s changed? Why are they suddenly taking over like this?’

  ‘They’re defying you,’ he answered. ‘They’re restless, impatient. Magic isn’t something you can just tame like a pet, Rachel. Especially your magic.’ He leant across and tapped her head. ‘Your spells are far too intense, too ambitious, to leave you alone for long. And you stopped listening to their requests months ago, didn’t you? You locked them out completely.’

  ‘I had to,’ Rachel protested. ‘They were too tempting. Larpskendya made me promise not to use my spells—’

  ‘I know,’ Morpeth said. ‘But your spells don’t care about a promise made to a Wizard. They don’t like being ignored. You won’t listen while you’re awake, so they come out to play at night – when they can take charge of your dreams.’

  Rachel bent across to stir the surface of the pond. ‘But why dump me under water?’

  ‘Why not?’ Morpeth said. ‘Water must be an interesting place for bored spells to experiment. There’s the challenge of how to enable you to breathe without lungs. And how to enable you to inhale water without damaging your body. Those things are difficult. They require many intricate spells, co-operating closely.’

 

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