The Last Task

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The Last Task Page 1

by Maeve Friel




  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Keep Reading

  Storyteller’s Note

  Also by the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Chapter One

  Jessica had had a busy year training to be a witch with Miss Strega. It goes without saying that she was a modern witch; she did not have a greasy old cape and a hooked nose, she did not conjure up nasty smelling brews (except sometimes, for a laugh) and she always flew her broom the Right-Way-Up – with the twigs in front.

  “The best thing about being a witch,” Jessica was thinking as she zipped over the rooftops, “is all the stuff you get. As well as my broom and my helmet and my flying licence, I have my lucky pebble, my wand, my long-eared owl’s feather for mingling brews …”

  “Hu-eet,” whistled Berkeley indignantly, poking her head out of Jessica’s cape pocket.

  “And you, especially, my wonderful mascot. I was just about to say that.”

  She stroked the nightingale’s feathery neck and then, as Miss Strega’s chimney pots came into view, flicked the descend twig of her broom, swooped down and made a perfect landing on the roof of the hardware shop.

  “The other best thing about being a witch,” she told Berkeley, “is knowing Miss Strega. Not that she doesn’t make me do some very hard things, like switching myself into a cat or vaulting over the moon. I wonder what I will have to do next.”

  She was just about to clamber through the attic window when she heard voices in the shop below.

  “That’s odd. Miss Strega’s customers don’t usually come until later.”

  She glided over to the attic trapdoor which was directly above the shop counter, opened it just a smidgen and peered down.

  Miss Strega had a visitor.

  All that Jessica could see at first was the hem of the visitor’s cape and a pair of very high shoes, with heels as slender as needles.

  “Oh!” gasped Jessica. She had once met someone who wore shoes like that.

  She opened the trapdoor a little more.

  Now she could see a tartan triangle of scarf draped over the shoulders of a smart glossy cape.

  “Tartan? Could it be …?”

  She opened the trapdoor a little more.

  The visitor was wearing a floppy black velvet hat secured with a long wand-shaped hatpin with a silver thistle at the tip. Even though she could not see her face, there was no doubt who she was.

  “Heckitty Darling!” Jessica shouted. “You’re back.”

  She flung the trapdoor wide open and whooshed down into the shop.

  Heckitty Darling – for it was indeed the glamorous Scottish actress witch who had presented Jessica with her flying licence – turned, theatrically threw her cape over her shoulder and held out her arms.

  “Jessica sweetikins!” she boomed, as if she were on a stage in front of hundreds of people, and not in a tiny little shop on the High Street. “You’re looking divine!”

  Then she lowered her voice and whispered confidentially. “I was just telling Miss Strega that there has been a break-in at our Coven Garden headquarters. The Witches World Wide guild is up in arms. Our greatest treasure is,” Heckitty’s voice wobbled, “gone!”

  Felicity, Miss Strega’s ginger cat, who was snoozing in her usual place on a pile of Spell Books on the counter, opened one orange eye and gave Jessica a wink.

  “Our greatest treasure stolen?” said Jessica, looking from Felicity to Heckitty to Miss Strega and back again. “But what is our greatest treasure?”

  Miss Strega hopped off her stool and picked up a large ladle. “Why don’t I pour us all a nice stiff brew first and then Heckitty can begin at the beginning?”

  Chapter Two

  “Have you ever heard,” Heckitty began, when they had all sat down with their cups of joobious juice, “of the Feet First Fund?”

  Jessica shook her head.

  “No? Well, it’s an organisation that finds and preserves shoes that have made history or that belonged to important people. It was set up by the Literary and Historical Association of the Witches World Wide guild. I am the Head Finder and Seeker.”

  Jessica and Miss Strega exchanged a look. The look meant Heckitty Darling is off her rocker, but Heckitty didn’t notice. She carried on.

  “You have heard of the old lady who lived in the shoe (she had so many children she didn’t know what to do)? Well, we have that shoe. It was our first acquisition. We have one of Cinderella’s glass slippers. We have Puss in Boots’ boots and Pinocchio’s clogs; we have the bootees that belonged to the Wicked Witch of the West …”

  Miss Strega replaced her cup on her saucer very noisily. “Yes, yes, my dear Heckitty. We get the idea – but has this got anything to do with the burglary?”

  Heckitty looked miffed. Like all actresses, she was a bit of a show-off and expected everyone to listen to her all the time. She sighed.

  “Go on,” said Jessica. “I think the Feet First Fund sounds brilliant.”

  Heckitty Darling smiled prettily and moved her stool closer to Jessica’s.

  “The treasure, the absolute pearl of our collection, is a pair of shoes that had once belonged to that wonderful witch, the inventor of the Modern Witch’s Right-Way-Up broom, dear Dame Walpurga of the Blessed Warts.

  I discovered them at the bottom of Walpurga’s well myself, you know, despite what Professor Cobbleroni says.”

  “Who’s Professor Cobbleroni?” asked Jessica.

  “Oh, she runs that ridiculous Fancy Footwear Foundation. Anyway, I had hardly put the Dame’s shoes on display when they disappeared! I turned my back and puff! – they were gone.”

  “But who took them?” asked Jessica.

  Heckitty Darling raised her shoulders and let them drop. “We’ve no idea. We had had a lot of witch school tours that day so at first I suspected a prank. I tried any number of anti-vanishing spells to make the shoes reappear, but nothing worked. Then we organised a witch hunt. Oodles of witches took part, but the Dame’s shoes were nowhere to be found.”

  Heckitty Darling’s voice trembled again. “I’m afraid they may be gone for good.”

  “Goodness gracious,” said Jessica.

  “Fortunately,” said Heckitty, dabbing at her nose with a handkerchief, “I had the excellent idea of consulting an oracle.”

  “I once had to consult an oracle myself,” said Jessica, proudly. “It was a talking sea anemone on one of the Charm Islands.”

  Heckitty looked affronted. She obviously had not expected Jessica to know anything about oracles.

  “A talking sea anemone? How preposterous! The oracle that I went to is a Greek witch. She’s easily the best fortune teller in the world – people flock to ask her questions. Unfortunately, she tends to answer in riddles; it can be simply impossible to understand a word she says.”

  Behind her, Miss Strega’s cup rattled once again.

  “So, the long and the short of it,” Heckitty continued, “is that last night when the curtain came down on the show in Coven Garden, (have you seen my reviews, darlings? Simply marvellous!) I flew to the oracle to ask where the shoes could be. This is what she said …”

  Heckitty closed her eyes and began to speak in a very strange unearthly voice.

  “To find the shoes, no witch is fit

  But she who is not a witch as yet

  Must fly to where a giant stands.

  The answer lies beneath his hands.”

  She opened her eyes and spoke in her normal voi
ce.

  “What do you make of that?”

  “Weird,” said Jessica.

  “Absolutely baffling,” agreed Miss Strega.

  “Unless,” said Jessica, holding up a finger, “I have a hunch. Perhaps the oracle is saying that only a witch-in-training can find the shoes – she who is not a witch as yet.”

  Heckitty clapped her hands together. “By the hooting of Minerva’s owl, Miss Strega, I think Jessica’s got it.”

  “Bravo, my little lamb’s lettuce!” agreed Miss Strega.

  Heckitty Darling opened her handbag and, with a flourish, thrust an envelope into Jessica’s hands.

  “So, will you take on the Feet First Fund challenge? Will you track down Dame Walpurga’s missing shoes?”

  Jessica’s jaw dropped.

  “But, but,” she stammered. “Where should I … how do I … what’ll … when …”

  “Jessica,” said Miss Strega sternly. “You’re gibbering. I think it’s a splendid idea. There’s nothing more exciting than a quest. Of course you must do it.”

  Chapter Three

  When Heckitty had left to tell the Feet First Fund how Jessica had agreed to help find the shoes, Jessica opened the envelope. It contained a colour photograph of Dame Walpurga’s shoes on display in the Shoe Salon at Goven Garden.

  They were purple boots with pearly buttons up the side and a tassel at the top and might once have been quite pretty, but they were in a terrible condition. The heels were stumpy and lopsided, the toes were scuffed and scratched, and the tassels had seen better days.

  Jessica shook her head. “I don’t believe it! These shoes may have been Walpurga’s but they’re wrecked. Whoever took them must be her Number One Fan, because nobody else would wear them.”

  Miss Strega tapped her nose. “Possibly not, but look at the label.

  “The Broomstick Battles?” said Jessica. “I did a project about that. Dame Walpurga led the modern witches (who flew with the twigs in front) against the cross old-fashioned witches (who flew with the twigs at the back). It was your grandmother Pluribella who led that bunch …”

  Miss Strega blushed. She didn’t like to be reminded about how her granny flew the Wrong-Way-Up.

  “Never mind about that. The point is, not only are these shoes antique, they are historic. They are relics of one of the most important witches ever and that means they are invaluable.”

  “In that case,” said Jessica, “I’d better take on the quest and do my bit for Witches World Wide.”

  Miss Strega clapped her hands. “That’s my girl. Now, do you still wear those magic pins for getting yourself out of trouble, the ones that Pelagia gave you when you learned Charming? You’ll need all the help you can get on a quest.”

  “Oh yes,” said Jessica, touching the row of pins on her cape. “I even have some I’ve never used before, like this Lantern Fish pin that glows in the dark.”

  “Good. And be sure to switch on your super-duper de-luxe invisibility-when-you-need-it cape at the slightest sign of trouble.”

  “Of course,” agreed Jessica. “I’m just wondering where to start my quest. Where would you begin?”

  “I’d say, first find your giant.”

  “But I haven’t the foggiest idea where giants live.”

  “Moonrays and marrowbones, Jessica! Haven’t I told you before that you’ll never know what you’ll find until you start looking? Just hop on your broom and take to the air. Fingers and toes crossed a giant will appear. I’ll come with you for the ride.”

  So off they flew, up into the twinkly night sky, over the rooftops of the High Street and on and on beyond the town and over the river.

  At last they saw a tall craggy mountain that reared up blackly in front of them with a row of jagged peaks like a rusty worn-down saw. The air began to throb with a strange whirring and humming which grew louder and louder as they flew up over the peaks. And there on the far side of the mountain, they discovered the reason for the eerie humming – a tall spindly windmill with a red conical roof and a pair of over-sized sails rotating furiously in the wind.

  They immediately tweaked their Fast Descend twigs and cruised down to have a look but they had not gone very far when the moving air all around them began to whisper and hiss.

  “By the swivelling of my arms, something witchy this way comes.”

  Jessica stopped in mid-air. “Golly, Miss Strega, did you hear that?”

  “Psssssssstttttt,” whispered the mill. “Come and sssshake handsssss.”

  Jessica looked doubtful. Just one touch from one of those great spinning arms and she would surely be hurled to the very farthest corner of the Milky Way. But the wind at that moment began to die away and the mill slowed to a creaking halt. As it did so, a remarkable thing happened.

  The windmill began to change.

  Its stilts became long lanky legs planted in the heather. Its sails turned into long skinny arms which hung down stiffly at its sides. A knobbly scarred face scowled insolently at them under a red conical hat.

  “By the blustery breezes of Old Castile!” Miss Strega gasped. “It looks like this windmill is actually …”

  “… a giant!” Jessica exclaimed.

  “You with the silly plaits!” the giant wheezed. “Come over here.”

  “What did you say?” said Jessica.

  “I said come over here. I haven’t got all day.”

  “There’s no call to be so rude,” Jessica retorted.

  “Oh, go on,” Miss Strega interrupted. “Go and see what he wants. You needed to find a giant anyway, rude or not. I’ll wait here for you.”

  Jessica edged forward until she was hovering about two broom lengths from the giant’s arms.

  “I’m on a quest,” she began, shouting to be heard above his creaking and groaning. “Can you tell me what lies beneath your arms?”

  “Speak up!” the giant ordered. “I can’t hear you properly.”

  Jessica nudged her broomstick a little closer.

  Suddenly the giant lurched forward and snatched her hand.

  “Wey-hey!” he roared.

  He carried her up, up and away, spinning her around until her eyes were popping.

  “Miss Strega!” she yelled. “He’s switched into a windmill again! Stop! Whoa! I’m going to be sick!”

  But the giant paid no attention.

  Now, just imagine how it feels when you are rotated three hundred and sixty degrees at top speed at the outer end of a windmill’s sail. Or should that be at the end of a giant’s arms? No wonder Jessica found it hard to think straight. No wonder she felt hard done by as the sails first plunged headlong towards the heathery bog below her and then lurched skywards.

  “I am definitely going to be sick,” she shrieked.

  “Hu-eet,” whistled Berkeley cheerfully, bustling out of her pocket to keep her spirits up.

  Chapter Four

  Luckily, all those months of witch training had not been wasted on Jessica. Even as she was whizzing around like a Catherine Wheel she remembered that she had tricks of her own up her sleeve.

  “I have skills,” she reminded herself. “No cheeky giant or runaway windmill (or whatever this is) can treat me like this and get away with it. Besides, I must get on with my quest.”

  So, in mid-hurtle, she composed an incantation and yelled it at the top of her voice into the wind.

  “O, Hazel Wand and White Owl’s Feather,

  Lucky Pebble, Charming Pins,

  Draw your magic all together,

  Stop this giant; halt these spins!”

  The very next moment, she went flying off into space like a cork shooting out of a bottle and landed with a thump on a mossy clump of heather. A moment later, there was an ear-piercing scream and a loud crash which made the whole mountain shudder.

  “Aaayyyy caarrrrrammbaaaa!”

  When the stars stopped spinning and the earth stopped juddering, Jessica crawled on to her knees and stood up. The giant was sitting some way off, gingerly patti
ng his head and examining his legs for broken bones. “That was a bit rough, wasn’t it? A bit uncalled for?”

  He cracked his fingers and thumbs loudly. “What sort of witch are you anyway?”

  “I’m a witch-in-training actually,” Jessica replied, indignantly.

  “I knew there was something funny about you. I said to myself, Don Gigantesco, she’s not up to the job. She’s too young, I said. Not bright enough.”

  “What job? Do you mean finding Dame Walpurga’s shoes?”

  “Shoes? What are you blathering about, you daft girl? I mean, not bright enough to turn me back into a giant. Not up to the job of undoing the spell that Pengelly put on me. I’ve been turning into a windmill every time the wind got up, every day, all day, for the last week – ever since he imprisoned me here on this crag, with my feet stuck in this sopping bog.” He flexed his arms and groaned. “It’s not been much fun, I can tell you. And you certainly took your time getting here.”

  Jessica narrowed her eyes. “Of all the rude ungrateful giants! I didn’t have anything to do with turning you into a windmill. So why did you snatch me?”

  The giant stretched his neck and swivelled it around. “What else could I do? I’ve never been any good at spelling so I needed a witch to come along and undo Pengelly’s curse. Mind you, there was no call to send me flying like that. If I have whiplash, you’ll be hearing from my solicitors.” He cracked his knuckles, stood up and stamped his feet, scattering Jessica’s socks, scarf and cape with flecks of mucky water.

  Jessica was sorely tempted to turn Don Gigantesco back into a windmill, but she needed information. “Who did you say turned you into a windmill?”

  “Pengelly, that blinking gnome. He has a nasty habit of kidnapping giants to run his machinery. No manners. None.”

  The giant pulled off a sock, squeezed the bog water out of it and shook it in Jessica’s direction.

 

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