by K. E. Mills
“What is this?” she demanded, goggling at the metamorphosing cakes as they shimmied back and forth across the lace tablecloth. “Miss Grimwade, please explain!”
“I–I can’t!” said ashen-faced Millicent Grim-wade. “It’s a trick-it’s foul play-it’s-it’s-” Staring wildly about her, she caught sight of Permelia Wycliffe’s expression of undisguised triumph. “It’s sabotage!” she cried and pointed an unsteady finger. “ That woman has sabotaged me! She’s pea-green with envy because I’ve beaten her at every turn and now she’s trying to steal the grand prize. But the Golden Whisk is mine, I tell you! Mine!”
Uproar as Permelia advanced upon Millicent Grimwade with dreadful solemnity, Eudora Telford bleating loyally in her wake. The judges scattered like lawn bowls before her barely-restrained wrath. Helpless, because Permelia Wycliffe was Guild president and no-one in her right mind smacked the president with a wooden spoon, not if they wanted to keep their prestigious position, the Invigilators dithered on the fringes of the fray. And all around them the spectators gasped and wittered and repeated the dreadful accusations until the Town Hall chamber sounded like a henhouse routed by a fox.
Now the transformed cakes were leaping up and down as though they’d been imbued with unnatural, frantic life.
“Stop it! Stop it!” sobbed Millicent Grimwade. “Permelia Wycliffe, I demand that you stop this sabotage at once!”
“And I demand that you confess you’ve been cheating, Millicent Grimwade!” cried Permelia Wycliffe, majestic in her triumph. “You’ve hexed your cakes so they’ll win the Golden Whisk!”
Millicent Grimwade’s hatchet face flushed as vermilion as her pound cake. “How dare you? I have done no such thing! How could I? I’m not a witch.”
“Then you hired a witch to do it for you!” Permelia retorted. “Or a wizard. It’s plain for all to see, so don’t go trying to split hairs now you-you termagant!”
Highly entertained, Melissande felt a sharp elbow-nudge in her ribs and looked at Bibbie. “Don’t do that, this is just getting interesting.”
“I’ll say,” said Bibbie, her sharkish grin on full display, and unfolded her fingers. In the palm of her hand the green hex-detecting crystal pulsed a deep and vibrant black. “Looks like we’ve got her, Miss Cadwallader.”
“Indeed it does, Miss Markham,” she replied, feeling an equally sharkish smile spread across her own face. “Don’t look now, but I think that’s your cue.”
“I say that you have done this dreadful thing!” Permelia Wycliffe continued in her vindicated glory. “And not just today. You’ve been cheating all year! You, Millicent Grimwade, have single-handedly brought the Baking and Pastry Guild into dire disrepute! By the power vested in me as president I demand that you hand over your Guild badge at once! You are a disgrace to the chocolate eclair!”
“I’ll do no such thing!” cried Millicent Grimwade. She was practically panting. “You can’t prove I’ve cheated, Permelia Wycliffe. You can’t prove a thing!”
“ She might not be able to, Miss Grimwade,” said Bibbie, ducking under the scarlet cordon-rope. “But I can. And I will.” She held up the black crystal in full sight of the crowd. “Do you see this?” she demanded in a loud and carrying voice, brandishing the crystal overhead. The closest of the deliciously shocked spectators craned their necks for a closer look. “It’s a hexometer, ladies. Designed to register thaumaturgic activity. If there isn’t any in the immediate vicinity it’s a pleasant pale green. But if there is it turns black. And as you can see, this crystal is indeed black.” She spun round to face a shocked and gibbering Millicent Grimwade. “As black as the heart of a woman who’d stoop to illegal thaumaturgy to win the Golden Whisk!”
A fresh outcry, as the direness of Bibbie’s claims registered with every Guild member in the room.
Despite the desperately dancing plates on her table, which was starting an alarming shimmy in counterpoint, Millicent Grimwade managed to rally. “And who are you, pray tell? Some hussy Permelia’s dragged in off the street?”
“ Hussy?” said Bibbie, milking her moment. “How dare you, madam? I am Miss Emmerabiblia Markham, one third of Witches Incorporated, the new witching locum agency recently opened in town. No task too large or too small, reasonable rates, absolute discretion guaranteed. Unmasking thaumaturgical villainy is our business and you, Millicent Grimwade, may consider yourself unmasked!”
Still Millicent Grimwade stood her ground. “Poppycock!” she retorted. “Do you think we’re going to take one look at your silly little crystal and believe that a woman of my social stature would stoop to cheating? That my Guild sisters would take your word over mine, some upstart young person who dares to show her ankles in public? Do you?”
As Bibbie stared, momentarily silenced, Melissande shoved under the scarlet cordon-rope and ranged herself at Bibbie’s side.
“ Yes!” she said, in a loud, commanding voice. “Because those ankles belong to none other than the great-niece of former Guild President Antigone Markham!”
Outright chaos ensued. The judges shouted, the shrieking Invigilators waved their wooden spoons, Eudora Telford bleated her support, Permelia Wycliffe demanded Millicent Grimwade’s confession and Millicent Grimwade demanded her presidential resignation in return. Not a single woman in the chamber kept her opinion to herself. The noise was so loud the windows started to vibrate.
And at the height of the uproar… Millicent Grimwade’s hexed cakes exploded.
“Well,” said Bibbie into the ringing silence, flicking a blob of chocolate log off the end of her nose. “I suppose that’s one way of winning the argument.”
Everyone within twenty feet of Millicent’s table was now wearing a sticky souvenir from the most exciting Golden Whisk competition in the Baking and Pastry Guild’s long and chequered history.
“Urrrgghhh…” said Millicent Grimwade, dripping gooseberry sponge, and fainted theatrically onto the floor.
Which was a signal for the room to erupt into fresh cacophony. Ignoring the outcry, Permelia Wycliffe stepped over Millicent Grimwade’s prostrate body to snatch Bibbie’s chocolate-daubed hands in a convulsive clasp. Incredibly, she seemed on the verge of tears. It made her all of a sudden more human. Less dislikeable.
“Oh, thank you, Miss Markham. Thank you.”
Reprehensible Bibbie grinned. “You’re welcome, Miss Wycliffe. We guardians of the Baking and Pastry Guild have to stick together, after all.”
Permelia Wycliffe leaned close, still clutching, her black silk-clad bosom painted with sloppy vermilion icing. “I must speak to you on another matter, Miss Markham,” she said, eyes narrowed with purpose. “Now that I know I can trust you implicitly. The Wycliffe honour is at stake and I feel you might be my only hope.”
Smeared with cream and bits of gooseberry, Melissande turned away from incoherently gushing Eudora Telford, determined to step in before Bibbie had the bright idea of volunteering their unpaid services in the name of Baking and Pastry Guild sisterhood.
“I’m sure it sounds most serious, Miss Wycliffe,” she said briskly. “And of course Witches Inc. would be only too pleased to undertake any commission on your behalf. Perhaps we might discuss the particulars tomorrow morning, at ten?” She fished in her reticule for the account she’d prepared last night, and held it out. “When you come by the office to settle today’s successfully concluded assignment?”
Permelia Wycliffe stared at her blankly for a moment, then nodded and took the sealed envelope. “Why, er, yes. Yes, certainly.” She turned. “You will be in attendance, won’t you, Miss Markham?”
“We’ll both be there, Miss Wycliffe,” said Melissande firmly. “The agency is our joint endeavour.”
Permelia Wycliffe drew breath to say something blighting, but before things could go from wonderful to woeful she was swept away by a gaggle of voluble Invigilators and various other agitated Guild members.
Melissande felt a plucking at her stained sleeve, and turned. Oh, dear. “ Yes, Miss T
elford?”
“I must go, Your Highness. Permelia will need me,” Eudora Telford whispered. Tears sparkled in her faded brown eyes. “I just wanted to thank you, again. This was so important to her… and I couldn’t help.”
Honestly, she really was the soggiest woman. “It was my pleasure, Miss Telford.”
“Gosh,” said Bibbie, emerging from under Millicent Grimwade’s table with the sprite trap as Eudora scuttled after her friend. “So that’s another job for Witches Inc., eh? Hmmm, didn’t someone recently say that using Monk’s interdimensional escapee to solve the Case of the Cheating Cake Cook might well work out to our advantage? Who could that have been, I wonder?”
Melissande sighed. “Yes, yes, rub it in, why don’t you?”
“Don’t worry, I will,” said Bibbie, grinning, the sprite trap dangling on the end of one careless finger. “I’m going to rub it in until-”
“I say! I say!” an excited voice called out. “Can you look this way?”
“What?” said Melissande, turning. “I know that voice! It’s-”
And then she was blinded by a flash of thaumically-enhanced light as the appalling photographer from the Times assaulted her yet again with his camera.
A tide of red and righteous wrath rose within her. “ You! What are you doing here? Give me that camera, you revolting little man!”
The photographer yelped and ran. Hurdling the still-prostrate Millicent Grimwade, scattering spectators like skittles, she chased the mingy weasel out of the chamber, down the Town Hall steps and into the busy carriage-filled street.
“That’s right, you little rodent!” she bellowed after him. “Run, go on! And just you keep on running, you hear? Keep on running and don’t look back!”
“Now, now,” said Reg, landing on her shoulder in a fluttering of brown-and-black feathers. “That’s not very nice of you, ducky. I mean, in a roundabout way he did get us this job.”
Hotly aware of the stares and imprecations she was collecting from various shocked pedestrians and carriage-drivers, Melissande leapt back onto the sidewalk and lifted her chin, refusing to be embarrassed. “I don’t care. It’s an invasion of privacy, that’s what it is. He’s a weasel and a toad and I’ve half a mind to slap Millicent Grimwade silly with a soggy cooked noodle until she gives up the name of the witch or wizard who devised that hex of hers. Could be I might have some business for them. There’s a certain camera I need to futz with.”
“No, don’t do that,” said Monk, behind her. “Black market thaumaturgy is kept strictly hush-hush. If you stick your nose in I’ll have to report you to the Department and that could get a bit awkward. And speaking of awkward, Mel, what have you done with my sprite?”
Melissande spun on her heel. “Monk? What are you doing here?”
“Reg came and got me,” he said, his eyes warm, his expression guarded. “Now can I have my sprite back, please? We’re up to our armpits in a controlled thaumic inversion back in the lab, and Macklewhite won’t cover my absent arse forever.”
“The wretched thing’s inside,” she said, desperately attempting to recover her poise. If only she wasn’t wearing quite so much whipped cream…
“Inside?” Monk repeated, horrified. “What do you mean, inside? You mean inside the Town Hall? Where people can see it? Mel, what were you thinking?”
“I wasn’t!” she said hotly. “This was all your mad sister’s idea! So if you want to shout at someone I strongly suggest you shout at her!”
Monk scrubbed a distracted hand over his face. “Mmm. Yes. That never turns out well for me.”
“And you think this conversation is destined for a happy ending?”
“Quit while you’re ahead, sunshine,” said Reg, snickering. “Want me to go and fetch Mad Miss Markham?”
They stared at her in mutual dismay. “ Absolutely not! ”
Reg sniffed. “Suit yourselves.”
Melissande watched her flap away, then sighed. “Wait here, Monk. I’ll fetch Bibbie and your precious sprite.”
But there was no need, for as she turned to trudge back into the Town Hall Bibbie came out with the deactivated sprite trap.
“ There you are!” said Monk, wrathfully advancing. “Bibbie, are you completely cracked?”
Ignoring the question, his sibling thrust the seemingly-empty birdcage at him. “Here’s your sprite, Monk. Lucky for you it came in handy or I might’ve had to devise a truly awful payback hex. As things stand, we’ll call us even.”
“ Even?” he said, flicking on the etheretic normaliser. “Not bloody likely!”
“Honestly, it’s in there, Monk,” said Bibbie, with unrestrained sisterly scorn. “Do you really think I’d-oh.”
Oh was right. The interdimensional sprite was puddled on the bottom of the birdcage, its only sign of life a faint, pulsating blue twitch.
Melissande stared at it, aghast. “Oh yes? My imagination, was it? I said the thing didn’t look very well, didn’t I say that? But no-one ever listens to me. Just because I’m not a thaumaturgical genius I get ignored!”
It was true. Bibbie was ignoring her now. “You’d better do something, Monk. If the stupid thing dies it’ll be your fault.”
“ My fault?” He looked in danger of falling to the pavement in an apoplectic fit. “Bugger that, Bibbie! If you’d done what I asked in the first place and brought me the damned sprite as soon as you caught it-”
“ Not here!” said Melissande, acutely aware of the unfortunate attention they were attracting from the public-at-large. She grabbed brother and sister by an elbow each. “Let’s find somewhere to discuss this in private, shall we?”
Monk wrenched himself free. “There’s no time. Can’t you see the rotten thing’s dying? And if it dies in this dimension I have no idea what the thaumaturgic fallout might be. And I really don’t want to find out the hard way! Do you?” Clutching the birdcage with its ailing occupant close to his chest, he made a dash for the pool of shadows cast by the Town Hall’s wide, imposing front steps.
“What are you doing?” said Melissande, following him, with Bibbie at her heels.
“What does it look like I’m doing?” he retorted, harassed. “I’m sending this bloody sprite back where it came from!”
“Here? This minute?” said Bibbie. “Monk, you can’t! There are too many people around, what if-”
Now it was Monk’s turn to do the ignoring. Deeply frowning, he pulled a rock out of his pocket and hummed complicatedly and untunefully under his breath, then held it above the sprite trap he’d so casually invented. Melissande recognised the rock as a relative of the portable portal he’d used in New Ottosland.
“Oooh!” said Bibbie, twitching. “Feel that!”
Melissande stared at her. “What? Feel what?”
“ That,” said Bibbie. “Ewww, it’s like a thousand caterpillars crawling over my skin! Can’t you feel it?”
No. She couldn’t. Because she wasn’t a real witch. But that didn’t bother her at all.
Monk was grinning now, and Bibbie was grinning back at him, their nursery-squabbling forgotten. “Any second,” he murmured. “Wait for it… wait for it…”
The air surrounding the ailing sprite shivered. Sparkled in an impossible whirlpool of silver and gold. The sprite emitted a tiny, surprised squeak. Then, as though an invisible hand had reached out to grab it by the scruff of the neck, or what passed for its neck, it was sucked into the sparkling whirlpool… and vanished.
“ Excellent!” said Monk briskly and returned the rock to his pocket. “Now I’d best be on my way. Oh, and there’s no need for you to worry about Millicent Grimwade. Reg filled me in on her shenanigans, and I’ve passed along the particulars to the relevant Department. In fact-” He nodded as an official-looking black car pulled up in front of the Town Hall. “Here comes justice now.” He grinned as two stern-faced men spilled onto the pavement and started marching up the Town Hall steps. “So that’s the cake cheat and her black market chum taken care of. She’ll spill
every last bean, I’ll bet, to make things easier for herself.” Still grinning, he shoved the birdcage at Bibbie.
“And what am I supposed to do with this?” she said, bemused.
“Hang onto it until the next time we have dinner?” he suggested, walking backwards. “Thanks!”
They stared after him, open-mouthed, until he was lost to sight amongst the city’s teeming pedestrians.
Then Bibbie laughed. “Never mind. All’s well that ends well.” She linked her arm through Melissande’s. “Now I want tea. Lots of tea. And scones with lashings of blackcurrant jam and cream.”
Melissande shook her head. The Markhams were totally incorrigible and utterly impossible. “Bibbie, no. We can’t afford — ”
“Oh, pishwash!” scoffed Bibbie. “We just solved the greatest crime in Baking and Pastry Guild history, sent a sightseeing interdimensional sprite home to its mother and put a black market thaumaturgist out of business! If that’s not an excuse to celebrate then I don’t know what is! Do you?”
“Well… no,” said Melissande, reluctantly. “Only we mustn’t go overboard, Bibbie. One celebratory scone each and a teapot between us. That’s it. And then we go back to the office and make sure we’re ready for round two with Permelia Wycliffe. Because if you’re right, and this ridiculous cake fiasco is the start of something big, then I want to be ready for it. Agreed?”
“Agreed,” said Bibbie, rolling her eyes. “Now come on, do. It’s time for some fun!”
CHAPTER NINE
The story appeared on page twelve of the next morning’s paper. This Year’s Golden Whisk Award Anything But A Cake Walk! the Times’ headline snickered. The accompanying photograph was of Bibbie, looking effortlessly beautiful even while covered in sprite-exploded chocolate log and holding a stupid birdcage.
“Ha!” said Reg, perched on the back of the client’s armchair and peering over Melissande’s shoulder. “What were you saying about the evils of free advertising?”