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It's games night over at Mrs. Ladle's.
Despite it being slightly more fun than a visit to a 12th century dentist, Stitches doesn't want to go. Tonight, Mrs. Ladle has promised them something special: a game that hasn't been played for a very long time.
One that's bound to make the evening fly by.
This could be the start of another adventure, crammed with intrigue and weirdness, and packed full of derring-do and never-before chronicled acts of heroism and bravery. Ollie and his ever-faithful crew travel with Mrs. Ladle to somewhere very strange indeed, where you'll learn things such as:
Why the forest is a bit of an odd place,
What a witch keeps up her sleeve,
And why there seems to be poo everywhere.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022
A Witch In Time
Skullenia Book 5
Tony Lewis
Copyright (C) 2017 Tony Lewis
Layout design and Copyright (C) 2021 by Next Chapter
Published 2021 by Next Chapter
Cover art by Cover Mint
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author's permission.
For Gertrude, Chris, Audrey and Tom. Sometimes I wish I could go back.
“Do we have to?” said Stitches.
“Yes, I think you'll find that we do,” said Ollie.
“So you really think this is a good way to spend a Friday evening then?” complained the zombie, like a child told it's bath night (or a farmer for that matter, the whinging, dung covered bumpkins. And by that I mean a child having a bath, and not a child being told it's a farmer. We don't want any confusion now do we, not this early on. Blimey, imagine getting a six year old farmer into the bath. It'd be easier to polish a rhino's horn. If you can find one obviously. Not the horn, they're attached to the rhino, I meant the rhino. I…oh, hang on. Right, I've been told to stop this meandering nonsense and get on with the story. Some people are so touchy).
“Well, yes actually, as a matter of fact I do,” replied the half vampire, with a distinct air of superiority. “And just to make my point, and in the spirit of fair play of course, I'll bet you a months wages that you can't think of a better alternative?” he added, replacing the distinct air with one of a more definite nature.
Stitches looked at his friend. “Well, I wasn't given the chance was I?” He pointed a finger. “But if I was, I'm sure I could've come up with something more constructive. And considerably more productive actually. And a few other uctives as well as it goes. And since when do we get wages?”
“Okay then,” said Ollie, sidestepping the salary related question with all the agile grace of a Welsh outside half from the 1970's. “Here's your opportunity. I'm going to give you the choice. You've got one minute to come up with a better alternative to tonight's cornucopia of delights. Our pleasure and relaxation for the next few hours is in your dusty mitts.”
“And if I do come up with something we'll go and do that instead, yes?” said Stitches, hopefully. He had a bag of pork scratchings in the kitchen that he planned to give to Flug telling him it was a jigsaw of a pig.
Ollie pondered the question for a moment.
“Um. No. It would upset too many people, and by that I mean a few. Come on, mate. You know how much Mrs. Ladle looks forward to our visits, as does Ronnie. And you know very well that Flug would be beside himself if we cancelled.”
“Oh, come off it,” said the exasperated zombie. “Flug doesn't know what town he's in let alone whose house. He only comes along for the cakes and sweets anyway.”
“Flug, Ronnie,” called Ollie, bringing the conversation to a close. “It's time to go.”
Within seconds they could both hear the rumble of Flug's heavy footsteps as they beat a rhythmic tattoo on the upstairs landing. Then, as he got closer to the top of the stairs, his fervour increased, and such was the pounding that he was giving the floor, each pace that he took could be heard and felt throughout the entire building as he hurriedly made his way to the office. It was like being at the epicentre of a rapidly intensifying earthquake.
“Me comin', Ollie. Me…”
There then followed a crash of such tremendous force that it practically shook the foundations of not only the buildings in Skullenia, but those in the neighbouring town as well.
“Good grief, he's down again,” said Stitches. “I don't believe it. It's the same every week. You'd think he'd never seen a plate full of cakes before. Or his feet.”
Whilst possibly being a bit mean, that statement was based upon a very astute observation relating to Flug's mental capabilities, such as they were. For instance, if you showed him something, it doesn't matter what, removed it, and then showed him the exact same something again straight away, he wouldn't have a clue that he was looking at the thing that he'd just been looking at. This was the very reason that they tried to keep him away from mirrors and shop windows. You didn't want to be standing on the other side of a pane of glass that Flug has just punched because he thought he was being followed by 'a big, ugly fing dat was dribblin' and looked fick'.
Ollie was getting used to the idea, but it could be extremely frustrating if you were trying to make a point, or attempting to get him to follow instructions, but then again, on the bright side, it was very handy when it came to say, birthdays for example. A few years back, before Ollie had taken up his tenure and money had been a bit tight, no less than eight people had given Flug the same gift. They just stood in a line, proffered the reanimate birthday boy a parcel, which he duly opened, and told him to put it on a table behind him where it was immediately snaffled, quickly re-wrapped, and passed to the next person to give to him. And whilst I know that sounds horrible, don't be too downhearted at this treatment of the big, loveable bag of bits. The pressie in question was a ten kilo lump of chocolate, and Flug wouldn't have noticed if the devil himself had handed it over in exchange for his soul. And then handed it to him again.
And whilst I'm explaining things, the phrase, 'a plate full of cakes', shouldn't strictly be applied to anything that comes out of Mrs. Ladle's oven. Even the term 'comes out' is a bit wide of the mark to be honest. Some of her pastry concoctions had walked out, others had flown, whilst one batch, much to the amusement of everyone that had seen them, had shot out of the four hundred degree inferno telling obscene jokes about ogres and what they did with root vegetables when they thought no one was watching. (They don't go in a stew if that helps. The vegetables that is, not the ogres. They prefer to bathe in thick gravy).
Be warned. You go to Mrs. Ladles for tea and fancies, there's a very good chance that you'll get rudely molested by a Wayward Flan, or stoned to death by a deluge of sentient Lumberian rock cakes. Literally. Gravel is one of the main ingredients.
Five minutes later, after he'd managed to get himself vertical, Flug came into the office, although he was still a bit on the wibbly wobbly side. (Amongst many of the other things that were the bane of his existence, poor Flug still had a bit of trouble with his balance, which is why he kept toppling over like a pole-axed lamppost. 'So what are the other things then?' I hear you ask. Well, let's just say that the big lummox has issues with just about everything else associated with a normal, everyday existence. He is rather good at lying down though, a position that he finds himself in with monotonous, noisy, and not always intentional regularity).
“We go now, Ollie? We go now?”
“I think he's a little bit excited,” said Ronnie, following Flug into the office. He'd been at the foot of the stairs when the reanimated juggernaut that was his friend had come clattering down the entire flight at something just under seventy miles an hour. Only a deft sidestep had prevented him from being turned into a very sticky and gelatinous, bloody mess.
“I should think he is,” said Stitches, the tiniest hint of sarcasm in his tone. “I mean, he's hardly ever spent any time over at Mrs. Ladles at all has he?”
“Come on then, guys,” said Ollie, getting up from his chair. “It's time to go. Let's not keep the old girl waiting.”
A couple of months back it had come to pass that every other Friday night was to become game night. And why? Well, I'll tell you. On account of the fact that the only time Ollie and the boys ever seemed to visit her was when something went wrong, or they were in some sort of trouble, Mrs. Ladle had requested (or decided. The effect is pretty much the same), that they put some time to one side so that they could all get together and have some good old fashioned fun. So that's what they now did. So far they'd partaken of Rumblesticks, Count the Coffins, and Grabbed by the Ghoulies.
Tonight though, Mrs. Ladle had promised them something special. Not only was it a game that they wouldn't have heard of, but one that hadn't been played for a very, very long time. (Hungry Hippos would've been my guess. No one owns that anymore, let alone plays it, with all the ones ever made having been consigned to the bin or left outside the nearest charity shop. The next time you're perusing the wares on offer in your local Sue Ryder have a look, you're bound to see a set. Half the balls will be missing, there'll be at least three rude drawings on the lid, and the hippos will have a touch of mange, but it'll be sat there in the window, looking all forlorn and lonely next to a crockery set from the 1970's, a video of car crashes so old there's a brand new Ford Escort on the front, and a selection of clothing that wouldn't look out of place in a silent movie).
As they approached Mrs. Ladles' house, Flug put on a burst of speed.
“Slow down, mate,” shouted Stitches as the meaty monolith took off. “We don't want a repeat of what happened last time do we?”
Flug came to a screeching halt (well, he slowed down over a distance of about thirty yards or so), and turned round.
“No, we don't,” he said, convincingly.
“Do you actually remember what happened last time?” said the zombie, not at all convinced that Flug's conviction was as convincing as he was trying to convince them it was.
“Uh, no.”
“Thought not. What colour is Mrs. Ladles' front door, Flug?” said the zombie.
“Um. It blue. Always blue.”
“Right you are. Have a look.” Stitches pointed at the door.
Flug had a look.
“What colour is that?” said Ronnie, taking over the conversation. Trying to get Flug to recall and understand things was a tricky and time consuming business that was best done on a shift system utilising rostered tea breaks, time of in lieu for a lie down, and annual leave.
“Uh…”
“Come on,” said Ollie, encouragingly. “You know your colours.”
“Um…”
“You only learnt them a little while ago,” said Ronnie.
“Uh…hammers.”
“Well, at least he managed an answer I suppose,” said Stitches. “And he's still conscious which is always a bonus. That much cranial activity usually ends up with him in a coma. It's red, mate.”
“Red,” said Flug.
“Yes. Red,” said Ollie. “It used to be blue, but the last time you came over you knocked on the door a bit too hard didn't you.” (In fact, Flug had hit the door with such force that he'd sent it, and the frame, right up Mrs. Ladles' hall and into the kitchen. The poor witch had been making a cup of tea at the time and had gotten such a fright that she'd accidentally released a small, but potent dose of magic, the result of which was her bread bin temporarily assuming a bit of an attitude and spitting her loaf of Beetles Split Farmhouse onto the floor).
Now that he'd been reminded of the door related incident, Flug still had no idea whatsoever what they were talking about. That was hardly a surprising reaction though. After all, we are talking about a being who, on a regular basis, forgets that the sun goes down at night and cries because he thinks that the sky is broken.
“Can me knock, Ollie?” said Flug as he got to the front door.
“Yes, okay, you can, but very, very gently, understood,” said Ollie.
With a determined look on his face, Flug nodded to indicate that he had indeed, understood. When informed what to do directly, and then be afforded the opportunity to carry out the required instruction there and then, he usually managed it without too many problems. It was only if a passage of time elapsed that information started to drift out of his massive head. Two or three seconds was usual. After that he started to panic because he couldn't remember what he'd been told to do and started making things up. It was for that precise reason that Ronnie always made sure that Flug was sitting on the toilet when he told Flug to go to the toilet. It saved a lot of time. And a hell of a lot of cleaning up.
Flug reached up and tapped gently on the front door with his index finger, that being comparable to most other peoples fists and liable to do about as much damage. Moments later it was opened, and Mrs. Ladle stood there beaming, or as much as a lady with her exotic looks can be said to beam anyway. It really wasn't a sight for the faint of heart, and any normal person seeing her beam like that would probably run away screaming in terror whilst asking for a priest and vowing never to watch The Exorcist again. Come to think of it, that same person would do the very same runny away, screamy thing, if they saw her looking her usual self. I could go on and talk about how she looked when she was looking her usual self, and what that would mean to the average man on the street, but the average man on the street has just poked me in the ribs and told me to get on with the story.
“Here they are,” she said. “My lovely boys. How are we all this evening? Ready for a fun night? Hello, Flug love, are you hungry?”
“Is Jocular a bloodthirsty fiend with the decorative sense of a near sighted slab of granite?” said Ronnie.
“Yeah, Mrs. L. Me hungry. Have you got cakes and sweeties?” said Flug.
“Better than that,” said the witch. “I've combined them. I've made sweetie cakes.”
Flug clapped his hands like a child on Christmas morning, squeezed past their host and disappeared inside.
“If I may, and please understand that I'm not complaining about what Flug eats when he's here because I'm sure it's all delightful,” said Ollie, as he and the others stepped into the house. He spoke in as friendly a manner as possible because even though he was delicately insulting Mrs Ladle's culinary endeavours, he didn't want to come across as if he were delicately insulting Mrs. Ladle's culinary endeavours when that was exactly what he was doing, albeit delicately. “But do you think you could limit his intake this evening. You know what he's like when he gets too much sugar in his system. It wasn't that long ago that we had to get Dr. Zoltan to flush him out. He was so wired that he didn't sleep for a week.”
“Well, he is getting on a bit,” said Mrs. Ladle.
“I meant Flug, not the doctor,” said Ollie.
“I know, you silly boy. Anyway, you don't have to worry because it won't be a problem this time. I've used a sugar substitute.”
“I see. And that would be?” asked Ollie with a heavy note of scepticism. (The last time that Mrs. Ladle had substituted something was when she'd gone to visit her maiden aunt for her two hundred and thirty seventh birthday. She was going to take a box of chocolatey, chewy things but couldn't find the ones she wanted so took her a suit of armour instead. Her auntie had loved it, well, who wouldn't, although she did break her remaining teeth on the chain mail vest).
“Oh, nothing too horrendous,” she said, showing the boys inside and shutting the door. “It's just a bit of spider web ground up into a fine powder. It's actually surprisingly sweet but it's got none of the calories and doesn't have any adverse after effects.”
“Okay, fine. As long as it's nothing weird. So, what are we playing tonight then?” asked Ollie.
“Come on through to the kitchen then, dears and I'll show you,” said Mrs. Ladle. “The tables all clear so let's sit down so that we can begin.”
A short time later, with drinks served, Ollie, Stitches, and Ronnie were sitting at the kitchen table with Mrs. Ladle in preparation for the nights activity. Flug wasn't there of course. He was far too busy. Currently, he was sitting on a chair by the larder and steadily working his way through a pile of cakey sweets that would have filled up a giraffe suffering from Prader Willi Syndrome.
Anyhoo, Ollie had a cup of Earl Grey, Stitches had a tall glass of water, and Ronnie had a couple of fingers of whiskey. For her part, Mrs. Ladle had a mug of something green that looked like it belonged in the handkerchief of someone suffering from double pneumonia.
“So,” said Stitches. “Do tell.”
Mrs. Ladle pointed to a wooden box that had been sitting in the middle of the table the whole time. It was made of dark wood and was covered in elaborate etchings. It looked a bit like a fancy tea caddy.
“It looks a bit like a fancy tea caddy,” said Ollie.
“Oh no. We're not playing guess the smell are we?” said Stitches.
“Nope. But Ollie's right. It is a tea caddy,” said Mrs. Ladle, now determined to seek out the stinkiest substances known to man for their next visit.
“So it's competitive tea drinking then. Don't think I'll be very good at that,” said the zombie.
The witch reached over, opened the lid, removed the contents of the box, and put them down in front of her.
“Oh, cards!” said Ronnie, happily. “Now we're talking. I haven't had a decent hand for ages. What's the game?”
“It's called Tempus fugit cum ludis,” said Mrs. Ladle, shuffling the pack like a seasoned, professional card sharp.
“It's called what?” said Ollie.
“Tempus fugit cum ludis,” repeated the witch.
“Careful you don't dislocate your tongue,” said Stitches.
“If it causes that maybe you should try saying it a few times,” suggested Ollie.
Stitches only reply was to poke out the very item just mentioned. “Wha' languith ith tha'?” he asked, wishing he hadn't poked out the very item just mentioned because it got caught in his teeth.
“I don't rightly know,” said the witch. “I thought it sounded a bit Dwarfish at first but now I'm not so sure. Not that it matters. It's really old though. I picked it up at a convention last weekend.”
She was talking about the Jasperian Natural Beings Convention, an annual dose of weirdness where many, far too many, supernatural beings of whatever description gathered together and masqueraded as non-supernatural types. To the uninitiated this involves them dressing up in costumes, pretending to be normal everyday beings, and living the life of the non-supernatural for a few hours. No one knows why they do this of course, in the same way that no one knows why ordinary people travel long distances to show off their latest Dr. Who costume or to garner praise for their Superman outfit. (Of course the reality of this phenomenon is far from spectacular as you can no doubt imagine. Instead of being able to gaze in wonder at a gathering of marvellously inventive doppelgängers, you're usually subjected to a teenager carrying a bag of Jelly Babies, a shiny pencil, and wearing a scarf knitted by his nan, and a fat bloke squeezed into a protesting, lycra body stocking who couldn't have leapt over a building in a single bound if he was fired from a cannon. And the less that's said about the plus size Princess Leia the better. Still, good luck to them all. They're good for a laugh if nothing else).
Anyway, back to the supernaturals and their convention. Some went as accountants, others as secretaries, and there was even the odd milkman or postie. It wasn't always plain sailing though. Last year a phantom caused a major controversy when he turned up dressed like a traffic warden, a costume that was deemed to be far from natural. Such was the shock of the other attendees that he wasn't allowed in. He got in eventually though. He returned half an hour later dressed up as a member of The BNP, and everyone agreed that was a far more acceptable person to pretend to be.
Mrs. Ladle had gone as an Avon Lady; although there was no way in the world that anyone would have wanted to sample what was in her wicker basket. Not unless you had a complexion like a rhino's scrotum and a death wish anyway.
Another popular thing to do at these little get togethers, besides dressing up like a knob and talking in a stupid voice, was you could buy 'normal' souvenirs, things that ordinary people might use in their day to day lives. You could get a packet of crisps actually made from potatoes for instance, or a bar of chocolate that didn't smell like the contents of an ogre's dustbin.
There was, however, always someone selling something considered to be not entirely normal, which meant that it was normal if you were from the supernatural world, but for the purposes of the convention it wasn't because the intention was to have normal things be not normal and not normal things be normal. Of course all this depended on what world you came from. A supernatural being would consider something not normal to be entirely normal and vice versa, but again that depended on whether he was attending the convention as a guest or a seller, because a seller would see the not normal item as entirely normal. Well, he normally would because during his break he might dress up as something normal, in which case the items that he was selling would be not normal. That's how it normally works anyway. I think. Good lord I've got a headache after all that. Is that normal?
Anyway, it was from one such vendor that Mrs. Ladle had purchased the deck of cards.
“So how do we play it then?” asked Ollie. He raised a placatory hand. “But do go slowly please, if you don't mind. I'm not much good at card games.”
“It's easy really,” said the witch. “First off, we get forty seven cards each.”
“Forty seven!” said Stitches.
“Yes, dear. Forty seven. And then three each of the Tree cards.”
“What are the Tree cards for?” asked Ronnie.
“You can play a Tree card if you've got four hats, but only if two of the hats are the same,” said Mrs. Ladle.
“Righto,” said Ronnie, who was rather adept at cards and picked up any sort of gambling related pastime quicker than a zoo-keeper fills his shovel whilst on diarrhoea watch in the elephant house.
(On a side note did you know that many people in Third World countries actually have elephants living in their houses with them? Thought not. It's got something to do with culture, lack of affordable grazing land, and an open door policy to rival that of the most approachable of managers. And in case you're wondering how they cope with the smell, the elephants just have to get used to it, ha ha).
“So,” she continued, whilst dealing, “we start with the player on my left. That'd be you, Ollie dear. You lay a card down. Then the next player tries to lay one that's the same. If they can't then they lay one that's opposite. So, say for instance that you play the Fifteen of Cauldrons, then Stitches would also try to play a cauldron you see?”
“Right you are,” said the zombie. “But if I haven't got one, what do I put down? I'm not entirely sure what the opposite of a cauldron is.”
“Well,” said the witch, “a cauldron is for putting things in isn't it, so you'd need to find a card representing something that you can't put things into. Like the Six of Carrots for example.”
“Ah,” said Ronnie, “but you can put a carrot into a cauldron.”
“Well spotted,” Mrs. Ladle. “And that would be a legitimate move called a Sideways Set. Two things that you might not think go together but do.”
“Like peanut butter and Marmite,” said Ronnie.
“Exactly.”
“Or fishfingers and gravy,” said Ollie.
“Correct.”
“Or Flugs head and information,” said Stitches. “Oh, wait. Those are two things that should go together but definitely don't.”
Ollie was having a close look at his cards as they were dealt to him.
“You know you mentioned the Fifteen of Cauldrons and the Six of Carrots,” he said.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Ladle.
“Well, there don't seem to be many others of those particular suits. Where are all the other cauldrons and carrots. Look, Stitches hasn't got any either.”
“I see what you're saying,” said Mrs. Ladle, “but that's because there's about eighty suits in total and they've only got two or three cards in each. That's what makes each and every game so different.”
Whilst staring at his cards, Stitches waxed lyrical to himself about all the various ways that this game could be different. So far, boring, tedious, monotonous, uneventful, and insipid were just a few of the terms that he'd come up with, but he was sure there were plenty more. He wouldn't dare share any of his thoughts with Mrs. Ladle of course. Not if he wanted his legs to remain where they were anyway.
“So what's the actual aim of the game?” asked Ronnie. “There has to be some outcome to all of this because at the moment it sounds like a game of Snap with delusions of grandeur.”
Mrs. Ladle finished dealing the main deck and put another, smaller one, in the centre of the table.
“The goal is to collect sub-sets of seven, eight or nine cards. If the card you lay exactly matches, or is opposite, or part of the same genre or family, then you can choose to pick up the entire pile, if you think they'll compliment your floaters which you keep next to you.”
“When the hell did floaters become a part of this?” said Stitches, who was starting to think that a prolonged and in depth chat with Professor Crumble about quantum physics would be easier to understand because it had less rules.
“Okay,” said Ollie. “If for instance, the Eighty Six of Slippers is on top of the pile of cards and I put the Twenty Three of Pants down, I could take the pile?”
“No,” said Mrs. Ladle.
“But why not? They're both objects that you can put things in aren't they?” he said.
“Yes they are, but they're not part of the same sub-set or genre,” said Mrs. Ladle. “But, if you played a Wallop at that point, the rule is suspended for your turn and you could take the cards. See, I told you it wasn't all that difficult.”
“That's easy for you to say,” said Stitches, looking at his cards the way that someone from Newcastle would look at a glass of squash. “This sounds more involved than one of Hector's rambling stories.”
“Oh, tish and piffle,” said Mrs. Ladle. “I'm sure you'll pick it up once we get going.”
“That's exactly what I thought when I last spoke to Hector,” said the zombie. “Three hours later I had a headache and wanted to ram his brush up his trousers.”
“So what's the ultimate hand?” said Ronnie, who not only liked to play cards, but liked to win even more.
“The Grand Slammer Jammer,” said the witch. “You have to collect twelve sub-sets, get all four hats in your hand, have a floating Tree card, and then draw the One Hundred of Particles from the discard pile. If you get that, it's an instant win.”
“Looks like I'll be going for that then,” said Ronnie, lighting a fag.
“I wouldn't be too optimistic about that if I were you, mate,” said Stitches. “There doesn't seem to be anything remotely instant about this game.”
“As sarcastic as that observation was, he's sort of got a point,” said Mrs. Ladle, lighting a cigarette as well. “According to the history of the game that came with it, it's never been seen during play. It seems that the odds are so high that it's next to impossible to get. Apparently, and I quote, 'there's more chance of being run over by a bus being driven by a moose with a law degree, who's dressed in scuba diving gear,' although how they came to that conclusion is beyond me. Still, it's better than just saying 'it's not very likely', I suppose.”
(Now, those of you reading this may be under the impression that I'm leading you down a certain path, and that a situation, however unlikely, is being cunningly and subtly set up with well chosen words and cleverly crafted phrases. Well, to put your minds at rest and to allay any fears that you may have regarding me doing something so blatantly obvious, I would like to point out here and now, that that is absolutely and positively the case. And yes, I know some learned and well read people may call it crowbarring in a plot point, whilst other erudite scholars of letters and noble prose may accuse me of bending the rules and offending literary normalcy, but to all of them I say this. I couldn't give a flying pile of poo. It's my story, my characters, and therefore my rules, so get stuffed! There, that'll put a pulp fiction shaped pin in their balloon of pretentious wafflings. Who needs a Nobel Prize anyway? Cormack Macarthy would be proud).
A couple of hours, dozens of fags, rather a lot of alcohol, and a pile of cakes the size of Mount Etna later, Ollie said something.
“You're not going to believe this. I've got twelve sub-sets put to one side, all four hats in my hand, and a Tree card in my floating pile.”
“How unexpected,” said Mrs. Ladle.
“What a fantastic surprise,” said Ronnie.
“You couldn't have made it up,” said Stitches.
“Me got a cake stuck up my nose,” said Flug.
“Well, it's your turn, dear,” said Mrs. Ladle, “so let's just see what happens. Hey, if you do get The Grand Slammer Jammer we'll have to let Excalibur know so he can put it in the paper. Not for my benefit of course, but it'll be nice to take a copy to the next coven meeting. The sisters will be purple with envy when they see it.”
(Purple was the colour that witches turned when they were a bit jealous. This was on account of them being green by nature. It was a handy biological signal that let people know how a witch type person was feeling, especially if, like the witches, their physical characteristics were outside the norm. And it wasn't just related to those of a witchy bent either. Thanks to Mother Nature, all sorts of anatomical weirdness has been sorted out, so that you, or I, will be able to tell exactly what's going on with someone and what mood they're in. Smurfs, for instance, are blue, so it'd be no good if one turned blue when he got cold would it? They go red. And imagine the confusion if a Chinese person got jaundice and turned yellow. That's why they turn pink. Of course the whole thing could fall down if a Chinese Smurf catches a chill that causes his liver to pack up, but happily there's no chance of that ever happening. Everyone knows that Smurfs are from North Wales).
Ollie reached over and drew the top card from the discard pile. And what do you know? Sure enough, wonder of wonders, what a fantastic surprise and who would have credited it etc, he'd pulled the One Hundred of Particles.
“Wey hey,” he shouted. “An instant win.”
He tucked the card into the others that he was holding and laid the winning hand down on the table.
“That is rather amazing,” said Ronnie, leaning back in his chair and rolling himself another smoke. “I've played poker for years and never even seen a straight Royal Flush. First game of Tempus fugit cum ludis and we get that.”
“I am rather proud of it actually,” said Ollie. “I wonder if I'll get a certificate or something. Or maybe…” He paused for a second and looked around the room. “Did you feel that?”
“Yes I did,” said Stitches, looking round he room. “It was weird. It felt like the house shrugged its shoulders.”
Mrs. Ladle got up from her chair. She stood perfectly still and remained silent for a few seconds. Then, bizarrely, she sniffed the air.
“Something doesn't smell right,” she said.
“Flug has had a lot of cakes,” said Stitches. “Maybe that sugar substitute is repeating on him.”
“No. This is something else,” she said. “This is more atmospheric then gastric. Just let me check outside, make sure everything's alright.”
Thirty seconds later they heard, “Can you all come out here please?”
The four of them joined Mrs. Ladle outside the front of the house. They looked. They saw. They stared at each other. They swore.
“Guys,” said Ronnie. “I don't think we're in Skullenia anymore.”
* * *
Ethan logged off of Ollie's' computer and shut it down (although 'shut it down' was rather a generous way of describing what he did. He closed it when it started to make funny noises as he tried to access one darknet site too many, which in this case, was one. On a side note, why is it, when a computer overheats is it said to freeze?)
He hadn't been looking at anything in particular, just checking emails. It was something that he'd taken to doing every other Friday evening when the boys were at Mrs. Ladles. He stayed away as he didn't much go for card and board games, one, because he was a bit rubbish at them, two, he had a competitive streak a couple of miles wide, and three, he simply didn't have the patience. (Even playing patience tried his patience).
Although good for a laugh sometimes, this combination of character traits was rather potent. Wanting to win, and not being able to, had caused quite a few scenes in the past, usually of the getting all big, hairy, toothy and having a werewolf type paddy variety. When Ethan lost his temper in a big way, his lycanthrope genes had a habit of sneaking out to say hello so he felt it best if he didn't get involved.
Feeling a bit thirsty he popped downstairs to the kitchen. Normally he'd have a cold glass of milk, but right now he fancied a cup of hot coffee. Ollie might be half human but thanks to his vampire DNA he usually kept his office rather cold.
Mere minutes later, much sooner than you might expect, he was pouring boiling water into a mug. (It's a fact that water doesn't take long to boil in Skullenia, a strange phenomena that was caused by a combination of assorted factors that included something to do with the altitude, the liquids unique chemical composition, its centuries long journey through the mountains, the various minerals it absorbed along the way, and the fact that Crumble had dropped a beaker full of something blue and bubbly down the drain a couple of years ago. The professor hadn't been quite sure exactly what it was or why he'd made it in the first place, but it meant that the local water now had a boiling point of about eight and a half degrees, and would come to temperature if placed under an energy saving, three watt light bulb, or a glare from Mrs. Ladle).
He chucked in a couple of spoonfuls of sugar and went to the fridge to grab some milk.
“That's unusual,” he said to himself as he opened the door (and it wasn't the light coming on that surprised him if that's what you're thinking, although that's a constant source of wonder whenever a fridge is opened by anyone, anywhere in the known universe, because they never, ever work. It's one of those expected annoyances that happen all the time, things that've become a part of everyday life that we just accept as the norm because there's absolutely nothing we can do about them. Other examples are not being able to open a carton of orange juice without squirting half of it on your trousers, going into the Post Office to find that the shortest queue is longer than a life sentence in an all male Turkish prison, returning to your vehicle in a virtually empty car park to find that some bonehead has parked so close to you that you need a tin opener to get in, or sitting in the cinema and finding yourself surrounded by people with enough snacks to feed a third world country, all of which are in packaging so loud that The Big Bang sitting three aisles away asks them to keep it down. Another thing is…well, I could go on but let's just say that more or less everything that happens outside my front door annoys me. That's probably why I write stories. I don't have to mix with people).
Next to the milk was Ollie's tankard and it was full to the brim with blood. Ollie should have had it before he left, but in all the excitement, Flug must have forgotten to give it to him. And there was no way that Ollie would have voluntarily taken it or reminded Flug that it was dinner time. His memory was quite selective when it came to his corpuscle based dietary requirement.
Checking his watch, Ethan saw that the guys had been out for a good few hours, meaning that Ollie was well overdue for his fix. Whilst it wasn't a complete disaster at the moment, if left for too long, the effects of abstaining would take hold and his condition would deteriorate rapidly. He would get jumpy, dizzy, feel a bit sick and soon after that, begin to drift in and out of consciousness as his blood starved system started to shut down.
Ethan didn't bother with the milk. He could finish making his coffee when he got back. He wouldn't be out long.
He took the tankard from the fridge, covered it with a towel and left by the back door. He didn't think Ollie would be overly pleased to see him, but when it came to supernatural health, it was better to safe than sorry, and besides, Mrs. Ladles house was only down the road a bit so it wasn't as if it was any great effort.
As he walked along the street, he said hi to those beings that he passed, but he noticed that there didn't seem to be as much activity as usual. At this time of night the town square, and the immediate vicinity, were usually awash with the various nocturnal tooings and froings of the undead, the unnatural and the unpleasant.
On the other side of the road, he saw Crushy, the tree ogre, who seemed to be in a bit of a hurry, so much so that when Grendle came out of his shop, the larger beast nearly knocked the old boy clean off his feet and through his own window.
“Hello there, Grendle,” said Ethan in surprise. Grendle was locking up his shop, something that he virtually never did. Whenever anybody in town needed anything, they could always rely on the shopkeeper having it in stock and that he would be open for business no matter what the time was.
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