Authors: Colin Thompson
The newlyweds and other runaways picked their way along the dark tunnel until a faint glow appeared in the distance. The glow became a light and finally the light led into the Valley of the Sages and Other Herbs.
Although it had been the middle of the night when they had entered the tunnel an hour earlier, they had come out into broad daylight â the daylight of a summer evening that filled the magical valley twenty-four hours a day. A gentle path took them through a meadow of the softest grass speckled with mountain poppies to a stream of crystal-clear water spanned by a bridge of pure
amethyst. On the far side of the stream, the path led up through an orchard of perfect fruit and on to the sacred caves where the hermits and shamans had once lived. They were all deserted now apart from the last cave, which was home to the only person left in the valley â the Sheman.
âI
do
like it,' said George for the first time in his life. The others had to agree.
The Sheman was sitting on a chair outside her cave and didn't seem the slightest bit surprised to see them. It may seem impossible to believe but she was probably even more beautiful than Mordonna. However, her immense beauty was shrouded in an air of great sadness, for she was immortal and this created an invisible barrier between her and everyone else. Those who fell in love with her could only do so from a great distance â usually Hasselt, a town in Belgium. To come closer only ended in a broken heart, for to hear the Sheman's voice, with its deep enchanting echoes of caramel and milk chocolate, was to love her forever.
Naturally our heroes were exempt from such a
reaction, Nerlin and Mordonna on account of the fact that they were in love with each other, which gave them immunity, the Queen on account of the fact that her hearing aid tuned out caramel and milk chocolate, and Vessel because he was totally besotted with the Queen. George the donkey felt his lumpy old heart flutter a bit, but he thought it was because of something he had eaten.
âI've been expecting you,' she said as they followed her into the cave.
âHow did you know we were coming?' Mordonna asked.
âI am a Sheman, we know everything.'
âEverything?' said Nerlin.
âWell,' said the Sheman, âeverything except Belgian and maths.'
âSo you know why we're here?' said the Queen.
âErr, umm, yes, absolutely,' said the Sheman. âYou have come to consult me and, umm, partake of my endless wisdom.'
âYes, sort of,' said the Queen.
âWe have to flee Transylvania Waters,' said Vessel.
âIn that case, we must make a sacrifice on the Golden Altar of Nebula,' said the Sheman. âBut first I must invoke the protection spell.'
She went outside, raised her arms and began to chant. The sun stopped shining and the sky grew dark. The air grew cool and it began to snow, gentle flakes drifting down in total silence, but then the wind began to blow and the snow became a blizzard.
âHang on, did you say sacrifice?' said Nerlin. âYou're going to kill something?'
âYes,' the Sheman explained. âI lay the chosen creature out on the altar and chop off its head. Then I can read your future in its entrails.'
Nerlin, who had seen some pretty disgusting things in his years cleaning the drains and toilets of the city, felt faint. He was a gentle soul and the thought of killing animals upset him, especially when he was one of the reasons some poor innocent creature was going to lose its life, and doubly especially if they weren't going to eat it afterwards.
âBlood and stuff?' he said.
âYes, that's the general idea,' said the Sheman. âIt's a great honour.'
âWho for?'
âThe sacrificee, of course.'
âWhat, being laid out on an altar and getting your head chopped off is a great honour?'
âOh, yes.'
âI think I'll wait outside in the nice blizzard,' said Nerlin.
âSuit yourself,' said the Sheman. After Nerlin had disappeared into the snow, she added, âRight, now where's Nigel the sacrificial flea?'
âA flea?' said Mordonna. âYou're going to cut the head off a flea?'
âYes.'
âYou're going to stretch a flea out across the Golden Altar of Nebula and cut off its head?'
âIt's a very small altar,' said the Sheman. âHave you any idea how much gold costs? I had to use the nib off my fountain pen to make it.'
âI was kind of expecting a goat or at least a chicken.'
âOr a beautiful young woman,' Vessel added.
âYuk,' said the Sheman. âThat's disgusting.'
âBut how on Earth can you read a flea's entrails?' asked Mordonna.
âI have a very small knife and a very big magnifying glass.' She took a tiny gold altar from around her neck and something from a matchbox.
âIs it over? Only I'm getting really cold out here â¦' Nerlin called through the cave entrance.
âI think so,' called Mordonna.
âOh dear, oh dear,' said the Sheman, peering at the dead flea through an enormous magnifying glass. âI see bad omens. Dark evil forces are afoot. It will end in tears.'
âWhat?' said Mordonna.
âHold on,' said the Sheman, wiping the magnifying glass on her robes. âOh no. I was wrong. There was a tea leaf on the lens. The omens are good. No problem. Seven children, well-fitting tights and happily ever after.'
âA tea leaf?' said Nerlin.
âSeven children?' said Mordonna. âThere goes my figure.'
Cliché, Stain and Ooze walked across town until they stood at the edge of the forest. One of the reasons the three secret agents had seven stars was their extreme dedication to their jobs.
19
This fanatical commitment had led Stain to have himself genetically modified. He had had his nose replaced with a bloodhound's nose, which meant he could follow anyone almost anywhere simply by sniffing one of their socks.
20
The Chancellor had given him one of Mordonna's eyelashes, which were normally sold in the castle gift shop for three gold sovereigns each and involved a very quiet ghost plucking them out while Mordonna was asleep.
21
They also had one of Queen Scratchrot's spare toes that she kept in a jar in the bathroom and had forgotten to pack. Cliché held the two objects to his nose and sniffed. Then he got down on all fours and sniffed some more.
âWhy are you doing that?' said Stain.
âI would've thought it was obvious,' said Cliché. âI'm trying to find where they went.'
âBut we've been told they went into the forest.'
âAnd there's only the one path,' Ooze added.
âWell, I know,' said Cliché. âBut we might have been given false information.'
âWe have a photo of them standing right here at the edge of the forest, and another of them just up there,' said Stain, pointing to the path.
âIt could be a fake,' said Cliché. âYou can do anything with computers nowadays.'
âGo on, admit it,' said Stain. âYou just like sniffing things.'
âEspecially girls' eyelashes,' sniggered Ooze.
It was a miracle that the three spies had any stars, because this was how they carried on all the time. Creeping up slowly and silently on someone was simply impossible for them. Time after time they had found the person they were looking for, crept up behind them and then given themselves away by bickering like sparrows.
âDid you bring the sandwiches?' Cliché asked as they vanished into the trees.
âI thought you were bringing the sandwiches,' said Stain.
âI brought them last time,' said Cliché.
Soon they were completely lost, which, considering there was only one path, took some doing.
Feeling safe in the Valley of the Sages and Other Herbs, with the Sheman's blizzard protecting them, the exhausted runaways decided to take the opportunity for a rest. Neurotic George was convinced he had altitude sickness and went and hid behind a tree. Even Mordonna and Nerlin, who wanted to get away as quickly as possible, agreed they would take a power-nap, which is like forty winks but half as long and with no winking.
When they woke up, the Sheman was in deep conversation with a pair of budgies.
22
âMy spies Cassandra and Clint tell me,' the Sheman reported, âthat the King has sent three secret agents after you. As we speak they are lost in the forest.'
âHow can they get lost in the forest?' said Vessel. âThere's only one path.'
âI arranged to have it moved a bit,' said the Sheman.
âShouldn't you have a creature of the night like an owl or a vampire bat spying for you?' said Mordonna. âBudgies aren't very cool, are they?'
âExactly,' said the Sheman. âNo one would suspect a couple of budgies flitting about. Besides, they speak a lot better than owls. I mean, have you ever tried to talk to an owl? They only know two words â âtwit' and âtwoo' â and one of
them
doesn't mean anything.'
âWho's a pretty spy?' said one of the budgies and the pair flew off to see what the three secret agents were up to.
âAs you know, there are but two roads out of Transylvania Waters â west to Transylvania and north to Russia,' said the Sheman. âNot surprisingly, the King has posted guards at each border crossing, and on every road to the border he has secret agents bribed with offers of great wealth.'
âHe doesn't have any great wealth,' said the Queen. âHe's useless, like every other king. His only talent is to squander the treasures his forefathers gathered.
I've
got all the King's gold in my handbag and teeth.'
âThe common people don't know that,' said the Sheman. âAnyway, I think this “great wealth” is more along the lines of getting to stay alive rather than getting their heads chopped off.'
âYes, that sounds like Grumpyguts. If he gets to the end of the week without turning someone into an Export Burger he gets in a really bad mood,' said the Queen.
âMother, he's always in a really bad mood,' said Mordonna.
âNo, I mean a
really
bad mood,' said the Queen. âHe presses kittens in the pages of the seven-hundred volume Great Encyclopedia, pulls the heads off daisies, ties spiders' legs in knots and laughs at whippets with a really nasty expression on his face.'
23
âThere is one other road â though to call it a road is stretching the definition,' continued the Sheman. âIt is the route my fellow shamans and other refugees have taken to escape the King's persecution â the Sanctuary Trail. It travels east.'
âBut there's just the Himalayas in the East,' said Mordonna.
âYes, but that is your only way of escape,' the Sheman explained. âYou must go up into the mountains and through Tibet and China.'
âCan we go back and say goodbye to everyone?' Nerlin asked. âI mean, I never said a proper leaving-the-country-forever goodbye to my mum and dad. I just said a popping-down-to-the-shops-for-a-newspaper-and-a-bag-of-lollies sort of goodbye.'
âNo, you cannot go back,' said the Sheman. âThe Queen's spies tell my spies the three spies are hacking through the forest. The King has been told and has already killed two spies for failing to watch the Queen's spies. They have been beheaded and chopped into little pieces and fed to the whippets.'
âThe whippets will like that,' said the Queen. âThey like minced spies.'
âYou must leave now, before nightfall,' said the Sheman, âI will send one of my budgies along to show you the way.'
âShouldn't we wait until the blizzard has died down?' said Nerlin. âYou can hardly see your hand in front of your face out there.'
âWhat blizzard?' said the Sheman, clicking her fingers behind her back.
âOutside,' said Nerlin. âIt's blowing a hurricane.'
âNo, I don't think so.'
Nerlin went to the front of the cave, and sure enough, there was no sign of the blizzard that had been raging a few minutes before. There wasn't even a single snowflake left. The magical daylight of a summer evening filled the valley again and George had come out from behind his tree to happily browse the perfect grass and the big red flowers.
âI don't know what's in these poppies,' he said, âbut they are delicious.'
âWe have to go,' said the Queen.
âI might have known it,' said George. âSoon as I get somewhere nicer than anywhere else in the world, we have to go.'
âNot that way,' said the Sheman as the donkey turned back towards the bridge. âFollow Cassandra.'
The black budgie sat on George's head and pointed with her wing. Every time the donkey turned in the wrong direction, she pecked him and squawked. They passed six deserted shaman caves. At the seventh, the budgie perched on a twig and pointed.
âIn there,' she said. âBye.'
âIs that it?' said Mordonna. âI thought you were supposed to show us the way.'
âI just did,' said Cassandra and flew off.
âI don't like it,' said George. âSo it must be the right place.'
At the back of the cave a steep tunnel climbed right up into the heart of the mountain and, hours later, came out the other side. Now they
were
in
snow, mountains covered in the stuff for as far as the eye could see. Up here, the air was as thin and cold as a witch's broomstick.
24
âNow I really don't like it,' said George. âDo I look like a polar bear? I should be in fields of soft grass, not this frozen wasteland.'
âStop moaning and watch where you're going,' snapped the Queen.
They had come out on a narrow, slippery, icy ledge above a sheer drop that disappeared into mist far below them on the right. On their left the mountain was a sheer wall of ice that disappeared into clouds above them. An eerie, mournful howling drifted down from the mountain tops.
âWhat is that?' said Nerlin. âIt sounds hungry.'
âThat is the Abominable Snow Person,' said Vessel, âand it is probably hungry. So would you be with nothing but abominable snow to eat.'
âCome on, George, let's go,' said the Queen.
âYou've got to be kidding,' said George, who had just discovered a brand new word. âI'm not opening my eyes for anyone. Just tell me when we're on flat ground again.'
The word George had learnt was âvertigo' and he had lots and lots of it. The Queen, realising the donkey couldn't see where he was going and could plunge them to their destruction at any moment, slid off his back and climbed up onto Vessel's shoulders.
âMy lady,' said Vessel, âI too have my eyes closed.'
âOh, for goodness sake, the pair of you, just don't faint whatever you do,' said the Queen, climbing down. âVessel, you hold the donkey's tail and I'll pull it along by its left ear.'
She led them down into the mist. Nerlin, at the back of the line, said very quietly that he felt he should really be in front as he was young and fearless. Fortunately, he said it too quietly for anyone else to hear.
As they walked, the ground cracked beneath their feet, sending huge chunks of ice and rock crashing down into the abyss. As they entered the mist the path got wider and the howling grew fainter. At last they reached the valley floor.
âYou can open your eyes now,' said Mordonna. âWe're on flat ground.'
âAre you sure?' said the Queen.
âYes, can't you see?'
âNo, I had my eyes shut too.'
âSo did I,' said Nerlin.
George opened his eyes and groaned.
âYeah, yeah, we know,' said Nerlin. âYou don't like it. Well, join the party.'
âListen, everyone. I don't want to make a fuss or anything,' said Mordonna, âbut I'm going to have a baby.'
âCongratulations, my lady,' said Vessel. âThe Sheman's predictions are coming to pass.' Turning to the Queen, he added, âIs it not wonderful, my great and glorious queen? Is it not just like Romeo and Juliet? Is it not just like
West Side Story
? Is it not just like Barry and Isolda?'
The Queen patted him on the arm and put her arms round Mordonna.
âI thought you had put on a bit of weight, darling,' said the Queen, âbut I didn't say anything in case it was just a thick vest.'
âNo, mother, it's a baby,' said Mordonna, âand I should say that not only am I going to have a baby, I'm actually going to have it very shortly.'