The Last Ever After (21 page)

Read The Last Ever After Online

Authors: Soman Chainani

“Handle it? I'm the one rescuing Sophie, not you!”

“You can't even say your own
name
!”

“I'm the prince and you're the princess and rescuing our friend is
my
job. Just ask Merlin!” Tedros yelled, practically a shriek—

“Yes, now you've got it, boy,” Merlin spouted, not looking as he trimmed his beard with a thorn. “Sound perfectly female now.”

Tedros gaped at him.

Agatha burst into howls. “Hahahahahahahahahaha—”

Tedros tackled her.

“Boys can't hit girls!” Agatha yelled, grabbing Tedros in a headlock.

“Lucky for you I'm not a boy!” Tedros shouted, flinging dirt into Agatha's face—

A spell zapped them both, ricocheting them to opposite trees.

“This is the future King and Queen of Camelot? This is whom we've entrusted with our future?” Merlin lashed, no longer the friendly old guide. “My spies and I have risked everything so that you may rescue your best friend and find a happy ending that will save Good, old and new. Countless lives are in your childish, untrained hands, least of all yours, only you're too busy argle-bargling and fiddle-faddling like two monkeys fighting over a spot to poo. So from now until it's time to go through those gates, I don't want to hear another
word
.”

Agatha and Tedros looked down sullenly, before Tedros' peeked up. “Then can I be a boy again?”

Merlin gave him a black scowl and Tedros looked back down.

“Listen, both of you. My spies will arrive in less than five minutes to break you into school,” the wizard continued. “With guards on the roofs, fairies on the rounds, and who knows what else lurking about, you'll have mere seconds to cross these gates without being caught.”

“But we still need a teacher to unlock them, Merlin,” said Agatha.

“Agatha's right,” said Tedros. “The gates only opened for us first year because Dovey gave me permission to be in the Woods.”

“Trust me, my dears, I am smarter than the both of you,” said Merlin. “Now once you safely arrive in the School for Evil, the two of you will split up on two missions. One of you will go to the School for Old and find Excalibur. The other will remain in the School for New and rescue Sophie. As to
which
one of you will rescue Sophie—”

“Me!” his charges shouted.

Merlin sighed. “Uma did warn me this would happen. Nevertheless, the one to rescue Sophie should be the one who knows her best.” He cleared his throat and pulled what looked like a pack of purple playing cards from his star-covered hat. The wizard peered down his spectacles at the first. “What is Sophie's favorite food?”

“Cucumbers!” Agatha and Tedros yelled.

Merlin muttered and shuffled to the next card. “What does Sophie use to wash her face?”

“Beetroot!” the Evers overlapped.

“What color is Sophie's fingerglow?”

“Hot pink!”

“What position does Sophie sleep in?”

“On her back!”

“What scent is Sophie's perfume—”

“Lavender vanilla patchouli!”

Merlin tugged at his moustache. “It seems switching sexes has improved your brain capacities. Perhaps you should stay this way permanently.” He shouted into his hat like a bullhorn: “
HARDER
, PLEASE.”

The hat ejected a single card that Merlin fumbled and caught. “Dearest me,” he said, squinting hard at it. “This seems rather unfair given Agatha practically grew up with the girl, but all right. Which of you knew Sophie's mother's name when you were on Necro Ridge?”

Agatha's stubbly cheeks grayed.

Tedros' girly face grinned.

“A twist in the tale, indeed! And so it seems
Essa
will rescue Sophie from the School for New,” the wizard said to Tedros, before turning to Agatha, “which means Edgar will go to the School for Old and find Excalibur. Now listen to me closely. We'll have only one chance for you to escape the school upon completing your missions. We must meet here at midnight,
precisely
midnight, in this very spot—Tedros with Sophie; Agatha with Excalibur—and I'll whisk the three of you to safety. Understood?”

“What about Sophie destroying the ring?” Tedros asked.

“For the last time,
please
use your girl voice, Tedros—”

“What about Sophie destroying the ring?” Tedros squawked.

Merlin rubbed at his ears. “I'm afraid destroying the ring is too much to ask of both you and Sophie for one night, my child. Tonight, your duty is to convince Sophie to escape the young School Master and follow you to a place where he will not find her. I am well aware gaining Sophie's trust would be far easier in your princely form, but remember: as long as you are in the wrong bodies, the Storian ceases to write your whereabouts. Once you return to Tedros' body, however, the Storian will tell the School Master exactly where you are and his entire school will murder you on sight. So if you plan on staying alive beyond tonight, don't do anything
stupid
.”

Tedros blanched as Merlin turned to Agatha. “As for you, my girl (or my boy, since we may as well be accurate) you must find a way to break into the School for Old all on your own, as difficult as it might be. Tedros' sword is hidden somewhere in that castle and it is your duty to steal it back. Remember, we cannot destroy Sophie's ring nor kill the School Master without that sword—” Merlin's eyes thinned. “Agatha?”

She was still glaring sullenly at her girl-faced prince.

“Agatha, my spies will be here any second and we can't have you pouting over your assignment like a spoiled cat,” said Merlin.

Agatha noticed Tedros' gloating grin. She shoved down her disappointment, determined not to give him the satisfaction. “Look, I'll find the sword, but you still haven't told us who these spies even ar—”

But now she and Tedros saw three ravens flapping out of green fog over the bay, one thin, one fat, and one albino-white.
All three were hopeless flyers, with the albino zagging off-track, the fat one snarfing chocolate worms, and the thin one screeching a signal to dive before all three birds crashed into each other and plummeted like failed parachutes into a bush behind the gates.

“I can't find the uniforms!” Anadil's voice croaked from inside the bush. “I left them right here—”

“Dot's sitting on 'em,” Hester's voice grouched.

“Was wondering why the ground's so soft,” Dot's voice wisped.

“Unmogrify on three,” said Hester. “One . . . two—”

“With you watching?” Dot gasped.

“As if we
want
to see you naked, you idiot!” Hester yelled. “Three!”

A burst of red, green, and blue light exploded from the bush as it rocked side to side, with flashes of skin through leaves.

“I think this officially makes us a coven,” Hester's voice grumped.

“Has someone got my underpants?” Dot clucked.

“Let no one question my allegiance to Evil because there is
nothing
more Evil than what I'm seeing right now,” snarled Anadil.

All at once, the three witches stood up in the bush, covered in pine needles and fully dressed in Evil's uniforms. Through the spiked gates, they saw Edgar and Essa blinking at them.

“I take that back,” said Anadil.


You're
the spies?” Tedros blurted in his deep voice (Merlin frowned). “But I thought you were Evil!”

“And I thought you were a boy. Things aren't so black and white are they?” Hester huffed. “Merlin, fairy patrol will be here in two minutes. We need to break them in
now
.”

“Where's the wand then?” said the wizard, grimacing at Hester through the gate.

Hester stared at Anadil and the two black rats peeking out of her pockets. “The wand isn't here, yet?”

Anadil went a shade whiter (if that was possible). So did the rats. “H-h-he was s-s-supposed to arrive before us—”

“One minute until fairy patrol,” Dot warned, listening to jangling chinks in the distance.

“And now we have an even worse problem,” said Agatha, big boy eyes narrowed across the bay.

Everyone spun and glimpsed Sophie's small shadow through the mist, tottering down the Great Lawn, head bent to the ground, as if searching for something in the grass.

“She'll see us if the mist clears,” Tedros fretted, voice somewhere between Essa's and his own.

“Thirty seconds until fairies,” Dot said, the ugly jangling growing louder.

“Anadil, we need that wand,” Merlin pressed.

For the first time, Agatha saw a crack in the wizard's poise. Hester, too, normally unsinkable, was blotched red, haranguing Anadil.

“You told Merlin it could find anything . . . that it'd find Dovey wherever she's imprisoned and get her my message . . . you promised it'd bring back her wand in time!”

“It's a talent, not a guarantee,” Anadil said weakly, her two
black rats looking just as uptight.

“Fifteen seconds!” said Dot.

But now there were green fairy flashes from the east, flitting along the bank . . . while green mist receded along the south shore, about to reveal three Evil witches and a famous Good wizard, breaking in two strangers at the gates . . .

“Five seconds!” Dot cried—

“There!”
Anadil hissed, pointing behind her.

Everyone whirled to see a white mouse hurtling out of fog, Professor Dovey's wand in its mouth. Only as the mouse scuttled towards them, wheezing and sweating, Agatha saw its body engorging, its white fur blackening, its front teeth sharpening, its black eyes reddening, until the white mouse was no longer a mouse at all, but a rabid black rat charging straight for its master. With a last flail of effort, it flying-leapt towards Anadil, flinging the wand through the air in seeming slow motion. The albino witch caught it and whirled to the school gates, stabbing the wand tip at the glowing spikes . . .

The gates parted magically, opening a thin gap.

“Thanks, fairy godmother,” Anadil sighed in relief. “Wherever you are.”

She tossed Dovey's wand to Merlin and the wizard jammed Agatha and Tedros through before the bars slammed tight behind the intruders. Together, Agatha and Tedros swiveled to see Merlin on the other side of the deadly gates.

“Midnight,”
said the wizard. “Do not fail.”

Then he pulled off his hat and jumped through its brim
like a genie into a lamp, before the hat vanished too with a thundering crack.

For Agatha and Tedros, being trapped in a witches' dorm room was a lot like being trapped in a house on Graves Hill.

The first few hours they simply didn't speak. Each claimed a bed—Agatha took Hester's, Tedros' took Dot's—with Anadil's between them like a castle moat. Neither even acknowledged the other, partly because they were embarrassed by their new bodies, but more because both had a lot of thinking to do. Hugging a moldy pillow, Agatha mulled every possible path into the School for Old—Halfway Bridge, sewers between castles, tree tunnels in the Clearing, or a long slog around the bay—while Tedros, charred pillow over his face, racked his brain for ways to get Sophie alone.

Soon Agatha heard neighbors returning after sessions, then complaining about dinner (stewed sardines and cabbage, she gathered, leaving her extra thankful for Merlin's magic hat), and before she knew it, the wintry light had dimmed through the window, melting into nighttime. Agatha lit Hester's claw-shaped candle on the nightstand and pored over some of the witch's books (
Advanced Spells for Suffering
,
Why Villains Fail
,
Frequent Witch Mistakes
) hoping she'd find something useful. Tedros, meanwhile, was scribbling at Dot's desk in the dark, balling up pages every ten seconds, breaking quills in frustration, and cursing loudly in his boy voice.

Agatha ignored him and focused on her task. Her best bet was Halfway Bridge, she thought. It's how she'd broken into
both the School for Evil and the School for Boys. Surely she could find her way into the School for Old the same wa—

Tedros broke another quill.

“Oh for God's sake. What
are
you writing?”

Tedros slouched, like a maiden failing to spin straw into gold. “Figured I should write down all the things I want to say to Sophie, but there's so much I don't know where to start.”

“You'll think of something,” Agatha grumbled, nose still in her book.

“If you haven't noticed, I'm crap under pressure.”

Agatha glanced up at him, her prince's earnest, puppy-dog eyes blinking through his girl's face. Strangely, he'd never looked more adorable.

“What happened to ‘I'll know what to do when the times comes?'” she asked.

“I know what to do when I'm with
you
. Never really thought I'd be rescuing her on my own. No matter how much I acted like it.”

Agatha blushed and went back to her book. “You've never been at a loss for words when it comes to Sophie. You flirted with her when she was a girl . . . when she was a boy . . . I'm sure you'll be charming her in no time.”

“I was
me
both of those times. This is different.” Tedros stretched his arms and climbed onto Anadil's middle bed. “Besides, I already have a princess. Even though she picks fights with me for no reason.”

“And I have a prince who doesn't listen to me and always thinks he's right,” Agatha snapped.

“Because you act like you don't need me half the time.”

“Because you act like I'm supposed to do what you say!”

“Because you're always trying to be the
prince
!”

“Well, I don't have the faintest clue how to
be
a princess!” Agatha barked—

“OBVIOUSLY!”
Tedros roared. “WHY DO YOU THINK I LIKE YOU SO MUCH!” He rolled onto his other side.

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