Bang Goes a Troll

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Authors: David Sinden,Matthew Morgan,Guy Macdonald,Jonny Duddle

BOOK: Bang Goes a Troll
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David Sinden Matthew Morgan Guy Macdonald

An Awfully Beastly Business

Bang Goes a Troll

Illustrated by Jonny Duddle

This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

ALADDIN

An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division

1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com

First Aladdin edition September 2009

Text copyright © 2009 by David Sinden, Matthew Morgan, and Guy Macdonald

Illustrations copyright © 2009 by Jonny Duddle

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

ALADDIN is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc., and related logo is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-866-506-1949 or [email protected]. The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.

Designed by Tom Daly

The text of this book was set in Bembo.

The illustrations for this book were rendered in pen and ink.
Manufactured in the United States of America

2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

Library of Congress Control Number 2008942949
ISBN 978-1-4169-8651-5
ISBN 978-1-4169-9669-9 (eBook)

Tonight,

look up at the moon.

Look at it closely.

Stare at it.

Now ask yourself:

Am I feeling brave?

Chapter 1

HIGH ON A SNOWY MOUNTAINTOP, A BLIZZARD
was howling. A tall man in a long fur coat staggered knee-deep through the snow, glancing into the mouths of caves. He gripped his high fur collar, shielding his face from the wind, and peered down into a hole in the ground. “This is the one,” he muttered. “Blud! Bone! Over here!”

“Coming, Baron Marackai.”

Two men were trudging toward him through the snow. One was small and was clutching a rifle. The other was big with a frosted beard and was dragging a long black hose.

“Stick the hose down here, Bone,” Baron Marackai ordered.

The big man Bone poked the end of the hose into the hole in the ground. He twisted a nozzle and thick black oil started pouring out into the mountain.

The three men waited silently as oil glugged from the hose. Snowflakes were swirling around them, whitening their hair and clothes.

“It's fr-fr-freezing up here,” the small man muttered. The rifle in his hands was rattling and a snotty icicle hung from his nose. He glanced down the mountainside, his eyes following the hose to an oil tanker and a cattle truck parked on an icy track. “Can I w-w-wait in the tr-truck, sir?”

“Stay where you are, Blud, you sniveling runt,” Baron Marackai ordered.

“Yes, B-Baron M-Marackai. Sorry, B-Baron M-Marackai,” the small man muttered.

The Baron turned to Bone and stamped his serpent-skin boot. “Hurry up!” he yelled.

Bone looked down into the hole. “Nearly finished, sir.” The hose gurgled and he shook black oily drips from its end.

“Is that the whole tankerfull?”

“It's all in there, sir.”

“Splendid,” the Baron said. “Blud, pass me the matches. It's time to smoke out the trolls.”

Blud fumbled in his jacket pocket and handed Baron Marackai a crumpled box of matches.

Baron Marackai struck a match and its flame fizzed, then went out. He tried to strike another but it snapped in two. “These are old matches, Blud!”

“I found them on the reception desk at the hotel,” Blud told him.

“You useless fool,” Baron Marackai muttered. He took the remaining matches from the box and struck them all at once. They sputtered into flame and he dropped them down the hole. There was a whooshing sound as the oil caught fire and flames roared underground. All across the snowy mountain, thick
black smoke began billowing from holes and caves.

“Get ready!” Baron Marackai ordered. He hid behind Bone, using the big man as a human shield. Blud crouched beside him.

“Not you, Blud,” Baron Marackai said. “You're the shooter!” He pushed the small man into the open.

Blud stood shivering in the wind and snow, his eyes darting from left to right as he pointed his rifle from one smoking cave to another.

From inside the mountain came the sounds of underground beasts: growls and squeals, bellows and squawks. Beasts came hurrying from caves, trying to escape the smoke. An ice-bear bounded out into the snow, roaring. A vampire owl flew screeching into the air. A giant wraith spider scurried out, hissing.

“It's the trolls I want!” the Baron shouted.

“There's one!” Bone called.

From a smoking cave, a huge green troll charged out on all fours, swiping the air with its long tusks. It
roared, snorting smoke from its nostrils. The troll saw Blud and stood tall, beating its chest. “Oof! Oof! Oof!”

“Help!” Blud cried.

Baron Marackai peered out from behind Bone, pointing. “Shoot it, you moron!”

Blud aimed his rifle at the troll. His teeth rattled as he squeezed the trigger and fired. A feathered tranquilizer dart shot out and struck the troll on the chest.

The troll stumbled, then toppled to the ground with a thud. It lay in the snow, face down, unconscious.

Blud spun round as another big green troll ran from the mouth of a cave.

“Aim between its eyes!” the Baron shouted.

Blud fired another tranquilizer dart, hitting the troll on the arm. It tumbled into the snow. Another troll burst out and Blud fired again. The feathered dart hit the troll on the nose.

“Behind you!” Bone called.

Two more trolls charged out from the smoke-filled mountain and Blud fired twice. The trolls fell, one on top of the other.

Troll after troll burst from the caves. There was oofing and roaring, and the whizz and crack of tranquilizer darts firing from the rifle. One by one they toppled into the snow.

Slowly, the mountain fell silent and the smoke began to clear. More than twenty trolls lay tranquilized and unconscious on the ground.

“Splendid!” Baron Marackai said, stepping out from behind Bone.

He walked through the snow to one of the trolls and kicked it with his serpent-skin boot. “Sleeping like a baby,” he said. “Bone, pick out five young ones and load them on to the cattle truck.”

Bone trudged over to inspect the tranquilized trolls. “How do I tell which are the young ones, sir? They all look big and ugly.”

“The young ones have the softest skin,” Baron Marackai told him.

Bone knelt down and pinched a troll's cheek, tugging its thick rubbery skin.

Blud skittered over to the Baron. “What are we going to do with them, sir?” he asked.

The Baron rubbed his hands together. “We shall use them in the Predatron,” he said.

“The Predatron!” Blud said excitedly.

“These stupid beasts won't stand a chance.”

“But what if we get caught, sir?” Blud asked. The small man glanced shiftily from side to side. “What if you-know-who find out?”

“I have prepared for that,” Baron Marackai said, grinning.

The Baron stroked the small stump of flesh on his right hand where his little finger was missing. He held his hand up. “Now, repeat after me. Death to the RSPCB!”

Blud and Bone turned down their little fingers
then held up their right hands. “Death to the RSCPC!” they said.

“The RS
PCB
, you numbskulls!”

The Baron picked up two handfuls of snow and pushed them in the men's faces. “Now load those trolls on the truck! I have important business to attend to.”

Blud and Bone wiped the snow from their eyes and watched curiously as the Baron strode off across the mountain. He was peering into the caves.

“Where are you?” the Baron called. “Come to Marackai.”

He glanced over at a small hole about twenty yards away. The head of a creature with pointy ears and large white eyes was poking from it.

The Baron waved. “Coo-ee!”

The creature ducked as Baron Marackai ran toward it.

The Baron reached into the hole and pulled the creature out by its neck. “Well, well, what have we
here?” he said, screwing up his nose.

It was a little gray goblin. It was dirty and wrinkly and wriggled in the Baron's grasp. In its bony hand the goblin was clutching a small black bat.

“Don't hurt me,” the goblin pleaded, its fat snout twitching.

The Baron smiled, his face twisting like a rotten apple core. “Spying, are you, goblin?”

The goblin's white eyes blinked. “Help!” it called.

“There's no one to help you here, you revolting little creature,” the Baron said. “The RSPCB is miles away!”

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