The Phredde Collection (17 page)

Read The Phredde Collection Online

Authors: Jackie French

Tags: #fiction

BOOK: The Phredde Collection
8.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘What use would they be against a ghost!’ I whispered.

‘There’s no such thing as ghosts,’ whispered Phredde. But her voice didn’t sound too sure.

I stared at her. ‘What do you mean there’s no such thing as ghosts?’

‘Well, there isn’t, is there?’

‘But…but you’re a phaery! And you believe in trolls and elves and vampires…’

‘Trolls and phaeries and vampires are real,’ Phredde pointed out. ‘Ghosts are just pretend.’ But her voice was still a bit trembly.

Clink, clink, clink…
the sound was just outside the door by now.

‘Haven’t you ever heard of haunted castles?’ I demanded.

‘Sure. But only in books or movies. Not really.’

‘How do you know this isn’t a haunted castle?’

‘Because it isn’t.’

Phredde still didn’t sound very sure.

Clink, clink, clink…
The sound was heading away down the corridor now.

Bruce hopped to his feet. ‘This isn’t solving anything,’ he croaked in an ‘I’m a male lets get all this sorted out’ type of voice. (It drives me mad when my brother Mark does that.) ‘We’ve got to catch whatever it is in the act!’

He hopped over to the door and opened it (with his tongue of course, being a frog. I made a mental note to use my hanky next time I touched the door knob—I don’t see why Bruce has to be a frog ALL the time).

Phredde and I tiptoed after him. We peered out into the corridor.

Of course the clinking had stopped again. And there was nothing moving in the corridor.

Nothing at all.

‘It’s…it’s just the same!’ I whispered.

Phredde gave a startled shriek, then tried to muffle it. ‘No it isn’t!’ she gasped. ‘Look!’

She pointed at the suit of armour down the corridor.

‘What about it?’ I hissed. ‘It was there last time we looked.’

‘But it’s MOVED!’ cried Phredde softly.

I blinked. So it had. The armour had been right down one end of the corridor last time, and now it was right down the other end.

‘That’s what it was!’ croaked Bruce.
‘Clink, clink, clink…
it was the noise of the metal armour on the floor.’

‘But suits of armour don’t walk by themselves,’ Phredde protested.

‘They do if they’re ghosts,’ I informed her.

‘There’s no such thing as ghosts.’ Phredde’s voice sounded even more uncertain. ‘There has to be someone in it. Someone playing a silly joke. Maybe Edwin from school—he could have snuck in without anyone seeing him. He knew we were going to have horror movies tonight because I ran into him in the video store.’

Well, that made sense. It was just the sort of thing Edwin would do, try to terrify us by pretending to be a ghost, which was why Phredde had turned him into a soccer ball last term, till Mrs Olsen made her turn him back again.

‘Come on,’ whispered Phredde.

I don’t know why we were all still whispering, if the ghost was only Edwin. But it seemed the right thing to do.

So we tiptoed down the hall…well, I tiptoed, Phredde flew, and Bruce hopped—till we were right in front of the suit of armour.

It looked just like a normal suit of armour. Not that I’ve seen many suits of armour—not really examined them anyway.

But it looked just the way I’d have thought a suit of armour SHOULD look.

Well, the only way we were going to be able to tell if there was anyone inside was to lift the visor—that’s the sort of door thing that covers the eyes.

‘Who’s going to lift the visor?’ I muttered.

‘You,’ croaked Bruce softly. ‘My tongue can’t reach that far.’

Phredde nodded. I doubt that Phredde’s tiny fingers could have managed a heavy metal visor either.

So I tiptoed forward, and lifted the visor…

…and shrieked, and dropped it again.

‘What is it!’ cried Phredde.

‘Nothing!’ I yelled. ‘There’s nothing in there!’

‘Then why did you scream?’ croaked Bruce reasonably.

‘Because don’t you see? If that’s not Edwin in there, it has to be a ghost. You can’t SEE ghosts. That’s the whole point.’

‘There’s no such thing as ghosts,’ insisted Phredde, more uncertainly than ever.

‘Well, if you don’t believe me, you have a look,’ I yelled. ‘There’s nothing in there!’

Phredde bit her lip. Her wings were fluttering madly, the way they always do when she’s upset. ‘Okay,’ she whispered.

There was a faint PING!, and the visor was magicked up, and Phredde fluttered over to it, and peered inside. Being Phredde of course, she could fit her whole head inside the visor, so she had a really good look all the way down.

‘Well?’ I demanded, as she fluttered out again.

Phredde’s face was faintly green, a bit like Bruce’s
face would have been if he’d happened to have been a green frog, instead of a
Crinia signifera.

‘Nothing,’ she whispered. ‘Nothing at all.’

‘Told you so.’ I said.

And then we all looked at each other. What were we going to do now?

‘I don’t want to live in a haunted castle,’ said Phredde tremulously. ‘We’ll have to move out…’

‘Maybe it’s just the suit of armour that’s haunted,’ offered Bruce helpfully. ‘Maybe if you got rid of the armour…’

‘Come on,’ I said. ‘We need to think about this.’

So we all went back to Phredde’s sitting room, and shut the door tightly, just in case there was a ghost trying to eavesdrop.

I made Phredde magic up some more pizza—Mrs Olsen says carbohydrates are good for shock, though as she’s a vampire I don’t know how she knows for sure. Is blood a carbohydrate? I must ask her.

So we sat there munching, and listening to the sounds of the elfin orchestra floating up from their toadstools, and the phaery laughter, and Uncle Mordred’s great big dragon laugh, and it started to seem so nice and NORMAL that I half began to think we’d been worrying about nothing.

After all we HAD been watching a horror movie, and the light HAD been out. Maybe we’d made a mistake, and the suit of armour had always been down that end of the corridor.

Maybe the clinking sound had just been from the plumbing, if phaery castles have plumbing.

Or maybe it was a possum on the roof, not that possums usually go…

Clink, clink, clink…

Phredde froze with her pizza halfway to her mouth. I swallowed mine in shock, and started to choke, and by the time I’d got it heading down to my stomach where it belonged, Bruce was halfway to the door.

‘Come on!’ he croaked.

‘Come where?’ I choked.

‘We’ve got to catch it in the act!’

Well, I didn’t see why we had to catch it in the act at all, but I wasn’t going to be left out.

So I dashed across the room, pizza crumbs bouncing off my T-shirt, and Phredde zoomed after me in racing pigeon mode, and I opened the door (which wasn’t as slimy after Bruce’s tongue as I’d expected).

And there was the suit of armour, clinking down the corridor.

It was heading away from us this time, not back to where it came from.

‘After it!’ yelled Bruce, leaping down the corridor.

‘Stop!’ shrieked Phredde, wings flapping like a butterfly gone berserk.

Well, I wasn’t too sure why she wanted it to stop—as far as I was concerned it was welcome to go as far as it liked, and preferably further, just as long as it was a long way from any castle I was likely to visit.

But after all, Phredde’s my best friend—and even Bruce isn’t bad, for a frog—so I went racing after it too.

The suit of armour wasn’t so much
clink clink clinking
now as
wham wham whomping.
I mean that armour was going FAST!

Down the corridor, down the stairs…Bruce was hopping like he was practising for the froggy long
jump and Phredde’s wings were going so fast they looked like a fan set on maximum speed.

I was getting out of breath, but still the armour went on running. It was waving its sword around now too.

Across the entrance hall, then out the front door. The armour gleamed in the floodlighting…

Clink clink clink…

Over the drawbridge, through the gardens at the side of the castle. That ghost sure was fit, carrying all that armour.

The bushes grew thickly near the back garden, and for a moment we lost sight of it.

‘There he is!’ shrieked Bruce, leaping over a garden seat.

‘Catch him!’ screamed Phredde, as the suit of armour dashed past the elfin orchestra on their toadstools and into the crowd of phaery dancers.

The orchestra stopped playing, and a couple of the elves hid under the toadstools. The dancers stopped dancing.

But the suit of armour kept running, its sword waving high in the air.

‘Yield, dragon!’ it yelled suddenly. It had this really deep voice.

And Uncle Mordred looked up and cried ‘Never!’ in this even deeper voice.

Everyone sort of stepped back as the suit of armour dashed at Uncle Mordred, and Uncle Mordred put his head down and charged at the armour.

And suddenly they met CRASH in the middle of the phaery green, and both of them went tumbling over and over and lay still.

‘Mordred!’ shrieked Phredde’s mum. ‘Are you all right?’

Uncle Mordred picked himself up.

‘Of course I’m all right,’ he said testily. ‘Why shouldn’t I be all right? It’s Sir Percival you should be concerned with. I gave him quite a bump there.’

‘Bump yourself,’ said the suit of armour, and suddenly it was taking its helmet off, and there was a KNIGHT inside. Or a knight’s ghost, anyway.

Well, I suppose it was a knight. He looked like a knight ought to. He had grey hair, and a long grey moustache that curled up at the edges and these bright fierce blue eyes. ‘I bumped you,’ insisted the knight, or the ghost, or whatever he was.

‘In your dreams!’ argued Uncle Mordred. ‘You’ve never bumped me in your life.’

‘I have so too,’ began the knight, when Phredde interrupted.

‘Uncle Mordred, how come you know the ghost?’

‘Ghost? What ghost?’ demanded Uncle Mordred.

‘That ghost there.’ I pointed to the knight. ‘When we looked inside the armour ten minutes ago there was no one there.’ I told him. ‘He must have rematerialised again.’

‘Remat what?’ asked the knight.

‘Rematerialised,’ I informed him. ‘It means you became visible again.’

The knight blinked. ‘But I was never invisible to start with,’ he protested in his deep voice.

‘But when we looked in the armour…’ began Bruce.

The knight blushed. ‘Oh, then,’ he muttered. ‘Just had to stop off at the bathroom, what? Bloke can’t go to the bathroom with his armour on. It rusts, you know.’

‘Oh,’ said Bruce.

‘But what were you doing in the corridor?’ I demanded.

Uncle Mordred gave his dragon chuckle. ‘Waiting to pounce on me, I imagine,’ he chortled. ‘Not that it did you much good, did it Percival?’

‘It did indeed,’ argued Sir Percival. ‘I took you by surprise tonight all right.’

‘Me? taken by surprise? You’ve never taken me by surprise in your…’

Phredde’s mum gave a polite cough. ‘Ahem,’ then sent a stern look at her brother. ‘If you two have quite finished interrupting, perhaps we could all get back to our dance.’

So that was the end of that.

The elves came back out from under their toadstools, and the music started again. Uncle Mordred and Sir Percival trotted back to the kitchen, and Uncle Mordred made cocoa, and the five of us sat by the fire in the great hall drinking it.

‘You see Percival and I were at school together,’ explained Uncle Mordred, curling his great tail around himself on the sofa. ‘Even at school I was fascinated by dragons.’

‘And I was fascinated by knights,’ put in Sir Percival, stroking his sword absently with one gloved hand.

‘So naturally we became friends with so much in common. Because after all, what good is a knight if he doesn’t have a dragon to hunt, and it gets pretty boring being a dragon if there’s no knight to pursue you.’

‘So we’ve been doing it for years,’ said Sir Percival. ‘I try to take him by surprise. That’s what I was doing in
the upstairs corridor—spying on Mordred. That’s how I caught him unawares.’

‘You did not!’ roared Uncle Mordred.

‘I did too…’ began Sir Percival heatedly, lifting his sword.

‘I prefer being a frog,’ said Bruce suddenly.

Well, if he meant to change the subject, it really worked.

Within a few minutes the three of them were arguing the relative merits of being a frog, a dragon or a knight, and Bruce was telling them all sorts of facts I’m sure they didn’t want to know about, gill development and loss of habitat, and Sir Percival was explaining about the knightly code of chivalry and Uncle Mordred was booming about sustained fire production and how hard it was to get really good coal to chew any more.

Phredde glanced at me and I glanced at her.

Then we tiptoed back upstairs and watched
The Vampire’s Curse
and
Saturday Night Werewolf
and all the rest of them by ourselves. And no ghost interrupted us.

In fact it was all pretty uneventful around our way, until Phredde’s mum caught a cold and crashed the world’s computer system.

But that’s another story.

Aaaaaaahhhtchooooooo!

You know, it’s funny how little things can lead to great big things…

Like the time I found a grubby Band-aid and it led to Phredde and me being chased by a mummy. (No, not my mummy, an ancient Egyptian one. It’d been dead for 5,000 years and boy, did it smell like it. But I can’t tell you about that yet, ’cause I’m still trying to work out how to explain it to Mum. Parents get stressed over the least little thing, sometimes, and it wasn’t like the mummy caught us. Well, not for long anyway.)

And there was the time that Phredde’s mum decided to do the ‘Introduction to Computers’ course down at the local tech with my mum, and she almost destroyed the world.

You know how parents get—I was zipping around on email and so was Phredde (we’ve even got our own email address) so Mum and the Phaery Splendifera decided it was time they learnt about computers too. You know, sometimes I think that generation doesn’t have the right sort of brains to be technical.

Come to think of it, though, I suppose this story REALLY started when Phredde got a cold. (That’s the problem with stories—they sort of sneak up on you so you don’t know that one’s begun till it’s over.)

Phredde and I were sitting up our tree in the schoolyard, waiting for the volcano to explode and discussing whether Bruce would look better if he was a green frog instead of a brown one, or maybe even pink with purple spots—when Phredde said ‘Ahhhhtchooo!’ and half the leaves fell off the tree.

For such a small phaery she’s got an awfully big sneeze.

‘Bless you,’ I said.

‘Dank you,’ said Phredde, reaching for her hanky.

Of course she didn’t have one—I mean, unless you’ve got one of those mums or dads who are always shoving a hanky in your pockets, who carries a hanky with them all the time?

So Phredde went PING! and there was a small bright purple hanky (to match her hair) just floating in front of her nose.

Phredde grabbed it and blew, and I said, ‘I think you’ve got a cold.’

‘Bodder,’ said Phredde.

There was a gentle PING! all around me.

Phredde blew her nose again. The hanky vanished, and Phredde said, ‘Well, that’s got rid of that.’

‘What, the hanky?’ I asked.

‘No, the cold,’ said Phredde carelessly.

I stared. ‘But it takes a week to get over a cold.’

‘Not if you’re a phaery,’ said Phredde smugly. ‘You just give it to something else.’

‘Like who?’ I asked suspiciously, then felt ashamed of myself. Phredde’s my best friend. There’s no way she’d magic me a cold.

‘I gave it to the tree,’ said Phredde.

‘But trees can’t catch colds!’ I protested.

‘I know,’ said Phredde. ‘Trees can’t even sneeze. That’s why it won’t mind that I gave it to it.’

Well, I suppose it made sense if you were a phaery.

‘Why didn’t you just make the cold disappear?’ I asked.

‘You can’t just make things disappear,’ said Phredde seriously. ‘That’s the Law of Conservation of Magic. You have to send them somewhere. Like when I made the dentist disappear that time. She didn’t really DISAPPEAR. I just sent her off to Uluru till after it was my time to see her.’

‘Oh, I see,’ I said. I’d wondered what had happened to the dentist. She had looked a bit sunburnt when she got back…

‘Pru,’ asked Phredde.

‘Mmm?’

‘What’s it like having a cold?’

I blinked. ‘Haven’t you ever had one?’

‘Not for more than a few seconds. I always got rid of it…or Mum got rid of it for me when I was small. Even when I broke my ankle skateboarding Mum gave it to my bicycle.’

‘But bicycles don’t have ankles!’

‘Sure. That’s why it didn’t matter if its ankle was broken.’

Like I told you, phaeries…

‘Well,’ I said, ‘your nose gets gummed up and dribbles so you have to blow it, you sneeze and your
eyes go all pink and so does your nose and you look disgusting.’

‘Oh,’ said Phredde. She considered for a moment. ‘It sounds sort of interesting.’

‘Trust me,’ I said. ‘It’s horrible.’

Phredde shook her head. ‘I bet having a cold is like going to Antarctica. If you HAD to live in Antarctica it’d be horrid, all cold and dry and ice. But if you decided to go there for a holiday it’d be wonderful. You’d see the icebergs and the penguins…’

‘Phredde,’ I said. ‘Sometimes you’re weird.’

‘No I’m not,’ declared Phredde, fluttering her wings stubbornly. ‘I just want to know what having a cold is like. Everyone else has colds! Why not me!’

‘Because you’re a phaery,’ I explained patiently.

‘I just want to be like everyone else,’ insisted Phredde stubbornly.

There was another PING!, and Phredde’s eyes were pink and her nose was dribbling again.

Then with another PING! the purple hanky was back too.

‘Ahhhhtchooo!’ sneezed Phredde happily, and grinned at me.

Then the volcano exploded, and Miss Richards shrieked a bit because some of the lava went through the library window again. (Phredde’s mum really needs to repair the volcano. It’s gone all wonky.)

So we had to go into class.

Well, it was a long day.

We had a geography test for one thing. I got just about everything wrong and Amelia kept getting just
about everything right and smiling over at me and whispering, ‘But it’s really EASY’ in this sweet little surprised voice. (Just you wait till we have a maths test, Amelia. I’m really good at maths.)

And Bruce, who sits in front of me, kept shooting his tongue out and catching flies whenever Mrs Olsen wasn’t looking (we’re not allowed to eat in class) and crunching them, which made me feel sort of sick, especially when he spat out the wings. So it wasn’t surprising I couldn’t concentrate on the capital of Belgium and the main exports of Japan…

And Phredde kept sneezing and sniffing and blowing her nose right behind my ear, and I started wondering how long it’d take before I got a cold too.

Not that I supposed it really mattered, because Phredde could give my cold to a tree or a bicycle, or even Amelia. (I grinned to myself.)

So anyway, we were FINALLY walking home after school. (Hey, I just had a thought—I wonder if Phredde could make school time pass faster. Must ask her.)

Sorry about that—anyway, we were walking home from school, and Phredde blew her nose for the three thousandth time, and said, sort of wistfully, ‘How long do colds last?’

‘A week or ten days.’

‘Oh,’ said Phredde. Then she asked, ‘How do you get rid of them? Without magic, I mean.’

‘You don’t,’ I said. ‘There isn’t any medicine that’ll get rid of a cold, though you can take some stuff to make you feel better. Colds go away by themselves in about a week or ten days. You just have to keep warm and rest and drink lots of fluids.’ (Mum drums all this stuff into me every time I sneeze.)

‘Oh,’ said Phredde again. Then she said casually, ‘Maybe I’ll just keep the cold till tomorrow morning. I mean even if you visited Antarctica you wouldn’t want to stay TOO long, would you?’

‘Nope.’ I said, sort of grinning to myself.

And I thought that was the end of it.

Weekends are usually great at our castle.

Dad makes his special scrambled eggs, if he gets up in time, and Gark our butler makes muffins or waffles with mango sauce or chocolate mousse.

I know most people don’t have chocolate mousse for breakfast, but this is magic mousse. It’s good for you. For someone who only eats magpie tucker like worms and dead cats on the side of the road, Gark’s a really good cook.

Then Dad and I go down and feed the piranhas in the moat.

I gave Dad the piranhas for Christmas. Dad likes anything South American—you should have seen his face when I gave him that jaguar last year!

But I think he likes the piranhas best, and feeding them is something we can do together. You know, that father-daughter bonding stuff.

So anyway, there we were throwing scraps of scrambled egg and bacon and pineapple muffin into the moat, and the piranhas were leaping about guzzling them, but a bit wistfully, like they’d really rather be eating a dead cow or something.

It was peaceful in the sunlight, with just the splash of the piranhas and the burps of Phredde’s dragon as it circled the turrets (it had been tucking into the rubbish bins during the night and, as Dad says, a burp
from a dragon like that can singe the hair from your nostrils) and the sound of the bees in the roses.

You know, just me and Dad sharing some real weekend quality time.

‘Hey Dad,’ I said.

‘Yes Pru?’ said Dad.

‘Did you know that a school of piranhas can skeletonise a cow in ten minutes?’

‘We don’t have any cows, Pru,’ said Dad, sort of thankfully.

‘Yeah. Pity,’ I said. ‘Hey Dad?’

‘Yes Pru,’ said Dad cautiously.

‘How long do you think it’d take them to skeletonise a leg of lamb?’

‘I don’t know, Pru. But I think Gark’s going to cook it for dinner.’

‘Oh.’ I said.

‘I think your mother would be annoyed if that leg of lamb went missing, Pru,’ said Dad.

‘Oh,’ I said.

We sat in silence for awhile.

‘I think your brother is really attached to his guinea pigs too,’ said Dad finally.

How did Dad know I was thinking about feeding Mark’s guinea pigs to the piranhas? Parents astound me sometimes.

‘Yeah, I guess so.’ I agreed.

‘What are you thinking about now, Pru?’ asked Dad a few minutes later. He sounded a bit worried.

‘Not about piranhas,’ I told him honestly. ‘I was just wondering what to get you for your next birthday.’

‘Don’t wonder too hard,’ said Dad earnestly. ‘Just a pair of socks will do.’

Sometimes I don’t think parents realise how much fun it can be thinking up really good presents for them.

After breakfast and the piranha feeding I made my bed, which takes hardly any time because it’s made of rose petals, so all you have to do is ruffle them around a bit. Then I went over to Phredde’s.

You can walk to Phredde’s from our place if you want to, or catch a bus.

In fact you can get there any way you want to, because her castle’s magic and our castle’s magic, so they’re really anywhere you want them to be.

Today was so calm and sunny I thought I’d sail over in my pirate ship. So I signalled to the pirate captain from the beach at the bottom of our backyard, and the first mate rowed me over to the ship, and by the time the captain had said ‘Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of ginger ale’ fifteen or so times I’d had enough, so we pulled in at the next bay, and there was the road up to Phredde’s, naturally.

I said it was magic.

Phredde’s dad, the Phaery Valiant (except he’s usually called Jim) answered the door.

‘Hi, Prudence,’ he said. ‘Ethereal’s up in the study. She’s showing her mother how to use email.’

‘Uh oh,’ I said.

I remembered what had happened when I tried to show my mum how to use email. (It’s really disastrous to try to teach your parents anything, because they get all cranky and just don’t listen half the time.)

Anyway, I reckoned Phredde’d need a hand by now, so I raced up the six flights of stairs to the turret where
the study was (you get really fit living in castles) and there was Phredde and her mum fluttering above the computer.

‘No, no, Mum,’ Phredde was saying. ‘All you have to do is move the cursor up to “Send”. Then all you have to do is…no Mum, don’t press that, you’ll…’

‘Hi!’I said.

Phredde looked around in relief. ‘Hi Pru,’ she said.

‘Hello Prudence,’ said Phredde’s mum. She looked a bit relieved to be interrupted too. ‘How are you, ahhhhhhhtchhhhoooooo!’

Maybe all phaeries have big sneezes.

So after I’d helped pick all the computer paper up I said, ‘I’m fine. But it sounds like you’ve caught Phredde’s cold.’

The Phaery Splendifera nodded. ‘I think you’re right. But never mind. It’s gone now.’

‘What did you give it to?’ I asked curiously.

‘What? Oh, the cold? I gave it to the computer of course.’

That’s when the computer sneezed.

‘Ahhhtchooo!’

It didn’t send the paper flying all round the room, of course, because computers don’t have any breath.

But it sure had a loud sneeze.

In fact it sounded sort of funny, a computer sneezing. Phredde and I glanced at each other and started to giggle.

And that’s when it struck us.

‘Mum, no!’ gasped Phredde.

‘Not the computer!’ I breathed.

Phredde’s mum stared at us. ‘What’s the matter?’ she asked.

‘Don’t you understand Mum!’ cried Phredde. ‘You’ve given the computer a virus!’

‘Yes, I know,’ said Splendifera, puzzled. ‘I gave it my cold. What’s wrong with that?’

‘Computers aren’t like bicycles!’ exclaimed Phredde. ‘If you give them a virus they don’t work properly. Everything goes wrong!’

‘Well, there’s no need to get upset about it,’ said Phredde’s mum a bit crossly. ‘I’ll just take it away again.’

There was a gentle PING! all around us.

‘There you are,’ said Phredde’s mum. ‘I’ve given the virus to the walls. Are you satisfied now?’

‘Oh Mum,’ groaned Phredde. ‘Haven’t you been listening to anything I’ve been telling you?’

‘Of course I’ve been listening, Ethereal,’ said Phredde’s mum, even more crossly. ‘There’s no need to take that tone with your mother.’

‘But don’t you see Mum—this computer has a modem, so it’s connected to all the other computers that have modems. As soon as you gave this computer a virus it would have spread to the other computers…and then to more computers…and then to more and more…’

Phredde’s mum blinked.

‘The whole world’s computers are going to get a cold!’ wailed Phredde. ‘And it’ll be your fault. Planes will crash! Power systems will fail!’

‘All because of silly little computers?’ said Phredde’s mum a bit unbelievingly.

‘Mum, the whole world runs on computers now!’

‘Oh,’ said Phredde’s mum.

‘If the computers fail everything’s going to go phut!’

‘Oh,’ said Phredde’s mum again. ‘Are you sure?’

‘Of course I’m sure!’ wailed Phredde. ‘I should never have let you touch a computer…’

‘Can’t you just magic the virus away from the world’s computer network?’ I asked.

Other books

Providence by Noland, Karen
All That Followed by Gabriel Urza
Rescuing Rayne by Susan Stoker
Sapphire by Suzanne, Ashley
Ella, The Slayer by A. W. Exley
All for a Sister by Allison Pittman
Murder Begets Murder by Roderic Jeffries