Dedication Dedication ONE - Tremors TWO - A Face in the Glass THREE - Wizard Almanacs and Whisper Shells FOUR - Farewell to Friends FIVE - Into the Hinterwoods SIX - Guardian of the Spheris SEVEN - A Welcome Return EIGHT - Path of the Father NINE - Nearhurst Aviary TEN - Echoes from the Past ELEVEN - Time Stream TWELVE - The Great Spider’s Nest THIRTEEN - Stalagmos FOURTEEN - Son of Baxley FIFTEEN - The Protectors SIXTEEN - Necro’s Maze SEVENTEEN - Double Hex EIGHTEEN - The Crown of the Snow Leopard NINETEEN - Full Moon Rising Copyright About the Publisher
For my dad, my biggest fan and best friend.
For Olive, my daughter, this story is for you.
– A.J.E.
For my mom and dad, who set the path I follow every day.
– A. J.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
ONE - Tremors
TWO - A Face in the Glass
THREE - Wizard Almanacs and Whisper Shells
FOUR - Farewell to Friends
FIVE - Into the Hinterwoods
SIX - Guardian of the Spheris
SEVEN - A Welcome Return
EIGHT - Path of the Father
NINE - Nearhurst Aviary
TEN - Echoes from the Past
ELEVEN - Time Stream
TWELVE - The Great Spider’s Nest
THIRTEEN - Stalagmos
FOURTEEN - Son of Baxley
FIFTEEN - The Protectors
SIXTEEN - Necro’s Maze
SEVENTEEN - Double Hex
EIGHTEEN - The Crown of the Snow Leopard
NINETEEN - Full Moon Rising
Copyright
About the Publisher
Aldwyn had often wondered what it would feel like to have wings. As the wind blew through his whiskers and his claws dug into the linen collar of Jack’s tunic, he was beginning to get a pretty good idea. Led by Jack’s outstretched wand, loyal and familiar were soaring above the treetops, climbing higher and higher towards the clouds. Back in his Bridgetower days, before he had become the magical animal companion to a boy wizard, Aldwyn used his claws to scale the rooftops and chimneys of some of the city’s tallest buildings. But having his fur graze the needles at the top of the mighty pine trees in the Palace Hills was something different altogether.
“We’re about to get wet!” exclaimed Jack.
Aldwyn braced himself as they blasted straight through a puff of white, sending rain pixies scattering in every direction. The tiny cloud fairies sprayed water with every flap of their wings, drenching the black-and-white cat’s fur within seconds.
“Guess we won’t be needing baths tonight,” he shouted at Jack.
Bursting through the cloud right behind them was Jack’s older sister, Marianne, gripping a wand of her own.
“Not bad,” she called out, “for a beginner.”
She flicked her wrist and made an upside-down loop in the air before coming up alongside her brother. Gilbert’s bulging orange eyes peeked out over the edge of Marianne’s shirt pocket, his webbed hands clutching on for dear life.
“Was that really necessary?” croaked the tree frog in a panic.
Jack used his free hand to brush the dirty blond hair out of his eyes, revealing a determined look beneath.
“Come on, sis,” he hollered as if he had something to prove. “I’ll race you back to the manor steps.”
The young wizard siblings darted downwards. Aldwyn felt his stomach do a little somersault as they hurtled through the air at an alarming speed. Dipping below the clouds once more, the grandness of the Vastian countryside opened up below them. Nearby, Aldwyn could make out Sorceress Edna’s Black Ivy Manor, a regal estate surrounded by hedge walls and rose gardens. Beyond the manor was an invisible dam that held back the heavy waters of a mountain river. Through the enchanted barrier’s sheer surface, fish could be seen swimming, as if a giant aquarium had been built into the side of the rocky peaks. At the base of the dam lay the grazing fields of Edna’s fabled short-horned steers, whose silver-hued hides were tough enough to resist even a dragon’s fiery breath. Further down the hill was Bronzhaven, with Queen Loranella’s palace rising into the sky at its centre, surrounded by the floating torches that hovered just above the castle walls.
Marianne had jumped ahead to an early lead, but Jack was quickly catching up. The two raced past Dalton and Skylar, who were practising precise hairpin turns around floating wooden cones. Dalton, the eldest – at fourteen and a half – and maturest of the children, called out, “Sorceress Edna instructed us to work on mid-flight reversals!”
“Slow down,” added Skylar. “You’re not competing on the Warlock Trail, you know.”
But neither Jack nor Marianne paid the boy or his blue jay familiar any attention. They were too focused on outpacing each other.
“Woo-hoo!” shouted Jack, as he pulled in front of his sister by a wand’s length.
As they skimmed lower, they approached the living topiaries that guarded the outside of Black Ivy Manor. These enchanted shrubs had been sculpted less than a month ago to protect the teaching grounds, a precaution of great import now that Sorceress Edna had taken over the training of Kalstaff’s three pupils and their familiars. The topiaries had been shaped like archers holding thorny bows at the ready. They swung their weapons from left to right, preparing to fire upon any unwelcome intruders.
“Short cut through those columns,” suggested Aldwyn from over Jack’s shoulder.
Jack nodded, then barrel-rolled between two marble pillars on the edge of the estate’s reflecting pool. The manoeuvre increased his and Aldwyn’s lead over Marianne and Gilbert and seemed to make their victory to the steps inevitable. That is, until Marianne invoked, “Creeping vine, possum tail, make Jack move, like a snail!”
Suddenly, it felt to Aldwyn as if the air around him had got thick and gooey like molasses. He and Jack found themselves slowed to a near crawl. Marianne zipped past them and landed on the outdoor stairs leading to the manor’s back door. Gilbert immediately jumped from her pocket and began kissing the ground.
“Ah, the sweet taste of gravel,” said the tree frog, pressing his lips to the earth.
“Gilbert, aren’t you being a little dramatic?” asked Marianne.
“Not fair,” cried Jack, still inching forward in slow motion. “You cheated.”
“You could have countered the spell,” replied Marianne. “I don’t remember anyone making a rule about no castings.”
Jack’s feet finally touched down, and Aldwyn leaped off his back. Marianne walked over to her little brother and gave his hair a ruffle.
“Next time,” she said with a wink as Dalton and Skylar landed beside her.
“Thanks for the pointers, Sky. I think I’m finally mastering those turns,” said Dalton to his winged familiar.
“Just remember, birds always keep their eyes on the horizon. I’d recommend the same for you.”
As the familiars and their loyals continued their friendly banter, Sorceress Edna rose from her chair beneath the shade of a canopy and came towards them. She was a plump, middle-aged woman with hair dyed black and a pair of oversized spectacles. Her familiar, a mink named Stolix, was wrapped round her neck. Edna took short little steps like a penguin, sending splashes of blueberry tea from the top of her porcelain cup. And though her appearance would suggest otherwise, she was a formidable magician indeed.
“Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy,” she said in a high-pitched, nasal voice. “At this age, your wand flight should be much more advanced. Tonight I want all of you to reread Crady’s Book of Aerial Wizardry cover to cover.”
Читать дальше