Published writing

14 June 2023, Week 4: Returning home

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
The Door to Talgia. Epilogue ‘We’ve found it!’ this was the call everyone in the ASSBSEOD (Australia’s Super-Secret Base of Studying and Exploring Otherworldly Dimensions) in 3:00 in the morning. Alfred Red jumped up in the air, smiling widely at a door. It was a covered in spirals, and was glowing slightly, but other than that, it was extremely normal. There was also the slight fact that every bit of it was strapped with chains. Everyone swivelled around in their desk chairs, and stared at him. ‘Wait…’ his partner, Winnie Sanders said, who had just turned from a screen with a picture of a kitten on it. ‘Do you mean…it’s…the wormhole…’ ‘Yup!’ Alfred said. He reached out to touch the door. Instantly, he froze. Then, the door blew open. The chains snapped. Alfred’s body warped, and he was sucked through the door. ‘Alfred!’ Winnie yelled. The door slammed shut. And Alfred was gone. Then, the door vanished into the night. Chapter 1: Escape Declan Red was obnoxious. it wasn't his snotty nose. it wasn't his piggy eyes. it wasn't even his tendency to take everyone else's lunch (although that could contribute.) no. Declan was obnoxious because of his sneering face, his uncaring smile, his arrogant walk. 'Give that back!' Criss yelled. 'that's for my brother!' 'Nope!' grinned Declan, holding the large chocolate bar above Criss' head. He took a big slobbery bite. ‘You…’ Criss lunged for the Mars Bar. He hit it out of Declan’s hand, and it hit the ground, instantly starting to melt in a chocolaty puddle on the playground slide. Declan stopped, and stared down at the boy 3 Cm shorter than him. ‘Now you’ve done it!’ Declan charged at the smaller boy, and… ‘Now stop right there!’ yelled Mr Jenkins, the PE teacher. He flung his skipping rope expertly to catch the running Declan around the shins. Declan crashed down at a petrified Criss’ feet, who, awoken from his stupor, ran as fast as he could away. ‘Declan Red,’ Mr Jenkins said slowly. ‘Go to the principal’s office. Now.’ ‘Inexcusable behaviour…wrong thing to do…poor Criss…suspension for three days.’ This was the string of unrelated words Declan heard as he sat in the uncomfortable chair in front of Miss Zahner, the principal. ‘Yes Miss Zahner,’ Declan droned. He had been in the principal’s office so many times he had broken a school record, at 1,000 visits this year. ‘Now get out!’ Miss Zahner said. Declan obediently got up, and walked out of the door. He shoved Freddy Zean out of the way, and stormed down the corridor, and out of the school. ‘Been suspended again?’ the matron for Declan’s dormitory, Miss Handers said in a bored voice. ‘Well, get to your dormitory.’ Declan trudged up the stairs. He flung himself onto his mattress, and stared up at the ceiling. It was tonight. He was going to run away, far away from this orphanage, this school, these people. Maybe to Queensland. That would be nice. Away from all those accusing stares. He gathered up all his things, which took approximately 2 minutes, as he had only a second set of clothes, a jumper, an action figure of Hulk, and the last thing his parents – father and half-mother, Declan reminded himself – had given him. A note, saying never come back. Declan turned to the window, and then caught a glimpse of a photo taken when he was a baby. He quickly grabbed it, and looked at it for a while. There he was, crawling around in the dirt. And there was his father. Tall, broad shouldered, with curly red hair like Declan. He was wearing his round green spectacles over his green eyes, and laughing as he chased Declan. That old gold bracelet was on his wrist. The one made to look like a snake. Declan sighed, and put the picture in the bag. Then, he waited. And waited. And waited. He knew his presence at the dinner table wouldn’t be missed. He waited until he heard the feet marching up the stairs, and Miss Handers calling, ‘Lights out! Lights out I tell you!’ Then, he opened his window, and looked down at the ground below. It was high up, seeing as he was three stories up, but Declan had made an escape plan. He took out his Hulk action figure, and threw his bag down. It landed safely below. He looked out, and reached for a pipe. It just held his weight. Declan slowly inched his way down, until he was close enough to the ground to jump. He landed uncomfortably on his bag, then picked it up, and ran. He ran down the road, and into the park. He spotted a stray dog. Then, he started walking. PE had never been his strong spot. Declan walked onward, crickets chirping, the night air blowing on his face. It was almost peaceful. Then, he nearly ran into the door. Chapter 2: The Attack of the Cloud Declan stared at the strange door. It was just there. Nothing was behind it; nothing was in front of it. He could have sworn that it wasn't there before. Just standing. In the middle of a patch of grass with a sign saying, ‘do not place anything on this grass.’ At 7:00 in the evening. It was covered in swirls...and they seemed to be moving. Declan scoffed. His mind must be playing tricks on him. He turned around…and there it was! In front of him. He looked behind him, but it wasn’t there. He turned again, and started running, only to nearly walk into it again. He grunted in anger. Was someone playing a trick on him? He punched the door. Immediately, the door flew open. A force, like a black hole but worse, yanked Declan forward, and into the door. The force pulling him in seemed to be pulling and pushing from all directions at once. He screamed at the pain of it. His eyes, which had closed when pulled in, opened slowly, to see he was hurtling through what looked like…well, what looked like nothing. Yes, that was it. Nothing. It was just a plain nothingness. The pain diminished slowly as he continued speeding through the nothing. Declan put his hands in front of his face. He could see them just fine. Then why couldn’t he see anything else? Just then, slammed into what felt like a brick wall, and fell out of an unfamiliar sky, onto the ground of a strange place. Declan looked around. The sky was cloudless, and sunless. The air was warm and cold at the same time. And everything was different to how he knew it. The trees were floating at different heights all over the plain. Red grass swayed all over the place, making a strange whistling sound. Hills humped up from the ground, shrinking and regrowing in other places, in different colours. Strange animals crept, slithered, walked, crawled, and jumped around him, some with strange wings that never seemed to stop moving, some with more limbs than seemed physically possible, others making loud honking sounds, and others that Declan just couldn’t describe. And the world smelled…different. Strange. Magical. Like jam. He took a step forward, and his leg sunk into a knee deep fluffy white substance. It was rising and falling steadily as if breathing, but seemed to shift as soon as he touched it. ‘Don’t. Move. A muscle.’ Whispered a voice behind him. Declan turned around to find a thing staring at him. He was short, even shorter than Declan. His eyes were changing colour continuously, and his hands were slightly clawed. Its head was covered in long hair, and a beard. And he had scales all over his body. ‘Why not?’ Declan practically shouted back. The fluff shook some more. ‘Shut up!’ came the thing’s strained whisper. ‘Now get off the cloud!’ Declan, staring at the strange old (obviously deranged) man-beast, and smiled. Then, he jumped up and down on the “cloud” and bellowed at the top of his voice, ‘NO!’ Instantly, Declan was jolted off the fluffy object, as it sped right up into the air. The “cloud” was a cloud. It was large, it was fluffy, it was white. Then its eyes opened, and the ultimate level of cuteness unfolded. ‘Aw!’ Declan said. ‘Don’t say that!’ the creature said. ‘It hates…’ but at that moment, the cloud’s expression darkened. Literally. It turned grey. Rain started pouring from the bottom, and the cloud’s eyes turned red. And for the first time, the clouds mouth opened. Declan screamed as the mouth, ringed with fangs of lighting rained lighting on him and the man-like thing. ‘RUN!’ the creature said, abandoning all whispering voice, and racing with Declan toward a nearby cave. ‘Come into my house!’ Declan ran for his life, as the cloud poured rain down on the ground, shot more lightning bolts, and bellowed its triumph in a voice of thunder. He ran through the entrance to the cave, and fell onto a rock. Chapter 3: Sir Arkenstien Vrolcroft Dingilius Siritinaglis the 4th The thing pointed at a large rock. There was a rumbling, and a huge hunch-backed creature stomped to the entrance, heaved the rock over it, and dropped the rock. Declan gasped. Declan looked around. There was a tapestry on the wall, featuring a bunch of strange gems. A stool stood in a corner, and a hallway leading to what Declan presumed was another room. There was a merry fire, glowing deepest purple but letting off more heat than any fire Declan had ever seen before. Even that one where the accidentally (on purpose) set the school on fire. ‘That’s Bill,’ the thing said. ‘He is a Danggervit, and helps me with everything I do. That’s why I have so many bones around the place.’ He picked up a skull that looked alarmingly like a human skull, and tossed it to Bill. Bill crunched it in his fanged jaws. ‘I don’t know who you are, or where I am, or why I’m here, but I’m only staying here until the cloud goes away, you old man fool!’ Declan said. ‘O yes,’ the thing said. ‘Where are my manners? my name is Sir Arkenstien Vrolcroft Dingilius Siritinaglis the 4th, and this is the region of Talgia!’ Arkenstein lapsed into a long silence. Finally, he spoke. ‘There’s no way out of this place, as far as I know,’ Arkenstein said. ‘None at all.’ Declan put his face in his hands. ‘If you don’t say please,’ Arkenstein said. Declan jerked his head up, and said, ‘PLEASE!’ ‘Well?’ Arkenstein said. But just then, there was a loud rapping on the rock. ‘By order of the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude,’ a snarky voice barked from outside, ‘please tell us if you have seen a boy, 158 cm tall, piggy eyes, snotty nose, 12-year-old wearing a red T-Shirt, brown pants, blue boxers, pink socks, white shoes, and holding a bag containing unknown (and possibly dangerous) objects.’ ‘Oh, did I forget?’ Arkenstein said, as he shooed a furiously complaining Declan into a small cavity in the wall and dropped a rock in front of it. ‘there’s the High Emperor King Chieftan Cool Dude. He’s the worst thing that happened to this world. Fell out of the sky like you. I brought him in myself. But he became power hungry. Soon, he became ruler of the world. And he rules it with an iron fist. COMING SIRS!!’ Declan saw as Bill lifted the rock away from the entrance. Then, he stared. There were things outside. Strange things. They were like men, but their heads were snakelike. Their hands were three fingered. And they were riding huge winged two-headed dogs with flaming fur. ‘Stop your flattery, and tell us the answer to the question!’ the one with a cobra head on the biggest dog thing sneered. ‘The High Emperor has been too easy on you, but I am not as forgiving. Now, answer!’ ‘Nope,’ Arkenstein answered. ‘I haven’t seen no boy, General Rakta. Just that cloud. I see you’ve taken care of it? OK. Now, if you don’t mind, I’ll be leaving you to your…’ ‘We do mind!’ General Rakta. ‘I need to make a search of your house!’ ‘I’m afraid that’s impossible,’ Arkenstein said. ‘Bill is in a bloodthirsty mood.’ Bill gave a large belch in the background, and sat down in a corner. ‘We’ll deal with him,’ General Rakta said menacingly, holding up long thin simitar. ‘Remember the first law. Obey the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. OR ELSE!!’ Arkenstein sighed, and let them in. The guards streamed across the small room, and Declan watched through the crack as they turned over baskets, stomped on the fire, ripped up the tapestry, and generally wrecked everything. Just then, Declan felt something hard dig into his head. He looked round, and saw a shelf. On it was a strange red and white rock. He picked it up, and immediately felt…different. Stronger. More powerful. Even…magical. He slipped it into his pocket. Just then, the snake heads went away. ‘You can come out now,’ Arkenstein whispered. Declan crawled out. Then, Arkenstein noticed the missing rock. Chapter 4: The Story Stones. Arkenstein’s face changed so quickly that it seemed that he was a different person. His eyes flashed red, and didn’t change. He seemed to grow taller. His scales stuck up all over his body. ‘WHERE IS THE STONE OF FIRE AND ICE!’ he bellowed, and it seemed that there were two Arkensteins speaking at the same time. ‘GIVE BACK WHAT YOU HAVE STOLEN, OR DIE!’ he drew two sharp axes from the wall, and advanced toward Declan. ‘OK, OK, OK!’ Declan whimpered. He drew the stone from his pocket, and lay it down before him, then leapt as far away from Arkenstein as he could. Arkenstein calmed down instantly. His scales came down, and his eyes coloured to a softer shade of blue, as he picked up the stone. Declan saw now that the red part of the stone was shifting constantly, while the white was still. ‘This,’ Arkenstein said, ‘is one of the most important stones in this realm. It is one of the original 10 story stones, the Stone of Fire and Ice, gives you power over flames, or freezes time. The Stone of Nature lets you speak with trees. The Emotion stone, gives you power to control emotions, but only the emotions that the person had already. The Dark Stone helps in the cause of necromancy. The Physic Stone lets you read minds and use telekinesis. The Ocean stone lets you breath underwater, control water, stuff like that. The Future stone lets you see the future. The Vanisher Stone lets you vanish and appear at any place. The Past stone lets you travel back in time. And finally, the Truth Stone, not the most powerful stone, but lets you know whether your opponent is telling the truth. It is rumoured that if one has all the stones, they will have complete power over everything in this land. But there are fakes too. And you always know when you’re holding a fake.’ ‘I bet you wouldn’t, but how?’ Declan asked. ‘They tear you apart.’ Arkenstein said. There was a silence. ‘So, this one…’ Declan said. ‘Is real,’ Arkenstein said. Declan stared greedily at the stone. ‘Don’t even think about it,’ Arkenstein said. ‘Anyway, our great High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude has 7 of the stones. And when he has all of the stones, he will destroy the world.’ ‘Can’t you call him something else, like HEKCCD?’ Declan said, completely fine that he had partially swore, and not at all miffed that this world would get destroyed. Serves it right for imprisoning him here. ‘No,’ Arkenstein sighed. ‘Rule 5. Always call the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. OR ELSE!!’ ‘Gimme those rules?’ Declan asked. Arkenstein took out a piece of paper from his beard. Declan read. Rule 1: Obey the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. OR ELSE!! Rule 2: Everyone must pay tribute to the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. OR ELSE!! Rule 3: No talking unless spoken to in the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude’s company. OR ELSE!! Rule 4: Everyone must listen to the palace guards (also known as Snakeheads). OR ELSE!! Rule 5: Always call the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. OR ELSE!! Rule 6: Anyone who does not listen to these rules will be henceforth thrown off the bottomless chasm. OR ELSE!! Rule 7: Obey the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. OR ELSE!! ‘Rule 7 just repeats rule 1! This guy’s dumb!’ Declan exclaimed. ‘Yes, well that’s the most important rule,’ Arkenstein said. ‘So, the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude is 4 stones away from ruling the world. Completely. There will be nothing to come here for. Nothing. We will be enslaved by his tyranny. But now you’ve come, we can go on a quest for the stones!’ ‘What!?!’ Declan yelled. ‘I’m not going on a stupid quest to save this world! It’s preposterous! This world has nearly killed me already, I’m not risking my neck for a world I don’t even live in!’ ‘If you do, I’ll tell you where the door is,’ Arkenstein said. And with those 10 words, he had convinced Declan. Chapter 5: Traps Are Made for People to Fall into Them. Declan trudged through the countryside with Arkenstein ahead of him, slowly approaching the bottom of a large cliff. Arkenstein had quickly packed all his belongings, including the Story Stone of Fire and Ice, in a large backpack which he was now lugging around, picked up a walking stick made of an orange wood, and headed off with Declan in his wake. They were leaving Bill to care for the home. ‘So, where exactly are we going?’ Declan asked for the umpteenth time. ‘To the Mines of Mildiana,’ Arkenstein answered, also for the umpteenth time. ‘The Emotion Stone, is said to be there.’ ‘But didn’t you say there were enemies there?’ Declan asked. ‘Yup,’ said Arkenstien matter-of-factly. ‘The dwarves of Mildiana live there. They lay traps at every single turn, bend, corner, hallway, and stairwell in the mines. Of course, most of these have been disabled by unlucky Snakeheads sent by the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude, but there are still some. And there are the actual dwarves.’ Declan, not at all comforted by this speech, continued walking. They were picking their way through a field full of sleeping clouds, and it took all of Declan’s concentration to walk on the thin pathways between clouds. Suddenly, Arkenstein stopped, and Declan ran into him. ‘We’re here,’ he said. ‘The Mines of Mildiana. Dwarf kingdom.’ They were staring at a gaping hole in the cliff they had been headed for. It looked like a crack in the skin of rock. A chasm. ‘Well,’ what are you waiting for?’ Arkenstein said. ‘Come on, let’s go!’ Declan shook himself out of his stupor, and followed Arkenstein into the fissure. Arkenstein lit a lantern, and walked through the small passageway behind the fissure. Declan followed him. Soon, they started seeing bones. Entire Snakehead skeletons, stuck between axes, dead in pits, Even suffocated in sand. Declan started feeling like they weren’t exactly wanted here. As they passed a particularly grisly scene with two decomposing Snakeheads stuck between pillars of rock, Arkenstein stopped again. ‘No more Snakeheads,’ Arkenstein said. ‘Get ready for traps.’ They walked slowly forward, Arkenstein looking forward at the ground, at the walls, at the ceiling. Then, he stopped. ‘Pit. Right in front of us. Too wide to jump,’ he said. ‘What will we do?’ Declan asked. Then he quickly added, ‘idiot.’ ‘Well, traps are made to be fallen into,’ Arkenstein shrugged. ‘I think the Dwarves want us to starve to death, more’s the pain. So…’ and he jumped, straight forward, and disappeared from sight. Moments later, there was a thump, and a cry of pain. ‘It’s safe!’ Arkenstein called up. ‘a bit deep, but it should be fine.’ A bit deep was an understatement, as Declan found out, as he plunged through the darkness. He screamed as fell for a while, before thumping down on something soft and springy. ‘It seems I was a bit wrong in my assumption,’ Arkenstein’s voice came out of the darkness, as he held up the lantern to illuminate their surroundings. ‘The Dwarves don’t want us to starve. The want us to die. Die in a grisly way. If I’m not mistaken, this is the lair of Verdinag. ‘Who’s…’ began Declan asked. But his question was answered, as a loud click-clacking came out of the darkness, and a gigantic spider came out of the darkness, white as marble, eyes red as blood, fangs gleaming and dripping with poison. ‘State your business, or Verdinag will strike!’ a voice cried from the darkness. ‘It will be a painful process where your skin melts off your bones. You don’t want to feel it.’ Chapter 6: the Burndalog As Declan squinted, he could make out a small, squat figure on the back of the giant albino spider. It had brown dirt coloured skin, grey stone coloured hair, and light brown clothing. Its nose stuck out quite far from its head, and its mouth leered out at them from the darkness. ‘Thank goodness!’ Arkenstein cried from beside Declan. ‘It’s you! I haven’t seen you for years, Drindik!’ ‘That’s your own fault!’ Drindik yelled back. ‘How could we let you back when you de—’ ‘Nothing about that now!’ Arkenstein quickly said. ‘That was in the past, Drindik, the past! And I only squished 2!’ ‘They were the only ones we had!’ raged Drindik. ‘We had to go up to the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude to get another evsanlius, and it took ages to breed. We had to spend 5 years, 5 YEARS, without the help of the evsanlius to give us the life-giving milk! And we lost a lot of our treasure on that day too, seeing as you knocked it down the abyss of death!’ ‘Yes, but I apologized,’ said Arkenstein a bit sulkily. ‘And besides, treasure isn’t everything.’ ‘TREASURE ISN’T EVERYTHING?’ Drindik bellowed. ‘TREASURE ISN’T EVERYTHING? TREASURE IS EVERYTHING! TREASURE MAKES THE WORLD GO AROUND! WITHOUT TREASURE, WE WOULD ALL DIE! ALTHOUGH YOU WOULDN’T KNOW A THING ABOUT TREASURE, SEEING AS YOU HAVEN’T EARNED A PENNY IN YOUR LIFE!’ Arkenstein seemed to get angry at that. ‘YOU THINK I’M POOR?’ he yelled. ‘YES, I DO THINK YOU’RE POOR!’ Drindik yelled back. ‘AND YOU’RE NOT IN A POSITION TO BE YELLING! I COULD KILL YOU RIGHT NOW!’ Arkenstein laughed. ‘You and I both know that you wouldn’t,’ he said easily, not yelling anymore. ‘You don’t know what I’m capable of!’ Drindik snarled. And with that, she yelled, ‘Verdinag, pick them up and take them to the Burndalog! Let us see whether these two will be our friends, or enemies.’ Arkenstein groaned and struggled. ‘Not the Burndalog! Anything but the Burndalog!’ he pleaded. For the first time since meeting Arkenstein, Declan thought he detected fear in his voice, and though it seemed that they were headed to a terrible fate, he still enjoyed Arkenstein’s fear as they were carried off by the spider into the darkness. They travelled over the web for what seemed like hours, but was probably minutes. And all the while, Arkenstein moaned and wailed and pleaded, until even Arkenstein’s fear couldn’t cheer Declan up. ‘Uh, Arkenidiot?’ Declan asked. ‘What’s the Burndalog?’ ‘It’s…’ Arkenstein said shakily, ‘it’s…it’s a feeling. It makes you want to curl up, and never live again. It makes you want to tear yourself to bits. It makes you want to die.’ And at those words, Declan was pleading, and moaning, and thrashing just as hard as Arkenstein, while Drindik looked on and laughed. Soon, they came to the edge of the web, and Verdinag flung them onto the ground. Declan stood up, and looked around. They were in dwarf kingdom. Everything was stone. Everything was brown or black. It was the calmest place Declan had found in this world. And he liked it. Dwarves swarmed to the two travellers, all chanting, ‘Burndalog! Burndalog!’ They were dragged to the mouth of a large cave. In the cave, there was a small dwarf. ‘So, who will it be?’ he asked, without turning. Arkenstein cowered, then quickly said, ‘not it!’ Declan groaned inside, muttered, ‘coward!’ and turned to the dwarf. If he knew what he was facing, he would have curled up into a tight ball and never moved again. The dwarf waved his hand, and armour came down from a shelf, and landed on Declan. ‘Hey! What?’ the dwarf ignored him. Next, he held out two weapons, a spear and an axe. ‘Which one?’ the dwarf said. Declan tested the spear, and immediately the dwarf took the axe away. ‘Wait, but!’ ‘Get him!’ the dwarf said. A dwarf twice as big as Drindik picked Declan up, and threw him down a slope. Declan tried to stop his downward decent, but he picked up speed, and fell into the arena. Declan wished he had picked the axe, but he had got the spear. He looked around. There were burning logs everywhere. In the centre was a shining diamond encrusted cup. ‘HELLO! HELLO! CAN YOU HEAR ME!’ boomed a loud voice. ‘IT DOESEN’T MATTER ANYWAY. YOUR GOAL IS TO GET THE CUP. JUST PICK IT UP. BEGINS IN 3, 2, 1.’ Then, out of the blue, completely unanticipated, Declan was hit by a wave of pain. He fell to the ground, screaming, feeling so much remorse about what he had inflicted on others. the spear clattered to the ground next to him. At that moment, he would have loved to just turn back time so he could change his actions. And he knew the only thing that could cause this emotion was one of the story stones. The one he needed to get to save the world. The one he needed so he could get out of this place. Then, Verdinag jumped down from the roof of the cavern, and landed in front of the cup. Declan lay on the ground, and watched through streaming eyes as he saw the giant spider approach, dripping venom on the ground, clicking in triumph. Chapter 7: Death by Remorse, or Spider. Verdinag sped through the burning logs, and Declan watched, pain stricken, willing his body to move. Finally, it did, and Declan was able to stand up, and when he did, he was so dizzy from the effort that he promptly fell over again, hitting a burning log, and knocking it in the spider’s path. It screeched, and reared onto its 4 back legs, waving the other 4 in the air. ‘Thank goodness that dwarf gave me this armour,’ Declan thought, as he watched the fire slide off it. The heat was just another pain that was dwarfed by the power of the Emotion Stone. Declan stood up shakily again, and realized that the spider was afraid of fire. It was still reared up, staring down at the fire with its red eyes, transfixed. Declan staggered over to another log, and shoved it over towards Verdinag. The spider screeched. Now two sides were obscured by fire. This time, bare skin touched the log, and Declan felt a jolt of pain. He tried to scream, but realized he was still screaming from before. Falling to his knees, Declan rolled on the ground until the fire went out, and tried to tone out the sound of his own screaming while he crawled to the next log closest to him. The pain generating from the Emotion Stone was getting worse. He shoved it over as well, and it landed just far away enough for Verdinag to be able to leap out of his prison of fire. The albino spider advanced, and Declan, shaking now, stood up, and stumbled towards the cup. Then, he could go on no further. He collapsed, shaking, writhing, and watched as the spider approached him. Then, he heard a voice. Not the dwarf’s voice, a familiar voice. ‘Come on, Declan! Stand up and get to the cup! Death by spider is worse than death by remorse! Move! Your! Butt!’ It was Arkenstein. Declan somehow found the strength in him to stand up. He half ran, half limped towards the cup, the power of the stone growing stronger as he got closer to the cup. Finally, he was right in front of the cup. Verdinag was right behind him. Just as Declan picked up the cup, Verdinag pounced, and the world went black around Declan. Declan woke up in a stone hut, on a stone bed, with his body aching all over, and feeling as though he wanted to lie somewhere more comfortable. The remorse was gone, but Declan could still feel the aftereffects. The stone hadn’t so much tortured him, as shown him what it felt like to be bullied. It had made him see things from the bullied people’s side. He felt tired. Then, he was knocked of the bed as 50 Kg of Arkenstein bowled him over. ‘You feeling alright?’ Arkenstein asked anxiously, completely ignoring the fact he had just knocked Declan off a hard stone bed onto an even harder stone floor. ‘Yeah, I’m alright,’ Declan said, standing up, and rubbing his ribs. ‘How about you?’ Arkenstein stared in astonishment at Declan. ‘What?’ Declan asked. ‘It’s just…’ Arkenstein said. ‘Who are you and what did you do with the real Declan? That is the first time I have heard you ask me how I felt! This is a breakthrough! Life is great! And you got the cup!’ Declan smiled. ‘Well, so know what does that mean?’ Declan asked. ‘It means we are officially honorary dwarves!’ Arkenstein said joyously. ‘Of course, I was already one, but was expelled after the whole treasure incident.’ ‘And the Emotion Stone?’ Declan asked. ‘I’ve talked to the dwarves about it,’ Arkenstein said, ‘and they’ve upped security around it. The High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude won’t be able to get this stone. They’ve reset the traps, you see.’ Suddenly, there was a BOOM! Drindik came running in, all anger at Arkenstein apparently forgotten, as she yelled, ‘the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude has breached the net! Prepare for battle!’ ‘What? so soon?’ Arkenstein exclaimed. ‘But how?’ ‘the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude must have had spies tailing you. And they have come with what seems the entire army.’ Arkenstein gasped. ‘With…with the racadumins?’ he stuttered. ‘And the wandering granderishes? And the ice-breathing Ikalots?’ Drindik nodded grimly. ‘We have to go!’ Arkenstein yelled. ‘Declan, grab your stuff! HURRY UP!’ Declan (for once not arguing) jumped up from the floor, grabbed his bag, and the three of them ran out of the door, to come face to face with a white and red bellowing creature. It had tusks longer than Declan’s arm, and lumbered across the space between them in seconds. A snakehead sat astride it, shouting, ‘General Rakta! I’ve found them! I’ve found the ones who dare defy the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. I’ve found the ones who want to take the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude’s power, and rule this empire for themselves. I’ve found the ones who are collecting the last Story Stones!’ Arkenstein grabbed for his bag, for the stone, but the ice-breathing flamendron pushed its tusks right up to Declan’s chest, and Arkenstein froze as if he had been hit by the freezing power of the stone. Then, General Rakta came around the corner, with a bundle of chains in his hands. Chapter 8: The High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude. Declan trudged along the steep road, his wrists wrapped in chains, with Arkenstein behind him, and the entire Dwarf population in front. Drindik was bellowing curses at the top of her voice. ‘Cowards! Scum! Sissies in scales! No ones! Come and fight me fair and square, and see who wins! Pathetic creatures of the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Du…’ there was a thump as a snakehead slammed his fist into Drindik’s face, and Drindik fell to the floor, unconscious. A dwarf quickly picked her up, and they continued on. Declan glanced back at Arkenstein. He was (mostly) unharmed, (he claimed) but seemed shaken. As soon as the snakeheads had got them, they had searched them, and found the Story Stone of Fire and Ice. There had been a huge cheer, and Arkenstein had been pounded. Now, he was limping along, head held high, and trying not to wince every time he took a step. Just then, the party stopped. Declan looked around. There didn’t seem to be anything around. General Rakta rapped sharply on what seemed to be air, but clearly wasn’t, 3 times, then 3 more times, but softer. Then, he bellowed, ‘Hail the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude!’ immediately, a castle materialized in front of Declan’s amazed eyes. They were standing in front of a large orange wood door. It opened, and two apelike things beckoned them inside, sneering with yellowed teeth at the prisoners. Everyone trudged inside, and the doors slammed behind them, like jaws. (It probably helped that the edges of the door were jagged, and fit together just like…you guessed it. Pointy, sharp, teeth!) Declan couldn’t help admiring the enemy’s palace. The ceiling soared up high, high into the air. The gold walls glistened with diamonds (courtesy of the Dwarves), and the floor was made of amethyst. There were plants growing in quite a few places, out of the wall, through the floor, down from the ceiling. This somehow made the place look more magnificent. They walked through room after room, each filled with treasure, weapons, armour, and large hippos (Yes! Large hippos!). Declan had a nagging feeling that he knew someone who liked large hippos. But he couldn’t remember who. Finally, they went to a room larger than the others. There was a ring of lava encircling a ring of gold encircling a ring of water encircling a ring of diamond, encircling a ring of amethyst. And in the centre was a throne. There was someone on the throne. He was tall. He wore a long red fur-lined cloak, and a bronze crown sat on his head. A bracelet glimmered on his wrist. It looked like a snake bitting its tail. Declan had a feeling he had seen that bracelet before. the man’s face was in shadow, but Declan was sure it was a man, not a creature. The snakeheads all raised their fists in the air. ‘All bow before the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude!’ the snakeheads forced everyone to the ground. Then, the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude stood up, and Declan was hit by a revelation. Declan looked closer. It couldn’t be. Could it? He had the same curly red hair. The same broad shoulders. The same green spectacles over his green eyes. But it couldn’t be his father. His father wasn’t in this place! And his father didn’t have a grave face, it was always laughing. Declan, trembling, brought out the picture he had of his father. And then he realized fully for the first time, that he was now facing his father, and that his father was an evil tyrant! That’s not something you experience every day. And here was his father, glaring down at him, not a glimpse of recognition in his face. His father’s face was stern, and hard as a rock. Declan stared up into his dad’s eyes, and a tear fell from his eyes and landed in the lava. ‘Dad?’ Declan whispered. Chapter 9: Things Don’t Always Turn Out the Way You Want It To. ‘So,’ Declan’s Dad (or the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude) growled, ‘Arkenstein. You’ve joined up with a band of ragamuffins in order to oppose my kingdom?’ ‘Huh? Oh, yes!’ Arkenstein said. ‘Yeah, well you seem to be trying to destroy the world. I do not agree with world destroying, Alfred.’ That actually confirmed it. ‘Um, Arkenstein,’ Declan whispered. ‘Not now,’ Arkenstein said, staring up at the High Emperor blah, blah, blah. ‘I’m having a very serious staring contest.’ ‘Arkenstein!’ Declan muttered. ‘He’s, my father!’ ‘Oh yes! He is!’ Arkenstein said in excitement. ‘What a breakthrough!’ ‘My dad is the one who wants to destroy the world!’ Declan his strained voice nearly breaking. ‘Yeah,’ Arkenstein said thoughtfully. ‘What are we going to do?’ Declan whispered. ‘Convince him not to.’ Arkenstein said. There was a long silence in which the High Emperor blah, blah, blah glared down at them. Finally, he said, ‘What did the traitor say?’ a snakehead said, ‘You! Traitor! What did you say?’ ‘Oh, I was just talking to this young fella Declan about burritos. Do they really contain tomitas?’ ‘No, tomatoes,’ Declan said, going along with the act, and wondering how Arkenstein knew about burritos. Poppycock and fried bananas!’ the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude (actually, from now on, the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude shall be known as Declan’s dad) said scornfully. ‘What are you plotting now?’ ‘Um, High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude,’ General Rakta said. ‘Yes?’ Declan’s dad said impatiently. In answer, General Rakta held up two stones. One was red and blue. The other was a stormy shade of grey. Declan’s dad gasped. ‘Any minute now,’ Arkenstein said. ‘Just say something!’ But Declan was frozen to the spot. Declan’s dad grabbed the stones, and pressed a secret button on his staff. It opened, and 8 more stones rolled out. ‘He got another one!’ Arkenstein said. ‘The tree-dwellers of the Randuin Forest must have given up the stone of nature! Do something Declan!’ Declan’s dad brought out a podium. ‘Scum! Worthless creatures of muck!’ he shouted. ‘Today, you shall witness my rise to power before you die!’ Everyone groaned. Declan’s dad placed an emerald green stone in the podium. It glowed brightly. Next came the stormy grey stone. It too glowed brightly. Then the red and white stone, a purple one, a deep impenetrable black one, an ocean-blue one, a stone that didn’t really have a colour, and was continually fading in and out of focus, a stone with images too fast for you to see, a stone the colour of old wood, and finally, a stone that looked just ordinary, all glowing brightly. ‘Come on!’ Arkenstein said. ‘Do it!’ But Declan couldn’t. He just couldn’t! But he had to, otherwise, his friends would be killed. It was strange to think about them as his friends, but he realized, he did think of Arkenstein as a friend. Just as he cleared his throat, it suddenly got blocked. Why was this so hard? Declna’s dad grabbed his staff, and waved it over the podium. ‘Inda tafta frandik doot!’ he chanted. ‘Granda dakla dundi frot! Ransing endolk whipliy quik! Abnik jiqua vindic rans!’ the world turned bright as there was a blinding flash. When Declan could see again, his dad was smiling evilly, holding his staff high in the air. On the tip, the 10 stones gleamed. ‘Now, you shall face my wrath!’ he laughed. He pointed the staff at the dwarfs. ‘Wait!’ came a voice. Declan’s dad looked around to see his son clearly for the first time. He stared. Then, he fell to his knees. Chapter 10: Time to Face Your Doom…or not. ‘Hello dad,’ Declan whispered. ‘What are you doing here?’ ‘I could ask you the same thing!’ Declan’s dad AKA High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude AKA Albert Red spluttered. ‘You shouldn’t be here! You should be in the orphanage where you’re safe!’ ‘Safe? SAFE?!?!’ Declan shouted. ‘I SPENT YEARS, YEARS, THINKING YOU HATED ME! YEARS OF PAIN, YEARS OF KNOWING YOU GAVE ME AWAY! I WOULD HAVE BEEN SAFER WITH YOU! DO YOU KNOW WHAT PEOPLE CAN BECOME WITHOUT CARE AND LOVE? DO YOU KNOW WHAT CAN HAPPEN?!?’ Years of feeling worthless, thinking his parents didn’t love him, pouring out his pain on everyone else, and now here was his dad, saying he gave him away to protect him? Said dad was spluttering on the throne. ‘DO YOU THINK I DON’T UNDERSTAND?’ he finally shouted back. He hit the staff against the floor, and there was a minor earthquake. ‘TIME AND TIME AGAIN I REGRETED MARRYING THAT…THAT WOMAN AND GIVING YOU TO THE ORPHANAGE! I SEARCHED FOR AGES FOR YOU, BUT I NEVER COULD FIND YOU! AND BEING STUCK IN THIS PLACE FOR AGES! ISOLATED FROM ALL HUMANITY? I’M SURE THAT IF YOU WERE IN MY SITUATION, YOU’D WANT TO DESTROY THE PLACE THAT TOOK SO MUCH FROM YOU!’ Declan stared. His father’s situation seemed quite dilemma. ‘I know what it feels like to be isolated,’ he finally said. ‘But I’m sure destroying everything isn’t the answer. Look at this world. Look at these people. Do they deserve to get destroyed? Do they deserve this? I know that this world has taken so much away from you. I know what it feels like. But destruction isn’t the answer! Please change your mind. Please don’t destroy the world.’ Declan stepped back. He felt…different somehow. That must have been the first time that he had ever tried to save anyone. It felt good. Albert sat on his throne, staring down at his son. He considered for a long time. Finally, he sighed. ‘You’re right,’ he said. ‘Destroying everything won’t help in the slightest. I don’t know what I was thinking. And he let the staff clatter to the ground. ‘Guards!’ Declan’s dad bellowed. ‘Release the prisoners! Release everyone captured in these dungeons! Release them all!’ There was a storm of confused shouting, and a lot of people nearly got trampled. But in the end, everyone was freed. There were some of Albert’s men who didn’t want to turn from their evil ways, and these few trooped out of the castle, muttering things about how they were going to destroy the world anyway. Creature after creature came trooping out of the dungeons. There were the old slumbers, the black brandoins, the dwarves of Mildiana, the tree-dwellers of Randuin Forest, the mesmerists of the sky city of Falinador, the seafolk of the endless sea, the no-ones from the plain of tomorrow, the wanderers of the Windy Ridges. Everyone was thanking Declan, slapping him on the back, shaking his hand, and giving him hugs. So, this is what it feels like to be popular, Declan thought, as a particularly misty no-one tried to give him a fist bump, and went right through him. ‘You’re famous!’ Arkenstein said happily, as he walked by with a large meatloaf in hand (the wanderers were famous cooks, and they had provided a feast for this occasion). ‘The seas will be drumming out your story on the seashore for sure!’ ‘Yes, I’m so happy that I’m famous and all that,’ Declan said, pushing his way through the crowd to a shadowy corner, ‘but I want to know where the door is. You told me that you would show me after I helped you. And I can bring my father home, and we can all…’ he stopped at the look on Arkenstein’s face. ‘Um, I did say that didn’t I?’ He said in a very false jolly voice. ‘Um, yes about that…’ ‘You lied?’ Declan asked incredulously. ‘I might have tweaked the truth a little,’ Arkenstein said guiltily. ‘Many have spotted the door, but it never stays in the same place for long. So, you’re probably…’ He gasped. ‘What?’ Declan asked. In answer, Arkenstein pointed. Declan turned around, and gasped too. It was the door. The very same door that had brought them into Talgia! ‘Dad!’ Declan shouted. ‘Dad! We can go home now! Come here!’ Albert came bustling up, and his jaw dropped open. ‘I expect you’ll be going now then?’ Arkenstein asked tentatively. Declan hesitated. For some strange reason, Declan felt like he wanted to stay. Here, he belonged. Here, he was admired. Loved. Over in Earth…not so much. ‘Um, yeah. I guess so,’ Declan said. There was an awkward silence. Then, Arkenstein brought out his strong orange wood staff. ‘Take this, as thanks for saving the world and all that mosh,’ he said gravely, handing the staff to Declan. Ignoring Declan’s stuttered thanks he burst into tears on a nearby slumber, and it jumped away quickly, white fur drenched. Drindik stepped up next. ‘We give you this diamond in thanks for saving us from near death,’ she said, handing Declan a huge diamond. ‘Even though you put us into that situation in the first place,’ Declan heard Drindik mutter as she strode swiftly away again. ‘Declan. Let’s go now,’ Declan’s dad said, putting a hand on Declan’s shoulder. ‘Well,’ Declan said, ‘I hope to see you again!’ and he and his father stepped to the door, and pushed. And they were sucked, back into the door, back through the vortex of nothing, and back to the real world. Epilogue. Criss walked through the gates of the university fence, and it clanged behind him. His newly earned PHD in Physics was bouncing along in his bag. Life was great, and even better, Declan wasn’t there to bully him. He thought back to that encounter a long time ago, when they were still kids. Declan had approached him right after he had taken his Mars bar. Declan walked up to him, cornered him in an alleyway. ‘You know about yesterday?’ he asked. Almost sheepish. ‘Yeah?’ Criss asked. At the time, he had been formulating the best way to get out of the alley. He was just going to put his plan into action, when… ‘Look, about the Mars bar…I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have done that. I know that I’ve been a jerk, but can you please forgive me?’ Criss stared, open-mouthed, eyes wide, feet ready to spring onto the trashcan right next to Declan and run. ‘It’s…it’s ok,’ he finally said. ‘And you were being a jerk.’ The two boys had laughed, and from that day on, they had been friends. Now, Criss was heading off to see something that Declan had said he would show Criss. He travelled up the familiar path, to the park in the intersection. Declan was waiting there. ‘It has taken me months to track it down,’ Declan said, ‘but I’m sure it’s here.’ ‘What’s here?’ Criss asked. ‘You’ll see,’ Declan said. They walked toward the centre of the park. Then, Criss almost crashed into a door that he had nearly run into. Criss stared at the strange door. It was just there. Nothing was behind it; nothing was in front of it. He could have sworn that it wasn't there before. Just standing. In the middle of a patch of grass. ‘Come on,’ Declan urged. ‘Touch it!’ Criss reached out, and touched the door. And they were sucked into the land of Talgia.

31 May 2023, Week 3: Overcoming obstacles

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
‘We’re here,’ he said. ‘The Mines of Mildiana. Dwarf kingdom.’ They were staring at a gaping hole in the cliff they had been headed for. It looked like a crack in the skin of rock. A chasm. ‘Well,’ what are you waiting for?’ Arkenstein said. ‘Come on, let’s go!’ Declan shook himself out of his stupor, and followed Arkenstein into the fissure. Arkenstein lit a lantern, and walked through the small passageway behind the fissure. Declan followed him. Soon, they started seeing bones. Entire Snakehead skeletons, stuck between axes, dead in pits, Even suffocated in sand. Declan started feeling like they weren’t exactly wanted here. As they passed a particularly grisly scene with two decomposing Snakeheads stuck between pillars of rock, Arkenstein stopped again. ‘No more Snakeheads,’ Arkenstein said. ‘Get ready for traps.’ They walked slowly forward, Arkenstein looking forward at the ground, at the walls, at the ceiling. Then, he stopped. ‘Pit. Right in front of us. Too wide to jump,’ he said. ‘What will we do?’ Declan asked. Then he quickly added, ‘idiot.’ ‘Well, traps are made to be fallen into,’ Arkenstein shrugged. ‘I think the Dwarves want us to starve to death, more’s the pain. So…’ and he jumped, straight forward, and disappeared from sight. Moments later, there was a thump, and a cry of pain. ‘It’s safe!’ Arkenstein called up. ‘a bit deep, but it should be fine.’ A bit deep was an understatement, as Declan found out, as he plunged through the darkness. He screamed as fell for a while, before thumping down on something soft and sticky. ‘It seems I was a bit wrong in my assumption,’ Arkenstein’s voice came out of the darkness, as he held up the lantern to illuminate their surroundings. ‘The Dwarves don’t want us to starve. The want us to die. Die in a grisly way. If I’m not mistaken, this is the lair of Verdinag. ‘Who’s…’ began Declan asked. But his question was answered, as a loud click-clacking came out of the darkness, and a gigantic spider came out of the darkness, white as marble, eyes red as blood, fangs gleaming and dripping with poison. ‘State your business, or Verdinag will strike!’ a voice cried from the darkness. ‘It will be a painful process where your skin melts off your bones. You don’t want to feel it.’ Chapter 6: the Burndalog As Declan squinted, he could make out a small, squat figure on the back of the giant albino spider. It had brown dirt coloured skin, grey stone coloured hair, and light brown clothing. Its nose stuck out quite far from its head, and its mouth leered out at them from the darkness. ‘Thank goodness!’ Arkenstein cried from beside Declan. ‘It’s you! I haven’t seen you for years, Drindik!’ ‘That’s your own fault!’ Drindik yelled back. ‘How could we let you back when you de—’ ‘Nothing about that now!’ Arkenstein quickly said. ‘That was in the past, Drindik, the past! And I only squished 2!’ ‘They were the only ones we had!’ raged Drindik. ‘We had to go up to the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude to get another evsanlius, and it took ages to breed. We had to spend 5 years, 5 YEARS, without the help of the evsanlius to give us the life-giving milk! And we lost a lot of our treasure on that day too, seeing as you knocked it down the abyss of death!’ ‘Yes, but I apologized,’ said Arkenstein a bit sulkily. ‘And besides, treasure isn’t everything.’ ‘TREASURE ISN’T EVERYTHING?’ Drindik bellowed. ‘TREASURE ISN’T EVERYTHING? TREASURE IS EVERYTHING, ALTHOUGH YOU WOULDN’T KNOW A THING ABOUT TREASURE!’ Arkenstein seemed to get angry at that. ‘YOU THINK I’M POOR?’ he yelled. ‘YES, I DO THINK YOU’RE POOR!’ Drindik yelled back. ‘AND YOU’RE NOT IN A POSITION TO BE YELLING! I COULD KILL YOU RIGHT NOW!’ Arkenstein laughed. ‘You and I both know that you wouldn’t,’ he said easily, not yelling anymore. ‘You don’t know what I’m capable of!’ Drindik snarled. And with that, she yelled, ‘Verdinag, pick them up and take them to the Burndalog! Let us see whether these two will be our friends, or enemies.’ Arkenstein groaned and struggled. ‘Not the Burndalog! Anything but the Burndalog!’ he pleaded. For the first time since meeting Arkenstein, Declan thought he detected fear in his voice, and though it seemed that they were headed to a terrible fate, he still enjoyed Arkenstein’s fear as they were carried off by the spider into the darkness. They travelled over the web for what seemed like hours, but was probably minutes. And all the while, Arkenstein moaned and wailed and pleaded, until even Arkenstein’s fear couldn’t cheer Declan up. ‘Uh, Arkenidiot?’ Declan asked. ‘What’s the Burndalog?’ ‘It’s…’ Arkenstein said shakily, ‘it’s…it’s a feeling. It makes you want to curl up, and never live again. It makes you want to tear yourself to bits. It makes you want to die.’ And at those words, Declan was pleading, and moaning, and thrashing just as hard as Arkenstein, while Drindik looked on and laughed. Soon, they came to the edge of the web, and Verdinag flung them onto the ground. Declan stood up, and looked around. They were in dwarf kingdom. Everything was stone. Everything was brown or black. It was the calmest place Declan had found in this world. And he liked it. Dwarves swarmed to the two travellers, all chanting, ‘Burndalog! Burndalog!’ They were dragged to the mouth of a large cave. In the cave, there was a small dwarf. ‘So, who will it be?’ he asked, without turning. Arkenstein cowered, then quickly said, ‘not it!’ Declan groaned inside, muttered, ‘coward!’ and turned to the dwarf. If he knew what he was facing, he would have lay there and never moved. The dwarf waved his hand, and armour came down from a shelf, and landed on Declan. ‘Hey! What?’ the dwarf ignored him. Next, he held out two weapons, a spear and an axe. ‘Which one?’ the dwarf said. Declan tested the spear, and immediately the dwarf took the axe away. ‘Wait, but!’ ‘Get him!’ the dwarf said. A dwarf twice as big as Drindik picked Declan up, and threw him down a slope. Declan tried to stop his downward decent, but he picked up speed, and fell into the arena. Declan wished he had picked the axe, but he had got the spear. He looked around. There were burning logs everywhere. In the centre was a shining diamond encrusted cup. ‘HELLO! HELLO! CAN YOU HEAR ME!’ boomed a loud voice. ‘IT DOESEN’T MATTER ANYWAY. YOUR GOAL IS TO GET THE CUP. JUST PICK IT UP. BEGINS IN 3, 2, 1.’ Then, out of the blue, completely unanticipated, Declan was hit by a wave of pain. He fell to the ground, screaming, feeling so much remorse about what he had inflicted on others. the spear clattered to the ground next to him. At that moment, he would have loved to just turn back time so he could change his actions. And he knew the only thing that could cause this emotion was one of the story stones. The one he needed to get to save the world. The one he needed so he could get out of this place. Then, Verdinag jumped down from the roof of the cavern, and landed in front of the cup. Declan lay on the ground, and watched through streaming eyes as he saw the giant spider approach, dripping venom on the ground, clicking in triumph. Chapter 7: Death by Remorse, or Spider. Verdinag sped through the burning logs, and Declan watched, pain stricken, willing his body to move. Finally, it did, and Declan was able to stand up, and when he did, he was so dizzy from the effort that he promptly fell over again, hitting a burning log, and knocking it in the spider’s path. It screeched, and reared onto its 4 back legs, waving the other 4 in the air. ‘Thank goodness that dwarf gave me this armour,’ Declan thought, as he watched the fire slide off it. The heat was just another pain that was dwarfed by the power of the Emotion Stone. Declan stood up shakily again, and realized that the spider was afraid of fire. It was still reared up, staring down at the fire with its red eyes, transfixed. Declan staggered over to another log, and shoved it over towards Verdinag. The spider screeched. Now two sides were obscured by fire. This time, bare skin touched the log, and Declan felt a jolt of pain. He tried to scream, but realized he was still screaming from before. Falling to his knees, Declan rolled on the ground until the fire went out, and tried to tone out the sound of his own screaming while he crawled to the next log closest to him. The pain generating from the Emotion Stone was getting worse. He shoved it over as well, and it landed just far away enough for Verdinag to be able to leap out of his prison of fire. The albino spider advanced, and Declan, shaking now, stood up, and stumbled towards the cup. Then, he could go on no further. He collapsed, shaking, writhing, and watched as the spider approached him. Then, he heard a voice. Not the dwarf’s voice, a familiar voice. ‘Come on, Declan! Stand up and get to the cup! Death by spider is worse than death by remorse! Move! Your! Butt!’ It was Arkenstein. Declan somehow found the strength in him to stand up. He half ran, half limped towards the cup, the power of the stone growing stronger as he got closer to the cup. Finally, he was right in front of the cup. Verdinag was right behind him. Just as Declan picked up the cup, Verdinag pounced, and the world went black around Declan. Declan woke up in a stone hut, on a stone bed, with his body aching all over, and feeling as though he wanted to lie somewhere more comfortable. The remorse was gone, but Declan could still feel the aftereffects. The stone hadn’t so much tortured him, as shown him what it felt like to be bullied. It had made him see things from the bullied people’s side. He felt weak. Then, he was knocked of the bed as 50 Kg of Arkenstein bowled him over. ‘You feeling alright?’ Arkenstein asked anxiously, completely ignoring the fact he had just knocked Declan off a hard stone bed onto a harder stone floor. ‘Yeah, I’m alright,’ Declan said, standing up, and rubbing his ribs. ‘How about you?’ Arkenstein stared in astonishment at Declan. ‘What?’ Declan asked. ‘It’s just…’ Arkenstein said. ‘Who are you and what did you do with the real Declan? That is the first time I have heard you ask me how I felt! This is a breakthrough! Life is great! And you got the cup!’ Declan smiled.

17 May 2023, Week 2: Through the door

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
Declan looked around. The sky was cloudless, and sunless. The air was warm and cold at the same time. And everything was different to how he knew it. The trees were floating at different heights all over the plain. Red grass swayed all over the place, making a strange whistling sound. Hills humped up from the ground, shrinking and regrowing in other places, in different colours. Strange animals crept, slithered, walked, crawled, and jumped around him, some with strange wings that never seemed to stop moving, some with more limbs than seemed physically possible, others making loud honking sounds, and others that Declan just couldn’t describe. And the world smelled…different. Strange. Magical. Like jam. He took a step forward, and his leg sunk into a knee deep fluffy white substance. It was rising and falling steadily as if breathing, but seemed to shift as soon as he touched it. ‘Don’t. Move. A muscle.’ Whispered a voice behind him. Declan turned around to find a thing staring at him. He was short, even shorter than Declan. His eyes were changing colour continuously, and his hands were slightly clawed. Its head was covered in long hair, and a beard. And he had scales all over his body. ‘Why not?’ Declan practically shouted back. The fluff shook some more. ‘Shut up!’ came the thing’s strained whisper. ‘Now get off the cloud!’ Declan, staring at the strange old (obviously deranged) man-beast, and smiled. Then, he jumped up and down on the “cloud” and bellowed at the top of his voice, ‘NO!’ Instantly, Declan was jolted off the fluffy object, as it sped right up into the air. The “cloud” was a cloud. It was large, it was fluffy, it was white. Then its eyes opened, and the ultimate level of cuteness unfolded. ‘Aw!’ Declan said. ‘Don’t say that!’ the creature said. ‘It hates…’ but at that moment, the cloud’s expression darkened. Literally. It turned grey. Rain started pouring from the bottom, and the cloud’s eyes turned red. And for the first time, the clouds mouth opened. Declan screamed as the mouth, ringed with fangs of lighting rained lighting on him and the man-like thing. ‘RUN!’ the creature said, abandoning all whispering voice, and racing with Declan toward a nearby cave. ‘Come into my house!’ Declan ran for his life, as the cloud poured rain down on the ground, shot more lightning bolts, and bellowed its triumph in a voice of thunder. He ran through the entrance to the cave, and fell onto a rock. Chapter 3: Sir Arkenstien Vrolcroft Dingilius Siritinaglis the 4th The thing pointed at a large rock. There was a rumbling, and a huge hunch-backed creature stomped to the entrance, heaved the rock over it, and dropped the rock. Declan gasped. Declan looked around. There was a tapestry on the wall, featuring a bunch of strange gems. A stool stood in a corner, and a hallway leading to what Declan presumed was another room. There was a merry fire, glowing deepest purple but letting off more heat than any fire Declan had ever seen before. Even that one where the accidentally (on purpose) set the school on fire. ‘That’s Bill,’ the thing said. ‘He is a Danggervit, and helps me with everything I do. That’s why I have so many bones around the place.’ He picked up a skull that looked alarmingly like a human skull, and tossed it to Bill. Bill crunched it in his fanged jaws. ‘I don’t know who you are, or where I am, or why I’m here, but I’m only staying here until the cloud goes away!’ Declan said. ‘O yes,’ the thing said. ‘Where are my manners? I’m Anderbeany.’ ‘That’s a terrible name!’ Declan scoffed. ‘Well yes, I was thinking the same thing,’ Anderbeany mused. ‘Yeah, that’s not quite right. No, my name is Sir Arkenstien Vrolcroft Dingilius Siritinaglis the 4th. We’re in the dimension of doom, although we probably need a better name, as it isn’t very doomy.’ Arkenstein lapsed into another long silence. Finally, he spoke. ‘There’s no way out of this place, as far as I know,’ Arkenstein said. ‘None at all.’ Declan put his face in his hands. ‘If you don’t say please,’ Arkenstein said. Declan jerked his head up, and said, ‘PLEASE!’ ‘Well,’ began Arkenstein said. But just then, there was a loud rapping on the rock. ‘By order of the High Emperor King Chieftain Cool Dude,’ a snarky voice barked from outside, ‘please tell us if you have seen a boy, 158 cm tall, piggy eyes, snotty nose, 12-year-old wearing a red T-Shirt, brown pants, blue boxers, pink socks, white shoes, and holding a bag containing unknown (and possibly dangerous) objects.’ ‘Oh, did I forget?’ Arkenstein said, as he shooed a furiously complaining Declan into a small cavity in the wall and dropped a rock in front of it. ‘there’s the High Emperor King Chieftan Cool Dude. He’s the worst thing that happened to this world. Fell out of the sky like you. I brought him in myself. But he became power hungry. Soon, he became ruler of the world. And he rules it with an iron fist. COMING SIRS!!’ Declan saw as Bill lifted the rock away from the entrance. Then, he stared. There were things outside. Strange things. They were like men, but their heads were snakelike. Their hands were three fingered. And they were riding strange winged dogs with scorpion tails. ‘Stop your flattery, and tell us the answer to the question!’ the one with a cobra head on the biggest dog thing sneered. ‘The High Emperor has been too easy on you, but I am not as forgiving. Now, answer!’ ‘Nope,’ Arkenstein answered. ‘I haven’t seen no boy, General Rakta. Just that cloud. I see you’ve taken care of it? OK. Now, if you don’t mind, I’ll be leaving you to your…’ ‘We do mind!’ General Rakta. ‘I need to make a search of your house!’ ‘I’m afraid that’s impossible,’ Arkenstein said. ‘Bill is in a bloodthirsty mood.’ Bill gave a large belch in the background, and sat down in a corner. ‘We’ll deal with him,’ General Rakta said menacingly, holding up long thin simitar. ‘Remember the first law. Obey the High Emperor King Chieftain cool dude. OR ELSE!!’ Arkenstein sighed, and let them in. The guards streamed across the small room, and Declan watched through the crack as they turned over baskets, stomped on the fire, ripped up the tapestry, and generally wrecked everything. Just then, Declan felt something hard dig into his head. He looked round, and saw a shelf. On it was a strange red and blue rock. He picked it up, and immediately felt…different. Stronger. More powerful. Even…magical. He slipped it into his pocket. Just then, the snake heads went away. ‘You can come out now,’ Arkenstein whispered. Declan crawled out. Then, Arkenstein noticed the missing rock.

3 May 2023, Week 1: A troublesome character

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
Chapter 1 Declan Red was obnoxious. it wasn't his snotty nose. it wasn't his piggy eyes. it wasn't even his tendency to take everyone else's lunch (although that could contribute.) no. Declan was obnoxious because of his attitude. 'Give that back!' Criss yelled. 'that's for my brother!' 'Nope!' grinned Declan, holding the large chocolate bar above Criss' head. He took a big slobbery bite. ‘You…’ Criss lunged for the Mars Bar. He hit it out of Declan’s hand, and it hit the ground, instantly starting to melt in a chocolaty puddle on the playground slide. Declan stopped, and stared down at the boy 3 Cm shorter than him. ‘Now you’ve done it!’ Declan charged at the smaller boy, and… ‘Now stop right there!’ yelled Mr Jenkins, the PE teacher. He flung his skipping rope expertly to catch the running Declan around the shins. Declan crashed down at a petrified Criss’ feet, who, awoken from his stupor, ran as fast as he could away. ‘Declan Red,’ Mr Jenkins said slowly. ‘Go to the principal’s office. Now.’ ‘Inexcusable behaviour…wrong thing to do…poor Criss…suspension for three days.’ This was the string of unrelated words Declan heard as he sat in the uncomfortable chair in front of Miss Zahner, the principal. ‘Yes Miss Zahner,’ Declan droned. He had been in the principal’s office so many times he had broken a school record, at 1,000 visits this year. ‘Now get out!’ Miss Zahner said. Declan obediently got up, and walked out of the door. He shoved Freddy Zean out of the way, and stormed down the corridor, and out of the school. ‘Been suspended again?’ the matron for Declan’s dormitory, Miss Handers said in a bored voice. ‘Well, get to your dormitory.’ Declan trudged up the stairs. He flung himself onto his mattress, and stared up at the ceiling. It was tonight. He was going to run away, far away from this orphanage, this school, these people. Maybe to Queensland. That would be nice. Away from all those accusing stares. He gathered up all his things, which took approximately 2 minutes, as he had only a second set of clothes, a jumper, an action figure of Hulk, and the last thing his parents – father and half-mother, Declan reminded himself – had given him. A note, saying never come back. He sighed. Then, he waited. And waited. And waited. He knew his presence at the dinner table wouldn’t be missed. He waited until he heard the feet marching up the stairs, and Miss Handers calling, ‘Lights out! Lights out I tell you! Vincent, please stop attempting to shove the cat in the fire. It doesn’t like it!’ Then, he opened his window, and looked down at the ground below. It was high up, seeing as he was three stories up, but Declan had made an escape plan. He took out his Hulk action figure, and threw his bag down. It landed safely below. He looked out, and reached for a pipe. It just held his weight. Declan slowly inched his way down, until he was close enough to the ground to jump. He landed uncomfortably on his bag, then picked it up, and ran. He ran down the road, and into the park. There, he started walking. PE had never been his strong spot. Declan walked onward, crickets chirping, the night air blowing on his face. It was almost peaceful. Then, he nearly ran into the door. Declan stared at the strange door. It was just there. Nothing was behind it; nothing was in front of it. He could have sworn that it wasn't there before. Just standing. In the middle of a patch of grass with a sign saying, ‘do not place anything on this grass.’ At 7:00 in the evening. It was covered in swirls...and they seemed to be moving. Declan scoffed. His mind must be playing tricks on him. He turned around…and there it was! In front of him. He looked behind him, but it wasn’t there. He turned again, and started running, only to nearly walk into it again. He grunted in anger. Was someone playing a trick on him? He punched the door. Declan knew instantly, that that was a very bad idea.

8 March 2023, Week 3: Clues and conflict

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
The next few days, Mr Evans was seen all around the place. He was talking with the neighbours for a few minutes, then moving off again. He was seen dusting the avenue with a broom. The neighbours thought he was just a bit mental (which wasn’t actually really strange. Number 2 had a demented cat.). He was also seen mowing his lawn with a scythe. One day, Leena opened her eyes, and yawned. She picked up her daggers, went down the stairs, grabbed a roll, and walked out of the door. Leena walked across the street, and knocked on the door of Bill’s house. Bill answered the door. ‘You’re just in time for my invention!’ Bill said. He dragged Leena up 3 flights of stairs, and they went into Bill’s room. Bill’s room was a comfy room, if you ignored the scorch marks on almost every available surface. Bill ran to the centre of the room, and picked up a weird contraption thing. ‘I think I’ve finally got it made,’ he said excitedly. ‘A contraption that can fry eggs!’ he brought a frying pan out, and put it on the thing. He then pressed a button, and put an egg in a slot. The machine lit a fire underneath the pan, and rolled the egg on the pan. The egg smashed, leaving shell all over the pan. A claw picked the egg shell pieces out. Some egg white dripped into the egg fryer. The machine stopped, and made a sputtering sound. ‘Duck!’ Bill yelled, and they both ran into the cupboard, Bill grabbing Fluffles, the fluffy white cat. There was a loud explosion. Bill peered around the door, grabbed his water bottle, and poured water on the fire. It fizzled, and went out. ‘Phew,’ Bill said. ‘Well, that’s definitely a failure.’ ‘Yup,’ Leena said. ‘Well,’ Bill said, ‘what about that Mr Evans?’ ‘Mr Evans?’ Leena said. ‘Is that the name of the guy we saw with the Barry’s best dog food truck?’ ‘Yeah,’ Bill said. ‘My mum invited him over for dinner last night. He was really nervous. It was as if he had never really been around people before. In the end he left early.’ ‘Weird,’ Leena said. ‘Anyway, can you help me erect the target board? I’ve just finished painting it.’ ‘Alright,’ Bill said. ‘Let me just…’ he grabbed a box of donuts that had miraculously survived the egg fryer’s explosion, and pulled one out, along with some cat food for Fluffles. Then, they went outside. Leena went inside her house and grabbed the target board. She rolled it down the steps, being careful not to make any noise. Her mum and dad were still sleeping. Leena brought the target board, and saw Bill waiting with a bottle of his home-made super glue, and Fluffles in his arms. The super-glue was made with a combination of different super-glues, and hardened in a minute after being squirted out. Leena took the bottle from Bill. ‘Hold this up for me, will you?’ she said. Bill lifted the circular board up, and Leena glued the back of it to the tree. They both crept up the stairs, and up into Leena’s room. Bill settled himself down on a bean bag, while Leena opened the window, and stared down at the target board. She took careful aim, and threw. It thunked into the target board. Just then, Mr Evans came out of his house. Leena threw another dagger. It thudded next to the first one. Mr Evans walked over to Leena’s house, and stared up at the window. ‘Hey!’ he called up. ‘What are you doing? You could kill yourself with those things!’ Leena leant out of the window. ‘I’ve done this before Mr Evans!’ she shouted back. ‘Don’t worry!’ just then, a bird landed on the window sill. Fluffles leapt for the window, and knocked Leena’s hand. The dagger slipped, and fell directly into Mr Evans’s leg! ‘Oh my!’ Leena exclaimed. She ran down the stairs, with Bill who had seen it as well. ‘Are you all right, Mr Evans?’ she asked. ‘Yes, quite all right,’ he said, inspecting the wound with interest. He pulled the dagger out of his leg. ‘I’ll be fine.’ ‘Aren’t you hurt?’ Bill asked, worriedly. ‘Hurt?’ the Mr Evans asked. ‘Oh yeah, hurt!’ he hurriedly made a few pained noises, and clutched at his leg. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I’ll be off then.’ Then, he walked off with an obviously fake limp. ‘What was that about?’ Bill asked. ‘I have no idea,’ Leena said. She knew that there was something strange about that man. And she was going to find out what it was. Chapter 3 ‘What,’ Bill asked for the 50th time, ‘are we doing here again?’ ‘Gathering critical info on the suspect,’ Leena said. ‘And why,’ Bill said, ‘does that involve my binoculars?’ The two friends were crouching underneath Mr Evans’ window, and Leena was staring through the window with Bill’s binoculars. The curtains were opened, and Leena could see a dusty living room, and an even dustier staircase, with the dustiest coat on the dustiest coat hanger she had ever seen. The smell of lemons wafted out as usual, and there was a cornflake packet on the table. But Leena noticed something else. ‘There’s a large painting on the wall!’ she whisper-exclaimed, ignoring Bills grumbles of, ‘You could have just asked for the binoculars,’ ‘it says 100 A.D!’ ‘Who cares?’ Bill said, as his stomach gurgled. ‘Say, do you want to go and get a donut? Or 10?’ ‘This painting could be a clue!’ Leena said. ‘My stomach is giving me a clue,’ Bill said, as his belly gave another gurgle. ‘It says that I want a donut.’ ‘Be quiet about your…Oh!’ Leena dived for cover behind a bush, dragging Bill with her. She peeked over the windowsill again. ‘Mr Evans has come back in!’ Mr Evans walked into the living room, and sat on the chair, letting out a large puff of dust. He poured some cornflakes for himself, and began eating. 2 hours later, Bill had gone and got some donuts, and had eaten a few, and Leena was beginning to doze off, when she was jolted awake by the noise of a scraping chair. Mr Evans had gotten up, and was walking out of the door! ‘Come on!’ Leena hissed to Bill, but Bill was finishing his 4th donut and wouldn’t move an inch. ‘O U Ithut E,’ he said through a mouthful of donut. Leena stood up, and crouched behind the bush as Mr Evans came out of his house. He stretched, yawned, and walked off. Leena followed him. Mr Evans walked down the street, past the chickens in sunglasses having a pool party, past the big number 1 of a house, and walked straight across the corresponding road. He walked into the park, and soon swept into the forest. Leena crept behind him. Soon, Mr Evans reached the centre of the forest. He sat, and took a deep breath in. ‘Soon,’ he said, but his voice wasn’t his voice. It was rasping, low, and menacing. ‘Soon, I will conquer the world. I will destroy this pitiful place once and for all. I can wait. I have waited 1000 years, and I can wait. I must wait for next Saturday. Then, I can strike. The whole world will soon know the name of Viggo Armagno, destroyer of worlds, conqueror of cities, enslaver of galaxies. The whole world will soon know the name, of Viggo Armagno, the immortal.

22 February 2023, Week 2: What will the neighbours think?

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
Next day, Leena opened her eyes, and yawned. She picked up her daggers, went down the stairs, grabbed a roll, and walked out of the door. Leena walked across the street, and knocked on the door of Bill’s house. Bill answered the door. ‘You’re just in time for my invention!’ Bill said. He dragged Leena up 3 flights of stairs, and they went into Bill’s room. Bill’s room was a comfy room, if you ignored the scorch marks on almost every available surface. Bill ran to the centre of the room, and picked up a weird contraption thing. ‘I think I’ve finally got it made,’ he said excitedly. ‘A contraption that can fry eggs!’ he brought a frying pan out, and put it on the thing. He then pressed a button, and put an egg in a slot. The machine lit a fire underneath the pan, and rolled the egg on the pan. The egg smashed, leaving shell all over the pan. A claw picked the egg shell pieces out. Some egg white dripped into the egg fryer. The machine stopped, and made a sputtering sound. ‘Duck!’ Bill yelled, and they both ran into the cupboard, Bill grabbing Fluffles, the fluffy white cat. There was a loud explosion. Bill peered around the door, grabbed his water bottle, and poured water on the fire. It fizzled, and went out. ‘Phew,’ Bill said. ‘Well, that’s definitely a failure.’ ‘Yup,’ Leena said. ‘Well,’ Bill said, ‘what about that Mr Evans?’ ‘Mr Evans?’ Leena said. ‘Is that the name of the guy we saw with the Barry’s best dog food truck?’ ‘Yeah,’ Bill said. ‘My mum invited him over for dinner last night. He was really nervous. It was as if he had never really been around people before. In the end he left early.’ ‘Weird,’ Leena said. ‘Anyway, can you help me erect the target board? I’ve just finished painting it.’ ‘Alright,’ Bill said. ‘Let me just…’ he grabbed a box of donuts that had miraculously survived the egg fryer’s explosion, and pulled one out, along with some cat food for Fluffles. Then, they went outside. Leena went inside her house and grabbed the target board. She rolled it down the steps, being careful not to make any noise. Her mum and dad were still sleeping. Leena brought the target board, and saw Bill waiting with a bottle of his home-made super glue, and Fluffles in his arms. The super-glue was made with a combination of different super-glues, and hardened in a minute after being squirted out. Leena took the bottle from Bill. ‘Hold this up for me, will you?’ she said. Bill lifted the circular board up, and Leena glued the back of it to the tree. They both crept up the stairs, and up into Leena’s room. Bill settled himself down on a bean bag, while Leena opened the window, and stared down at the target board. She took careful aim, and threw. It thunked into the target board. Just then, Mr Evans came out of his house. Leena threw another dagger. It thudded next to the first one. Mr Evans walked over to Leena’s house, and stared up at the window. ‘Hey!’ he called up. ‘What are you doing? You could kill yourself with those things!’ Leena leant out of the window. ‘I’ve done this before Mr Evans!’ she shouted back. ‘Don’t worry!’ just then, a bird landed on the window sill. Fluffles leapt for the window, and knocked Leena’s hand. The dagger slipped, and fell directly into Mr Evans’s leg! ‘Oh my!’ Leena exclaimed. She ran down the stairs, with Bill who had seen it as well. ‘Are you all right, Mr Evans?’ she asked. ‘Yes, quite all right,’ he said, inspecting the wound with interest. He pulled the dagger out of his leg. ‘I’ll be fine.’ ‘Aren’t you hurt?’ Bill asked, worriedly. ‘Hurt?’ the Mr Evans asked. ‘Oh yeah, hurt!’ he hurriedly made a few pained noises, and clutched at his leg. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I’ll be off then.’ Then, he walked off with an obviously fake limp. ‘What was that about?’ Bill asked. ‘I have no idea,’ Leena said. She knew that there was something strange about that man. And she was going to find out what it was.

8 February 2023, Week 1: Hiding the extraordinary in the ordinary

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
Chapter 1 Banktown Avenue was a cosy, rundown sort of place. There was a park filled with trees nearby, and the houses all had circular windows in their attics, but other than that, the houses were all different. This was how the people in Banktown Avenue liked it. the Avenue was dusty and well ridden on, by people in big cars going on business trips, who just happened to ride through, and kids on skateboards who threw rocks through the windows of number 14 Banktown Avenue, which was said to be haunted, and smelled like lemons. The rest of the Avenue smelled like eucalyptus. But aside from all the weirdness, Banktown Avenue was pretty quiet…in most of the houses. Number 12 Banktown Avenue was different to all the rest. Not because it was weird, no, all the houses were weird. Number 3 Banktown Avenue even had a large chicken farm in the front yard with a miniature rocket for the chickens to sleep in instead of a chicken house. No, number 12 was weird because of the girl who lived there. The girl, whose favourite hobby, was playing with daggers and swords. Leena Tavin stared out of the circular attic window, taking careful aim with her dagger. Leena was a tall 12-year-old girl with dark red hair, and sharp dark brown eyes. she wore a belt hung with daggers around her waist, and her hair was in a messy ponytail. It was the holiday, and she had decided to spend the day throwing daggers at the target hung up on their ewe tree. She was a great shot. As she went down to pick up the 4 daggers she had thrown, Leena saw her best friend, Bill Drake, coming out of number 4 Banktown Avenue, holding a large donut covered with black icing. Bill’s house was peculiar, because it had 3 chimneys. Leena had once asked why the house had 3 chimneys, but Bill had just said, ‘it’s for some good reasons,’ and gave no further explanations. Leena suspected it was so that the explosions continually issuing from Bill’s room (which all the chimneys connected to) would let out the smoke. Bill said he was going to invent something useful one day, and Leena believed him. He had a great mind. He just got distracted by food often. Bill had large glasses, with purple frames, and with tape all over the arms. He had curly hair, and was short for his age, which was 13. He was thin and gangly. He usually wore overalls over his black jeans, and bought donuts online with the computer he made out of a kit. When he wasn’t eating, he was thinking, and when he wasn’t thinking, he was making. So far, he had made a robotic toy for cats, which ran around while his pet cat, Fluffles, chased it. ‘Ey Leena,’ Bill said, his mouth full of donut. He quickly swallowed all the donut, and licked his lips. ‘Why are you throwing daggers now? It’s a holiday! You should be, I dunno, relaxing at a beach in Hawaii, not throwing daggers in a dangerous sort of way?’ Bill never got why Leena loved weapons so much. ‘This is all I can do,’ Leena said. ‘I don’t like reading, or inventing, or eating, or sleeping, and we’re not going on a holiday, so this is what I do. You’ll thank me when someone tries to kill us, and I stop them.’ ‘Alright,’ Bill said. He knew there was no point arguing with Leena. ‘Hey, did you notice, there’s a new guy. His van is over there. I think he’s moving into number 8. Leena looked over, and saw a large moving truck with Barry’s Best Dog Food spray-painted on the side. Then, she saw the man. Chapter 2 The man was old. His skin was wrinkled. He was wearing a baseball cap, a plaided shirt, white pants, different coloured shoes, one black, the other pink, and gloves. He yawned, and his teeth glinted in the light, pure white. He brought out a walking stick. ‘Hey kids!’ the man said. ‘Is this Banktown street?’ ‘Yeah,’ Leena said, flipping a dagger. ‘What of it?’ ‘Have a donut.’ The man said, bringing out a giant box of donuts and throwing one at them. Bill caught it, and looked down. ‘Strawberry icing! Awesome!’ he said, biting down on the donut, an expression of ecstasy on his face as he ate it in 2 bites. The man threw the donuts over his head, and they landed on the dusty Avenue, exploding in colours, and colouring everything in icing. The man didn’t seem to care that he had wasted all his donuts. Bill looked on in an expression on horror on his face now, at the way the man had wasted the donuts. The man brought out a pink teddy bear, gave it to Leena, patted her on the head, and said, ‘what a nice young girl.’ He then walked to the house, dragging a suitcase behind him. In that second, Leena came to a conclusion. She hated that man.

14 December 2022, Week 5: Reflecting on our year

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
12
I like the fortnightly sessions because of the wait, as it makes the YWC much more fun. I come back week after week because this club is so good, and because it helps me with writing skills. Also, I like reading all the others’ ideas. I am now much more confident in sharing my writing. My favourite term in 2022 was term 3, because I love making things up. One idea for future young writer’s club terms could be; a) each writer makes a world where there is a corrupt ruler, and the character is the only one who is brave enough to stand up to him/her. b) each writer writes about earth invading (or being invaded by) aliens, or a goldilocks planet.

30th November 2022, Week 4: The Fix

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
11, turning 12 in 13 days
Prologue Things can never be forgotten. No matter how deep you stuff them down to the back of your brain, how hard you try to erase it from your mind, it will stay there. Lurking. Waiting for the right moment, the right time, to pounce back into your brain. Like now. Deep, deeeep under the State library of NSW, something stirred in the black catacombs of Know-how. Something that was meant to sleep forever, trapped. A case, laced with Qualkinite, shifted. Cracked. Splintered. Someone, no, something, rose from the debris. The Bane of Knowledge was free. And it was out…for revenge. Chapter 1 Strange things had been going on in the large city of Sydney, and strange things were going to happen. Axel just knew it. it had started with the disappearance of creatures. Dogs, cats, horses. No one really cared except the people who owned them, and all the animal-lovers (Axel included). Then, people had vanished. When 25-year-old Barry Baloney, 86-year-old Sarah Gregory, 5-year-old Teddy Smith, and 18-year-old Jemimah Barber had gone missing, it had caused an uproar. Everyone wanted to know what had happened. Detectives were out and searching. Axel Delimand was sitting in the state library of NSW, reading through his homework, and groaning. He’d never liked math, and today, he had 50 questions to get through. He was a tall, bulky boy, with black eyes, and straight hair, slicked right down. His jeans had tears in them, and his shirt, which used to pronounce, ‘I love soccer!’ now said, ‘I le ser!’ his long legs bounced up and down as he stared at the math problems. Axel sighed, and put the math away. He’d do that later. Now, he had to walk, to run. He stuffed all his homework into his backpack, and walked out of the library. As he walked out of the doors, he had a strange feeling in his head, that told him not to leave, but to stay. He ignored the feeling. He’d been feeling it for days now, but it still felt weird. Why would he want to stay at the library? He lived somewhere else. Once he was out, he pelted past the big sign in front of the library. He ran past the parked cars, the buildings, and the occasional man in a jumpsuit. Soon, he was at his home. 24 silver street was a comfy, rundown house. A large birch tree, shedding leaves all over the driveway, sat in the front yard. The garage was slightly rusted, but in pretty good shape. Axel jumped up the steps to the door, and announced his arrival by stepping on the squeaky plank next to the worn rocking-chair. He opened the door, and stepped into the living room. ‘Hey mum!’ Axel called into the kitchen. ‘What are we having for dinner?’ ‘We’ll have nothing if you don’t come in here,’ came the high and lilting voice of Lilly Delimand. ‘Abby’s causing chaos, and I can’t cook and watch at the same time.’ Axel walked into the kitchen, and was met with a sticky hug from Abby, his little sister. She had a round face, and the same black eyes that Axel had. Her face was pretty much always smiling, and her hands were pretty much always in, on, and around anything she could get at. Abby looked seriously at her older brother, and said, ‘you play with me?’ ‘Alright Abby,’ Axel said. ‘Just let me put my stuff away, and I’ll play with you.’ ‘Get her cleaned up as well,’ Axel’s mum said. ‘she’s a sticky mess!’ Lilly had the same round face as Abby, but she had brown eyes. She was plump, but not fat, and she usually wore a flowery dress and skirt. ‘Yes mum!’ Axel called, looking into the kitchen as he picked Abby up. It looked like it usually did, with pots on the stove, and food in the pots. One such pot that had not been put on the stove was lying on the floor, with golden sauce seeping out. ‘Well, there goes our sweet and sour sauce,’ groaned Axel’s mother, grabbing a cloth, and wiping up the mess. After wiping up Abby, Axel played tag in the front yard with her. Abby loved running around the yard while Axel roared and chased after her. Soon, it was turning dark, and the two siblings waited for a small red Toyota car to appear in the street. Sure enough, a pair of headlights came rumbling down the road, and they came to rest at the garage. A tall, gangly man with slicked down hair climbed out of the Toyota. ‘Daddy!’ Abby yelled, and she ran at Gary Delimand, and hugged him around the legs. ‘Hello, my little princess,’ Axel’s dad said, picking her up, and squeezing her tight. He walked over to Axel, and said, ‘Hey Ax, how’s it going?’ ‘Great!’ Axel said. He knew his voice sounded a bit too bright, but he just couldn’t help it. ‘You still thinking about my new job?’ Gary said, putting Abby down to run into the house. ‘Why do you have to go?’ Axel burst out. He knew he sounded selfish, but once he started, he couldn’t stop. ‘Why do you have to take the job, and move to freaking Brisbane? Why can’t you just decline the job?’ ‘I know you don’t want me to go, and I don’t want to go either,’ Gary said, putting his hand on Axel’s shoulder. ‘But I have to go. I go where my boss sends me, and he’s sending me there. And I’ll be able to come back every so often.’ ‘I don’t want you to go,’ Axel whispered. ‘I know, Ax,’ his dad said. ‘I know. We’ll talk in the morning, alright? Now, let’s go inside.’ They walked through the door, and into the living room. Chapter 2 Axel lay awake in bed. Dinner had been a quiet business, with scraping spoons and forks. He had read for the rest of the time, and now he was supposed to be sleeping. But he wasn’t. Suddenly, Axel felt a rustling at his sleeve! He jerked up, and grabbed at…a strip of old parchment. As he looked, words started appearing in the moonlight. ‘Human. Time is short. The Bane of Knowledge is free. And it wants revenge. Your ancestors used to be great. I just hope you are to. Come to the Mitchell library. More will be explained later. What are you doing, just lying there? Get up! The world and all in it are depending on you!’ Axel sat in the moonlight, contemplating his decisions. ‘Well, if this is true, and I don’t go, then we’ll all die apparently,’ he muttered. ‘If it’s false, and I go, then what is there to lose?’ Axel jumped out of bed, and ran to the window, and threw it open. Just before he leaped out of the window, he paused. He needed rope, and a torch. He grabbed them from his desk drawer, went back to the window. Axel climbed onto the gutter, and slid down. Soon, he was at the ground, and he was running toward something that would change his life. Forever. He knew the path to the library well, and he knew the quickest shortcuts there. Soon, he was at the library. It looked different in the dark. The Mitchell library cast a deep shadow over everything around it. A shadow so black, that once he stepped into the shadow, he could barely see his hand in front of his face. Axel sneaked up the stairs, and came to the door. He found it by bumping into it. Axel knew it must be locked, but he tried it anyway. Instead of opening, there was a sucking noise, and the doors seemed to disappear. He stepped through into the Mitchell Vestibule, and the door reappeared, putting him into complete darkness. Or almost complete. A light was coming from the reading room, through the archway. Voices also came through; voices he didn’t understand. Then suddenly, the voices snapped into focus, and he could hear what they said. ‘E won’t come,’ a deep male voice said. ‘The big uman brute. All of em are like at. Brainless.’ ‘Oh, he will Balg,’ said a higher male voice. ‘we’ve been sending him to many mind warps for him to not come. ‘I agree with Niggles,’ said a female voice, ‘the boy will come. In fact, he’s here now. Axel, come down please.’ Axel stepped into the light, and slowly walked past the bookshelves to the stairway. The rail cast a shadow that made Axel feel like he was in bars. Then, he looked toward the light, and his jaw dropped so far it could have fitted an adult human. The light he had seen had come from a candle in what looked like a human’s skull. But that wasn’t what made Axel gape. There were three figures on the table…the ones that had been talking. They were small, and bent over. Their hands were small, but their fingers and arms were long and thin. One of the little creatures had a long red beard, straight red hair, and bushy eyebrows. Another had a very droopy, long moustache, droopy, drawn eyes, and a hat with a bobble on the top the size of his head. The final one had blue eyes, a pink dress, and long, curly hair. ‘Well, what oe doing, boy?’ the red head said, his voice indicating he was Balg. ‘The world is at stake, and oe stand ere looking like the idiot you are. Come on en, the Bane of Knowledge is still out ere! Get going!’ Then, to the one in the pink dress, ‘e’s stupider an e looks, Kelk. Oe sure this is e one? I say we kill im.’ At that, Axel fainted. When he came to, Axel found himself lying on the floor of the reading room, with Niggles leaning his head over him. Axel yelled, and scrambled away, knocking over a couple chairs and books. ‘Who are you,’ he gasped, pressing himself against the bookshelf behind him, and knocking over more books, ‘And what do you want?’ Balg laughed heartily, slapping himself on the belly. ‘E’s a scaredy hat!’ he bellowed loudly, rolling over. ‘I am not!’ Axel whispered, ‘and stop shouting! This is a library!’ ‘OK, scaredy,’ Balg yelled. ‘Balg, for once be quiet!’ Kelk muttered. Balg mouthed all the words while rolling his eyes, but shut his mouth. ‘So,’ Niggles said to Axel, ‘I expect that you are wanting some explanation of what we called you for, and why you are so special.’ Axel nodded vigorously, not trusting himself to speak. ‘Well,’ Niggles began, ‘first, you must know what we are. In our language, we are known as, the Gentolandin, but in the common English tongue, we are what you call, elves. ‘Library elves!’ Kelk added. ‘Elves?’ Axel finally gasped. ‘You mean those – you exist?’ ‘Course!’ Balg whisper-shouted. ‘Ow do oe think the ibrary is so clean? Oe umans are so clumsy in cleaning, oe can’t do all at. E take care of all at is uncared for.’ ‘Back to the story,’ Niggles said. ‘The Bane of Knowledge. This is what is behind all this human disappearance. Now, I expect that you want the full story of the creature. Here is the story.” Chapter 3 Niggles began. ‘It started like this. Long ago, before Australia was “discovered,”’ at the word discovered all three elves spat on the table, ‘a wiseman of a tribe brought to life a dark creature from the realm of madness. ‘It was like a shadow. It travelled faster than lightning. And it craved destruction. The last thing anybody saw who was trapped by the Bane of Knowledge was two, dark red eyes, containing nothing but anger. But the worst part was, the Bane consumed the creature. Drained all that made them who they were. And they were turned into mindless slaves. ‘It was said to have a true form, more terrifying than anything else. Two, long, clawed hands. Tendrils of destruction trailing from its back. The snout of a dragon. An inhuman call, which echoed across the plain at night. ‘Finally, young men from every tribe in Australia came together to fight it. there was a great battle, and it was sealed in a chamber by the “wise” man who had called him into existence.’ Axel, who had been listening intently, suddenly realised Niggles had left something out. ‘If the Bane of Knowledge was sealed, then how is it still around?’ he asked, suddenly less shy. Kelk took over the story from Niggles. ‘When the library was built, they dug down to make the archives of the library. They dug right into the chamber where the Bane was trapped. In 1826, the Bane of knowledge was free again. Angrier than before, it caused mass panic in Sydney. ‘Finally, a young boy, with the spirit of the not-so-wise man, defeated it, and trapped it in an obsidian coffin. The young boy was your great-grandfather. You are special, because the ‘Wise’ man’s spirit lives in you, protecting you from any harm. They put the coffin in the archives, in a secret room. And now it is free again, and its goal is to finalize the process it started centuries ago. To destroy the world.’ There was a deathly silence. And then the library doors started creaking open! ‘Hide!’ Kelk whispered, ducking under the table, and extinguishing the candle. Axel ducked down with her, and they hid their, as they watched a librarian watch-man walk into the reading room. The man stepped down the steps, and flashed his torch around. His nametag stated that he was Wally Eren Fredrich, and he was on night duty. Wally walked toward the table where the skull candle had been. Niggles grabbed and somehow pocketed it before the man shone his torch to the table. But there was something else there. Balg stood on the table, his beard waving in an unseen and unheard wind, and smiled. ‘Ello, uman,’ Balg grinned impishly. ‘Oe have walked into private affairs ere. So, I ighly suggest at oe faint like a babby…NOW!’ and Balg yelled into Wally’s face, his yellow teeth dripping slobber. Wally screamed, fell backwards, and banged his head against the chair behind him. ‘Messy,’ grumbled Kelk as she and Axel dragged Wally into the nearest enclosed space, which happened to be a broom cupboard. ‘Now,’ Niggles said, ‘back to business. As you have agreed to fight the Bane of Knowledge,’ Axel made an indignant noise, ‘we will help you through all that happens. The first step is to get you down into the catacombs of the library. There the Bane was reborn. You might find some clues there.’ Axel finally burst out, ‘but I never agreed to do this! You can’t force me to!’ ‘But you have to!’ Kelk said. ‘The fate of the world is at stake!’ Niggles said. ‘Is the fickle uman boy too scared?’ Balg said in a baby voice. ‘Does e want is mummy? Is e gonna go screaming back, scared of everything and anyones?’ It was this, more than anything else, that made Axel stop. He breathed deeply, in, and out. ‘Alright,’ Axel said slowly. ‘I’ll do it. Now, what do we do first?’ Chapter 4 Axel and the three elves walked down the corridor leading to the catacombs. ‘I still don’t get it,’ Axel said for the fourteenth time. ‘Why hasn’t the Bane destroyed everything yet?’ ‘Because,’ Niggles said patiently, also for the fourteenth time, ‘the Bane of Knowledge feeds off fear. The disappearances haven’t caused enough panic to get the effect of the blind panic that it loves. We should use this time to find out the Bane of Knowledge’s weakness, and trap it.’ They arrived at the archives. Metal shelves lined the walls, covered with interesting things like hair, death masks, a rifle, and what looked like an elephant’s bone. Axel admired the objects, but the elves walked straight past everything. ‘Where are we going?’ Axel asked nervously, his eyes darting everywhere. ‘We ain’t gonna go anywhere,’ Balg said. ‘oe’re the leader, so lead on!’ ‘OK,’ Axel said. Then, they came to an intersection. Axel went right. Suddenly, he hit something with his foot. ‘OW!’ Axel cried, grabbing his foot. Balg laughed. Kelk, meanwhile, leant down to inspect the thing Axel had kicked. ‘It’s a lever!’ she said excitedly. ‘Let me,’ Balg muttered, shoving Kelk out of the way, and grabbing the lever. He pulled. Nothing. ‘A incy bit o elp ere?’ he said to Axel. Axel reached down and pulled. The lever gave way, and clicked. There was a silence. Nothing happened. Niggles groaned. ‘It’s a fake!’ he said. Just then, there was a rumble, and the entire corridor opened up under them! They fell, screaming, into the abyss. They fell for a terrifying 2 seconds, until Axel hit something soft. Niggles landed on top of him, Kelk landed on top of Niggles, and Balg landed on all of them. Axel shook off the three elves, and looked around. He seemed to have landed on a huge cushion of foam. Around him was a smaller collection of stuff. But it seemed, that this was more rare, exotic things. A huge snake skull. A tablet covered with runes. A sword that seemed to whisper. Axel tried to see through the dark, but he couldn’t. ‘Wait,’ Niggles said. Axel turned to see him close his eyes, stick his fingers in his ears, and concentrate hard. Slowly, he started to float into the air. Then, with a loud pop, Niggles’ head turned bright blue, and he fell on the ground. ‘What…how…huh?’ Axel stuttered, staring at the bright blue headed Niggles. ‘It’s a trick that all elves learn from youth,’ Niggles said. ‘All elves have luminescent heads.’ They walked through the shelves, and they saw more and more strange objects. A digeridoo. A fish mask. Two flipflops shaped like skulls. Suddenly, Niggle’s head’s light sputtered, and died. Balg bellowed out in pain, slipped and fell onto the ground, clutching at his foot. Axel leant down to inspect the foot, and found a purple shard in it. ‘Qualkinite,’ Kelk hissed in repulsion. The shard was small, but it seemed to be giving Balg great pain. He hissed through his teeth, and his eyes rolled back. ‘What’s Qualkinite?’ Axel asked. ‘Qualkinite is a rare, rare mineral,’ Kelk said. ‘It drains any magical creature’s powers, and touching it is worse. Can you pull it out?’ Axel grabbed hold of it. Suddenly, he felt sick, like he wanted to throw up. Then, the pain started. It racked his whole body, shaking it with fear. Through the pain, he managed to pull it out, and throw it onto the ground. Instantly, the pain stopped. ‘What…what just happened?’ Axel asked. ‘I forgot!’ Kelk cried. ‘You have a magic in you as well. The Qualkinite must have a similar hold on you too. I’m sorry.’ Niggles, who was standing next to Balg, pulled him to his feet. Then, Axel smacked his forehead in frustration. ‘What?’ Niggles asked. ‘I had a torch in my pocket this whole time, and I didn’t even use it!’ he exclaimed, digging his hand into his pocket, and pulling out the torch. He switched it on, and stared at the ground in front of them. It was littered with the Qualkinite shards. And in the center, was a leather case. Cracked Qualkinite lined the case. It was brown, and ancient. The case was ripped and torn, as if in fury. Balg, leaning against Niggles for support, gasped. ‘The tomb of the Bane of knowledge!’ he exclaimed. ‘This is what contained the Bane?’ Axel asked in amazement. ‘The Qualkinite kept it imprisoned,’ Kelk said, ‘but it must have failed under the fury of the Bane of Knowledge.’ Axel glimpsed something in the case, and moved forward. His shoes squeaked as he moved through the Qualkinite. He reached into the case, and pulled out…an old torn book. Axel made his way to the elves, and stared at the book. The title was, the diary of Terry Delimand. Everyone gasped, as the truth sunk in. The great capturer of the Bane had his diary in here. ‘This as to ave useful knowledge on ow to trap the Bane!’ Balg grinned excitedly. ‘Open it!’ Axel opened the book reverently. The pages were almost all ripped out, and the ones that remained were half filled. Axel read the parts he could. ‘The great battle…captured the Bane of Knowledge…buried safely…should not have done it…’ ‘what does that mean?’ Axel asked. ‘I dunno,’ Balg said. Then he froze. Staring at something behind Axel. Axel slowly turned around. And stared. A black shadow, with two, scarlet red eyes, stared at him out of the shadows. Tendrils of darkness coiled from the creature. ‘Peek-a-boo,’ it rasped. Chapter 5 Axel tried to scream, but his tongue had gotten stuck to the roof of his mouth. The elves had no problem in doing that though. Kelk shrieked, Niggles yelped, and Balg yelled. The three elves backed off, moving away from the Bane of Knowledge as it approached. Axel felt rooted to the spot as the Bane swirled toward him. Then it was on him, enveloping him, sucking at him. Axel found himself face to face with it. Its red eyes gleamed in the dark. There were no features other than the eyes. The eyes enveloped every sense, every feeling, every moment in his life. And the eyes contained anger. Pure, red-hot, furious anger, and surprisingly, sadness. The eyes spoke at him out of the darkness. And this is what they said. ‘Freedom,’ they seemed to say. ‘Freedom. Freedom. Freedom. Freedom! Your ancestors tore my freedom away from me. And you have come to do the same. I will destroy you, and I will be free once more. Free to reign. Free to go back. Free…to go home. Now, you will die!’ And the Bane of Knowledge struck out, wrapping Axel in a stranglehold. Axel struggled, but it was futile. The creature, though made of shadow, was stronger than anything that he had ever felt before. And he was forced to stare into its eyes. Slowly, ever so slowly, Axel’s mind started going blank. His body went limp. He could hear Balg, Kelk and Niggles shouting in the background, but he didn’t care. ‘Death is sweet,’ the eyes said. ‘Welcome death.’ And Axel almost did. Almost. When suddenly, a blazing flash of light burst out of his body! it shone all around him, and hit the Bane of Knowledge like a brick wall, shoving it away. The Bane screamed, and vanished. Axel was released, and fell onto the stone floor. Above him, he could see the ghostly image of an old Aboriginal man with war paint all over his body. ‘Eken revo xalatin!’ he said cheerfully. ‘gamnokb werrawerra yioup?’ Then, he looked down, and saw Axel lying at his feet. ‘Oh!’ he said in English. ‘I’m late! Quickly Balg, help me with him.’ ‘Soup,’ Axel mumbled. ‘Creamy soup. 5 creamy soups.’ Then, he passed out. Chapter 6 When Axel woke, the second time in the night, there was a clock above his head. The clock stated, 11:47. ‘Where…where am I?’ he muttered, staring up at the clock. His head throbbed painfully. ‘Oh good, you’re awake!’ cried a familiar voice from up above. Axel peered around the clock, to see the Aboriginal man again. The second thing he saw, were 5 creamy (and by creamy, there was a lot of cream on the top) soups. Axel peered around some more, and saw that they were still in the library. This part of the library must have still been in the levels underground, as it was dimly lit, and the iron shelves were still there. ‘What just happened?’ Axel asked. ‘Wise Man just saved you from the Bane of Knowledge,’ squeaked Kelk, who was holding the clock. ‘It hates light.’ ‘So, ave we found anying usfull?’ Balg asked, with his usual bad grammar. ‘Or was e entire missin usless?’ ‘I brought the leather case and the diary,’ Wise Man (as apparently that was his name) said. ‘I am a ghost, so Qualkinite doesn’t hurt me.’ ‘But since you’re a ghost,’ Axel said, ‘shouldn’t the things just go through your body?’ ‘Nah,’ Wise Man said, ‘those ghosts are the fake ghosts. Real ghosts can hold things, but they can still go through things. Anyway, since you are the leader, lead on! What are we to do?’ Axel racked his brain for a solution, but couldn’t find one. It didn’t help that the elves and ghost kept giving outrageous suggestions. ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite!’ ‘I know! We grab it, and shove it down the toilet!’ ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite!’ ‘We could send it back in time!’ ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite!’ ‘Could we glue it to a wall?’ ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite!’ ‘How about we ask it to go away?’ ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite!’ ‘We can trap it with magic.’ ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite!’ ‘Wait, what did you just say?’ Axel asked. ‘E could blow it up ith Dynimite?’ Balg asked hopefully. ‘No, not that,’ Axel said. ‘The thing Niggles said.’ ‘Trap it with magic?’ Wise Man said, looking thoughtful. ‘That is what we did before, but the Bane won’t fall for the same trick again. We’ll have to use the Qualkinite on something else. Empty your pockets!’ Axel had nothing, as his stuff had been taken by Balg. Kelk brought out a bone, a diary, and a beautiful green and red feather. Niggles had 2 bouncy balls, a lunch box, three batteries, and a pendant with a small emerald set into the end. Balg had to be turned upside-down to shake all the stuff out of his clothes. Out of his pockets fell the torch that Axel had brought, a snotty hankie, a library book that was about 20 years overdue, 3 empty candy wrappers, and the crust of a pizza. Out of his shoes fell a knife, another knife, a blow torch, 1 extra pair of socks, and a startled looking frog. ‘Well,’ Wise Man said, ‘let’s see. We could use the socks. No, they aren’t airtight. The frog? Nah, every time it opens its mouth the Bane will have a free exit. The lunch box…the lunch box. Airtight, made out of plastic, not much escape, yes, we’ll use the lunch box!’ ‘Sure, it’s easy for you to say,’ Niggles said, ‘but we can’t touch the Qualkinite! You’ll have to make it on your own.’ ‘Okay…’ Wise Man said, ‘it’ll probably take a while, but I think we…I can do it. Niggles, hand me the battery. We’re going speed mode!’ Niggles handed Wise man the battery, and he put it to his tongue. The electricity surged through Wise Man’s body, and he yelped, and glowed a bright blue, like Niggles had. Then, he got to it. His hands moved faster than light, faster than time itself as he worked. He was a blur, a fizz, a nothing. Every time he slowed down, he put the battery back on his tongue, and started working again. ‘What is happening?’ Axel asked in amazement, as he watched the whizzing blur that was Wise Man. ‘Ghosts ave a sorta special ability,’ Balg said. ‘lectricity makes em faster. Racts ith their brains. Dead still ave powers oe know!’ Even though Wise Man was literally moving at the speed of light, he was just one person…ghost, and this was a precariously hard job. It was like a jigsaw puzzle. The Qualkinite had to be placed in just the right spot to slip in with the other pieces, and then fused into the lunch box with the blow torch. There were continuous frustrated grunts, sighs, annoyed noises, and ughs. When the final piece had been slotted in, 2 entire hours had passed. ‘Well now, it’s finished!’ Wise Man announced, holding up the lunch box in triumph. The edges gleamed purplish in the light. ‘Now, let’s discuss the plan.’ Chapter 7 Axel wandered around the corridors of the State library. He kept his eyes on every shadow, every dark spot, anything that could be the Bane of Knowledge. Then, he found it. Axel caught his breath as he turned a corner in the corridor, and saw the shadowy form, slumped underneath a whole bunch of globe things. ‘Hey, you!’ Axel shouted, staring at the Bane. ‘Bet you can’t catch me!’ and he ran. The Bane of Knowledge started, stared around, and rasped, ‘bet I can.’ And they were off, Axel running like his life depended on it (which it actually did, once you think of the circumstances), and the Bane zooming off behind him, laughing maniacally as it went. Axel ran into through the reading room, ran down the stairs to the catacombs, ran through the shelves. But as he ran, he could feel his legs tiring, his chest heaving, his brain roaring at him to just take a rest. And suddenly, Axel tripped. He fell, sprawled out on the floor, and looked up as the Bane of Knowledge swirled above him. ‘Time for death, little boy,’ it rasped. Suddenly, from one of the shelves came a blast of light, as Wise Man sped out of a teapot. The Bane of Knowledge shrieked, and stumbled (if moving backwards jerkily counts as stumbling) back…right into the lunch box which Axel had tripped on! Balg and Kelk jumped on either side to trap it, and Niggles jumped on the top. As Axel watched, he saw the eyes. they blazed out with anger, fury, and…was that sadness? Longing? Something in those eyes made Axel pause. He raised his hand to stop the elves. ‘What do you want most in the whole world?’ he asked. The Bane stopped struggling. It paused, then said in a small voice, not at all like the voice it had been using, ‘I want to go home.’ Behind him, Wise Man yelped, and said, ‘of course! Let it go, elves.’ The elves reluctantly let go of the lid, and the Bane crept slowly out. It slowly shrank, until it looked exactly like a little girl. ‘Can you take me back?’ she asked. Wise Man made a frustrated noise, and smacked himself in the forehead. ‘Of course she wants to go home!’ he exclaimed. ‘she’s been separated from all she knew, and probably from her family to! That must have been why she wrecked so much havoc! She was angry at us for bringing her up to this world!’ and to the girl that was the Bane, ‘of course you can go home! I’m so sorry for bringing you here. We’ll send you back straight away!’ ‘Call me Lilly,’ Lilly said. ‘Thank you.’ ‘We have to go to the roof of the library,’ Wise Man said, can you take us there, Lilly?’ ‘Alright,’ she said, and she transformed back into the shadowy mass that she had been all along. Everyone got on, and Lilly shot upwards. Axel felt as if he was water, as he seemed to slide through the ceiling time and time again, until they reached the roof. ‘Help me with this, elves,’ Wise Man said. The elves and Wise Man got in a square position, and started chanting in a strange language, getting louder, and louder, until their voices were booming across the air. Then, all of them raised their hands in the air, and a dark portal opened up in the centre. ‘Thank you,’ Lilly said again, and then she jumped into the portal. The last thing Axel saw before the portal closed, was Lilly’s happy face. Then, it was gone. Epilogue Axel sat, quiet, on the wall outside the State Library, as he watched the sun set. It had been several months since the Bane…Lilly, had gone back to her family. He sighed, and slid down, and yelped as he nearly landed on the head of a little elf, underneath him! ‘Balg!’ Axel said, looking at the little elf. ‘What are you doing here?’ ‘I’m ere,’ Balg said, ‘cuz the time as come. Omething big’s appening!’ ‘What?’ Axel said. ‘Wise man,’ Balg said, ‘e’s done it again. We’re all going to die unless you come!’ then, the library exploded!

2 November 2022, Week 2: The monster

First name, first letter of surname
Ezra H
Age
11
Chapter 4 Axel and the three elves walked down the corridor leading to the catacombs. ‘I still don’t get it,’ Axel said for the fourteenth time. ‘Why hasn’t the Bane of Knowledge destroyed everything yet?’ ‘Because,’ Niggles said patiently, also for the fourteenth time, ‘the Bane of Knowledge feeds off fear. The disappearances haven’t caused enough panic to get the effect of the blind panic that it loves. We should use this time to find out the Bane of Knowledge’s weakness, and trap it.’ They arrived at the archives. Metal shelves lined the walls, covered with interesting things like hair, death masks, a rifle, and what looked like an elephant’s bone. Axel admired the objects, but the elves walked straight past everything. ‘Where are we going?’ Axel asked nervously, his eyes darting everywhere. ‘We ain’t gonna go anywhere,’ Balg said. ‘oe’re the leader, so lead on!’ ‘OK,’ Axel said. Then, they came to an intersection. Axel went right. Suddenly, he hit something with his foot. ‘OW!’ Axel cried, grabbing his foot. Balg laughed. Kelk, meanwhile, leant down to inspect the thing Axel had kicked. ‘It’s a lever!’ she said excitedly. ‘Let me,’ Balg muttered, shoving Kelk out of the way, and grabbing the lever. He pulled. Nothing. ‘A incy bit o elp ere?’ he said to Axel. Axel reached down and pulled. The lever gave way, and clicked. There was a silence. Nothing happened. Niggles groaned. ‘It’s a fake!’ he said. Just then, there was a rumble, and the entire corridor opened up under them. They fell, screaming, into the abyss. They fell for a terrifying 2 seconds, until Axel hit something soft. Niggles landed on top of him, Kelk landed on top of Niggles, and Balg landed on all of them. Axel shook off the three elves, and looked around. He seemed to have landed on a huge cushion of foam. Around him was a smaller collection of stuff. But it seemed, that this was more rare, exotic things. A huge snake skull. A tablet covered with runes. A sword that seemed to whisper. Axel tried to see through the dark, but he couldn’t see a thing. ‘Wait,’ Niggles said. Axel turned to see him close his eyes, stick his fingers in his ears, and concentrate hard. Slowly, he started to float into the air. Then, with a loud pop, Niggles’ head turned bright blue, and he fell on the ground. ‘What…how…huh?’ Axel stuttered, staring at the bright blue headed Niggles. ‘It’s a trick that all elves learn from youth,’ Niggles said. ‘All elves have luminescent heads.’ They walked through the shelves, and they saw more and more strange objects. A digeridoo. A fish mask. Two flipflops shaped like skulls. Suddenly, Niggle’s head’s light sputtered, and died. Balg bellowed out in pain, slipped and fell onto the ground, clutching at his foot. Axel leant down to inspect the foot, and found a purple shard in it. ‘Qualkinite,’ Kelk hissed in repulsion. The shard was small, but it seemed to be giving Balg great pain. He hissed through his teeth, and his eyes rolled back. ‘What’s Qualkinite?’ Axel asked. ‘Qualkinite is a rare, rare mineral,’ Kelk said. ‘It drains any magical creature’s powers, and touching it is worse. Can you pull it out?’ Axel grabbed hold of it. Suddenly, he felt sick, like he wanted to throw up. Then, the pain started. It racked his whole body, shaking it with fear. Through the pain, he managed to pull it out, and throw it onto the ground. Instantly, the pain stopped. ‘What…what just happened?’ Axel asked. ‘I forgot!’ Kelk cried. ‘You have a magic in you as well. The Qualkinite must have a similar hold on you too. I’m sorry.’ Niggles, who was standing next to Balg, pulled him to his feet. Then, Axel smacked his forehead in frustration. ‘What?’ Niggles asked. ‘I had a torch in my pocket this whole time, and I didn’t even use it!’ he exclaimed, digging his hand into his pocket, and pulling out the torch. He switched it on, and stared at the ground in front of them. It was littered with the Qualkinite shards. And in the center, was a leather case. Cracked Qualkinite lined the case. It was brown, and ancient. The case was ripped and torn, as if in fury. Balg, leaning against Niggles for support, gasped. ‘The tomb of the Bane of knowledge!’ he exclaimed. ‘This is what contained the Bane of Knowledge?’ Axel asked in amazement. ‘The Qualkinite kept it imprisoned,’ Kelk said, ‘but it must have failed under the fury of the Bane of Knowledge.’ Axel glimpsed something in the case, and moved forward. His shoes squeaked as he moved through the Qualkinite. He reached into the case, and pulled out…an old torn book. Axel made his way to the elves, and stared at the book. The title was, the diary of Terry Embapo. Everyone gasped, as the truth sunk in. The great capturer of the Bane of knowledge had his diary in here. ‘This as to ave useful knowledge on ow to trap the Bane of knowledge!’ Balg grinned excitedly. ‘Open it!’ Axel opened the book reverently. The pages were almost all ripped out, and the ones that remained were half filled. Axel read the parts he could. ‘the great battle…captured the Bane of Knowledge…buried safely…should not have done it…’ ‘what does that mean?’ Axel asked. ‘I dunno,’ Balg said. Then he froze. Staring at something behind Axel. Axel slowly turned around. And stared. A black shadow, with two, scarlet red eyes, stared at him out of the shadows. Tendrils of darkness coiled from the creature. ‘Peek-a-boo,’ it rasped.