him.â
âI know perfectly well what he wants,â snapped Mirella.
She had never touched Charlie before. Now as she felt his rough coat under her hand, his warm tongue licking her bare leg, something extraordinary happened to her. It was as though the scales fell from her eyes. She saw the Hag, so old and weary, who had trekked miles believing Mirella to be in danger. She saw the other rescuersâthe troll and the wizardâand Ivo, who had thought she might be his friend. Above all, she saw the living, warm, excited little dog.
And suddenly a feeling flooded through herâof thankfulness for being alive, of joy in the world. She looked up at the window through which in a few moments she would fly out and away forever and felt panic, thinking of the loneliness that would follow.
But she had to go through with it now. She had suffered so much to get here, she had been so obstinate and determinedâshe couldnât now change her mind. She closed her eyes and lifted her head as the ogreâs hand came down toward her.
The hand never reached her. The ogre gave a terrible cry, took two tottering paces forward, and fell to the ground with a crash that echoed through the Hall.
Everyone rushed forward, but the ogre could not move; he only pointed with his great arm to the doorway, where a figure as large and hideous as he was himself was standing, wreathed in a ghostly mist.
âGermania,â whispered the ogreâand fainted.
CHAPTER
13
REMOVING THE GRUMBLERS
T he ogre had bruised his forehead badly when he fainted at the sight of his wife. The Hag had found the foot water which the Norns had given them, and it helped a little, but not very much.
âThey must have been the wrong kind of feet,â said Ivo, who was beginning to have a very low opinion of the Norns.
But it was not the bruise that was worrying them; it was the ogreâs state of mind. He had decided that Germaniaâs ghost had appeared to him because the ogress wanted him to join her in her bone-covered mound.
âShe has been hovering over me ever since she passed on,â said the ogre. âI have felt her hover. A heavy hover, because sheâs a big woman. So I have to die,â added the ogre. âI have to die quickly so that she doesnât get impatient.â
The ogre having a breakdown had been bad, but the ogre deciding to die was worse.
âI canât stop eating at once, but I shall stop eating slowly, so every day you must weigh my food and take off an ounce. And I must decide which pajamas to wear for the funeral and whom to invite. My three aunts, of course, and theyâll have to bring Clarence.â
âWhoâs Clarence?â asked Ivoâbut the ogre only shook his head and sighed.
âBut you canât do this,â said the Hag. âYouâve got a castle to care forâlook at all the land out there and the gardens and the lake. Whatâs going to happen to it?â
âI shall make a will,â said the ogre. âPerhaps my Aunt-with-the-Eyes should have itâsheâs the eldest. Or the Aunt-with-the-Nose. Obviously I canât leave it to Clarence. Itâll probably take a few weeks for me to be properly deadâIâll have decided by then.â He waved a lordly hand. âAnd you can look after everything till then, canât you?â
The rescuers looked at each other. They thought that the ogre was getting a bit above himself.
âI have a house in London, you know,â said the Hag.
âAnd I have a job,â said the troll.
âMy mother is waiting for me,â said the wizard.
But the truth was that 26 Whipple Road did not look very inviting from a distance. Mr. Prendergast would be all right, and after the way Gladys had behaved the Hag did not feel that she had to hurry back to her toad. And there was going to be a terrible row about Ivo whenever they got back. Nor did Ulf long to go back to pushing