Perkins tried again and Colin changed to bronze, then a shiny metallic lucky Chinese Dragon with a waving front leg, then to alabaster. All of these feats, while powerful and complex in themselves, really helped us not one jot, and as Colin passed the three-hundred-foot mark and was changed by Perkins into a delicate ice sculpture, I did the last thing available to me. I punched Perkins hard on the arm. It was a risky undertaking and could have gone either way – to him getting the spell correct, or failing utterly.
‘What the—?’
‘Get it together,’ I snapped, ‘or you and me are done.’
Actually, him and me were not yet an item so we couldn’t be done, but I had to think that it might be something he valued, and give him an emotional boost to get the spell right. With only two hundred feet and a second or two to a nasty, shattered end, Perkins tried again and Colin changed abruptly to a dark matt-black substance.
I held my breath.
Colin hit the road with what I can only describe as probably the loudest, deepest and most dense-sounding
‘Blast,’ said Perkins, lowering his now steaming finger in case anyone noticed he was responsible. They hadn’t, and Perkins suddenly looked tired and sat on our luggage, head in hands.
‘You okay?’ I asked.
‘I think so,’ he said. ‘I’ve not spelled that strongly before. Do I look okay?’
He looked tired and drained and somehow … different. More world-weary. I told him he probably needed an early night and he nodded in agreement.
‘Was that Colin?’ asked the Princess, walking back toward us.
I told her it was but to keep it under her hat. Magic was
‘How far do you think he went?’ she asked, staring at the horizon.
Perkins looked at his watch.
‘He’ll be bouncing for the next ten minutes or so. Best guess – thirty or forty miles.’
‘How much wizidrical energy to change him back?’ I asked.
‘Bucketloads if you want it done immediately,’ replied Perkins thoughtfully, ‘but the spell will wear off on its own within a few days. Either way, he’s not flying out of here on his own – not with a wing like that.’
‘But he’s safe as a rubber dragon until he turns back?’
‘Sure – so long as no one tries to make car tyres or doorstops or gumboots out of him. But it’s not all bad,’ he added. ‘At least he’ll be waterproof if it rains.’
I sighed. This was a bad start to our search. I pulled my compass out of my bag and took a bearing on the hill behind which Colin had bounced, then drew a line on my map. It was, luckily enough, pretty much in the same direction we were to travel. If our calculations were correct, Colin would be running out of bounce not far from Llangurig.
‘They had run out of armoured cars,’ said the Princess ‘so I persuaded them to upgrade us to a military half-track at the same rate.’
She looked at Perkins, who was still sitting, head in hands.
‘Do you think we should upgrade this to a quest?’ she asked.
‘It is
This was true. The Questing Federation were powerful, and would insist on a minimum staffing requirement: at least one strong-and-silent warrior, a sage-like old man, and either a giant or a dwarf – and all of them cost bundles, not just in salary but in hotel bills too. To go on a quest these days you needed serious financial backing.
‘No,’ I said more emphatically, ‘this is a search, plain and simple.’
‘Jenny?’ said Perkins, still with his eyes closed.
‘Yes?’
‘Why
A voice chirped up behind us.
‘They shot him down because all aerial traffic in the Cambrian Empire is banned.’
I turned to see who was speaking, and that was when we first met Addie Powell.