But though Rick was very pleased, this time he decided to make a speech himself. ‘Ladies, gentlemen, ghosts and seals,’ he said, leaping up on to the table. ‘I would like to say something about my friend, Humphrey.’
Everybody looked at Humphrey who was playing with Baby Rose and his ectoplasm turned dark pink from pleasure and embarrassment.
‘If Humphrey had not come to fetch us there would be no Henderson Ghost Sanctuary. And no ghosts.’
Everyone looked at everyone else, and Aunt Hortensia’s head nodded so hard that the Shuk dropped it.
‘Humphrey was ill and weak but he glided all those many, many miles to get help. Ladies, Gentlemen, Seals and Ghosts,’ said Rick, getting excited and waving his arms. ‘Humphrey may not be Horrible. In fact if you want my opinion, Humphrey will never be Horrible. But Humphrey is something
There was a short silence while the ghosts took this in. Then a great beam of pride passed across the faces of the Hag and the Gliding Kilt while the whole hall full of ghosts rose to their feet, raised their glasses of rats’ blood and thundered with a single voice: ‘HUMPHREY THE HEROIC!’
After that, the good-byes could not be postponed any longer. It only lacked another hour till dawn and the children had their way back to make.
They were just starting the long round of hugs and kisses when something most extraordinary happened. First a kind of chill passed through the hall. An owl screeched. And then, there appeared in one of the high, arched windows, a ghost that none of them had ever seen before.
He was not a very nice-looking ghost. Even when he’d been alive he’d been horrid to look at. Now, he was undoubtedly a mess.
‘Can... Can I come in?’ stammered Lord Bullhaven. (He had woken up in the hotel with a swollen jaw and in such a fiendish temper that he’d left the clergymen and Professor Brassnose stranded, leapt into his car and driven away at ninety miles an hour – straight into a stone wall.)
There was a stunned silence. Then:
‘You!’ shrieked the Hag, going through the roof.
‘Ghost Murderer,’ yelled the Mad Monk.
‘Exorcist!’ roared the Gliding Kilt.
‘The nerve of it, coming here!’ shouted Aunt Hortensia’s head.
Lord Bullhaven’s ghost stood waveringly on the windowsill. Then it seemed to shrink into itself and began slowly to turn away.
And then, once again, Rick leapt on to the table.
‘Ghosts of Britain, I’m
The ghosts looked up at him, silent and ashamed.
‘A sanctuary is a place of safety. For
Lord Bullhaven’s ghost, on the windowsill, nodded sadly.
‘But after all you weren’t all that wonderful when you were alive yourselves, were you? What about Henry the Eighth’s housekeeping money – was it
‘That was a
‘It was still killing,’ said Rick sternly. ‘Ghosts of Britain, I
For a moment there was silence. Then the ghosts, deeply moved by his words, moved forward towards the window.
‘Welcome to Insleyfarne, Lord Bullhaven,’ said the Gliding Kilt.
And with a sob of gratitude, the wicked spectre flew down and stretched out his gory hands in greeting.
When the children got back to the plane they found poor Peregrine standing sadly beside the engine and looking out to sea. He’d woken up without remembering anything that had happened and had absolutely no idea how he’d come to land his aeroplane on a cold grey beach in the middle of nowhere. There didn’t seem to be any way of explaining either, so they just spoke to him gently and told him to fly back home which he was only too pleased to do.
In the plane Rick was very silent. Saying good-bye to the ghosts had made him feel completely hollow and though the Hag had promised that Humphrey could come and haunt Norton Castle School in the spring, he felt flat and tired and grey.
Barbara looked at him quietly for a moment. Then she leant forward. ‘Before we came away I was reading about the polar bears,’ she yelled in his ear. ‘The ones in Alaska.’
Rick nodded. ‘What about them?’
‘They’re in a very bad way. Becoming very rare. Extinct perhaps. Rich people go and hunt them from aeroplanes and snowmobiles. It’s perfectly disgusting.’
Rick was still silent but his face had changed. He was working things out. How soon could he get to Alaska, how much would it cost? Should he take Barbara and Peter or go alone? What exactly did polar bears eat?