Authors: Lynne Reid Banks
She was told off four times during the day for being lazy and not paying attention. She stared at her
reading book and couldn’t make sense of it. She did her math, but every single sum came out wrong, so wrong that the teacher said she was just being silly. She refused to do P.E. Usually she quite enjoyed it (as long as it wasn’t jumping the horse), but today she pretended to be ill and sat out.
The only nice thing that happened all day was that Keith didn’t tease her or bully her. In fact he seemed to be trying to make friends with her. She couldn’t stand him usually but today she felt different about him. On the other hand, Manda kept away from her.
After school, Bindi walked slowly to the gate. Keith had suggested they meet at the shops. She could see Manda watching. They lived on the same street and they usually went home together, either with Jan or with Manda’s mother, whoever came to get them. Today it was Manda’s mother. Bindi pretended not to see her and set off toward the shops. She heard footsteps running behind her.
“Bindi!”
She stopped. Manda’s mother ran up to her.
“Where do you think you’re off to?” she panted.
“I’m not coming home today,” Bindi heard herself say. “I’m meeting Mummy.”
“Jan didn’t say anything to me about that. I think you’d better come with us.”
“No,” said Bindi. “Mummy told me not to go home with you. She’s waiting for me.” And she ran off in the opposite direction from home.
She slowed down when she got round the corner. Her heart was thumping and she felt very strange. Her feet had hardly touched the ground. It was as
if … as if the necklace had been pulling her along, pulling her almost through the air. She had a funny feeling that if she really needed to, she could fly.
She walked to the shops. She kept trying to think about what she was doing. She had told a complete lie to Manda’s mother. As a matter of fact she’d been telling lies all day, to the teachers, to the other children … to herself, even. One bit of her mind knew very clearly that the necklace was causing her to behave like this—to change. Another part of her was enjoying it. The two parts of her mind seemed to be fighting each other. It was giving her a headache.
At the shops she met Keith. The first thing he did was give her a fruit-and-nut bar.
“Where’d you get it?” Bindi asked.
“Nicked it, didn’t I,” Keith said, boldly.
Bindi thought, “Yesterday I’d have been shocked. I’d have given it right back to him.” Today she wasn’t shocked and she ate the chocolate and wished there were more.
“How do you nick things?” she heard herself ask.
“Come on, I’ll show you,” Keith said.
He led her to the paper shop.
“Aren’t you afraid of getting caught?”
“Naaaaa,” said Keith.
As they walked into the shop and Bindi saw all the sweets laid out, the necklace was quivering round her neck, digging its spikes into her. It was just as if it were saying, “Go on, go on!” the way you might if you were watching an exciting film.
Bindi’s heart was beating. Her hands were trembling. She saw Keith glance round and then put his
schoolbag down on the display of sweets. He dawdled about for a while, and then picked it up again.
“Here! You—boy! None of that—I saw you!”
Keith jumped with fright and dropped the bag, and a Clark bar fell on the floor with it. He started to run away, but the shopkeeper, a very big Sikh with a turban and a fierce-looking rolled black beard, grabbed him.
“You are a thief! I am going to call the police!” he was roaring as he shook Keith back and forth furiously.
Everyone in the shop took sides. In the end the Sikh let Keith off, because he cried and swore he’d never done it before and would never do it again. But the shopkeeper told him not to come back into the shop, and pushed him out, throwing his schoolbag out after him.
Bindi sneaked out too. She had kept very quiet. She’d also been very busy.
As she and Keith crept off down the road, she passed him the Clark bar she had stolen while all the fuss had been going on. In her schoolbag were two Mars bars, a Snickers and a Heath bar.
When Bindi got home, she ran straight up to her room without saying hello to her mother and tipped out her bag. The stolen chocolate bars tumbled onto her bed with her books.
She looked at them for a moment or two. The points on the necklace stuck into her gleefully, seeming to say: “Go on, go on!” She ate one of the Mars bars. Then half the Snickers. She was full, but the necklace was still urging her on. “More! More!”
“But if I eat the lot, I’ll have none left,” Bindi said aloud.
Her eyes fell on something lying on the table by her head. It was the rose twig.
Bindi felt no fear of it now. She put out her hand at once and snatched it up. The thorns stuck into her hand, but they didn’t hurt. And she knew exactly what she had to do.
Holding the twig like a wand, she tapped it on the Heath bar. In a flash, it became two. She did the same with the others. They doubled themselves. More. More. Another tap—ten bars—twenty!
Bindi felt a wild sense of excitement. She tapped again. The bed was overflowing with chocolate bars. They began to tumble to the floor.
She could do anything with this! She could
have
anything. Anything she liked. She looked round the room. In one corner was her wooden toy box. She ran across to it and hit the lid with the top of the twig.
“More toys!” she cried. “I want more toys!”
The next second, the lid burst open. Like a volcano erupting, out poured a mass of toys—dolls, stuffed animals, puppets grinning at her, games of every sort and size. They flowed and tumbled onto the floor and piled up around Bindi’s feet.
Instead of stopping, Bindi kept hitting out with the twig again and again, and the more she did it the more toys came. She only paused when a magnificent doll, as big as a real baby, shot up out of the toy box and landed in her hands. It was oddly dressed in purple satin and gold lace. Its eyes opened as Bindi straightened it. They glowed like green lamps.
An awful feeling went through Bindi. She threw the doll on the bed, but its eyes didn’t close. They stayed open, staring at her.
And suddenly she was frightened. All excitement left her. The twig was still clinging to her hand. She felt the necklace throbbing round her neck. She tried to tear it off. Like the thorns of the twig, the sharp gold spikes dug into her. She shook her hand frantically to shake the twig off, but it clung to her. As she shook, it banged again and again on the heap of toys, which were still boiling up out of the box. Jan was down in the kitchen. She didn’t know Bindi had come home.
Now, suddenly, Jan heard Bindi calling. She’d never heard her voice sound like that.
Jan hobbled out of the room and tried to run upstairs. She could hear Bindi screaming, “Mummy, Mummy! Come quickly!” But Jan couldn’t come quickly—her lame leg wouldn’t let her. She had to go up the stairs one step at a time. It was like the worst kind of bad dream, when you have to run, and you can’t.
At last Jan reached Bindi’s bedroom door. She tried to throw it open. The handle turned, but something was jamming the door. She cried through the crack, “What is it, love? I’m here!” Bindi was not screaming any words now. She was just screaming. Jan pushed and pushed against the door but she hadn’t the strength to open it. She was helpless.
Suddenly she heard footsteps running up the stairs behind her, and there was Charlie. He didn’t stop to ask questions. He threw himself against the door with all his weight. There was a crash as the wood split. With a great heave, Charlie pulled the broken door off its hinges.
There was a second’s pause. Charlie’s and Jan’s eyes nearly popped out. Then Charlie jumped back, dragging Jan out of the way.
A torrent of toys, like an avalanche, fell out of Bindi’s room. Every kind of toy you can think of. The games came open and the separate parts tumbled everywhere like pebbles among rocks—only the rocks were dolls, and bricks, and trains, and balls, and jump ropes, and puzzles, and computer games. Everything a child might dream of, only it wasn’t a dream. It was
more like a nightmare, except that it was real. They were real, solid toys. And somewhere in that bedroom which was flooding with toys was Bindi. She wasn’t screaming anymore. And Charlie, when he scrambled to his feet, knew at once why she wasn’t. She couldn’t scream because the toys were burying her.
Like two mad people, Charlie and Jan began to tear at the toy-mountain. They burrowed into it, throwing toys everywhere. All the time they were shouting, “Bindi! Bindi!” Soon they’d dug a kind of cave in the toys, but the toys kept tumbling down on them. They were both bruised from the sharp edges of the boxes of games, the handles of rackets, the wheels of toy trucks, the hard little heads of dolls.
“It’s too much!” Charlie ground out between his teeth. “There’s too much of it! We can’t—”
But Jan wasn’t digging and struggling anymore. She had suddenly turned in the breaking-up cave and was half crawling back to the door.
“Keep digging, Charlie!” she cried. “I’m going to get help!”
She didn’t try to run downstairs. She leaned on the banister, lifted her feet and slid all the way down on her stomach. She was going to call the police—the fire engine—the ambulance—anything, everything! But when she got downstairs she didn’t do that after all. Instead she ran out into the back garden and yelled, “Tiki! Wijic! Help! Help! Help!”
The day before, on Bindi’s birthday, the roses in full bloom had made the garden bright and scented. Now the whole place had gone dark, because they were all dying. The ground was thick with pink petals. All that was left on the bushes were the hearts of the roses, the green and yellow stars. And buzzing thickly around these bare, sad remains were clouds of wasps.
As Jan stood there, staring round in dismay, a wasp left the heart of a dying rose and flew straight at her. It flew against her face, buzzed harshly and swerved away. Like a warning. She turned her head sharply and hit out at it with her hand. Another wasp did the same thing, and then another. The eighth wasp stung her on the cheek.
Jan cried out. But it wasn’t because of the pain. It was because she suddenly understood.
For eight years the wicked Fairy Queen had been biding her time. Or perhaps it had taken her this long to find the child that Tiki had helped to be born. And now she was taking her revenge—she, and the wasps. Jan knew now why the rose twig had not been there
this morning when she had gone out to look for it. She even guessed where it was. Bindi had it. It was with Bindi, up there, in her bedroom.
Ignoring the wasps that were now buzzing furiously round her, Jan ran right into the midst of them, down the garden path. Halfway, she turned and looked back up at the house. The window of Bindi’s room was blocked with toys. As Jan gazed, there was the crash of glass. The window panes had burst. A shower of glass and toys rained down the wall of the house and smashed on the patio. Only a moment before, Jan had been standing on that spot.
She ran to the bottom of the garden with the wasps buzzing after her. Without stopping to think, she headed for the one thing—the single link she had with the Fairy Queen who was doing all this. The holly bush. She grabbed it with both hands, ignoring the prickles, and shook it, shouting into thin air:
“All right, you Queen! That’s enough! Stop it! Stop it now. What more do you want? Do you want to kill us all? Are you so cruel? Do you hear me, Queen of the Fairies? Stop!”
And it stopped. All of it. Everything stopped.
The wasps stopped in midair. Turning her head, Jan saw another shower of toys falling from Bindi’s window. They stopped halfway down. Just stopped, as if someone had pinned them to the wall behind them. Everything—the grass, the trees, the rosebushes—seemed to rush away from Jan into a dark mist. There was a deadly, deadly silence in the garden.
Jan was all alone, gripping the holly prickles. She slowly let them go. The bush didn’t spring back—it
didn’t move. Nothing moved. There wasn’t a sound, until a high, thin, thrilling voice close to Jan suddenly said: