Read Pwf & The Goblins' Revenge pdf Online
Authors: Kaye Umansky
cringe and crave and implore. Not after what your Broom just did."
"Not if I buy you a brand new collection of make-up? As well as let you judge the
fancy dress parade?"
Sharkadder hesitated.
"Can I be
in
the fancy dress parade as well as judge it?"
"Certainly," said Pongwiffy immediately. "Nothing could be fairer."
"Done," said Sharkadder briskly. "See you in your garden at midnight."
CHAPTER THREE – A Brush With Danger
By now, of course, you'll be dying to know what had happened to Pongwiffy's Broom. Why
should a normally level-headed, sensible Broomstick suddenly fly off the handle like that?
Well, it had good reason. The day before, you see, it had had a terrible shock.
Something awful had happened to it.
It had been Broomnapped by Goblins!
It had happened so easily. The day before had been Wednesday, and Woody was
bored. (That's its name, by the way. Woody. Nobody but other Brooms ever bothers to call
it anything but Broom, but as it's starring in this part of the story, you really should know its
name.)
So. Woody was bored. Being a Witch of dirty habits, Pongwiffy never gave it anything
to do. She liked her hovel just as it was (filthy). Understandably Woody, who was an active
type, got tired of being propped up in the garden shed with nothing to do for hours on end
except listen to an indescribably tedious game of I Spy between a rusty rake and an old coal
shovel.
Lunch was over. Woody had swept the shed floor at least a dozen times, and the
long afternoon seemed to stretch into infinity.
"Bored," thought Woody. "That's what I am. Bored stiff. Fed up to the back bristles.
Unamused. I must find something to do, or I'll go stark staring bonkers."
It sneaked into the hovel and tried a bit of furtive sweeping when Pongwiffy's back
was turned, but she noticed.
"Oi! You! I've told you before about that! You leave that dirt right where it is!"
Feeling fed up and generally unappreciated, Woody flounced out and went looking
for Hugo, Pongwiffy's Hamster. Hugo couldn't speak Wood either, but was too kind to mind
when the lonely Broom moped around after him. However, this particular morning Hugo
was nowhere to be found as he was out checking for weak points in Pongwiffy's Wall Of
Smell.
Looking for a Hamster (even one wearing a gas mask) in a rubbish tip is like looking
for a tick in a Goblin's sum book. You're just wasting your time. Woody poked around a bit,
then gave up.
"Now what?" it thought. It looked up. The sky was a huge, empty sweep of tempting
blue, just crying out to be flown in.
"I know," thought Woody. "I'll go for a quiet little fly, all on my own. Brush up my
flying techniques. Bit of wind in the bristles, that's the ticket."
Now, this wasn't strictly allowed. The Witch rule book firmly states that Broomsticks
MUST NOT fly:
1) During daylight hours.
2) Without a Witch, unless given written permission.
But if you're bored, you get tempted into doing all kinds of silly things. Just this once.
Woody decided to risk it. After all, Witchway Wood was at its quietest this hour of the day.
Most of the Witches would be sleeping off lunch, and it was unlikely that it would be
noticed. Feeling rather wicked, it did a couple of pre-flight exercises, just to get the sap
moving – what Brooms call timbering up – then it took a deep breath, flexed at the base,
and gave a little jump. Up it soared, over the tree tops, into a nice, warm southerly wind.
"Mmmmm," thought Woody. "Now, this is more like it. Just what the tree surgeon
ordered."
Indeed it felt wonderfully free, up there among the clouds without Pongwiffy's bony
knees jabbing into its stick.
"Wow!" thought Woody. "It's good to be alive and a Broom today.” And it skittishly
performed an easy somersault or two, then attempted a complicated triple stick loop
followed by an inverted back flip. As usual it didn't quite manage it. To avoid loss of face, it
chased a passing crow for a minute or so, then flipped over on its back and floated lazily on
the air currents. It was enjoying itself so much, it didn't really pay any attention to where it
was flying.
Where was it flying?
Directly over Goblin Territory, that's where!
Goblin Territory. That's the name given to the scrubby, stony slopes of the Lower
Misty Mountains which border the south-western edges of Witchway Wood. It's an
unpopular, lonely, desolate place. There are a lot of sharp rocks up there, and it usually
drizzles. To be truthful, as a tourist area, it lacks something. Nevertheless, it is home to
seven particularly stupid Goblins, who live in a cave and answer to the names of Plugugly,
Stinkwart, Hog, Slopbucket, Lardo, Eyesore and Sproggit. That makes seven. One whole
Gaggle.
Now, Goblins and Witches are sworn enemies, and usually prefer to live at least a
thousand miles apart, so you may wonder why this particular Gaggle choose to live right
next door to Witchway Wood, which is notoriously stiff with the old girls.
Wonder no more. Plugugly, Stinkwart, Hog, Slopbucket, Lardo, Eyesore and Sproggit
didn't choose. They had been dumped there by Magic, and there, much to their disgust,
they had to stay.
It hadn't always been that way. In the old days they were regular gypsies, always
moving around, looking for fresh neighbours to drive mad. Until that fateful occasion when
they were stupid enough to attempt squatting in a Wizard's house. The furious house-holder
came back, took one look at the scandalous state of his kitchen, and cast a Spell of
Banishment which whisked them away to this particular cave on this particular mountain.
Right next door to Witchway Wood.
The Goblins, when they had got over their surprise, were terribly fed up. The cave
was damp and there was nothing to eat. The only place to go hunting was down in the
woods, where the Witches took great pleasure in spotting them, swatting them and booting
them back to their own territory again in two whisks of a wand. Not that the Goblins ever
succeeded in catching anything anyway. They were much too stupid. Hungry, harrassed,
hounded and frequently rained on, they had a very lean time of it.
Woody was aware of all this. Sadly, though, it was unaware that it was flying directly
above Goblin Territory. It only discovered this when it was rudely knocked out of the air by a
large brick.
CHAPTER FOUR – Broomnapped
The brick had been thrown by young Sproggit. Sproggit hadn't actually been aiming at
Woody, although he boasted later that he had. He hadn't even noticed that there was a
Broom up there. He'd just thrown a brick because he felt like it. (Throwing bricks is typically
Goblinish behaviour.) So Sproggit was extremely surprised when his brick connected with
Woody, bringing the poor thing crashing down out of the sky, point first onto his own foot.
Sproggit's pained scream brought the rest of the Gaggle pouring from their cave.
When they saw what had happened, they were delirious with joy. A captured Broomstick!
What luck! Even better, it was that ol’ Pongwiffy's Broomstick. What a prize! What a break!
Poor Woody. They threw it about a bit, jumped on it a couple of times, then tied it
up and triumphantly bore it back into the cave. Thankfully, Woody was stunned, and didn't
know about any of this. Crash landing on your sharp end from a great height is no joke.
When it came round some time later, it was horrified to find itself gagged, bound,
chained and firmly padlocked to a rusty hook projecting from the wall of a dank, smelly
cave. A short distance away, torches flickered on the boots, braces and bobble hats of its
seven unsavoury captors, who were huddled in a conspiratorial circle, obviously plotting.
"Oh no!" groaned Woody to itself. "Captured by Goblins! How embarrassing. Think
of the shame. If the gang get to hear about this, I'll be the laughing stick of the sky. And I'm
not even supposed to
be
here. Supposing Mistress finds out? I'll never live it down ..."
Anxiously, it looked around for a means of escape. There wasn't one. The ropes were
so tight, its sap was cut off. Even if it could somehow wriggle free, the front boulder was
firmly shut.
"How depressing," thought Woody. "Alone and friendless in a cave of mad Goblins.
What will become of me?'
Sick to the stick, it slumped back hopelessly and reluctantly tuned in to the Goblin's
conversation.
"Let's chop it up." That was young Sproggit. "I cort it, din I? An' I say we chops it up.
Wiv an axe. Chop it up an' send it back to ol' Pongwiffy in liddle pieces. Chop chop."
Whaaattttt?????!!
Woody's sap ran cold.
"Sproggit's right," agreed Slopbucket. "She's gorrit comin' to ’er she ’as, that ol'
Pongwiffy. Bein' so mean wiv 'er rubbish. Stickin' up that there Waller Smell, the ol' cheat."
That brought a heartfelt chorus of agreement. Feelings were running high about
Pongwiffy's Wall Of Smell. Raiding the Dump on the run up to Hallowe'en was traditional.
Everyone did it. Using Magic to guard it was downright mean.
"Booo!"
"Unfair!"
"’Ere ’ere!"