Authors: Sam Gayton
Hercufleas looked up. âGreta, Iâ¦'
Her gaze went from icy to burning. âAnd Yuk
took them from you
, didn't he?'
Hercufleas nodded, and Greta said very quietly, âI know how that feels.'
âGreta? Why did Miss Witz make you come back for me?'
She shrugged. âYou'll have to ask her.'
âAh! Awake are we?' said the old babushka from the door.
Hercufleas jumped. How long had she been there? She was very stealthy for an old granny.
âI am Miss Witz,' she said, hobbling right up to the windowsill. âAnd you are Hercufleas. And Greta brought you back from Avalon, the island of heroes. But you are not a hero, are you?'
Hercufleas shook his head. âNo.'
Miss Witz paused, and Greta looked at the copper bell on the babushka's ear, but it did not ring.
âYou see, miss? I told you he wasn't. He's not interested in saving Tumber.'
âPff!' said the babushka. âIt shows only that Hercufleas
believes
he is not. There is a difference. But not a great one. Believe something and it is halfway to being real. Besides, I say,
So what?
Many heroes have come to Tumber before, and all failed to protect us. Yet Hercufleas has bought us some time.' The copper bell rang on her ear, and she smiled. âYes, I suppose that isn't strictly true. It was those two villains and that pig who filled Yuk's belly for another month. Now he is gone, sleeping somewhere deep in the woodn't. But as always, he will wake up and come back. So we must prepare to fight once more, and if we win, perhaps Hercufleas will see his fleamily again.'
Hercufleas thought of Min and Pin and the others, in that broken-down house-hat on Yuk's head. Miss Witz was right. If they could survive up there for a month, the giant would bring them back to Tumber when he next came to guzzle.
âBut we are getting ahead of ourselves,' Miss Witz said. âHercufleas, you must tell me â if you are not a hero⦠who are you?'
Greta scowled. âI'll tell you who he is,' she said. âA coward. A liar. A weakling.'
âI did not ask you, Greta.'
Hercufleas stood on the windowsill, looking at his reflection, searching it for an answer. It stared back, blank-eyed. Who was he? A sad little sultana-sized flea with a cracked arm and a broken heart, sitting on the windowsill.
âI'm alone,' he said. âI see,' said Miss Witz. âAnd now that you know what you are missing, you can tell me what you want.'
Once, Hercufleas would have cried out,
Adventures!
But he was not a little hatchling any more.
âI want my fleamily back,' he said, turning to look at Miss Witz and Greta. âI want to stop Yuk from taking anyone away, ever again. But how can I do that?'
Miss Witz said very solemnly, âThat is the question that only your quest will answer.'
âQuest?' Greta shook her head. âIs this a joke? Why isn't your bell ringing? Heroes go on quests. Hercufleas isn't a hero!'
âGood,' Miss Witz said. âNo hero can defeat Yuk, because no hero can wield a weapon big enough to destroy him. To Yuk, Excalibur is a toothpick. An arrow from Rama's bow is a pinprick. Ugor's Bazuka did nothing much. A blade big enough to chop off Yuk's head would need to be many houses high. Who could lift such a thing? This is what Greta made me realise, the night she stole the florins and went to Avalon seeking a
giant-slayer.
And she found one: you.'
âMe?' Hercufleas groaned. âHaven't you been listening to Greta? I'm not a giant-slayer. I'm just a flea.'
Miss Witz's face wrinkled into a smile. âWhich is very lucky indeed. For a flea is exactly what Tumber needs.'
Hercufleas looked up. âIt is?'
âYes. Because there is only one weapon capable of destroying Yuk. And only a flea can wield it.'
Miss Witz sat on the desk by Greta and took from her pockets two knitting needles and a tangle of wool. In her lap she began knitting her wool into a green scarf; in the air, she began weaving her words into a story.
âL
ong ago,' Miss Witz began, âyour ancestors, Hercufleas, were more than just pests. They made a name for themselves as the greatest giant-slayers of all. Across the world fleas went, killing humans who were ten thousand times their size. To people, fleas were like grains of sand, yet they killed them with a single nip of their fangs.'
Hercufleas looked at Greta. Were fleas really once so mighty? It sounded like a fairy tale.
âIt's true,' Miss Witz whispered hoarsely, âevery word I say. And you may wonder, Hercufleas, why your ancestors killed with a single bite and you cannot. The answer, I tell you, is this: you do not have the weapon that they carried.'
She paused. The only sounds were the tinderfly's buzzing and her needles clack-clacking together.
âThis weapon was not a sword, or an axe, or a Bazuka, or a bow,' she continued. âIt was a plague. The deadliest disease of all. And its name was the Black Death.'
Greta breathed in sharply. Beside her, Hercufleas felt her prickle of fear.
âThe Black Death,' repeated Miss Witz, shivering. âCarrying this weapon inside them, your tiny ancestors killed millions upon millions of people.' She smiled grimly. âFleas killing humans⦠Tell me, Hercufleas, what is that, if not giant-slaying?'
âBut the Black Death is gone,' Greta blurted out. âIt doesn't exist any more.'
âAh,' said Miss Witz. âFor the answer to that, I must finish my story. The Black Death was a dreadful weapon, yes, but it had one weakness: feeding on death and destruction, it had to constantly kill to survive. Eventually it became too deadly. Killing too quickly, before it had a chance to spread. And so the plague destroyed itself and humanity survived. And yetâ¦
âEven after all that suffering and loss, some saw the terrible power of the Black Death, and wanted that power for themselves. Evil men, who loved to conquer and kill â warlords, emperors, generals. One of them was the old king of Petrossia.'
âThe Czar,' Greta breathed, and Hercufleas remembered the portrait on the stamp above the stairs back in the house-hat. The man with the smouldering eyes.
âThe Czar.' Miss Witz nodded. âThe most fearsome, bloodthirsty king Petrossia has ever known, and he did not see the danger of the Black Death; only its power. Sacrificing whole armies, he managed to take a single drop of the Black Death and contain it within a phial. Then he sealed the phial in a lead box, placed the lead box in a stone chest and put the stone chest in the heart of his great fortress in the northern Waste. And then he told his enemies exactly where it was.'
âWhy would he do that?' said Hercufleas.
âTo terrify them,' said Miss Witz. âTo let them know he had the most dreadful weapon in all the world, and that he could unleash it at any time. Knowing this, who would be mad enough to attack him? Now, of course, the Czar has been dead for many years, murdered in mysterious circumstances. His fortress has fallen to ruin⦠yet there the Black Death remains.'
âNo one can take it,' said Greta. âBecause anyone who opens that phialâ¦'
â⦠will die from the Black Death themselves.' Miss Witz nodded again.
âExcept for me,' said Hercufleas.
Greta looked down at him. At last Miss Witz stopped knitting. Curled up in her lap was a finished green scarf.
âExcept for you,' she said. âLike all fleas, you are immune. You can carry the Black Death without being harmed by it yourself. Go to the Czar's old fortress, Hercufleas. Find the chest. Open the lead box. Break the phial. Drink the drop inside. Then we will have our weapon â the only weapon that can defeat Yuk.'
âMiss Witz!' Greta hugged her teacher. âYou're a genius! He really
is
a giant-slayer!'
But Hercufleas didn't feel like one. Something nasty coiled inside him, like a drop of cobra blood. âYou don't just want me to defeat Yuk,' he said to Miss Witz. âYou want me destroy him.
Kill
him.'
âYuk kills,' Greta said, whirling round, âand he'll keep on killing. If you don't do this, it will be
your
fault when he guzzles everyone in Tumber.'
Miss Witz leaned down, joints cracking like snapped pencils, until her chin was resting on the windowsill. âGreta is right,' she said. âI wish there was another way. We are at the end of our hope here in Tumber. It all comes down to you. I have never begged for anything before, but I am begging you now.' She clasped her mottled blue hands together. âPlease, Hercufleas. Please. Save us.'
T
here was no time to lose. Somewhere to the north was a fortress, and inside that fortress was the only weapon that could stop Yuk, a weapon only Hercufleas could carry.
âEvery hero must go on a quest to find their weapon,' Miss Witz said as she carried him out of the school. âRoland of Breton received his sword, Durendal, from an angel. Albion's Arthur pulled Excalibur from a stone. The vorpal sword that killed the Jabberwock wasâ'
âBut how do I get
my
weapon?' said Hercufleas.
âYou must go far to the north. Beyond the great lakes we call the Sorrows, somewhere in the endless tundra of the Waste. Find the fortress. Travel to its heart. Bring the Black Death back to Tumber.'
Hercufleas tried not to tremble. This was what he'd wanted ever since he'd hatched â a real adventure, with real danger. But now it was happening, he wasn't excited. He just felt sick and scared.
âYou will need help,' said Miss Witz, taking the green scarf she'd knitted and draping it around Greta's neck. âGo with him, Greta.'
â
Me?
' Greta gawped.
So did Hercufleas. â
Her?
'
Miss Witz cut them off. âI know what you will say! He was a coward in the woodn't. He betrayed you. I know. Hercufleas is weak. Which is why he will need your strength, child.' Miss Witz leaned forward and kissed her, leaving a red lipstick mouth on Greta's cheek. âMake him brave. Keep him on the quest. And no matter what, return to Tumber by the next new moon. Take Artifax. Speed is everything.'
Greta scowled at Hercufleas, then stormed off to pack.
âIsn't there someone else I could go with?' he asked hopefully. âWhat about you, Miss Witz?'
She cackled, thumping her walking stick on the path. âI am too old, dear little flea.' She watched Greta leave, adding quietly, âAnd do not think it is just
her
who will be helping
you.
For Greta is also on a quest â yes, she is. To find a way to heal her heart, which was broken by Yuk many guzzlings ago.' The old babushka sighed. âShe did not used to scowl so much, you know. When she was a child, she did nothing but smile.'
âShe's still a child,' said Hercufleas.
Miss Witz smiled sadly, because her copper bell was ringing. âMaybe.' She left him there and started off down the road. âNow I will go tell our plan to the survivors.'
Two hours later, Greta and Hercufleas rode Artifax out of Tumber. It was sunset and the blue stars winked on, one after the other, across the violet sky.
In the town the warm orange street lamps formed constellations of their own. The ruined church of Saint Katerina was silent on the hill. Artifax trotted past house after empty house. Hercufleas read their names: Old Barrow, Stove Cottage, the Saltpots. Each one beaten up, like boxers gone ten rounds too many. Doorways gaping, windows knocked out. Nobody home.
âWhere is everyone?' Hercufleas asked.
âGuzzled,' said Greta. âThese are the dead streets. There aren't many of us left.'
They stopped by the houses of the cinderwikk men, with their singed fingers and tinted goggles, who bred tinderflies to fill Tumber's street lamps. Greta refilled her silver tinderbox, taking a stack of sugarsticks too. She broke off a nub from one and popped it in Artifax's beak.