Authors: Sam Gayton
âAnd keep your little hatchling under control.'
âWe will, Mr Stickler!'
âAnd consider that a formal warning.'
âCertainly! Thank you, sir!'
Seizing hold of Hercufleas, his parents bounded down the corridors. The shelves flew past, all labelled with categories of heroes to suit any quest: Ninjas, Nightmare-Hunters, Necromancers⦠So this was what Min meant when she said they worked for their host. His parents were the librarians of Stickler's catalogues of heroes.
âTricky business, giant-slaying,' Stickler said above them, drumming his fingers on a shelf. âEvery giant has its weakness â an ogre is vulnerable to iron, a troll is susceptible to fire, and a cyclops is prone to conjunctivitis. Giants from the Cloud Kingdom, would you believe, are helpless against little boys called Jackâ'
âYuk doesn't come from the clouds,' Greta interrupted. âHe comes out of the forests around Tumber.'
âHmm.' Stickler steepled his hands. âPerhaps one of my stronger heroes will be able to simply overpowerâ'
âNo,' Greta said. âThe mayor already tried that. He hired strong heroes from other shops: Heroes for Hire, and As Good As Our Sword, and BestQuest, I think, was the last one.'
âHmm, BestQuest,' Stickler sniffed. âYes, they're just down the road. Although their heroes aren't quite as legendary as the ones we offer here, of courseâ¦'
âGood,' said Greta. âBecause we already hired the Stone Golem from there.'
âThe Stone Golem? You hired him?' Stickler's voice was full of envy. âHe is the strongest hero BestQuest has to offer!'
â
Was
their strongest hero,' Greta corrected. âHe's a pile of gravel now.'
âGravel?' Stickler choked on the word. âImpossible.'
âI saw it happen,' said Greta. âI was there.'
And while the fleas searched the miniature library below, Greta told Stickler about Yuk.
T
he night was dark, the moon was new and Yuk was coming. On the edge of Tumber, Greta snuffed her tinderlamp and hid behind some rubble to watch the approaching battle. She stared out into the blackness until she got her night vision. No light but the cold hard shining of the stars. Nothing stirring but the wind, rattling through the empty spaces between the pines. In that silence, her breath seemed too loud in her throat.
It started in the air. The air trembled. Again. Again. Like a heartbeat. Like a thunderstorm coming closer. Then the forest began to sway. Tall pines were parting like curtains. Two glowing moons the colour of curdled milk rose up into the sky from behind the tree line.
And
blinked.
Yuk gazed down at Tumber. Each month he grew a little bigger. With every guzzling he was a little stronger. Now he was at least ten houses high. The tree rooted on the top of his head stood up like a mohican. The bats roosting in the cavern of his bellybutton uttered their eerie screams. Shaggy moss covered his body and a tangled beard of vines trailed down his chest. His mouth was full of grey broken teeth, covered with lichen like tombstones. He ground them together, then roared:
âYUK WANTS TO GUZZLE!'
In one stride he reached the river; in another he crossed it. Greta watched him stomp down the dead streets, plunging his hand into houses with roofs already torn off like the tops of sardine tins. Yuk had guzzled them, months ago.
âWHERE'S YUK'S FOOD?' he bellowed.
Enraged, his fists smashed the houses to bits. Bricks and bits of chimney sploshed in the river. When the echoes of his voice faded away, Yuk turned to look up at the Church of Saint Katerina on the Hill, where the last tinderlamps were still lit. Licking his lips, he stepped forward.
Right into the ambush.
âI shall protect Tumber!' boomed a voice, and down the hill charged the Stone Golem of Prais.
The Stone Golem, chiselled from granite and brought to life by alchemy!
The Stone Golem, said to be indestructible!
The Stone Golem, who had once punched the ground so hard with his fist, the Earth wobbled out of orbit and descended into a winter ten years long!
His charge took Yuk by surprise. He smashed into the giant's shin, sending Yuk stumbling back down the hill. But the giant was back on his feet at once, towering over the mighty hero.
The Stone Golem attacked again, but this time Yuk was ready. Raising one enormous foot, he stamped on the hero, grinding him beneath his heel. The Stone Golem's granite body began to crack and splinter under the pressure. Yuk jumped up and down, pulverising the hero again â again â again â until there was nothing left but gravel.
Licking his lips, the giant reached the Church of Saint Katerina on the Hill. He tore off the roof and plunged in his handâ¦
âEnough!' shrieked Stickler. âI've heard all I need to hear!'
Greta fell silent. In the library stacks, Hercufleas tried in vain to imagine Yuk's size. To him, humans were enormous. But Yuk⦠the giant's
blood cells
were probably bigger than he was. What hero could possibly stop something so gargantuan?
âGnome-catchers, goblin-trappersâ¦' Behind him, Min and Pin hopped along the shelves, reading labels. âHere we are: giant-slayers.'
But just as they reached the first book, the shelves sank back down again with a shudder. Gears whining, they juddered back below the counter and vanished.
âApologies,' Stickler said to Greta, taking his hand from the lever. âWe are currently experiencing technical issues. I'm afraid it won't be possible to help you. Goodbye, and have a Happily Ever After.'
H
ercufleas looked at Min and Pin. They stared back, as confused as he was. Above them, Mr Stickler sat, hands folded, waiting for Greta to leave the shop.
She did not.
âWhat do you mean, you won't help me?' She scowled. âWhy?'
âAt current, we currently have no suitable heroes, erm, currently available.' Stickler blinked nervously.
âYou didn't even look!' Greta cried. âYou're afraid!'
âAfraid?' Stickler barked a laugh. âRidiculous.'
âYou are. You're terrified of Yuk!'
âHe could damage my top earners!' Stickler said primly. âYour quest sounds as if it has already wasted a good number of heroes. I recommend you try BestQuest again, or As Good As Our Sword.'
âOr me!' Hercufleas piped up.
âHercufleas, hush!' said Min.
âGoodbye,' said Stickler. âThe door is located behind you. Use it at your earliest convenience.'
Greta locked her eyes on him. âYou'll help me,' she growled, âor else.'
He snorted. âOr else what?'
Her eyes brimmed. âOr else
this
,' she said, bottom lip quivering.
Stickler folded his arms. âCrying won't get you anywhere.'
âHe wouldn't help me,' Greta sniffed, looking around the shop as if people were there. âMr Stickler, from Happily Ever Afters. I only wanted a hero, and he sent away a poor helpless child in need!'
Stickler looked around in confusion. âWho are youâ¦? What are youâ¦?' But Greta drowned him out with an anguished howl and burst into tears. They dribbled down her cheeks and hung from her chin in wobbly drops.
âWhy wouldn't he help?' she sobbed to the invisible crowd. âHappily Ever Afters had such a good reputation! “You bring the quest, we'll do the rest,” he says, but that's not truuuuue.'
Mr Stickler reared back in alarm. âStop it! Don't⦠You mustn't say that to anyone!'
âI can't help it,' Greta wailed, heading for the door. âI'm just so saaaaaad! I'm never going to stop being saaaad, or telling everyone just who made me saaaad!'
âHold it!' Stickler said in a panic. âBe quiet! Shut up!'
Greta only cried harder, louder. She opened the shop door to the street.
âAll right!' Stickler lunged forward, catching hold of her satchel and yanking her back inside. âIt's all right, you can stop crying, you can shut the door! I remember now!'
Her tears stopped at once. Greta turned to him, eyes red and triumphant. âRemember what?'
âI know who can give you your Happily Ever After.' Stickler sank back into his chair, dabbing his sweaty forehead with his sleeve.
Greta sniffed. âWho?'
âMe?' suggested Hercufleas.
âThey are the greatest warriors in all Avalon,' Stickler said quickly. âHappily Ever Afters only offers them, you understand, for the riskiest, most perilous of quests⦠I do not think they have been awoken in decades.'
Greta came back to the counter. âWhat are their names?' she said eagerly.
âPrince Xin,' said Mr Stickler. âAnd Ugor the Barbarian.'
âPrince Who?' said Min.
âUgor the What?' said Pin.
âNever heard of them,' they said together.
Hercufleas frowned. Mr Stickler was hiding something he was ashamed of⦠maybe even afraid of, too. Being a flea, to whom keeping out of sight was second nature, Hercufleas could sense it. But what could it be? He looked at Min, but she just shrugged.
âWe've never hired them out before,' she murmured.
Greta narrowed her eyes at Mr Stickler, obviously suspicious too. He avoided her gaze and took off his glasses to polish them.
âAre you trying to swindle me?'
âSwindle you? No, no! Of course not! I give you my one-hundred-per-cent money-back guarantee.'
Hercufleas believed him. If Mr Stickler
was
trying to swindle Greta, surely that would ruin his reputation just as much as if he'd refused to help her. But what was he up to, then? Hercufleas couldn't work it out.
Neither could Greta. She scrutinised Mr Stickler, then rolled her eyes and gave up. âHave Prince Xin and Ugor got experience slaying giants? I don't need them strong, I don't need them to have enchanted swords, I just need
giant-slayers.
Understand?'
âOh yes!' Stickler nodded furiously, the house-hat wobbling on his head. âOf course. Now, there are certain⦠risks⦠attached to Prince Xin and Ugor⦠And the fee to hire such legendary warriors is, of course, considerableâ¦'
Greta leaned down and fiddled with a clog. Three enormous gold coins flicked up into the air. Hercufleas leaped clear as they clattered onto the counter.
Stickler leaned forward to gaze at the florins. Their reflections glittered in his scopical glasses. The muscles in his jaw twitched. âThat should be⦠more than sufficient,' he said. âNow all you have to do to seal the deal is sign the contract. Where are the rest of my employfleas?'