LAST EMERALD
PHILLIP & WHIZZY TRILOGY (BOOK 3)
LEAVING GREENVILLE
Chapter4
My alarm began blaring at
7 am that following morning. I am sure that I don’t have to explain how early
that is when there is no school. Yet, my excitement drove me like it was
Christmas morning. I leapt out of bed and dashed to my closet. Quickly changing
out of my pajamas, I got dressed, grabbed my wand and went to leave my bedroom
when I nearly tripped over Princess Merran. She stood at the door like she was
waiting for me to open it. When I did, she gracefully exited. I rolled my eyes
at her antics and headed for Whizzy’s room.
Grandpa Whizzenmog met me
in the hallway outside my brother’s room. He, too, was dressed and ready for
our trip.
“Do we dare enter?” He
said with a smile.
“We had better knock,” I
replied back with a slight giggle.
He knocked on Whizzy’s
bedroom door three times. There was no reply.
“Whizzy! Phillip! It is
time to go,” I called so they would hear me through the door.
My grandpa reached for
the door handle.
“Stop!” I blurted out.
“Please, don’t do that. What if he isn’t…decent?”
“Whizzy? My dear he’s
been indecent since the day he was born.” Then he rubbed my back to calm my
nerves. “Just wait right here.”
Then Grandpa Whizzenmog
opened the door, stepped inside, gave me a sly wink and closed the door behind
him. Next, his booming voice erupted from the bedroom. “Michael Whizzenmog,
wake up!”
I could hear shouting,
followed by crashing, and I think someone farted. The commotion continued for a
few minutes. Then my grandpa came into the hallway and quickly slammed the
door. He was covering his nose and mouth with his shirt. The door handle
violently wiggled; then Phillip and Whizzy pounded on the door. They were
trying to get out like some hideous creature was attempting to eat them alive.
“What is wrong? What
happened?” I screamed in a panic.
“Open this door,
Grandpa!” Whizzy yelled in a fit of rage.
“You must pay the penalty
for keeping us from our departing time, Michael Whizzenmog.” Grandpa chuckled
heartily with his nose and mouth still covered within his shirt. His eyes were
watering when he looked at me.
I gave him a shocked
expression and shook my head.
“It was Whizzy’s alarm…do
I have to pay the penalty, sir?” Phillip cried.
“Sorry, my boy. Guilt by
association.” He cackled like a high school freshman.
“What did you do?” I
scolded.
“Just gave the boy some of his own medicine.”
“Did you fart?” I was
most disgusted to imagine my grandpa intentionally passing gas and then
trapping my brother and Phillip inside the room to suffer. “Open the door!”
His laughter was growing
with every second.
“Now!” I shouted like my
mom.
The door flung open
causing Phillip and Whizzy to crash to the floor gasping for air. Phillip
crawled down the hallway.
“What did you eat?”
Phillip squealed in a girlish voice.
“That…was…awful,” Whizzy
said between deep breaths of fresh air. “I’m gonna get you back, Grandpa.”
“Son, you can’t beat the
master,” my grandpa replied, patting Whizzy on top of the head.
“I hope that isn’t your
power in Mistasia,” Whizzy blurted out. “Well, actually that would be pretty
cool.” He pointed at our giggling elder. “Just don’t use it on us…remember, we
are on your side.”
“You two are
embarrassing,” I yelled. “Let’s just go, please. We have to get to Mistasia and
you guys are screwing around.”
It was December 16th
and my parents had gone to finish their holiday shopping. They would be gone
all day. It made today our best opportunity to travel to Mistasia and hopefully
return before my parents could realize that we had disappeared.
“We have around ten hours
in Greenville,” I explained.
“Good that gives us about
ten days in Mistasia then,” Whizzy replied. “That isn’t too bad.”
We had gathered in the
basement…that was, everyone except Grandpa Whizzenmog.
“Where is your grandpa, Rachel?”
Princess Merran questioned.
As we looked around, he
finally appeared at the top of the stairs. We watched as he slowly maneuvered
the staircase and walked across the basement to the sliding glass door that had
served as the portal to Mistasia for our previous trips.
I watched as he adjusted
his gloves and then grabbed the handle to the door.
“What are you doing?” I
asked.
“I am opening the door,”
he said with a smart tone.
Whizzy and I shared a
confused glance.
“But we have to go
through the door,” Whizzy said before I could.
“That is the portal to
Mistasia, Rainer Whizzenmog,” Princess Merran added.
“Well, we can’t really go
back through the same way you came out can we? Weren’t you all banished?” He
slid the door open and walked out into the cold winter air.
Phillip was the first to
follow. Then we all proceeded to walk out into our wintry backyard.
I carried Princess Merran
in my arms, and Aevion sat on Phillip’s shoulder. We didn’t talk much. Instead
we just followed my grandpa as he walked through the backyard and into the
forest.
It was cold and slightly
windy. It had apparently snowed last night, as a fresh layer of white fluffy
snow hung on the tree branches above our heads. A pile of snow slid off one
tree and landed directly in front of Phillip.
“That was close,” Phillip
said, sounding relieved it didn’t land on his head. Then more snow tumbled from
the same tree and hit Whizzy. Phillip and I laughed at Whizzy as he brushed the
snow from his hair.
“That’s not funny!” my
brother yelled. He looked up into the trees. They swayed in the wind. More snow
began to fall toward us. Phillip, Whizzy and I dashed away just in time.
“Where are we going,
Whizzy?” Phillip spoke out the side of his mouth. He looked worried. “Your
grandpa isn’t gonna smoke us out again, is he?”
How disgusting…boys and
their bodily functions. How could someone be so proud when they make a room
smell so badly that no one can even breathe?
“I know; it was like
rotten cabbage and dead animals!” Whizzy laughed.
“Don’t say dead animals,”
Phillip gulped. “We’re all gonna be animals when we get back to Mistasia, and I
don’t wanna be dead!” He cried.
We were silent again. I
knew we all were thinking about what Phillip had just said. Everyone looked
worried.
“I don’t think we can
just walk to Mistasia,” Whizzy snarled in an attempt to be funny and lighten
the mood.
It didn’t work.
“No, we cannot, Whizzy.
It is just up ahead,” Grandpa Whizzenmog responded.
“The river?” I muttered.
“But it is frozen over.”
“Water makes for a strong
magical conductor, Rachel,” Grandpa Whizzenmog explained.
“Condu-what?” Whizzy
showed how little he paid attention in science class.
“A conductor, Whizzy. It
is something that allows another force…in this case magic, to flow properly.
Even with the water being frozen, it will let the magic in my wand
through…sometimes even magnifying its power,” Our grandpa elaborated as he
stepped up to the river’s edge.
“I’m not really liking
this whole jumping into a frozen river idea,” Whizzy whined.
“Then you don’t have to
come,” Grandpa Whizzenmog replied. “You can stay home and help your parents
wrap gifts.” He turned back and smiled at me.
I loved it when he picked on Whizzy.
Grandpa Whizzenmog
adjusted his snowcap and then pulled a straight wooden stick from his boot. It was
his wand. He studied it longingly. It must have been decades since he used it.
Running his fingers along the length of his wand, he inhaled deeply.
“Let’s see if I remember
how to use this,” he said.
Copyright Held by: Christopher M. Purrett
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