Big
Magic
I found Wizard Moobin in his room. He had
repaired the door, but was still busy tidying up his room after the
explosion. There was almost nothing unbroken. The power of magic
can be devastating when uncontrolled. He was there with Half Price,
Full Price’s very similar little brother. They were so similar, in
fact, that I often wondered about the fact that you never saw them
together. There was someone else in the room, too, someone I didn’t
recognise.
‘Ah,’ said Moobin when he saw me, ‘it’s you.
This is Mr Stamford, a lapsed sorcerer from Mercia. He’ll be
staying with me for a few days. Mr Stamford, this is Jennifer
Strange.’
Stamford was a sallow man with greasy hair.
He peered at me cautiously and shook my hand.
‘You’re here because of the Dragondeath?’ I
asked.
‘I think so,’ he replied after a moment’s
thought. ‘You know that feeling when you go into a room and then
can’t remember what it is you’re there for?’
‘Yes.’
‘It’s exactly
like that. I don’t know why I’m here, I just feel that I should
be.’
And he fell silent.
‘He’s the third to arrive since this
morning,’ said Wizard Moobin. He paused for a moment. ‘Tiger Prawns
was out of order doing what he did, you know.’
‘I know. He was doing it to stop me
resigning.’
‘It was noble, I grant you that. We respect
honour. Sadly, Lady Mawgon doesn’t. She wanted to have you both
replaced and asked Mother Zenobia to send a shortlist of new
foundlings so we could start interviewing.’
‘That’s not how it works.’
‘It’s how Lady Mawgon works.’
‘What happened?’
‘Mother Zenobia told her they’d run
out.’
I smiled. Mother Zenobia had hundreds of
foundlings, but she was supporting Tiger and myself by telling Lady
Mawgon there weren’t any. It must have made Mawgon even
more angry.
‘So what’s she doing now?’
‘Lady Mawgon? Marching around the corridors
gnashing her teeth, I expect. If ever there was a time to go and
hide, this might be it.’
It seemed a good time to tell Moobin what
had happened. He was, after all, the sorcerer I got on best with,
and Mr Zambini’s successor, if there was one.
‘I’m the last Dragonslayer.’
‘Yes,’ said Moobin, ‘I saw it on the news.
You’re no longer a bystander, Jennifer, you’re a player.’
‘Yes,’ I agreed, ‘but how?’
Moobin took out his Shandarmeter and turned
it on. I looked over his shoulder as the small needle bobbed
against the scale.
‘The background wizidrical radiation has
risen almost tenfold since yesterday,’ he mused. ‘I’ve never seen
anything quite like it.’
‘Is that why you’re here?’ I asked Brother
Stamford. ‘Like moths to a light?’
Stamford answered by firing a shimmering
globe from his fingertip that buzzed round the room before
vanishing.
‘I couldn’t do that yesterday,’ he
announced. ‘You may joke about Big Magic, but it’s real and it’s
true and it’s going to happen very soon.’
‘But what is it?’ I asked.
They both looked at one another. Wizard
Moobin was the one who answered.
‘There was a time before magic, and there
will be a time when magic has gone. In between those times the
power of magic will ebb and flow like the tide. But like it or not
there will come a day when the tide will recede and never return –
the power of magic will vanish for ever.’
‘But that’s unthinkable!’
‘It’s not all bad. There is always an
opportunity to rekindle that spark and bring the tide of power back
into flood – and with the flood bring on renewal. Renewal of the
power of magic.’
‘And that opportunity is Big Magic?’ I
asked.
‘A chance to recharge the batteries, so to
speak. But at times of low power, sorcerers are less likely to see
the signs of a Big Magic. We never know when it will be, or what
form it will take. The last time Big Magic took place was two
hundred and thirty years ago, with the appearance of the star
Aleutius in the evening sky. If Brother Thassos of Crete had not
seen it for the sign it was, magic might have vanished for
good.’
‘But where does magic come from?’ I asked.
‘And where does it go?’
‘Explaining magic is like explaining
lightning or rainbows a thousand years ago; inexplicable and
wonderful but seemingly impossible. Today they are little more than
equations in a science textbook. Magic is the fifth fundamental
force, and even more mysterious than gravity, which is really saying something. Magic is a power lurking
in all of us, an emotional energy that can be used to move objects
and manipulate matter. But it doesn’t follow any physical laws that
we can, as yet, understand; it exists only in our hearts and
minds.’
‘And the Dragonlands? What do they have to
do with it?’
‘I wish we knew. But one thing is crucial.
With the way that the power of magic has been deteriorating over
the past fifty years, this happening – whatever it is – might be
the last chance to regather the power before it goes
completely.’
‘What are the chances it will happen?’
‘A renewal is a risky undertaking. Chances
are twenty per cent, at best.’
And on that note, Moobin returned to his
tidying, and I wandered up to my room. My window faced west and I
watched the deep orange sun sink slowly behind the marzipan
refinery at Sugwas, the heat from the refinery’s gas flares making
the air wobble and distorting the image. I sat down on the
bed.
‘Do you want some pizza, Tiger?’
‘Yes, please,’ came a small voice from
inside the cupboard. It seemed Tiger still wasn’t happy sleeping on
his own. ‘Hey,’ he added, ‘is this a Matt Grifflon poster you’ve
hidden in here?’
‘I’m looking after it for a friend,’ I said
hurriedly.
‘Right.’