Mr. Prendergast had brought news, too, about the wizard’s mother. Mrs. Brainsweller had got a very important job, organizing all the Banshee choirs which went to wail at places where something bad had happened. This meant traveling all over the country and she had decided to leave her son to get on with his own life.
“I did my best for him,” she had told Mr. Prendergast. “But he was never properly grateful — and really when I saw him making a salad I realized I was just wasting my time.”
This news was a tremendous relief to the wizard, and to the two spiders who had been watching over him, and that night he cooked a wonderful festive meal for everyone, using produce from the garden, and they drank to Gladys’s memory and toasted “absent friends.”
When it was clear that the aunts were gone for good, the ogre had asked the troll to take care of the castle till he returned, but this time Ulf had been firm.
“We’ll stay but only if you leave the castle to us when you go and join Germania in her mound. We have the children’s future to think of.”
The ogre had agreed and sent for a lawyer to make a proper will. He had also left them his sock drawer so there was money to run things properly, and gradually more people came to the castle, not to be changed into animals but to work and to help. Brod sold them a cow and some chickens, and his little grandson came up whenever he could to lend a hand. Mr. Prendergast was so sad at the thought of making the dangerous journey back and living alone in Whipple Road that he decided to stay. He did the accounts and was useful in all sorts of ways, and the Hag wrote a letter to the principal of the children’s home saying that Ivo was safe and well, and the orphanage could have her house and sell it and keep the money. She was sure that this would keep the principal quiet and she was quite right.
They had postcards from the ogre quite often; he was really enjoying life on board the Empress of the Seas. He had turned out to be the best at shuffleboard and won a prize at bingo, and the captain had invited him to sit at his table.
“I don’t think the fingernail boat would have suited me nearly so well,” he wrote.
There was some talk about starting a school, but the children thought this was a bad idea.
“Anyone who can read and write and add and subtract can educate themselves,” said Ivo firmly — and somehow the talk died down.
The Norns were mistaken when they looked into the screen and thought that Mirella was smelling a rose. She had in fact been settling the spittlebug she’d taken from the ogre’s nose into the center of the flower, which was damp and quiet and suitable.
“I don’t think the other passengers would like it if you had insects coming out of your nose all the time,” she had told him. “And you know I’ll look after them.”
Which she did, most faithfully. Everyone was careful not to make the garden too tidy and to leave heaps of compost and a few stones, and some leaf mold so that there was always somewhere for the wood lice and bugs to go, and it became a sanctuary for everything that crawled and buzzed and flew.
“Oh we are lucky to be able to grow up here,” said Mirella.
“To live here forever if we want to,” said Ivo.
They were in the garden on a lovely autumn afternoon. The gnu grazed peacefully nearby; the aye-aye was sitting on the roof of the greenhouse, peeling a cob of sweet corn they had brought her; they could hear Bessie splashing in the lake.
And on a sunlit patch of grass sat Clarence on his trolley. The aunts had not come back for him and he was part of the family now. Charlie, as always, was guarding him, and from time to time he carefully licked the mottled shell. Clarence was obviously going to take his time to hatch, and whether he was going to be someone who would save the world or just an outsize chicken nobody knew, but the children were not in a hurry.
Anyone who has an egg to watch over has a stake in the future, and the future — they were sure of it — was going to be good.