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“Then you must’ve misremembered it,” said Reg.

“Nonsense. I’ve tamper-proofed so much ink in the last two years I could do it in my sleep.”

Reg tut-tutted. “Then I blame that Madame Rinky Tinky and her cut-rate under-the-counter flim-flam of a correspondence witching course. That’s who taught you the technique, isn’t it?”

Melissande groaned. So much for Reg’s newfound restraint. I should’ve known it was too good to last. “ There’s nothing wrong with studying metaphysics by mail. Gerald studied metaphysics by mail and look where he is now-a super special secret agent in a government Department that’s so hush-hush they’re not allowed to tell themselves they exist!”

“True,” Reg conceded, then looked pointedly down her beak. “But Gerald had me.”

Slumping against the filing cabinet, she glared at the test tube and beaker. “It’s got to be the ink. I’m going straight back to see Mister Cripps and give him a piece of my mind. He’s got no business selling substandard ink to unsuspecting customers. It may be his most economical brand but that’s no excuse for-”

“Now, now,” said Reg. “Only a bad worker blames her tools.” Staring at the residual mess in the test tube and beaker, she shook her head. “Deary deary dear. You really have cocked it up this time, haven’t you? Good lord, madam, what were you thinking? Gerald never-” And then she squawked as a pointed finger was jabbed between her eyes.

“I swear, Reg,” breathed Melissande, “on my honour as a princess, finish that sentence and I will shove your beak where the sun doth not shine!”

Reg sniffed. “You know what your problem is, don’t you, ducky? You can’t take a little constructive criticism, that’s your problem. You may be Her Royal Highness Princess Melissande in disguise but you don’t have the authority to shove my beak anywhere. And even if you weren’t in disguise and you owned up to being an HRH instead of prancing about calling yourself Miss Cadwallader and you did have that kind of authority, I’m a queen and therefore outrank you.”

“Once upon a time you were a queen, Reg,” she snapped. “Now you’re just a bird of no fixed parentage. And disguise or no disguise, if you think I’m going to be dictated to by an ambulatory feather duster with delusions of grandeur you can bloody well think again!”

From outside the open window a coolly amused voice said, “Now now, girls. How about a little decorum?”

CHAPTER FIVE

With a startled squawk Reg fell off the windowsill to land beak-first on the elderly cabbage-rose carpet. With an equally startled cry of “Reg!” Melissande leapt forward and scooped her up to make sure she was all right.

“Izz by deak brogen?” mumbled Reg, eyes rolling. “Id veels brogen!”

“No, no, it’s not broken,” she soothed, straightening Reg’s mussed feathers and sitting her gently on the seat of the client armchair. Then she whipped around and glared at the face in the window. “Bibbie! For the love of Saint Snodgrass, what are you doing? If anyone catches you levitating yourself we could lose-”

“Oh, relax,” said Bibbie, waving one hand. “I hexed a dustbin lid, not me.”

“Well don’t. Now get down! Or get inside! Quick, hurry, before someone notices!”

Monk’s appalling sister grinned, folded her arms along the windowsill and rested her elegant chin on her wrists. “Come on, Mel. Don’t be a spoilsport.”

“I am not a spoilsport, I’m trying to save our hides. If the landladies walk in and see you hovering out there they’ll have conniptions. You know what they said about Peculiar Goings On. We’re already up to our fifth official warning and we’ve only been here three and a half months. One more incident and we’ll be out in the street!”

Bibbie sighed. “Mel, relax. Our landladies aren’t going to see me up here, the old dears are as blind as a herd of bats. But even if they do see me they’ll just think I’m a well-dressed weather balloon. Or a novelty kite.” She frowned. “I wonder… is there such a thing as a herd of bats? Maybe it’s a flock. Or a gaggle. Or possibly a school…”

“Trust me when I say I neither know nor care,” said Melissande grimly. “But if there were more than one of you, for which I thank Saint Snodgrass daily there isn’t, you’d be known as a Headache of Emmerabiblias! And don’t call me Mel!”

Bibbie pretended to pout. “Monk calls you Mel.”

“You’re not Monk!”

“Sorry,” said unrepentant Bibbie, back to grinning.

She took a deep and goaded breath. “This is not funny! You just about frightened the life out of poor Reg! Now would you please be serious for five consecutive minutes and come inside? It’s well after half-past nine, which means you’re horribly late.”

“Sorry,” said Bibbie, still unrepentant. “I over-slept. After I got back to the boarding house Demelza Sopwith and I ended up in an argument about the accurate measuring of etheretic fluxes and it went on for hours. Oooh, she’s such an ignorant hag. She says you need to take five readings to be certain of the thaumic variations but I say you only need three, provided you-”

“Yes, yes, yes,” she said impatiently. “That’s fascinating, Bibbie, and I’d love to hear all about it, honestly, only not now. Now you need to come inside before I drag you inside. I want your help.”

“Help?” Bibbie looked pleased. “With what?”

She felt her chin tilt. “Nothing much. Hardly anything at all, actually. Just-”

“She’s forgotten how to make tamper-proof ink,” said Reg. “So if you’re quite finished impersonating a deranged bumblebee, ducky, perhaps you’d care to join us and earn your keep.”

When it came to Reg, Bibbie had a hide like a rhinoceros. Instead of arguing, she just nodded and smiled. “Not a problem, girls. Don’t go away.” And with a jaunty little wave she dropped out of sight, plummeting like a hydraulic lift with its cables cut.

“ Bibbie!” Melissande threw herself precariously across the windowsill, sure that Monk’s mad sister would end up smashed to pieces on the ground. But no-she was touching down on the cobbles quite safely with a gentle clatter of hexed dustbin lid. “And don’t forget to check the mailbox on your way upstairs!” she shouted.

Another jaunty wave was the only reply.

Sighing, she hauled herself back into the office. “It doesn’t matter how many times I remind her, she always forgets to fetch the first post.”

Reg snorted. “Too busy levitating. She’s as bad as her brother, that girl, and that’s saying something.”

Despite her aggravation Melissande smiled as she picked up the scattered bits and pieces of the discarded Ottosland Times.

“Well, I suppose it’s to be expected. They are related, after all. And really there’s no harm in her. She’s just young and high spirited. I expect I’d be the same if Lional-” She cleared her throat. “Well. If he hadn’t turned into a homicidal maniac.”

“You’d be young and high spirited if you had tighter buttocks,” said Reg. “I’m telling you, ducky, flab is not your friend.”

The bird was saved only by Bibbie’s arrival. Witnesses to murder were so inconvenient.

Melissande swallowed a bubble of unbecoming envy as Monk’s sister sauntered into the office, the morning mail tucked under one arm. Every so often-like right this moment, for example, probably thanks to the spirit-crushing debacle of the exploding tamper-proof ink-she found herself struck speechless by the girl.

Simply put, Emmerabiblia Markham looked like a princess. Well, the way people imagined a princess should look, anyway. And despite being the genuine royal article, Melissande Cadwallader regrettably didn’t. Not even when she went to the trouble of sprucing herself up.

Slender and shapely in watered green silk, with the kind of complexion oft-compared to strawberries and cream, Bibbie also enjoyed luxuriously waving hair the obligatory colour of a sun-ripened wheat field, cherry-red lips, eyes like blazing sapphires and so on and so forth ad absolutely nauseum and sometimes-galling as it might be to admit-it was hard to feel anything but inferior. Especially since Bibbie was also a phenomenally gifted witch.