CHAPTER THREE
The girls set off to put their suitcases and cats into their
rooms and to get
themselves tidied up before assembly, which was held in the Great
Hall. Mildred was delighted to find that she now had six bats
roosting along her picture rail, instead of the usual three. She
was mad about animals and, although the bats didn't do very much
except sleep all day -- occasionally stretching a wing or shuffling
along a bit -- it was nice to know they were there. In the early
hours, when Mildred was often lying awake worrying about a looming
potion test or some similar horror, it was always comforting to see
her little flock come in from their night's hunting and
jostle into position upside down. It only took a few minutes for
Mildred to unpack her suitcase and put
away her clothes, so she decided to nip along the corridor to
Maud's room. "Have you got that styling brush, Maud?" she asked,
letting herself in through the heavy oak door. "I'd like to have a
little twirl with it and see if I can liven up my hair a bit." Maud
was still cramming her clothes into her tiny wardrobe. All the
pupils had a wardrobe, with space on one side for their robes and
shirts and
a narrow set of drawers on the other side, which was not big enough
to take a term's supply of socks and underclothes and was,
therefore, very
difficult to keep tidy. "Of course you can, Mildred," said Maud
cheerily. "It's on the bed there.
Just push up the switch at the side and it makes a hissing sound,
then gets warm in a few minutes." "Thanks, Maudy," said Mildred.
She was about to close the door as she left the room when Enid came
up
behind her. "I'm just going in to have a chat with Maud," said
Enid. "Coming?" "Not yet," replied Mildred. "I'm going to have a go
at beautifying myself
with Maud's magic brush here," and she skipped off down the
corridor back to her room. "What do you make of our new form
mistress, then?" asked Enid, settling on the end of Maud's bed with
her knees pulled up under her chin. Maud stuffed the last pair of
grey-and-black-striped pyjamas into the bottom drawer and closed
the wardrobe door. "She's a bit weird-looking, isn't she?" said
Maud. "I'm surprised H.B. let her over the doorstep. She's so --
everything H.B. can't stand, isn't she? Nervous, twittering,
doesn't look as if she could control a dead budgerigar -- and that
funny little voice and all those frivolous curls!" Enid laughed.
"Come on," she said, "let's go and help Mildred with her
hair." "Yes, let's," said Maud, heading for the door. "I meant to
warn her to be
careful. It's really easy to get the brush tangled if your hair's
long." CHAPTER FOUR Maud and Enid pushed open Mildred's door. "Be
careful with the brush,
Mildred," said Maud. "It's easy to -- " She stopped abruptly as she
saw Mildred sitting on her bed with the styling brush and her hair
rolled up in a great messy loop right against her
scalp. She was desperately trying to unroll it, but the brush was
held as
tightly as a fly parcelled up in a spider's web. "It's got stuck,
Maud!" said Mildred, trying not to cry. "I mean really stuck! I've
turned it off but it's still burning hot and the brush is black so
you can't see where the hair ends and the brush begins." "Don't
panic, Mildred," said Enid, trying to sound soothing, despite
the
horrified tone in her own voice. "That's right," said Maud. "Just
leave it and let Enid and me sort it out. Bend your head towards
the window so we can see what we're doing." Mildred bent her head
so that Maud and Enid could assess the situation. It was not good.
In the dim light filtering through the narrow castle window, they
could see that Mildred had twirled up a large hank of her
waist-length hair, which had spiralled round the brush into a
hopeless tangle. Maud and Enid exchanged appalled glances. They
looked even more horrified when the bell for assembly began to
clang urgently through the corridors. "Oh, no!" said Mildred,
bursting into tears. "Why on earth do these things always happen to
me? I can't go down to assembly like this. H.B. will
go bonkers!" "Hang on, Mildred," said Maud, jumping up. "Perhaps I
can find someone to help." She opened the door just as Ethel Hallow
was walking past. Ethel looked
in at Mildred. "Oh, dear," she said, "what have you done now?"
"Don't be horrible, Ethel," said Enid. "This is really bad news.
Mildred's got Maud's styling brush stuck in her hair. It'll take
all day to untangle. It's really serious." To everyone's surprise,
Ethel looked suddenly genuinely concerned. "Sorry, Mildred," she
said. "Of course it's awful, but luckily I know just what to do.
Hang on a sec." She went over to the window in an authoritative
manner, bent Mildred's
head towards her and began busily working on the hair and brush as
if
she knew exactly how to help. No one could quite see what she was
doing and by the time they realized it was too late. Ethel had
taken a pair of scissors from the jar on Mildred's windowsill and
cut the brush out of
Mildred's hair, leaving a tuft about three centimetres long and ten
centimetres wide. "Ethel!" exclaimed Maud and Enid together. "You
are unbelievable! Look
what you've done!" Mildred leapt up, feeling the space where the
brush had been, and rushed to look in the mirror, which hung just
below the bats. "Oh, no!" she cried. "I look completely mad,
Ethel." "Well, you asked me to help!" said Ethel, sounding
offended. "No, I didn't!" snapped Mildred hotly. "You just barged
in here and hacked a huge lump of my hair off !" _______ THE WORST
WITCH SAVES THE DAY by Jill Murphy. Copyright (c) 2007 by Jill
Murphy. Published by Candlewick Press, Inc., Cambridge, MA.
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