“Wakey wakey, rise and shine!” Jack Wren’s voice called up the stairs and stirred Phoebe from her slumber. He sounded excited, like a kid at Christmas, and the thought made Phoebe smile. She yawned, rubbed the sleep out of her eyes and sat up as she allowed the realisation of the significance of this new day to impact on her.
“It’s today!” Phoebe said out loud to nobody in particular. “It’s actually today!” As the realisation of the implications of this day dawned on her, Phoebe was suddenly wide awake, and bounced out of bed. This was the day that she, Demetrius and her parents would make the long trip home to Ireland. This was the day that Cosain and the other Heavenly warriors would surprise the Enemy and engage the powers of darkness in an epic battle of good versus evil. But this was also the day after yesterday, which meant that history had not repeated itself, and Phoebe’s parents’ lives had not ended tragically on Thursday 15th July. This hurtling train of thought raced through Phoebe’s mind with such velocity that she had to hold on to the end of her bed to steady herself. She couldn’t decide whether to dance for joy, weep with excitement, or shudder in fear, and in the end she did something that was a blend of all three.
Phoebe crossed the floor and pulled open her bedroom curtains. The fact that this was the last morning she would wake up in beautiful Africa did not escape her, and she paused deliberately at the window, drinking in the breathtaking view, and trying desperately to commit every minute detail to memory. She would miss this place, there was no doubt – the sunshine, the warm and friendly locals, the birds and rabbits and lizards – but she believed that what lay ahead of her in Ireland would match and even exceed the life she had known here in Africa.
Phoebe took one last wistful look before turning away from the window. She started to move towards her bedroom door, when something made her pause and look back through the window. She was not sure what she had expected to see, but nothing had changed, so she went downstairs to have breakfast with her parents.
Just outside Phoebe’s window, Braygor and Graygor had narrowly avoided detection, and were hanging below the windowsill by the tips of their gnarled fingers.
“I told you she would look round again, you dimwit!” snarled Graygor at his twin.
“You did not! It was you who insisted on getting closer! Numbskull!” retorted Braygor, who was desperately clinging on despite the burning cramps that had beset his twisted little arms.
“This is not something we can afford to mess up, brother!” snapped Graygor. “Captain Schnither will have our hides if we do! You need to be more careful!”
“Me? Me?” hissed Braygor. “You’re the completely unreliable idiotic one, not me! You need to be more careful!” He kicked out at his diminutive brother, catching him in the ribs and causing him to squeal out in pain.
“Ouch!” yelled Graygor, as he attempted to return the blow with his clenched right fist. The manoeuvre did not go to plan however, and Graygor lost his grip on the window sill, grabbing desperately on to his twin in an attempt to stop his fall, but succeeding only in sending them both tumbling to the ground in a tangled mess of limbs and leathery black wings.
“Now look what you’ve done!” shouted Braygor. “I knew I should have scouted this house out on my own!”
“Oh shut up you little pest!” retorted Graygor. “Let’s just get on with our mission before we lose the girl completely. Now can you be quiet?! She’ll hear us if you’re not careful!”
Braygor was obviously not amused, and hissed his disapproval at his still snarling twin, but he knew that Graygor was right, and sulkily agreed to get back to the job at hand. As the two impish little monsters crept round the side of the Wrens’ house, Braygor was sporting a limp, although it was entirely possible that his pride hurt more than his bruised backside. They skulked along the exterior walls until they reached the kitchen, then Graygor clambered on to Braygor’s shoulders and peeped over the windowsill and into the kitchen, where Phoebe and her parents were having breakfast.
The Wrens were sleepy from their early start, but all three were excited and expectant about their return home, and their conversation over breakfast was animated and vivacious as a result. Breakfast was a fairly hasty affair, and in truth no-one was very hungry, so after a quick slice of toast, Phoebe darted back upstairs to grab her bags. Most of the family’s furniture and the larger household items were being left in Africa, and Jack had asked that Esau oversee their distribution to whoever might need them. Other bits and pieces had been shipped back to Uncle John and Aunt Kate’s house in Loister, Ireland, during the last few weeks, and would be waiting for the Wrens when they got home. As she lugged her suitcases down the stairs, Phoebe was glad that her father had been so organised and meticulous – any more to carry today would have rendered their trip mission impossible!
“Right ladies,” said Jack, who was standing by the front door with his backpack slung over his shoulder. “Is that everything?”
“Yep,” said Phoebe. “This is all my stuff.”
“And mine is in the Jeep,” said Eva, stifling an enormous yawn.
“Okay then, this is it!” exclaimed Jack, and he smiled at Eva and Phoebe. “Come on now girls, we definitely don’t want to miss that flight, and we’ve got to pick up Demetrius en route.”
“Okay Mr. On-Time, let’s do this!” replied Eva, and she picked up her hand luggage off the bottom stair, put an arm around Phoebe’s shoulder, took one last look at the house that had been home to her and her family for the last ten years, then stepped out through the front door into whatever the future might hold for her.
Jack waited until his wife and daughter had exited the house, then he too took a quick last look, and pulled the front door closed behind him. He locked the door and pocketed the key.
“Remind me to give this to Esau,” he asked Eva, patting the back pocket of his blue jeans.
Jack, Eva and Phoebe walked over to the family’s Jeep, where Jack slung Phoebe’s case into the trunk along with his and Eva’s cases, then climbed into the driver’s seat, started the engine and pulled out through the gateway and onto the road towards Demetrius’s house.
Phoebe spun around in the back seat, and watched as the house she had known as home faded into the horizon. She felt a sudden pang of sadness mixed with apprehension, but immediately and deliberately pushed these down and opted instead to focus on her joy and excitement and hope for the future. Phoebe smiled contentedly to herself, and whispered a silent prayer of thanks for ten amazing years in Africa, and the security and protection she and her family had known during that time.
Unseen by Phoebe, Braygor and Graygor had take to the air and followed the Wrens out through their gate, and were currently tailing their Jeep from a safe distance. The twisty little demons’ eyes were glinting with scarcely contained glee at the thought of the misery and devastation that this day would bring, and neither could wait to see just what Captain Schnither had in store for the do-gooders.
“Braygor, stay close, don’t let them out of your sight! I must report back to Captain Schnither and let him know that the target is on the move.” Graygor barked the order at his belligerent twin, who ordinarily would have needed no further excuse to start an argument, but on this occasion Braygor merely nodded his consent and put an inch to his step, determined not to lose sight of the Wrens for even a second.
Graygor pulled back, and with a swoosh of his black leathery wings, propelled himself skyward, then shot off into the horizon in the direction of the Mooar Mountain like a gruesome parody of Peter Pan returning to Never Never Land.