Wet Magic E. Nesbit (interesting books to read for teens txt) đ
- Author: E. Nesbit
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âBut what do you do with it?â Mavis asked.
âNip the feet of the enemy,â said the Princess, âand it holds on. Under Folk have no tails. You wait till they are near a rock; then nip a foemanâs foot with your good weapon, laying the other end on the rock. The oyster shell will at once attach itself to the rock and.â ââ âŠâ
A terrible shout rang out, and the Princess stopped.
âWhat is it; oh, what is it?â said the children. And the Princess shuddered.
Again that shoutâ âthe most terrible sound the children had ever heard.
âWhat is it?â they said again.
The Princess drew herself up, as if ashamed of her momentary weakness, and said:
âIt is the war cry of the Under Folk.â
VIII The Water-WarAfter the sound of that terrible shouting there came silenceâ âthat is, there was silence where the children were, but all above they could hear the rush and rustle of a quick arming.
âThe war cry of the People of the Depths,â said the Princess.
âI suppose,â said Kathleen forlornly, âthat if theyâre so near as that all is lost.â
âLost? No, indeed,â cried the Princess. âThe People of the Depths are very strong, but they are very heavy. They cannot rise up and come to us from the water above. Before they can get in they must scale the wall.â
âBut they will get over the wallâ âwonât they?â
âNot while one of the Royal Halibuts still lives. The Halibuts have manned the wall; they will keep back the foe. But they wonât attack yet. Theyâll send out their scouts and skirmishers. Till they approach, the Crustacean Brigade can do nothing. It is a hard thing to watch a fight in which you may not share. I must apologize for appointing you to such an unsatisfactory position.â
âThank you, we donât mind,â said Cathay hastily. âWhatâs that?â
It was a solid, gleaming sheet of silver that rose above them like a great carpetâ âwhich split and tore itself into silver threads.
âIt is the Swordfish Brigade,â said the Princess. âWe could swim up a little and watch them, if youâre not afraid. You see, the first attack will probably be delivered by one of their Shark regiments. The 7th Sharks have a horrible reputation. But our brave Swordfish are a match for them,â she added proudly.
The Swordfish, who were slowly swimming to and fro above, seemed to stiffen as though to meet some danger at present unseen by the others. Then, with a swift, silent, terrible movement, the Sharks rushed on the noble defenders of Merland.
The Swordfish with their deadly weapons were readyâ âand next moment all the water was a wild whirl of confused conflict. The Sharks fought with a sort of harsh, rough courage, and the children, who had drawn away to a little distance, could not help admiring their desperate onslaught. But the Swordfish were more than their match. With more skill, and an equally desperate gallantry, they met and repulsed the savage onslaught of the Sharks.
Shoals of large, calm Cod swept up from the depths, and began to shoulder the dead Sharks sideways toward the water above the wallsâ âthe dead Sharks and, alas! many a brave, dead Swordfish, too. For the victory had not been a cheap one.
The children could not help cheering as the victorious Swordfish reformed.
âPursuit is unnecessary,â said the Princess. âThe Sharks have lost too heavily to resume the attack.â
A Shark in terror-stricken retreat passed close by her, and she clipped its tail with her oyster shell.
The Shark turned savagely, but the Princess with one tail-swish was out of danger, pushing the children before her outspread arms, and the Shark began to sink, still making vain efforts to pursue them.
âThe shell will drag him down,â said the Princess; âand now I must go and get a fresh shield. I wish I knew where the next attack would be delivered.â
They sank slowly through the water.
âI wonder where Reuben is?â said Bernard.
âOh, heâs quite safe,â said the Princess. âThe Boy Scouts donât go outside the wallsâ âthey just do a good turn for anybody who wants it, you knowâ âand help the kind Soles to look after the wounded.â
They had reached the great flooded garden again and turned toward the Palace, and as they went a Sea Urchin shell suddenly rose from behind one of the clipped hedgesâ âa Sea Urchin shell and behind it a long tail.
The shell was raised, and the face under it was Reubenâs.
âHi, Princess!â he shouted. âIâve been looking for you everywhere. Weâve been scouting. I got a lot of seaweed, and they thought I was nothing but seaweed; and so I got quite close to the enemy.â
âIt was very rash,â said the Princess severely.
âThe others donât think so,â he said, a little hurt. âThey began by saying I was only an irregular Sea Urchin, because Iâve got this jolly tailââ âhe gave it a merry wagâ ââand they called me Spatangus, and names like that. But theyâve made me their General nowâ âGeneral Echinus. Iâm a regular now, and no mistake, and what I was going to say is the enemy is going to attack the North Tower in force in half an hour.â
âYou good boy,â said the Princess. I do believe if it hadnât been for his Sea Urchinâs uniform she would have kissed him. âYouâre splendid. Youâre a hero. If you could do it safelyâ âthereâs heaps of seaweedâ âcould you find out if thereâs any danger from the Book People? You knowâ âthe ones in the cave. Itâs always been our fear that they might attack, too: and if they didâ âwell, Iâd rather be the slave of a Shark than of Mrs. Fairchild.â She gathered an armful of seaweed from the nearest tree, and Reuben wrapped himself in it and drifted offâ âlooking less like a live Boy Scout than you could believe possible.
The defenders of Merland, now acting on Reubenâs information, began to mass themselves near the North Wall.
âNow is our time,â said the Princess. âWe must go along the tunnel, and when we hear
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