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Chapter 2 Spider Invasion

OK, this is really weird. There are even more spiders here,” Sam said as he and Sophie walked towards her house. They lived on the same road, Sam near the town and Sophie at the end, in a house that bordered on to the Shadow Woods.

Sophie groaned. “Forget the spiders, Sam! Race you to my house! Last one there is a squashed bug!”

She charged off with Sam pounding after her. Sophie just managed to beat him. “Hi, Mrs B!” she called as they tumbled in through the front door.

Sophie’s parents were archaeologists and were away working for a few months, so Grandpa and the housekeeper, Mrs B, were looking after Sophie and her twin brother, Anthony.

Mrs B was in the kitchen. “Hello, you two! Come and meet Nigel. I’ve just collected him.”

Sophie smiled as she remembered. “Nigel’s the parrot Mrs B is looking after for a few weeks,” she explained as she and Sam kicked off their trainers. “She’s keeping him here. Let’s go and see!”

They hurried into the kitchen. On the table was a large birdcage with a grey parrot inside. He had a curved black beak and white feathers round his eyes. Seeing Sam and Sophie, he walked sideways along his perch.

“Isn’t he beautiful?” cooed Mrs B. “Say hello, Nigel.”

The parrot put his head coyly to one side. “Hello, Nigel.”

Sophie grinned.

“No, no, just say hello,” Mrs B told the parrot. “Go on.”

“Hello. Go on,” the parrot gabbled.

“How about hiya?” suggested Sam. He turned to the parrot. “Hiya!”

Fire!” the parrot screeched. “Fire, fire, FIRE!” He bobbed excitedly up and down.

Sophie giggled. “What about Pretty Polly? Can you say Pretty Polly?”

“You’re a wally! You’re a wally!” cackled the parrot.

Mrs B blinked as Sophie and Sam fell about laughing. “Oh, dear! I’m not sure he should be saying that!”

“He’s brilliant!” cried Sophie. “We should record him and show him to everyone at school.” She saw her grandpa’s mobile phone on the side. “Here. Let’s give it a go with this.”


She tried using the camera on the phone to film Nigel, but the parrot didn’t seem to like the idea. He screeched loudly every time she held the phone up in front of him.

“Wow, is he noisy or what?” said Sam, raising his voice over the din.

“I think you’d better stop now, Sophie-duckie,” said Mrs B. She covered the parrot’s cage with a dark cloth and Nigel fell silent. “That should calm him down. It makes him think it’s night-time, so he’ll go to sleep.”

Sam nudged Sophie. “You’re a wally!” he squawked. They both started giggling again.

Just then there was a yell and Anthony, Sophie’s twin brother, shot in through the door. Like Sophie, he had blonde hair, but his eyes were pale blue instead of green.

“There are spiders everywhere in the house, Mrs B!” he cried. His voice shook. “They keep coming into my room through the window, and they’re on the landing and in the hall. There’s a massive one on the stairs!”

Spiders again! Sophie and Sam looked at each other in surprise. “We’ve got loads at my house too,” said Sam.

“And we saw some more on the way here,” added Sophie.

“Oh, dear, there must be an infestation. Here, take some of this.” Mrs B went to the cupboard under the stairs and passed Anthony a can of lemon furniture polish. “Spray it on your windowsill.”

Anthony frowned. “But I want to get rid of the spiders, not clean my room!”

“Yes, but this will keep the spiders out,” Mrs B told him. “Spiders don’t like strong flavours like lemon or eucalyptus, so if you spray a scented furniture polish on the windowsill they won’t cross it.”

“They also love cardboard,” chipped in Sam, “so make sure you don’t leave any cardboard boxes lying around.”

Anthony rolled his eyes. “Trust you to be a freaky spider expert, geek-brain!”

“Shut up!” Sophie said angrily. It was OK for her to tease Sam, but not Anthony. He and his friends were always picking on Sam at school. “Least Sam’s not afraid of spiders like you. Chick-chick-chick-chick chicken!”

Anthony scowled and kicked out at her.

“Stop that, both of you,” Mrs B said. “Anthony, go on – take the spray upstairs and put some on your window ledge.”

“Wish I had a spray that would work on you two,” Anthony muttered to Sophie and Sam as he passed. Sophie pulled a face at him.

“Now, I wonder why there aren’t any spiders in here,” said Mrs B, looking around the kitchen.

“It’s probably because of Nigel,” Sam told her. “Spiders really don’t like birds, because birds eat them.”

“Maybe we should get more parrots then,” suggested Sophie, lifting the corner of the cover over Nigel’s cage.

“FIRE!” he shrieked, flapping his wings.

Mrs B quickly pulled the cover back down. “Maybe not! Now, I suppose I’d better go and help Anthony with all these spiders.” Picking up a broom, she bustled out.

Alone, Sophie and Sam looked at each other. “What do you reckon is going on?” said Sam in a low voice.

Sophie shook her head. “I don’t know!” Just then she caught sight of her grandpa through the window. He was standing by the fence that separated the garden from the wood. “Come on! Maybe Grandpa’ll know!”

They hurried outside. Sophie’s grandpa was staring at the ground and scratching his short grey hair. He didn’t look like most grandfathers and was very fit – he went running and swimming every day.

“Look at this!” breathed Grandpa as they came running up. “Hundreds of spiders – and they’re all coming out of the Shadow Woods!”

Sophie’s scalp prickled as she stared down at the long line of spiders moving through the grass. “They’re everywhere inside – and at Sam’s house too.”


Grandpa gazed grimly into the woods. “Something is going on with the shadow creatures. I just know it is.”

Sophie grinned, unable to resist. “Your spider sense is tingling, Grandpa!” she said, thinking of Spider-Man.

Sam sniggered too, but Grandpa didn’t look amused. “Sophie, this is no—”

“Laughing matter. I know,” sighed Sophie. Grandpa was always telling her that she didn’t take things seriously enough. He’d been amazed when she’d become the Guardian. The job of protecting the gateway had never gone to a girl before, and Grandpa had assumed that Anthony would be the next Guardian after him. But the magic had chosen Sophie instead – and now she was determined to prove that she was the right choice.

“Should we go into the woods and see where the spiders are coming from?” she said eagerly.

Grandpa shook his head. “It’s too risky. We should look through The Shadow Files first, and see if anything like this has ever happened before.” He fixed her with a stare. “You have a worrying tendency to just go jumping into things, child. Remember: think before you act! Now, have you got The Shadow Files with you?”

Sam nodded and took the book out of his bag. “Oh – and we found the clue for the red gem!” He opened the page and showed it to Grandpa.

“Excellent!” Grandpa read it over quickly. “So, have you worked it out?”

“Um… no,” Sophie admitted.

Grandpa scowled. “Well, then, what are you doing, standing round here talking? You two get to work on the clue, and I’ll read through The Shadow Files and see if it says anything about spiders.” Taking the book, he strode inside.

The Spider Gnomes

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