BARRY BOTTER AND THE SORCEROUS PHONE
by W. C. Nuessle
copyright
2021
Part the First
It was the opposite of a dark and
stormy night; a rather gorgeous, sunny day, which was remarkable for England in
high summer. As he closed the door of his gleaming silver Lexus, putting the
key fob in his pocket after hearing the pleasing shirp
shirp sound of locked doors,
Barry Botter sighed happily. He was the captain of a cracking football club
that would shortly decimate the final opponent of the year, had a lovely
girlfriend to celebrate that victory with, and there wasn’t a cloud in the sky.
There was, though, an unpleasant
odour. Ever after Barry would kick himself for not ignoring the scent and
continuing on into the lockers, but then—fate has a way of inevitability, idn’t
it?
Looking around, wrinkling his
usually well-ironed Roman nose, Barry found the source of the problem. A large,
enormously bearded man, framed by destiny, or at least the door of the
Port-A-John he was exiting.
In the grand British style, Barry
immediately tried to avoid eye contact, but it was too late.
“You Barry Potter?” The large man
rumbled, a wave of noxiousness rolling off him.
“Who’s asking, then?”
The man laughed heartily. It was
unpleasant. “They told me you’s a smart one. I’m Haggard.”
“I can see that,” Barry replied
noncommittally.
Haggard stepped closer, unfortunately.
“I’ve come to find ye, lad.”
“Did King’s College put you up to
this?” It would explain an awful lot. “Those bounders.”
“We’ll be boundin’ soon enough,
Barry. I’ve come some distance to find ye, tell ye the truth about yerself.”
This ought to be good. While he cast
about for Security, Barry thought he’d best keep this nutter talking. “What
truth is that, then?”
“Yer a whizzard, Barry.”
That
word, whizzard, struck a chord somewhere deep inside staid, confident
Barry Botter. More an alarm bell, really. His search for a security guard
redoubled. “Come again?” Perturbed, he ran a hand through his thick, wavy blond
hair, looking at this interloper with his piercing blue eyes that had never
needed glasses of any kind. “Who are you?”
The large man scratched his beard,
at least it might have been his beard, he was so hairy it was hard to tell
where any specific part of hairiness left off. “Haggard, as I said.” Several
creatures of indeterminate origin tumbled out as he scratched, quickly
secreting themselves amidst the folds of the man’s remarkably disgusting robe.
“Yes, well, that’s very nice but I’m
due on the pitch any minute. I’m Forward against King’s,” as if this fellow
didn’t know that, “they’re my uni’s rival.”
“Uni? Oh, unicorns!” Haggard laughed
uproariously, causing several passing women to swear off ever having children.
“You’ll see lots of them where I’m taking you.”
“And where’s that?” Barry asked
politely, trying to remember his self-defense training.
“Hogwash.”
“I beg your pardon?”
Haggard looked surprised. “Hogwash
School of Whizzcraft and Wichery.”
“Well, yes, that sounds lovely but I
really must be going,” is what Barry meant to say, and got as far as “Well, yes—” when
Haggard strode forward and grabbed him, perhaps only intending a friendly
noggin rub, however the large man’s distinct funk proved overpowering at close
range and Barry collapsed.
When he came to, with quite the
start, Barry found himself on a bench, an ad for The
Crystal Maze slipping past
his eyes. He blinked, and realized it was pasted to the side of a
double-decker. “Where are we?”
“Awake, then, are ye?” Haggard
guffawed. “I like to take midday naps meself. Can’t say as I blame ye. But come
on, now, we’re short on time.” With a friendly if undeniable hand on his
shoulder, Barry stumbled along next to Haggard. “And we need to get you your
wand.”
“My what, then?”
“Your wand. There’s a lovely shop on
Punctu Alley; hurry now!”
Something of a pattern nudged at
Barry’s confused cranium. “Theoretic… Alley? Punctu Alley? Next you’ll be
telling me Politic Alley is where they hold” —what had he called it— “Whizzcraft
Parliament meetings.”
Haggard stopped dead in the street,
looking stunned. “Cor, they told me you was a smart ‘un, but I never! Honest,
how’d you suss that out?” Now the overlarge man looked suspicious. “You sure
you never been here before?”
“Let’s just go,” Barry murmured,
seeing the attention they were drawing and, being British, not caring for it.
“My favorite’s Immor Alley, you want
to know, but yer much too young for that street, I’ll tell ye,” Haggard continued as he
lumbered along. “Ah, here we are. Olive Juicer. Best wand-maker in the
country.”
It looked like a Taco Bell to Barry,
and he said so.
Haggard guffawed. “It’s all part of
the disguise, idn’t it? We can’t let the Marbles know about the magical world,
can we?”
“The…marbles?” Barry was certain he
was losing his. This
is all going to turn out to be a horrible dream any moment, he told himself for at least the forty-seventh
time.
“Yer, the non-magical folks. The
ones what think the world is normal.”
How Barry loved those folks. He
didn’t say so. Out loud he only said, “Olive Juicer?”
Haggard beamed at him. “Ah, well,
that’s sweet of yer to say, Barry; I love you too. No need for the sir.” While
Barry was still wrapping his mind around this, Haggard pushed open the door of
Olive Juicer’s secret wand shop made up to look entirely like a Taco Bell. It
was a very convincing disguise. If Barry didn’t know any better, and he most
certainly didn’t, he would have thought that it really was just a Taco Bell, right down to the manager who walked over briskly
the second Haggard came in. “No, no, no—I have told you a thousand times, sir,
you are not welcome here!”
Haggard
laughed indefatigably. “It’s all right, Olive, the lad here knows all about
Whizzcraft, you don’t need to keep up the pretense.”
Barry, who was not a foolish youth,
had started to figure out a little about this brave, new world, and spoke up
before the poor fast-food manager could get more upset. “You know, you’re
right—but obviously Olive’s trying to tell us” he made big eyes at the manager
behind Haggard’s back “that what we’re looking for is outside, eh?”
‘Olive Juicer’, whose nametag
cleverly read Emil, seemed quite happy with Barry’s suggestion. “Yes, yes, go
outside for your games.”
For his part, Haggard seemed
content. “All right, Barry, I’ll follow yer lead. Yer the Chosen One and all.”
Barry picked the least disgusting-looking
square inch of Haggard’s robe and pulled him back out of the door before anyone
reported the moving health-and-safety violation. In the strip of grass next to
the restaurant was a scraggly tree, and under the tree… “Aha!” Barry exclaimed,
swooping down upon a sturdy looking stick, roughly a foot in length. Whether or
not his ploy worked, he felt like having some sort of weapon would be a plus in
his current situation. “See, a lovely wand.”
“Well bless me,” Haggard exclaimed,
“they’re just leavin’ wands lyin’ about on the street, now? What’s the world
comin’ to? But I will say, that’s a lucky find, Barry—suits you to a tee and
that’s good because we don’t want to be late.”
“Late for what?” Barry asked with
another sinking feeling. He’d been getting a lot of those in the past hour.
“Late for the train, lad. Come
along.”
More drug along than following,
Barry kept tight hold of his new wand as the unlikely pair set off down the
street.
(Chapter Two: ‘The Hogwash Express’,
coming soon!)
Will Nuessle holds a third-degree brown belt in ninjitsu; rides a Harley; primary caregives a five- and two-year-old (with the third arriving in April) and claims to be able to recite the alphabet backwards in less than ten seconds. He also writes occasionally.
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