about Wizard Watchit!" exclaimed Bella. She ran off to his tower to find him.

  "We're doing a big Spring Clean," she told him. "You can do the towers."

  The Wizard looked puzzled. "Do the towers? What with?"

  "With soapy water and a brush," said Bella, and she hurried away.

  The Wizard scratched his head. He had never heard of a Spring Clean.

  "A big sprinkling?" he said to the ghost. "What's that all about?"

  "Woo woo woo," said the ghost.

  The Wizard shrugged. "Oh, well. If that's what Bella wants?"

  So he did a spell to sprinkle soapy water and brushes all over the towers of Custard Castle. The brushes bounced off the towers, but the soapy water cleaned them quite well.

  Meanwhile Bella was cleaning her way through the castle. After a while she reached the treasure room.

  Cautiously she opened the door.

  "RRRARGH!!" went the Thing that guarded the treasure room.

  "Sorry, Thing," said Bella, "but I need to clean the treasure." She lit the lamps and began to dust the piles of coins.

  The Thing jumped off the treasure pile and huddled in a corner. It was a small, blue, fluffy Thing, and it did not like its treasure room to be clean and bright. It liked it to be dark and dusty.

  Bella began to sweep its corner.

  "EEEGH!!" went the Thing, and it fled. It ran out of the treasure room and hid in the cupboard under the stairs, next to the sleepy little dragon they kept there for lighting the fires.

  Five minutes later, the cupboard door was flung open. Bella began to polish the dozing dragon.

  "RRUURKK!!" cried the Thing. It fled again.

  This time it bounced down the steep stairs that led to the dungeon. It was nice and dark and dusty down there.

  The dungeon was peaceful - for a while. But not for long.

  Soon Bella came down the stairs, sweeping as she went. She had done so much sweeping that her broom was almost worn out.

  "Last bit," she said. She pushed open the dungeon door, and lit a lamp inside.

  "WHURGHH!!" protested the Thing. It jumped into Bella's bucket to hide from the light.

  Bella did not notice it there. She was too busy cleaning the dungeon.

  First she swept the floor. Next she polished the chains.

  Then she noticed a rusty iron hook sticking out of the wall. It looked dirty, so she began to scrub it.

  As she scrubbed, the wall behind it moved. There was a creak and a groan. Slowly a hidden door opened, and revealed a passage.

  "I never knew that was there!" gasped Bella. "It's dark and damp? and absolutely filthy!"

  She picked up a torch and her bucket. Then she set off down the secret passage.

  At the end of the passage was a tall, dark cupboard.

  "What a dirty old cupboard!" said Bella, brushing cobwebs off it. She opened it and peered inside.

  A dozen spiders crawled out. And then something fell out of the cupboard - something long and thin.

  Bella jumped backwards, before she realised what it was.

  "A broom!" she cried. "Just what I need! Mine's worn out. This broom is very dirty, though."

  The broom was covered in grime and cobwebs. Bella reached into her bucket for a cloth to clean it.

  But instead of a cloth, she pulled out the small, fluffy Thing.

  Bella did not notice. She began to polish the broom with the Thing.

  As soon as she rubbed the broom, it shot up into the air with the Thing clinging on to it by its tiny claws.

  "AAROOGGH!!" howled the Thing.

  "Oh, my goodness," said Bella. "It's a magic broom!" She jumped up to try and grab it, but the broom flew away. It swooped down the passage with the Thing hanging on to it.

  "EEYARGGH!!" yowled the Thing.

  "Come back!" cried Bella.

  The broom flew out of the secret passage and into the dungeon. It flew through the dungeon and headed up the stairs.

  Bella ran after it. Every time she nearly caught it up, the broom darted away again, with the terrified Thing yowling as it clung on.

  The broom swooped and swirled along the corridors of Custard Castle. Bella ran after it, shouting, "Stop, broom! Stop!" She was terribly afraid that the Thing would fall off.

  Everybody ran out of the rooms they were cleaning, to see what all the shouting was about.

  "YAEEEGH!!" screamed the Thing as the broom did a loop-the-loop.

  "Whatever is going on?" cried the King.

  "It's a magic broom," said Bella, "and it won't stop flying!"

  "Magic? Wizard Watchit - sort it out!" ordered the King.

  Wizard Watchit stared at the broom zooming up and down overhead.

  "I know that broom!" he exclaimed. "It belongs to my Aunt Hogweed, the witch. She must have left it behind last time she came to visit me."

  "Why did she hide it in the dungeon?" asked Bella.

  "I've no idea," said Wizard Watchit.

  "Well, do a spell to stop it!" said the Queen. She ducked as the broom shot over her and flew into the throne room.

  "I don't know any spells for runaway brooms," the Wizard said.

  "Then think of one - quickly!" yelled the King.

  So the Wizard made up a spell and said it in a hurry.

  "Stop your swooping, start your sweeping,

  Before your passenger starts weeping!"

  To his great relief, the broom slowed down. It drifted to the floor of the throne room, with the Thing still hanging on to it.

  The broom landed. It stood upright and began to sweep the throne room.

  "There we are! No problem!" said the Wizard smugly.

  Jack tried to pick up the Thing. It bit his finger and clung on to the broom.

  "Ouch! The Thing seems to be all right," he said.

  "And now that magic broom will finish all the cleaning!" cried the King. "Well done, Wizard! Jolly good spell!"

  The Wizard looked hard at the broom. It was busy sweeping behind the throne. Suddenly he realised why his Aunt Hogweed had hidden it away.

  "Um?" he said. "Must go now! Bye!"

  He ran off to his tower. As he ran he heard a shriek behind him.

  Then everyone began to scream and shout, because they had all just noticed what the broom was doing.

  "It's not brushing the dirt away at all!" cried Fifi. "It's bringing it back!"

  For wherever the broom swept, piles of dust and cobwebs appeared.

  "That's a magic broom all right," said Jack, watching the throne grow dirtier and dustier.

  "Oh, no!" wailed Bella. "We've just cleaned everything! We've got to get this broom out of the castle!"

  She grabbed hold of the broom and tried to drag it away. The Thing was still clinging on to it.

  The broom was very hard to drag. It tried to keep sweeping. And wherever it swept, piles of dirt and dust appeared.

  Bella dragged it slowly through the castle, leaving a dusty, dirty trail behind.

  She stopped just outside the treasure room. "This is hard work!" she gasped. "I can't drag it all the way back to the dungeon!"

  "EEGURGLE!!" squealed the Thing.

  "Really? All right then," said Bella. She opened the door of the treasure room and dragged the broom inside.

  At once it began to sweep. Piles of dirt began to appear around the treasure.

  "GARRAGH!!" said the Thing happily. It jumped off the broom and sat on top of the heap of golden coins while the broom swept around it. Soon it was surrounded by dust and cobwebs.

  Bella left them there and closed the door. She could hear the Thing singing and the broom sweeping. She went back upstairs to find the King.

  "The broom's busy sweeping your treasure room," she said. "It's as good as an extra guard."

  "My treasure will get all dirty!" protested the King.

  "It doesn't need to be clean," said Bella.

  "But what about my throne?" wailed the King. "It's a terrible mess!

  Bella looked at the thro
ne. Now it was not just smeared with jam. It was covered in dirt and dust and cobwebs too.

  "You'd better clean it up," the King told her.

  But Bella shook her head.

  "You can if you want to," she said. "But I've finished my Spring Clean. I'm not going to clean a single thing until next year!"

  The End

  Thank you for reading Chaos at Custard Castle.

  Have you read the first two collections of Custard Castle stories?

  They are The King of Custard Castle (which is free) and The Ghost of Custard Castle (which is not free, but is not expensive.) Both are available from most good ebook stores.

  You can also find the Custard Castle tales, and many other free stories and ebooks, at Emma Laybourn's website,

  www.megamousebooks.com

  Happy Reading!

 

 
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