A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett

space. In a way that was almost impossible to describe, they seemed to be more real

than others around them. They just showed up more. But if they didn’t want to be

seen, they became amazingly hard to notice. They didn’t hide, they didn’t magically

fade away, although it might seem like that, but if you had to describe the room

afterwards you’d swear there hadn’t been a witch in it. They just seemed to let

themselves get lost.

‘Ah yes, well done,’ said Miss Tick. ‘I was wondering when you’d notice.’

Ha! thought Tiffany.

Miss Level got realer as she walked towards them. She was all in black, but clattered

slightly as she walked because of all the black jewellery she wore, and she did have

glasses, too, which struck Tiffany as odd for a witch. Miss Level reminded Tiffany of a

happy hen. And she had two arms, the normal number.

‘Ah, Miss Tick,’ she said. ‘And you must be Tiffany Aching.’

Tiffany knew enough to bow; witches don’t curtsy (unless they want to embarrass

Roland).

‘I’d just like to have a word with Miss Level, Tiffany, if you don’t mind,’ said Miss

Tick, meaningfully. ‘Senior witch business.’

Ha! thought Tiffany again, because she liked the sound of it.

‘I’ll just go and have a look at a tree then, shall I?’ she said with what she hoped

was withering sarcasm.

1 should use the bushes if I was you, dear,’ Miss Level called after her. ‘I don’t like

stopping once we’re airborne.’

There were some holly bushes that made a decent screen, but after being talked to as

though she were ten years old Tiffany would rather have allowed her bladder to explode.

I beat the Queen of the Fairies! she thought as she wandered into the wood. All right,

I’m not sure how, because it’s all like a dream now, but I did do it!

She was angry at being sent away like that. A little respect wouldn’t hurt, would it?

That’s what the old witch Mistress Weatherwax had said, wasn’t it? ‘I show you respect,

as you in turn will respect me.’ Mistress Weatherwax, the witch who all the other witches

secretly wanted to be like, had showed her respect, so you’d think the others could make

a bit of effort in that department.

She said: ‘See me.’

. . . and stepped out of herself and walked away towards Miss Tick and Miss Level, in

her invisible ghost body. She didn’t dare look down, in case she saw her feet

weren’t there. When she turned and looked back at her solid body, she saw it

standing demurely by the holly bushes, clearly too far away to be listening to anyone’s

conversation.

As Tiffany stealthily drew nearer she heard Miss Tick say:

‘- but quite frighteningly precocious.’

‘Oh dear. I’ve never got on very well with clever people,’ said Miss Level.

‘Oh, she’s a good child at heart,’ said Miss Tick, which annoyed Tiffany rather more than

‘frighteningly precocious’ had.

‘Of course, you know my situation,’ said Miss Level as the invisible Tiffany inched closer.

‘Yes, Miss Level, but your work does you great credit. That’s why Mistress Weatherwax suggested you.’

‘But I am afraid I’m getting a bit absent-minded,’ Miss Level worried. ‘It was terrible flying down here, because like a big silly I left my long-distance spectacles on my other nose. . .’

Her other nose? thought Tiffany.

Both witches froze, at exactly the same time.

I’m without an egg!’ said Miss Tick.

‘I have a beetle in a matchbox against just such an emergency!’ squeaked Miss Level.

Their hands flew to their pockets and pulled out string and feathers and bits of

coloured cloth-

They know I’m here! thought Tiffany, and whispered, ‘See me not!’

She blinked and rocked on her heels as she arrived back in the patient little figure by

the holly bushes. In the distance, Miss Level was frantically making a shamble and Miss

Tick was staring around the wood.

‘Tiffany, come here at once!’ she shouted.

‘Yes, Miss Tick,’ said Tiffany, trotting forward like a good girl.

They spotted me somehow, she thought. Well, they are witches, after all, even if

in my opinion they’re not very good ones-

Then the pressure came. It seemed to squash the wood flat and filled it with the

horrible feeling that something is standing right behind you. Tiffany sank to her knees

with her hands over her ears and a pain like the worst earache squeezing her head.

‘Finished!’ shouted Miss Level. She held up a shamble. It was quite different from

Miss Tick’s, and made up of string and crow feathers and glittery black beads and,

in the middle, an ordinary matchbox.

Tiffany yelled. The pain was like red-hot needles and her ears filled with the buzz of

flies.

The matchbox exploded.

And then there was silence, and birdsong, and nothing to show that anything had

happened apart from a few pieces of matchbox spiralling down, along with an iridescent

fragment of wing case.

‘Oh dear,’ said Miss Level. ‘He was quite a good beetle, as beetles go . . .’

“Tiffany, are you all right?’ said Miss Tick.

Tiffany blinked. The pain had gone as fast as it had arrived, leaving only a burning

memory. She scrambled to her feet. ‘I think so, Miss Tick!’

Then a word, if you please!’ said Miss Tick, marching over to a tree and standing there

looking stern.

‘Yes, Miss Tick?’ said Tiffany.

‘Did you . . . do anything?’ said Miss Tick. ‘You haven’t been summoning things,

have you?’

‘No! Anyway, I don’t know how to!’ said Tiffany.

‘It’s not your little men then, is it?’ said Miss Tick doubtfully.

‘They’re not mine, Miss Tick. And they don’t do that sort of thing. They just shout

“Crivens!” and then start kicking people on the ankle. You definitely know it’s them.’

‘Well, whatever it was, it seems to have gone,’ said Miss Level. ‘And we should go,

too, otherwise we’ll be flying all night.’ She reached behind another tree and picked up a bundle of firewood. At least, it looked exactly like that, because it was supposed to.

‘My own invention,’ she said, modestly. ‘One never knows down here on the plains,

does one? And the handle shoots out by means of this button- Oh, I’m so sorry, it

sometimes does that. Did anyone see where it went?’

The handle was located in a bush, and screwed back in.

Tiffany, a girl who listened to what people said, watched Miss Level closely. She

definitely had only one nose on her face, and it was sort of uncomfortable to imagine

where anyone might have another one and what they’d use it for.

Then Miss Level pulled some rope out of her

pocket and passed it to someone who wasn’t there.

That’s what she did, Tiffany was sure. She didn’t drop it, she didn’t throw it, she just

held it out and let go, as though she’d thought she was hanging it on an invisible hook.

It landed in a coil on the moss. Miss Level looked down, then saw Tiffany staring at

her and laughed nervously.

‘Silly me,’ she said. ‘I thought I was over there! I’ll forget my own head next!’

‘Well . . . if it’s the one on top of your neck,’ said Tiffany cautiously, still thinking

about the other nose, ‘you’ve still got it.’

The old suitcase was roped to the bristle end of the broomstick, which now floated

calmly a few feet above the ground.

‘There, that’ll make a nice comfy seat,’ said Miss Level, now the bag of nerves that most

people turned into when they felt Tiffany staring at them. ‘If you’d just hang on behind me.

Er. That’s what I normally do.’

‘You normally hang on behind you?’ said Tiffany. ‘How can-?’

“Tiffany, I’ve always encouraged your forthright way of asking questions,’ said Miss

Tick loudly. ‘And now, please, I would love to congratulate you on your mastery of

silence! Do climb on behind Miss Level, I’m sure she’ll want to leave while you’ve still

got some daylight.’

The stick bobbed a little as Miss Level climbed onto it. She patted it, invitingly.

‘You’re not frightened of heights, are you, dear?’ she said as Tiffany climbed on.

‘No,’ said Tiffany.

‘I shall drop in when I come up for the Witch Trials,’ said Miss Tick as Tiffany felt

the stick rise gently under her. ‘Take care!’

It turned out that when Miss Level had asked Tiffany if she was scared of heights, it

had been the wrong question. Tiffany was not afraid of heights at all. She could walk

past tall trees without batting an eyelid. Looking up at huge towering mountains

didn’t bother her a bit.

What she was afraid of, although she hadn’t realized it up until this point, was

depths. She was afraid of dropping such a long way out of the sky that she’d have time

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