Welcome to Majestica The dead dragon glared at Hattie from empty eye sockets. As she gripped her dust rag, the ladder wobbled alarmingly under her feet. She reached into the bony mouth, between a sea of teeth, and wiped the spiderwebs away. The skull hung over the lobby of the Hotel Majestica, following the guests with its eerie gaze. It was so large she could have climbed inside with room to spare. Hattie threw a hasty glance at its fangs. It''s been dead a hundred years. It can''t bite you.
Still, she dusted a little faster than usual. Snatching her arm from the dragon''s mouth, she announced, "Done!" Mrs. Galliforma, the hotel''s head, squinted up at the skull. She was a stout woman with a brown complexion, and her hair was drawn into a no-nonsense bun. Hundreds of brass keys dangled from her waist. You always knew Mrs. G was on her way because of the jingling. The housekeeper studied the dragon skull critically.
"Very good." Hattie stepped down the ladder, hiding her smile. Mrs. G never complimented anybody. She must be in a good mood today. "I always feel like it''s going to come alive and grab me." She wiped her hands on her apron. "I don''t see why we can''t just use magic to dust it.
" "Magic," Mrs. G said sternly, "is no substitute for good old-fashioned elbow grease. And none of the other girls are small enough to fit in its mouth." Hattie was used to odd jobs. Feed the pixies! Polish the wineglasses! Run this down to the lobby, will you? There was always something to do at the hotel. But Mrs. G wouldn''t let her become a real maid until she was fifteen. Hattie dreamed of the day she would finally put on that black dress and ruffled apron.
She wanted to giggle in the maids'' dormitory at night and line up for uniform inspection in the morning. To be part of something. But thirteen was all about being stuck in between. Mrs. G noticed her sulky look. "Don''t pout, my dear." She tucked a flyaway piece of hair behind Hattie''s ear. "We all must do our part.
Our guests are here to see the rarest magical creatures in the world, not a dusty lobby." "But I do want to do my part!" Hattie said eagerly. "Look how good I am at dusting. Maybe I could help Maude on thethird floor?" Sixteen-year-old Maude was the youngest chambermaid. They were both orphans, but unlike Hattie, Maude thought it was glamorous. "Haven''t the foggiest idea who my parents were," she''d say, sweeping her feather duster dramatically. "I could be anyone, you know--even a princess!" Hattie usually stayed silent. There was no point in pretending she was anyone special.
Both her parents had worked at Majestica, but she didn''t mind. The hotel was the most magical place in the world. Who would want to be anywhere else? Mrs. G touched her cheek. "Maybe next year, my dear." Hattie bit her lip to keep a sigh from escaping. Well, it had been worth a try. Mrs.
G''s voice turned brisk. "Now, go fetch the dirty tablecloths down to the laundry. Lickety-split!" With a wave of her hand, the ladder''s legs snapped together and it whooshed into a closet. As Hattie scuttled out of the lobby, she couldn''t help looking back at the dragon skull. Dusting it always made her feel a strange whisper of regret. Once it had been the king of the skies. Now it was nothing but a gruesome curiosity for the hotel guests to take photographs with. Dragons were rare in the world these days.
Even Majestica only had one. She saluted it respectfully. "Till next time, sir." Hattie wheeled her laundry cart into the breakfast room. The sun filtered through the glass ceiling onto the tables and potted plants below. An orange dragomander crawled up the inside of the window with sticky feet. When it saw Hattie, its mane stood up. Breathing a tiny poof of fire, it zoomed out of her reach.
The breakfast room was empty except for one table, where four people sat drinking tea. Hattie immediately recognized the man with the distinguished gray sideburns and polka-dot bow tie. Mr. Ridgewell owned the Hotel Majestica. Next to him sat a young man with ink-stained fingers. His sandy hair flopped roguishly to one side, and his eyes twinkled at Hattie in a way that made her blush. On his other side was a woman in a plaid jacket and spectacles, a book primly propped in front of her. But most interesting to Hattie was a girl her own age, silk ribbon perched on her perfect brown ringlets.
She kept sneaking grouchy looks at everyone else. Hattie bobbed a curtsy. "Morning, Mr. R." "Why, good morning, Hattie." He lifted his teacup toward her. "How are you today?" She gave him a smile. "Very well, thanks .
sir," she added hastily. A green pixie jumped on the table, a tray balanced on his fingertips. He was ten inches tall and had a wizened, grumpy face that made him look like an old man. With a bow, he set down a plate of chocolate pancakes. "Oh, how cute!" the girl exclaimed. She wouldn''t think so if she knew how hard pixies could bite. But Hattie held her tongue, remembering what Mrs. Galways said--the guests must never see through the magic.
"It''s all so orderly." The young man gazed up at the lush vines crawling across the skylight. "How do you keep these magical plants from taking over the place?" "That''s all thanks to the Caretaker. My greatest invention, you know," Mr. Ridgewell said. "Runs the entire park." At the next table, Hattie concentrated on the salt and pepper shakers. Maude had taught her a spell to move small objects.
But the shakers only gave a feeble wiggle. Hattie wrinkled her nose. She could light candles with magic, but that was about it. She moved the salt and pepper by hand and tugged off the sticky tablecloth. The breakfast room had eight tables across and six tables down. Hattie tossed the tablecloth in her cart. Only forty-seven more to go. "I understand your magical machine is a Majestica secret.
" The young man lowered his voice. "So you don''t let anyone see it--not even your staff?" Mr. Ridgewell sipped his tea. "That''s right." "Haven''t you ever thought about showing it to the public? It would make a big splash. Front page, for sure!" He made a grand gesture. "Picture the headline: Ridgewell''s Magical Invention Revealed at Last . By yours truly, Jasper Foxfire.
Give the readers something new." Mr. Ridgewell waved his hand. "If it''s new you want, our gardener has built a brilliant maze--the pathways change every five minutes! I myself was lost inside for three hours. I completely missed lunch." Before the reporter could reply, there was a crash. A wide-eyed creature with a striped tail appeared, knocking over the teapot. When he saw the strangers, he let out a screech.
Hopping over the puddle of tea, he scrambled onto Hattie''s shoulder. He chittered angrily to himself, shaking out his wet feet. Hattie sprang into action to stop the spilled tea from spreading. "I''m so sorry, sir!" she babbled, piling napkins on the table. "He didn''t mean-- He was just--" Mr. Foxfire inspected the animal. "Well, I''ve never seen anything like this fellow before." Hattie winced as his paws dug into her neck.
"This is Jeffers, sir. He''s a leaping lemur." "A jumper, eh?" Mr. Foxfire tentatively touched her pet''s bushy tail. Hattie shook her head. "Not a jumping lemur. A leaping lemur. Like this.
" She snapped her fingers, and with a pop Jeffers vanished. A second later, he reappeared on the ceiling chandelier. "Marvelous!" Mr. Ridgewell clapped his hands. "Well done, Hattie. I see you''ve made some progress with him." Hattie''s cheeks warmed. Mr.
Ridgewell didn''t always notice her. She would treasure his words of praise all week. Nobody would have blamed him if he''d sent Hattie to an orphanage after her father died. But he had given her a home at the hotel. It was part of why she was so eager to do a good job. She wanted him to be proud of her. Mr. Foxfire rummaged under the napkins for his notebook.
"What a fascinating creature." He began to write as he talked. "Is he rare? What''s his scientific name? Are there more of them here?" Jeffers was Hattie''s pet by accident. Dowson, the gamekeeper, had purchased him two years ago for the park, but he''d soon found that magical fences were useless against a lemur who could pop in and out whenever he wanted. On one of his adventures, Jeffers had met Hattie and decided he liked her. And that was that. "A bit of a troublemaker, that one," Mr. Ridgewell said.
"Supposed to be an attraction for the guests, but he was . hard to keep track of." "It''s true." Hattie smiled. "Wherever you put him, he always gets loose. So now I take care of him. When he''s here, anyway." "Where do you suppose he goes," Mr.
Foxfire mused, "when he''s not here?" Hattie had spent a lot of time thinking about this question and never came up with a good answer. Jeffers could teleport up to a hundred feet. He could leap through walls, but only if he knew what was on the other side. But where did he go? She still had no idea. She shrugged. "In between, I guess." "Intrigui.