Beware The Wicked Web

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Authors: Anthony Masters
book.”

    Hurrying downstairs and just managing to avoid their mother, Sam and Rob grabbed two brooms from the kitchen cupboard and hurried back to the attic.
    “Something’s changed,” whispered Rob.
    To their amazement they saw that strands of the web were rustling around the heavy oak door.
    “It couldn’t be growing, could it?”
    “No chance,” snapped Sam. “We must have pulled out those strands when we closed the door. Didn’t we?” she added, doubtfully.

Chapter Three

    Slowly, Rob went into the attic bedroom.
    Sam followed. She was surprised. Rob only ever took the lead if he wanted something badly. Why should he so desperately want that mouldy old book?
    She shuddered as she touched the soft grey folds of rustling web. Sam hadn’t realized they would be so sticky - or so clinging.
    “Use your broom,” hissed Rob. “Push the thing aside.”
    It was like sweeping away a living creature, for as soon as they brushed them aside the folds flopped back, sticky and suffocating. Rob leant over, wrenching the little black book from a fold of the web, which made a slurping, sucking sound.
    “Got it!”

    “Let’s get out of here.” Sam shuddered again as the strands of web caught at her in a strong and sticky grip. Pulling away hard, she ran for the door, with Rob close behind, clutching the book.

    Once in his own bedroom, Rob pulled an old football shirt out of a drawer and rubbed away at the mouldy book, making flakes of the leather cover fly in the air.

    As he worked, Sam thought back to last week when they had only just moved into number 14, one of a row of four-storey houses along the river where the wharves had once been. Next door was an old fruit warehouse that their parents had bought and planned to turn into flats.
    “I’m going to make the attic into a big games room for both of you,” Dad had promised. “But don’t go up there yet. No one’s used it for years and it could be dangerous.”
    He can say that again, thought Sam. Should they tell him? Then she remembered how much trouble they’d be in for being in the attic in the first place.
    Sam wished they had never gone up there at all. She remembered the toys and wondered why a child had been sleeping in that tiny attic space. There were plenty of other rooms in the house.
    “It’s a diary,” said Rob, finally able to prise open the cover. He paused. “But there’s only one entry.” He began to read aloud:
    “July 4th. My name is Abby Hall. Since my parents died, Aunt Grace has been horrible to me. Sometimes I think she wants me to die up here. If I did die, Aunt Grace would inherit my fortune. She told me I’ve got to stay in this attic until I’ve learnt to be a good girl. She says the web is only in my imagination. But I can see the web growing every day and it’s not just the web that’s growing. The spider is, too.”

    Underneath, Abby had drawn a picture of an enormous spider.
    His heart pounding, Rob showed the drawing to Sam. “That’s no ordinary spider,” he said. “It’s tropical.”
    “Oh, really?” scoffed Sam. “And how do you think a tropical spider could have got up here?”

Chapter Four
    That afternoon, Rob and Sam went to the library to look at some books on insects. After a long search they found a picture of Abby’s spider, with a chilling description.

    “But I don’t understand. How could a giant poisonous spider from the West Indies get into that attic?” asked Sam uneasily.
    “What about the warehouse next door?” asked Rob. “Wasn’t it used to store bananas, a long time ago? Maybe Aunt Grace got to hear about an
Araneida Magna
turning up at the warehouse and bribed someone to smuggle the spider into the attic.”
    “Is
that
why Abby wrote up her diary, as a warning?” Sam and Rob looked at each other in mounting horror.
    Then Rob said, “We’ve got to destroy that egg right away. It could hatch any minute.”

    They were shivering with fear and anxiety as they once again climbed

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