in the autumn sky.
âSo what do we do now?â said Jack.
âThe invitation says weâre supposed to meet Merlin in the heart of the oak,â said Annie.
âYeah, but what does that mean?â said Jack, scowling. âThe heart of an oak?â
âLetâs go down and try to figure it out,â said Annie.
She carefully placed their invitation in a corner of the tree house. Then she and Jack climbed down the rope ladder. They stepped onto the leafy ground. In the fading daylight, they began circling the base of the giant oak.
They walked all the way around, until they came to the rope ladder again.
âWeâre back where we started,â said Jack. âWe never found the heart.â
âWait a minute,â said Annie. âWhatâs that?â She pointed to a long, thin crack in the bark of the tree trunk. A sliver of light seemed to be coming from the crack.
Jack touched the bark around the light. He pushed. The crack got bigger.
âItâs a secret door!â said Jack. He pushed harder.
Creak.
A tall, narrow door swung into the tree. Light streamed from inside.
âWe found it,â whispered Annie, âthe heart of the oak.â
Jack nodded.
âLetâs go in,â said Annie. They slipped through the narrow doorway into the bright hollow of the tree trunk.
Jack couldnât believe his eyes. The round room was lit with hundreds of candles. Shadows danced on the curved brown walls.
This isnât possible!
thought Jack. The heart of the oak seemed much bigger than the tree itself!
âWelcome,â said a deep, whispery voice.
They turned around and saw an old man sitting in a carved wooden chair. He had a long white beard and wore a red cloak.
âHi, Merlin,â said Annie.
âHello, Annie. Hello, Jack. It is good to see you again,â the magician said. âI am grateful for the help you gave us on Christmas Eve in Camelot. Now Morgan and I believe you might be able to help us again.â
âWeâd love to!â said Annie.
âThe whole future of our kingdom depends upon your success,â said Merlin.
âAre you sure you want
us
?â Jack asked. âI mean, weâre just kids.â
âYou have passed many tests for Morgan,â said Merlin. âAre you not Master Librarians and Magicians of Everyday Magic?â
Jack nodded. âYes, we are,â he said.
âGood. You will need all your skills on this mission,â said Merlin. âYou will also need a helper and guide from
our
world, the world of magic and legend.â
âAre you coming with us?â asked Annie.
âNo,â the magician said. âYour guide shall be one much younger than I. He is in my library now. Yesterday he brought me some books I had requested from Morganâs library.â
Merlin rose from his chair. âCome,â he said, leading them to a door in the curved wall. He opened it and stepped into another room. Jack and Annie followed him.
The musty room was filled with scrolls and ancient-looking books. Sitting on the floor was a boy about eleven or twelve years old. He was reading by the light of a lantern.
âYour helper and guide,â Merlin said to Jack and Annie.
The boy looked up. He had a friendly, freckled face and dark, twinkly eyes. He broke into a big grin.
âArf, arf!â he said.
âTeddy!â cried Annie.
Jack couldnât believe it! Their helper was the young sorcerer who was training as Morganâs apprentice!
Merlin, for once, looked surprised. âYou already know each other?â he asked.
âYes, we met a while ago when I accidentally changed myself into a dog!â said Teddy.
âMorgan wanted to teach Teddy a lesson,â explained Annie. âSo she sent him with us on four tree-house journeys before she changed him back into a boy. He saved us on the
Titanic.
And he saved us from a buffalo stampede!â
âAnd from a
Jan (ILT) J. C.; Gerardi Greenburg