an assessing gaze, and then nodded.
âBegin,â Glinda said, and one of the soldiers flipped a switch on the seesawâs platform. I screamed as a blinding wave of pain surged through me. It felt as though I was being electrocuted. Over my own cries I could hear the machine give out a huge, creaking groan, and the platform I was strapped to shifted as the machine began to move. The pain was unbearable and unending; my nostrils filled with the scent of burning, and I realized in horror that it was the smell of my own flesh. Nothing I had been through in my life had prepared me for pain like this.
âIâm very disappointed in you, Jellia,â I heard Glinda say, and then everything went black.
I woke up on my back in the long, sweet-smelling grass. Every part of my body ached, and when I tried to open my eyes my vision was so blurry I shut them again. My head pounded with a dull, throbbing pain.
âAwake, lazybones?â Glindaâs voice came from a few feet away, but I couldnât bring myself to look at her. âIâm afraid youâve failed me rather badly this afternoon, and it will take quite a lot of effort on your part to make it up to me. Iâve had to revamp the entire mechanism, and all that wasted time is your fault.â
âWhat happened?â I croaked, my voice barely above a whisper.
âYou should have had enough magic to power the device yourself. But you simply werenât up to the job, Jellia, and now Iâll have to find a way to run it manually. How inconvenient for me.â She sniffed delicately. âI suppose I need to think of something for you to do all summer at my palace. Youâre not nearly as valuable to me as I thought you would be.â
Every muscle in my body cried out in protest as I struggled to sit upright, cradling my pounding head in my hands. âNow stand up and make yourself useful,â Glinda said, her voice sharper. I heard her snap her fingers, and I yelped aloud as my body was jerked into a standing position. I was afraid Iâd fall over, but her spell held me there. âOpen your eyes,â she said, and my body obeyed her. Slowly, my vision returned. We were still in the field, and the sun was still high in the skyâbut that didnât mean anything. Dorothy controlled the passage of time in Oz, and she liked long afternoons with lots of sunshine. Something was moving next to Glindaâs terrible machine. I squinted, and saw that the soldiers had corralled a handful of terrified Munchkins. While a few soldiers guarded the Munchkins, another was busy taking apart the harness and helmet theyâd strapped me into. When they finished, they began lifting the Munchkins up to the platform part of the seesaw.
âMunchkin labor,â Glinda sniffed, her honeyed voice underscored with disgust. âUnreliable, ineffectiveâand impossible to leave unsupervised. Iâll have to station some of my soldiers here, and even return myself to make sure the job is getting done properly. All of this could have been avoided, Jellia, if your magic was sufficient to power the machine.â She studied her device thoughtfully, and then looked back at me. âPerhaps with some refinements youâll be able to help me again.â One of the soldiers barked an order, and the miserable-looking Munchkins began jumping up and down in place. With a terrific, earsplitting groan, the machine began to turn. Glinda sighed and turned away. âOnward to my palace, I suppose,â she said.
Magic. Glinda was mining magic, pulling it out of the soil as if she was just digging a well. It was everywhereâit was in the land itself.
I struggled to stay awake in Glindaâs carriage, but my body had other ideas, and I passed out again as soon as it moved forward. I had no idea how much time had passed when Glinda shook me impatiently and I snapped back to consciousness. My muscles still ached, but the rest had done