was right. Iâm not good enough. Iâm going to mess everything up .
Future Jess put her arms around Future Milly. âItâs okay. Donât worryâ¦â
It was too much. Milly couldnât bear to see any more. With tears stinging her eyes, she turned and ran back across the road and up the path. Despite everything sheâd said to the others, sheâd hoped that maybe she would be good enough to be Annie. But she wasnât. She climbed back over the fence, a heavy dullness filling her heart. As she approached she saw Jess, Michael, and Jason searching around and looking worried. They know Iâve gone offsomewhere, she realized. If I tell them what Iâve seen, Iâll never hear the end of it.
She crept up to a tree, drew on all her acting ability and fixed a bright smile on her face. âBoo!â she shouted, jumping out from behind it. âTricked you!â
âMilly!â Jess complained. âThatâs not funny!â
âItâs lame,â Michael agreed. But then he froze. The clouds were floating away from the sun, and hard shadows stretched out on the ground behind them.
âQuick!â Jess cried.
Michael pulled the feather with the crystal out of his pocket and held it up to the sky. As the sun hit the top of it, the gem seemed to flare but then the light ebbed away once again. âItâs still not strong enough.â
âNot yetâ¦â Jason held up the magnifying glass, angling the sunâs rays against the feather and the gemstone. âBut if I use my new magnifying glass to concentrate the sunbeamâ¦â
âI think itâs working!â whispered Milly.
The little crystal glowed again, more and more fiercely. The light within it suddenly burst forth, blinding white. The Worthingtons all blinked, and for a moment each of them saw a bright white gem shape etched onto the inside of their eyelids. When they opened their eyes again the fierce sunlike blaze had gone, but the crystal was glowingand glittering in Michaelâs hand, golden light swirling around inside it.
They stared in silent awe for a few seconds.
âGood one, Jase,â said Michael. âItâs worked!â
Jason cheered. âWeâve got the shaft of tomorrowâs sunlight Fenella needs!â
âWow!â breathed Milly, her sadness almost forgotten in the excitement of completing the phoenixâs first magical task.
Michael held out the feather. âLetâs get back to Fenella and let her do her gold-spinning thing!â
The Worthingtons hurried back into the shed. Jason set down the magnifying glass outside the workshop door for his future self to collect, as heâd agreed. âThank you, me,â he whispered.
Then Michael held the feather out. They all touched it.
Michael took a breath. âTime of yore, be never gone!â
Milly felt herself swirling round again but this time going in the opposite direction. Golden flashes filled her vision, and the hairs on the back of her neck stood on end. No sooner had the journey begun than it ended, and a huge relieved screech made her and the others jump into the air.
Fenella was sitting on a workbench, hopping from leg to leg in anxiety. âOh, dearies!â she squawked. âWhat arelief! Thank goodness youâre back safe and sound. All of a quiver I was!â
âMe too,â Milly whispered, thinking back to the scene outside the church hall. âIâm glad we donât have to go back to the future.â
âWhat was I thinking?â Fenella cried theatrically. âSending you off like that into goodness knows what!â
âWe got your shaft of sunlight!â Jason said eagerly.
âHere,â said Michael, holding up the feather with its swirling, beautiful gemstone.
âOh, you wonderful children!â The phoenix rubbed her head affectionately against Michaelâs arm. âNot that some silly sunlight matters
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