Monday, 26 September 2011

Coded message



Robbie and his friend Nick were not happy!

Double French with Miss Knowles was nobody's idea of fun. To make matters worse, there was a test schedules for later that afternoon.

As Miss Knowles was muttering something about a conjunctive known, there was a knocking sound behind Robbie and Nick that seemed to be coming from the radiator.

Robbie whispered in Nick’s ear that it was probably an air-lock. Robbie had learned this from Dad and knew that you had to bleed radiators to sort out this problem.

Halfway through the French test later that afternoon, the knocking started again.

“Maybe it’s morse code?” Said Nick in a loud whisper.

Unfortunately, Miss Knowles heard the whisper and deducted a mark from Nick.

Robbie however, found this interesting. Maybe it was someone sending code. Nothing for it, this was a problem that needed to be solved.

So after school, Robbie and Nick went to the room above their classroom as that’s where the knocking seemed to be coming from.

It was the girls toilet!

“That’s it” said Robbie. “A girl is sending us a coded message from the toilet”

The boys were excited as can be and shot to the library to borrow a book on morse code so that they could decipher the message.

The school librarian was happy to find such a book. It hadn’t been borrowed for quite some time and had a thick layer of dust. The librarian blew the dust from the cover which unfortunately caught Robbie in the left eye and made him drop his heavy pencil case on to his foot.

The next day the boys sat eagerly in class, not listening to the teacher but waiting for the next coded message. At the same time as the day before, the knocking started.

Nick seemed the quickest at deciphering the code and came up with the following message

Wnyt a bpti uf iy bhfsl

The boys stared at this message for quite a time until Robbie declared

“Want a bite of my bagel. That’s what it says! A girl is inviting us to share her bagel!”

The boys were beside themselves with excitement.

“How do we find out who sent the message” Asked Nick.

Robbie thought for a while and then answered.

“Simple! We borrow a dress from lost property and a lipstick that I can take from Mum’s handbag. She has loads! When the knocking starts, you ask to go to the toilet. Quickly change so that you look like a girl. Go into the girls toilet and see who is sending the message”

Nick thought this was a brilliant plan. He was very worried about dressing up as a girl but didn’t want to look like a wimp.

So after school, Nick managed to borrow a dress whilst Robbie distracted the teacher by complaining of a sharp pain in his left, big toe. In the evening, Robbie took a lipstick Whilst Mum was on a lengthy phone call, arranging her next book club meeting and the boys were ready to go.

So the next day, when the knocking started again, Nick held up his hand and asked if he could go to the toilet.

Off he shot, quickly changed into the dress and slapped on some lipstick although some of that mysteriously ended up on his nose. He charged through the girls toilet door and found………Nothing!! Not a soul was in there.

Nick scratched his head, walked out of the girls toilet and almost collided with Miss Gurney, the head teacher.

“You girl, you know that lipstick is not allowed in school” She bellowed.

Nick fled like the wind. Despite his fear, Nick couldn’t help but think how draughty it was running in a dress. He changed back into his normal clothes, wiped off the lipstick with a tissue and rushed back to class.

Miss Gurney had spotted a distinctive mark on the back of the fleeing child's dress and she knew that this dress belonged to Rosie Leach, one of the naughtier children in the school.

So Rosie was summoned to Miss Gurney’s office and was completely bemused when she was given a detention, after all, Rosie had been singing with the school choir at the time of the alleged offence. But Miss Gurney was quite fierce and Rosie thought it best not to argue.

The knocking on the radiator never occurred again. Robbie and Nick both got a C their French tests and Nick’s Dad could not work out how his son had got lipstick on his nose.

Little did the boys know that Miss Jarvis, the music teacher had been planning a school concert in her spare periods. She had listened to her i-pod for songs that could be used and was prone to tapping her foot in time to the music on a radiator pipe in her room. The noise had echoed down the pipes and, well, you know the rest!

 

With thanks to Melinda P for suggesting the two words lipstick & solved. 

 

 

Thursday, 22 September 2011

Lost & found



Robbie was a little distressed.

His pocket money had been stopped for 3 weeks after he slipped a spider into Ashleigh Dobb's pencil case during a spelling test.

The problem was, a new set of dinosaur Top trumps was being released and Robbie had no money to buy them.

Robbie called at his friend Nick's house so that they could play in the park and discuss the situation. On the way to the park, Robbie's eye was drawn to a card displayed in the corner shop window with the following request.

It read

'Missing cat Peaches

Please return to Woodland cottage if found

Lucky finder will be paid £50.

This was it! How hard could it be to find a cat? Robbie was a little unsure how he would find the peaches but thought he'd still get a reward for finding the cat.

"Come on" Robbie said "Let's look around the Woodland cottage area"

So off they jogged to Woodland cottage where as suggested by the name, there was quite a sizable wood.

They kept as quiet as possible so as not to disturb any wildlife. Both Robbie & Nick screamed in a high-pitched way when a Muntjac deer suddenly shot from the undergrowth. Nick thought he'd spotted a deadly snake but it turned out to be a long stick with different shades of moss on it.

Suddenly, out the corner of his eye, Robbie saw a black shape move. It was definitely a cat.

Nick and Robbie approached the cat from slightly different angles but every time they got near, the cat scampered off. It always returned to near why they were standing and obviously thought this was a game. After Nick had fallen face-forward into a muddy pool and Robbie had plunged straight through some stinging nettles, they managed to catch the cat after it got distracted by a particularly large dandelion.

"How do we know it's the right cat?" Asked Nick.

Robbie looked at the collar of the cat. A tag on the collar said 'lucky'

"This is it" Said Robbie "The note in the window said "Lucky finder gets £50" "Well, we have found Lucky. The owner will be delighted after his loss and will pay us a reward!"

Robbie & Nick took the cat to Woodland cottage but there was no reply when they knocked on the door. So they wrote a note giving Robbie's address on a scrap of paper found for reasons they never discussed, just inside Nick's sock. They tied the cat to the garden gate with a piece of twine that they found lying near a vegetable patch and went home for tea.

Later that evening, there was a large rap on the front door. Dad answered the door and Robbie then heard a few raised voices.

Dad returned to the dining room and asked Robbie

"Did you take a cat to Woodland cottage today?"

"Yes" Replied Robbie excitedly, "Did someone bring round a reward?"

"You found the wrong cat!" Said Dad in a fairly exhausted way. "You found a cat called Lucky, but the missing cat was called Peaches! Lucky had a different address on the bag of his tag and we need to return him to his correct owner."

"Oh, and you've lost another two weeks pocket money" Dad carried on.

Dad and Robbie drove a bewildered Lucky back to the address written on the back of the tag, kncked on the door and returned him to a grateful owner who hadn't actually realised that his cat had wandered off.

Funnily enough, on the way home, Dad and Robbie had to drive past Woodland cottage.

About 500 yards past the cottage, Dad suddenly had to slam on the brakes as a cat shot across the road and crashed into a dustbin that had been left for collection the following morning.

Dad rushed over to the carnage and picked up a disheveled and shocked looking cat.

Written proudly on his name tag was 'Peaches'.

Dad had to smile. He drove back to Woodland cottage and returned the cat to an extremely grumpy but grateful owner.

The owner decided to pay a reward of just £10 and kind-hearted Dad gave it to Robbie so that he could buy his Top trumps.

The additional two week pocket money ban was still left in place, but Robbie didn't really mind as he and Nick stayed locked inside for at least a couple of weeks during their spare time comparing and trying to out-do each other's dinosaurs.

© Chris White


Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Impulse buy



Robbie pricked up his ears.


Mum had come home claiming that she had been spontaneous. She had gone to the shops to buy some breakfast cereal but had come home with a new pair of shoes. She had claimed these were an impulse buy. But all worked out well as Dad thought they looked pretty. Neighbour Mr Barclay thought they looked pretty but had red cheeks when he said this. Annabelle also thought she looked pretty. Robbie didn’t think she looked pretty as she was his mum and mums were not supposed to look pretty.

Robbie decided that he wanted to make an impulse buy. He emptied all the money from his piggy bank and headed for the shops. On reaching the parade of shops, he decided to close his eyes and when he opened them, he would buy something from that shop.

Firstly he banged into a lamppost and soon after walked into a surly looking traffic warden who could only growl at Robbie. When Robbie next opened his eyes he was outside the bank and didn’t think you could buy anything there. So he tried again and this time opened his eyes outside the pet shop.

The shop assistant was very helpful and when Robbie produced his pocket money, he was told that he had enough money to buy a newt.

Robbie was delighted. What an impulse buy! He rushed home to show the family and named the newt Nelly on the way home.

On showing his new pet, Dad raised his eyebrows, Mum sighed heavily, Annabelle called Robbie “Stoopid” and Bubbles the cat was intrigued until Nellie climbed on to Bubbles back one day and refused to come down.

The house was in chaos the next few days as Nellie ran riot around the house. It was found in the bread bin, it was found inside a toilet roll, it was found in Mum’s handbag, it swam in Annabelle’s bath water and seemed to sleep in Dad’s slippers.

Robbie loved his pet until one day Nellie just disappeared and was never seen by Robbie again. Robbie was a little upset for a day but soon got over it. Every now and then though, he did wonder what had happened to Nellie. Dad thought it had probably left the house and found a pond to live in.

The truth was never known to Robbie, but this is what happened.

At school, the day after Nellie went missing, Annabelle’s school class was tasked with designing and colouring a flag for a mythical country.

Annabelle had to ask permission to go to the toilet. She had forgotten to go during break time as she was listening to a particularly cool track on her i-pod with her best friend Faye Rosewood.

When Annabelle left the classroom, Rosie Leach, the naughtiest girl in the class, unzipped Annabelle’s pencil case as she new that Annabelle had a new set of felt tip pens.

Rosie shrieked as loudly as she could as a little green animal suddenly appeared from nowhere, jumped on to Rosie’s shoulder, licked her on the cheek, jumped down on to the floor and ran out the door.

“LIZARD!!!” Yelled Rosie and burst into tears.

Newts are quite small and nobody else in the classroom saw anything.

Rosie was sent to the head teacher’s room to be told off for yelling out in class. Annabelle thought it typical that Rosie had gone into her pencil case without asking but never for one moment did she connect Rosie’s claim of seeing a lizard with a missing newt.

Robbie decided that maybe Impulse buys weren’t the best idea and decided to save his pocket money so that he could buy his favourite comic.

With thanks to Holly Blackwood for the suggested two words - Spontaneous & newt.


A charmed life


Mum was going shopping for the day and Annabelle had been invited along. It would be a whole day trip and Mum’s friend, Mrs Pennington-Smythe was coming along. Annabelle liked Mrs Pennington-Smythe as she usually bought Annabelle a little treat.

At the breakfast table, Annabelle asked Mum why Mrs Pennington-Smyhte had two surnames and Mum said it was in case she lost one. This seemed logical, but Mum never answered when Annabelle asked if she could have a second surname.

Annabelle and her friends had been given a fun piece of homework, checking what ladies carried in her handbag. When Mrs Pennnigton-Smythe arrived at their house, Annabelle asked her if she would allow her to route through her handbag so that she could list the items that she carried around.

Mrs Pennington-Smythe went a light shade of pink.

“ I don’t mind at all, but you might want to throw away the half cheese sandwich I’ve been meaning to get rid of” she said.

Annabelle smiled as this was exactly the type pf thing all her friends were finding in ladies handbags. Rosie Leach claimed she had found a live canary in her neighbours handbag, but nobody rally believed her as she was quite naughty and a bit of a fibber.

The recent rain had only just stopped and there were large puddles everywhere.

“We will take some umbrellas” Announced Mum.

“All right dear, but don’t open them in the house!” Mrs Pennington-Smythe replied.

Mrs Pennington-Smythe was a lovely lady, but very superstitious. She carried with her, a horse shoe, a four leaf clover, a rabbit foot and a shamrock all for luck. She would never walk past a black cat, threw salt over her shoulder when she dropped it (Once hitting Bubbles the cat in the eye whilst doing this), and she would never take a number 13 bus.

The three ladies decided to walk into town and had an enjoyable chat, although Annabelle was told off for jumping in puddles and splattering her tights with muddy rain water.

As they approached the shops, a man was up a ladder painting a new sign at the bakers.

“ Now walk around the ladder! It’s bad luck to go underneath it” Mrs Pennington-Smythe said.

As they walked around the ladder, a car flew along the road at great speed.

All three saw it coming and pointed their umbrellas for cover. Mum and Annabelle managed to protect themselves, but Mrs Pennington-Smythe’s umbrella went inside out at exactly the wrong moment and she was completely drenched in spray.

Mum quickly rushed Mrs Pennington-Smyhte home and insisted that she have a shower.

“I don’t understand it” She wailed, “My lucky charms normally keep me safe from things like that.

Annabelle came up to Mum as Mrs Pennington-Smythe was in the shower.

“What shall I do with the half sandwich I took from Mrs Pennington-Smythe’s handbag Mum?” She asked

“Put it in the bin dear” Mum replied.

“ I found a Kentucky fried chicken bone as well so I took that out” Annabelle continued.

Mum found this slightly odd and looked where Annabelle was pointing.

That was no Kentucky fried chicken bone! It was Mrs Pennington-Smythe’s lucky rabbit foot.

Mum decided that it would be wise not to tell Mrs Pennington-Smythe that she had been splashed by a car when she didn’t have her lucky rabbit foot in the bag. She just slipped the rabbit foot back into the handbag and hoped that Annabelle wouldn’t ask any questions if she ever spotted it again.

© Chris White

Sunday, 28 August 2011

A fishy tale


Dad could almost have anticipated what was about to happen!

He sat in his favourite chair with a large bag of spicy crisps, cracked open a beer and readied himself for the big game.

In burst Annabelle.

“Bubbles won’t eat her food” She wailed.

Dad sighed, lifted himself from his chair and walked to the kitchen.

Bubbles indeed had not touched her salmon cat food and had an odd expression on her face. Strangely though, Bubbles had gobbled up a small amount of spaghetti bolognaise that Annabelle had absent-mindedly dropped on the floor.

Later the same day as Dad waited to watch the replay of the game that he had missed, Robbie burst into the room.

“Bubbles hasn’t eaten her tea” He cried.

Dad again visited the kitchen and Bubbles had not touched her ocean menu cat-food.

Again, Bubbles had munched into a rather slow sparrow that she had pounced upon in the garden.

Dad was confused and took Bubbles to the vet to be checked out.

The vet checked Bubbles carefully and offered her a bowl of chicken and cheese cat food that Bubbles woofed down. The vet got a swished tail in the face as thanks from Bubbles which set him off on a sneezing fit.

“Maybe, Bubbles has gone off fishy food?” Suggested the vet.

Dad had not considered this and changed Bubbles diet to a meatier selection.

Bubbles ate his food happily and none of the family really gave it another thought.

Nobody saw late at night, Bubbles skulk down into the cellar.

An old video lay there with a TV on stand-by.

Bubbles pushed her paw onto the video and Finding Nemo burst into life on the screen. A tear appeared in Bubbles eye as Nemo was lost at sea.

Bubbles felt so sorry for that little fish and decided that she was not going to eat fish again.

Nobody was there to question how a cat could start a video.
Nobody was there to realise why Bubbles had stopped eating fish
Nobody could remember what Robbie had done with his Finding Nemo video

Although Bubbles soon started eating fish again, she never really enjoyed it and yet didn’t know why.

© Chris White

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Trumpet cherrystone


Robbie had taken up the trumpet! His parents seemed to think he was making rather good progress, but parents are always slightly biased.

When Robbie practised, his sister Annabelle found an excuse to leave the house. Bubbles the cat usually bore the brunt of the trumpet and could be seen fleeing the house whenever the practice commenced.

Once, when Bubbles was caught off guard, the opening notes to ‘Smoke gets in your eyes’ made Bubbles almost leap out of her skin. She belted out of the living room and ran straight through a trifle that Annabelle had inexplicably left on the kitchen floor.

Fund raising was continuing at the school for a new swimming pool and a summer concert had been organised. Robbie was delighted to have been invited to join the brass band along with his friend Nick. The dulcet tones of ‘The grand old duke of York’ were heard 24/7 as Robbie feverously practiced his trumpet harmonies.

Annabelle’s classmate, Rosie Leech was not amused. She considered herself a great flute player, but Miss Jarvis the music teacher, did not agree! Rosie had not made the wind section of the school orchestra and was not pleased.

She had made an excuse to visit Annabelle much to Annabelle’s dismay. She called round one afternoon with a flimsy excuse about pressing flowers and wormed her way into the house.

Mum had earlier returned from the shops with a large bag of blood red cherries that were as sweet as nectar. She had put them in a bowl on the kitchen table for all to share, When an hour later, they had all disappeared, Mum was furious.

She blamed Robbie and Annabelle who both pleaded innocence. She questioned Rosie who put on her sweetest, innocent smile. Eventually, Bubbles was considered the culprit and Dad aimed a careful kick at his behind as Bubbles was chased out the door in disgrace.

The next day was concert day and the whole school arrived in anticipation at the school hall along with parents, grandparents, brothers, sisters and a smelly old lady who always put in an appearance and yet nobody knew who she was.

As the brass section warmed up, Robbie’s trumpet started making some strange noises. He tried tuning it, shaking it, blowing harder, blowing softer. All to no avail. With one particularly fierce blow, he made a sort of farting noise with the instrument. Miss Jarvis looked up and smiled nervously at the audience, not realising that they all thought that she had made the noise.

Robbie was frantic, he couldn't figure out what was wrong or why his trumpet wouldn't play properly.

Time had run out. Miss Jarvis waved her baton to start the song and Robbie blew into his trumpet for all he was worth. There was a loud noise like the opening of a new jam jar. Robbie’s trumpet burst into life and the whole audience were pelted by small fruit seeds.

Seeds landed in people’s laps, Miss Gurney the head teacher took one to the ear. The grubby little lady took one home for tea, Dad took a glancing blow to the head and some even flew out of the window.

The concert was a success. Nobody could explain the fruit seeds!

Bubbles was blamed for spitting the cherry stones into Robbie’s trumpet. Rosie was incensed that her attempt to sabotage Robbie’s playing had failed. Mum went back to buying seedless grapes and about 10 years later, a cherry tree started growing on the school playing fields that nobody could ever remember being planted.

© Chris White

Monday, 22 August 2011

Mysterious hero


Mum could not believe her eyes!

It had been hammering down with rain all night, there were rivers of water running down the street and yet Dad was standing there, as he did every Sunday, kitted out in his running gear for his weekly attempt at keeping fir.

“Are you mad?” asked Mum.

“Not good to miss a week” Replied Dad. “Besides, the rain has just about stopped!”

And off he set.

Annabelle raised her eyebrows, as that was what Mum had just done. Robbie didn’t notice as he was busy seeing how many spaghetti hoops he could get on the prong of a fork.

Dad took his usual route. Along the road, through the park, over the bridge, through the wood, back up another couple of streets and home.

All was fine although Dad secretly thought that Mum was probably right, as his socks were particularly wet and seemed to weigh twice as much as usual.

When Dad reached the woods, his usual path was more like a stream.

He decided to aim his feet at the small dry areas towards the very edge of the path,

This was slow going, but the idea seemed to be working.

In hindsight, this was not great thinking from Dad as there was quite a slope down from the path to some thorny, shrubbery below.

Suddenly, Dad’s foot hit an area on the edge of the path that completely gave way beneath him.

Dad had no chance to correct his footing and with an ungainly stumble and a loud curse, he tumbled down the slope and landed with a thud in a particularly thorny bush.

Dad picked himself up, checked that he was not seriously hurt and picked a few thorns carefully from his bottom.

Dad tried to climb back up the slope to the path.

But the slope was like a greasy pole. Every time he got a little way up, his footing would go and he would end up at the bottom in the same bush.

Dad scratched his head which hurt quite a lot as he had a thorn that he hadn't noticed attached to his finger nail. He couldn’t climb back up the slope and couldn’t go sideways as the bushes were too thick.

Dad had no reception on his phone because of the trees. Suddenly, he heard the pant of a dog next to him.

He looked down and indeed there was a dog standing next to him.

Wondering where on earth the dog had come from, Dad bent down to look at is collar.

The dog leapt up, whipped the cap from Dad’s head, scurried up the slope and disappeared out of site.

Dad could not believe his bad luck. He had another couple of failed attempts to climb the slope and finally slumped to the ground in exhaustion.

Meanwhile, back at the house. Mum was hanging up washing on the line whilst Annabelle tried to take up knitting and Robbie made a funny looking Lego monster.

As Mum hanged out Robbie’s school shirt, a dog leapt the garden gate and jumped up at Mum barking furiously.

Mum was initially livid as the dog left dirty footprints on Robbie’s school shirt. But then Mum noticed that the dog had dropped Dad’s cap at her feet.

The continual barking and the dog nudging her leg made Mum feel uneasy.

She gathered up Annabelle and Robbie and decided to see if the dog would lead them anywhere.

The dog went at a fair pace but Mum, Annabelle and Robbie on his scooter managed to keep up just about.

The dog led them to the exact spot where Dad had fallen.

Mum dispatched Robbie on his scooter to ask their neighbour Mr Barclay to come to the wood with a rope.

Robbie was super fast.

Mr Barclay had just the thing. He quickly made his way to the wood with a rope, tied it to a tree and Dad managed to climb up the slope.

When Dad was safe, they all turned around to congratulate the dog.

But the dog was nowhere to be seen!

Later that evening, Robbie asked the question that was on everyone’s mind.

“ Who was that dog and how did he know where we lived?”

Nobody had the answer and despite keeping heir eyes peeled, there was no sign that week of this mysterious, canine hero.

© Chris White