Smash!

Smash! by Alan MacDonald Page B

Book: Smash! by Alan MacDonald Read Free Book Online
Authors: Alan MacDonald
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There aren’t any!” grumbled Angela.
    Mrs Nicely got to her feet with a sigh and headed for the house. The back door slammed. Bertie didn’t wait a second longer. He tore through the bushes and shot back through the hole in the fence.
    “Well?” said Darren. “Did you get the football?”
    “You’ve got to be joking,” panted Bertie. “I am NEVER doing that again!”

CHAPTER 4
    They were dead meat, doomed, done for. Sooner or later Mrs Nicely would notice the broken window and find the football.
    “Doo-dee doo-dee doo…!”
    A shrill voice floated over the fence. Angela! She was back outside. Perhaps
she
would be able to help. Angela wasin love with Bertie and told everyone that he was her boyfriend. Normally Bertie avoided her like a cold bath, but not today – she was their last hope. He walked over to the fence.
    “Psst! Angela!” he hissed.
    “Is that you, Bertie?” asked Angela.
    “Of course it’s me. Listen, I need your help. It’s very important,” said Bertie.
    Angela nodded seriously. “Are we looking for dinosaur footprints?”
    “Not this time,” said Bertie. “You see the greenhouse?”
    Angela turned and gasped. “Umm! Someone broke the window!”
    “Yes… Never mind that,” said Bertie. “There’s a football in there and I need you to get it, okay?”
    Angela frowned. “Is it your football?”
    “Yes,” said Bertie.
    “Actually it’s mine,” said Darren. “But Bertie booted it over.”
    “Is that how you broke the window?” asked Angela, wide-eyed.
    “Look, never mind about the window,” said Bertie. “Just go and find the football. It’s
really
important we get it back.”
    Angela was silent for a while, thinking. “What do
I
get?” she said at last.
    “You?”
    “Yes, if I get the ball for you, what do I get?”
    Bertie rolled his eyes at his friends. By now they should have known that nothing with Angela was ever simple. Luckily they’d been to the sweet shop that morning.
    “I’ll give you a jelly snake,” he said. “It’s my last one.”
    “Where is it?” said Angela. Bertie poked the snake through the crack in the fence. Angela grabbed it and bit off the head.

    “What else?” she said, chewing.
    “What do you mean, what else? That’s my last jelly snake!” grumbled Bertie.
    “I know, but now I’ve eaten it,” said Angela.
    Bertie ground his teeth. This was robbery. But if they wanted the ball they didn’t have any choice. He heldout his hand to Darren and Eugene, and reluctantly they parted with their goodies. Angela accepted two fizzy bootlaces and a half-sucked lollipop.
    “
Now
will you get the ball?” said Bertie.
    “Okay!” sang Angela, dancing away from them.
    A minute later they heard a ball bouncing on the lawn.
    “Great,” called Bertie. “Hurry up!”
    THUD, THUD, THUD! The ball went on bouncing.
    “Throw it over!” cried Bertie impatiently. “You promised!”
    Angela shook her head. “I promised I’d get it, I didn’t say I’d give it back.”
    She went on bouncing – she’d always wanted her own ball.

    Bertie couldn’t believe it. They’d been tricked. Cheated out of their sweets – and all for nothing.
    “ANGELA!”
    The bouncing suddenly stopped. Mrs Nicely had returned. Bertie and his friends ducked down behind the fence to avoid her.
    “Angela, where did you get that ball?” she demanded.
    Angela said nothing. If she admitted it wasn’t hers she’d have to give it back.
    Mrs Nicely marched down the lawn. “You know what I think about footballs,” she scolded. “Things always get broken. If you don’t—” She stopped, catching sight of the smashed window.
    “ANGELA!” she screeched.
    “But it wasn’t me…” said Angela.
    “Don’t tell lies!” snapped Mrs Nicely. “Give me that ball – and go to your room, right now!”

    Angela’s lip wobbled. She dropped the ball and fled indoors, wailing all the way. “WAAAAAAH!”

    Mrs Nicely picked up the muddy football. Nasty horrible thing!

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