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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Paddy the canine olympian

It's not often that you find dogs entering into the Olympics but in the year the Games were held in China the Olympic Committee decided to honour it a most unusual way. You see it happened to be the Year of the Dog, in the Chinese Zodiac and so decreed that one worthy dog would be allowed to compete in one of the games alongside humans.
The newspapers and television stations ridiculed the proposal saying the Committee was turning the Games into Crufts, but competitors and the public alike thought it was a marvelous idea.
From all over the world dogs of all breeds, colours and countries were entered into the games; running, swimming and jumping alongside humans. But of all of them one competitor stood out. His name was Paddy and he had three legs.
Officials overseeing the 100m race were hesitant about Paddy competing against able bodied humans in that class but Paddy's owner, Leyla, protested that Paddy was the best in his class.
"He's the fastest dog in Scotland," she said.
"He's only got three legs," replied the race co-ordinator.
"That's not what makes him fast," Leyla said confidently.
The race co-ordinator chuckled beneath his breath. Leyla was incensed, but simply patted Paddy on the head and snatched Paddy's numbered jacket from the co-ordinator's hand.
"I believe in you," she muttered to a nonchalant Paddy.
Moments before the race began Paddy's gut began to rumble. He could feel something brewing deep down inside. It was a slightly familiar feeling that he usually got after particularly meaty meal, but something was different.
When the starter asked the competitors to line up Paddy took to his mark. Grumble, rumble, rumble, gurgle, went his gut.
"Get, set" yelled the starter.
The very moment the starter fired the starting gun Paddy's gut erupted into the loudest, most powerful and windy fart he had ever let rip. So powerful was it, that it propelled him down the race track at lightening speed, setting a new course, and world record in the process.
If it wasn't for the track barrier Paddy would have gone much further but as it was he crashed straight into it to a sudden and dizzying halt.
The crowds were on their feet, cheering and clapping for the new Olympic Hero.
Paddy smiled proudly and licked the remnants of his cabbage and baked bean dinner from his lips.

Monday, August 9, 2010

An unfortunate growth

There once was a young girl called Gail
who had the world's longest thumb nail
it stretched through her front door
and down to the shore
where it got caught in stringy sea kale

Sunday, August 8, 2010

A voluminous beard

There once was an old man called Geard
who had a long, grey, bushy beard
in it he could hide
an African tribe
and the elephant they had just speared

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Tales from Grimwold: Looking skyward

Kelan Pickle was so short even the ants looked down on him. It made for a very stressful and terrifying life, as almost everything he encountered was big enough to eat him; flies, beetles, spiders, and heaven forbid he ever met a mouse. That would be unthinkable. He could never out run a mouse. So rather than risk inevitable death he spent his time hiding under rocks by a trickling stream.
Kelan hadn't always been small. He was once the tallest ten year old boy in all of Grimwold. The prize of the Wizard of Galdorgalere. Not that the wizard cared particularly about that. The wizard was more interested in the fact that Kelan had another talent. He was a superb cook. Kelan had a talent for mixing the strangest of ingredients to make the finest of foods. He was simply incomparable to other cooks. But like all of the Wizard's employees he wasn't there of his own volition.
When news of Kelan's talents spread to the Wizard when Kelan was only eight years old, the wizard enticed him to his castle. The wizard claimed he had herbs and spices that Kelan had never even heard of. Dazzled by the idea of trying new flavours Kelan ignored his mothers's advice not to go with strangers and agreed to go with the wizard. But once he was there he was never able to leave. The wizard had put magic shackles round Kelan's ankles and chained him to his kitchen.Nothing would cut through the chains. Not knife, not cleaver, not axe.
Then one day the wizard accidentally left a box of potions in the kitchen after he'd reprimanded the washerboy because he couldn't see his reflection in his plates. Kelan saw his opportunity and threw a dish rag over the box to hide it. When the wizard left he snatched the box from the table and stashed it in the cupboard. When night fell and all were asleep, Kelan sneaked from his wooden cot in the corner of the kitchen and pulled the box from the cupboard. Each of the five vials in the box had writing on it but because Kelan couldn't read he had no idea what they did. Kelan didn't care. If he could use them to weaken the wizard's powers for long enough he might be able to free himself from his bondage.
Through the night he made his best Pelham Pie-the wizard's favourite dish-and tipped in every last drop of all the vials.
The next day, when the noon sun was blazing down, Kelan presented the wizard with his pie and watched as the wizard chomped his way through the crisp crust to the meaty potion beneath. When the wizard and licked the bowl clean Kelan saw his plan start to work.
The wizard sprouted bunny ears, his nose grew longer and crooked, his feet turned into horse hooves and he started to squawk like a chicken.
Whilst the wizard, perplexed by his sudden transformation, tried to overcome the forces controlling him Kelan snuck out of the wizard's long dining room and set to work trying free himself from his chains. He grabbed the wood axe by the fire and began smashing the metal blade against his ankle chain. As sparks flew into the air the wizard burst into the kitchen; his face contorted with rage and his bloodshot eyes bulging from his skull.
"Treacherous dog!" he growled, as he flicked the bunny ears from over his eyes.
Kelan frantically hammered the axe onto his chains, hoping one of the blows would smash through the metal before the wizard could unleash his powers.
"From now on you will pay for this betrayal," the wizard continued and raise a shaking arm that now looked more like a dog's paw. Clutched in his claws was his gnarled wand.
Kelan knew what was about to come and realised he'd been defeated. There was no escape now. All he did was close his eyes and wait for the escape of death. He half expected a brilliant white light when finally he opened his eyes again, but instead found he was still in the kitchen. Or at least he thought it was the kitchen. Everything in it was now a hundred times bigger than it was before. Even grains of dirt on the ground were like boulders he had to clamber over.
All around him were the huge, rusty links of the chains that once encircled his ankles, and there, looming over him with his long purple moustache and cloth cap, was the wicked wizard. A wry smile drew across his face.
"By making you as small as a nat," said the wizard, "I inflict on you the worst kind of punishment, for now you shall never be able to work your magic in the kitchen and will be forced to survive on dirt and dust. I would step on you like I do other insects but that would be too kind."
And with a deep chuckle that shook the ground Kelan stood on, the wizard stomped out of the kitchen and left Kelan alone in his new world.

Friday, August 6, 2010

The big issue

There once was a girl called Rose
who had a large growth on her nose
but compared to her butt
which was stuck in a rut
it wasn't the worst of her woes

Monday, August 2, 2010

Pepper

It wasn't every day that Pepper saw a tree in the living room of his house. But when it appeared, one blizzarding day, his heart struck an extra beat and his eyes widened to the size of tennis balls. The twinkling lights drapped across the boughs, the glittery balls dangling from branches, the promise of delights to come; he knew exactly what it meant for him, all he had to do was wait.
Every day as he lay down at the foot of the tree, staring up at the little red and white man twirling around on string, he waited for the floor to be piled high with boxes wrapped in brightly coloured, wafer-thin paper. Why was it there? he pondered. Was it lonely? Did it need a home? Or perhaps it was cold. That at least would explain why it was inside when the wind howled outside and the ground turned white.
He knew how that felt; to be confined to a small part of the garden, hemmed in by a metal fence with no shelter. Memories from long ago. But now nothing could taint his excitement.
Patiently he sat and on the seventh day, when he cracked open his sleepy, sticky eyes and lifted his head of his tartan, hairy rug he saw before him a pile of glimmering boxes piled randomly on top of one another.
He leapt off his rug and bounded into his carers' bedroom, throwing open the door with a headbutt.
Pepper's carers sat bolt up right in bed. He knew he'd woken them both suddenly by the rasping of their voices, the whites of their eyes and their heavy breathing, but that didn't matter. They called out to him with sounds incomprehensible and furrowed brows. Pepper just stood at the foot of the bed, staring at one and then the other with his jaw open, his lips curled into an eager smile and his tongue lolling like a limp piece of ham from the side of his mouth.
'Gimme, gimme,' he thought. 'Please, please.'
There weren't many sounds he understood but 'Come on then, Pepper,' usually meant they'd given in to his will. This time it was no different. The stockier of his carers pulled back the sheets and led Pepper back through to the lounge. Pepper scuttled alongside him and dashed toward the tree where he sat down, panting and glancing down at the presents and up at his bare, pink-skinned carer.
"You want your presents already?" he said.
Pepper just stared back at him.
"Fine," said his carer as he reached into the multi-coloured pile and pulled out two odd-shaped packages wrapped in wrinkled paper.
Pepper began to salivate. He knew what it was. He could almost taste it, almost feel the hairy texture on his tongue.
"Now," said his carer, waggling the present in front of Pepper's eyes. "At least make it last longer than a day as the ladies at the charity shop are getting suspicious of me. If they knew I bought these for you to tear up they'd never let me in their store again."
More incomprehensible sounds.
His carer handed Pepper the present, and Pepper gently clasped his mouth round the soft package.
When his carer was out of sight he thumped his body on the floor, gripped the packaged between his fore paws and frantically tore through the crisp wrapping, exposing the orange and black striped beast inside.
It had four bulbous paws, two pointed ears, a lolling red tongue and large, black plastic eyes. That's what Pepper liked the most; eyes not so big that he couldn't get his mouth round it and too small to find either.
He plucked the unsuspecting tiger from the shreds of soggy paper and gripped it between his paws.
But just as he was about to begin earnestly gouging out the black eyes with his teeth, something stopped him. The hopeful smile on the tiger's face, the piercing stare of its eyes, the eagerness of its pricked ears spoke to him silently.
Pepper could feel its warmth radiating off its fur, enveloping him like the warm comforting arms of his carer.
He tried to fight back the unfamiliar feeling, trying to tap into his deep desire, his fixation with pulling the ribbons white fluff from its squashy body-the white gold he so desperately craved-but its soothing force was stronger than he could overcome. All he could do was stare at it staring back at him.
He was defeated. He knew he could no more pluck the stuff from that toy than he could his carers. So instead he simply rested his chin upon its head and made sure it never left his side.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

It's sum-mer

Pitter patter, coming down
Summer rain lands on the ground
Wash away the cloudy day
make way for the sun to play

Sound of mowers, smell of grass
fresh cut flowers in a vase
sprinklers swaying to and fro
let's get wet jump through the flow

Squeals and shouts, soaked to the skin
parents shouting "quiet that din!"
sister reaches for the hose
and sprays her brother up the nose

Friday, July 9, 2010

Determination

when all else fails
dig deep inside
retrieve the strength
you always hide

you have it in you
to pull through
you know just what
you have to do

don't take to heart
the sly remarks
thrown around
like playing darts

rise above
the mockery
you're better than
you think you'll be

set you sights
upon the prize
and strive to reach
those all time highs

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

In the attic

The fresh topic of discussion at school had moved from Miss Harris's bird's nest hair do to the cool new website that took photos of your street. All day kids were logging on, checking out the streets of Bickertown.
Tyler was desperate to check out his house, to show off his parent's palacial pad. But his pleas to the kids in the locker room to look at his laptop were drowned out by the guffaws coming from the crowd surrounding Gavin Baxter.
"It's Mickey Finn," said one kid. "On Morrison Street."
"Who's he snoggin'?" said another.
"I reckon it's Penny. She's the only girl I know that piles her hair on her head like a pineapple."
Tyler left the locker room during the chorus of snickers.
When he got home that afternoon the nagging curiosity of seeing his house online drew him to log onto his computer. He entered his address, clicked the mouse and up popped an image of the outside of his house. But the novelty of the innovation quickly wore off when, on closer inspection, he saw a face in the attic window that didn't belong to any of his family.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

The face in the window

Bebe's only company was the face in her bedroom window. It was never there during the day, it only appeared at night. Wispy and faint and with pigtails like hers, it spoke to her, with a warm, strawberry smile. It told her tales of life on the high seas, made her laugh with jokes and entertained her with magic tricks. It sped up time, filling the lonely gaps in her solitary life whilst her mother cocooned her in the house.
"Protection from the wicked world," her mother said.
She was happy there, with all she knew, until one day her mother forgot to lock her bedroom door.
A gust of wind, that blew up from the floor below whistled down the corridor and clicked her bedroom door open.
Bebe was too curious to stay inside, yet apprehensive of what lay beyond her world.
She tiptoed to the door, not wanting to stir what lay on the other side and found herself in a long room with steps that led down. The room was lit with flickering lights on the wall and was as sparsely furnished as her plain room. There was only a table, a little way in front of her, and what looked like a window on the wall above it. But it was a strange window. It's frame was oval and rolled in gold.
And when she approached it the face in her window appeared before her.
"Emmy!" she said, delightedly at the smiling face staring back at her.
"You're looking at your reflection," snorted her mother, from the stairs.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Curiosity killed the cat

Janie Johns had always been far to nosy for her own good. When told not to do something, she always did the opposite, like the time Mickey Grayling in Year 1 told her about Mr Vincent's back garden cemetary-or what he believed was a cemetary. Janie just couldn't help herself. She had to take a look. She had to be the one to prove the rumours. True, or false, the outcome didn't matter.
That time she got away with it, but her luck was about to run out.
It had been a while since she visited her Great Aunt Violet. Janie didn't do relations, but as she was on her death bed Janie's mother dragged Janie along for her last visit.
While she was there she overheard her Great Aunt talking to her mother.
"There's something I need you to do, Flora," croaked Aunt Violet. "There's something in the attic I need you to get. I need you to destroy it. It's important."
Janie could tell Aunt Violet was anxious. Her desperate, spluttered speech, her deeply wrinkled frown. Whatever was up there Janie wanted to see it before her mother did.
She listened closer.
"Of course, Violet, anything," replied her mother.
"Jig Saw," were the last words Aunt Violet uttered before her last gasp of breath.
Janie ran upstairs, choosing to find what she shouldn't rather than console her whimpering mother.
She crept up the wooden ladder and flipped over the attic hatch.
There lying on the floor of the empty attic, bathed in the orange glow of the setting sun, streaming in through the window, was a flat box. Janie brushed the dust from the cover.
'Jig Saw', were the words fainted scribed on the box.
"Why was she so worked up about this?" Janie crowed as she prised off the lid. "It's just a box, full of bits of jigsaw."
Janie tipped them up onto the dusty attic floor, but as she tried to sort them out, flipping each one over to its picture side, she noticed that all the pieces were blank.
"That's weird," she said and tried to clip two together.
As the pieces interlocked part of a picture formed on the surface of both of them.
"Wow," Janie gasped. "It must be magic."
Eagerly, Janie put the pieces together, matching the shapes as best she could. As she did the picture took shape in front of her eyes.
She couldn't tell what it was a first as the colours were too muted-soft browns, tans, creams and oranges, blending in with each other. But working her way from the edge of the jigsaw inwards she noticed the picture forming was of an empty room. The lower half of a person was next to form-a person crouched with their back towards her. Above the person was a shiny object, curved and sharp, glinting in the sunlight.
As Janie's mother called to her from below Janie shakily placed the last two pieces of the jigsaw and realised to her horror, it was a picture of her in the attic.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Elspeth's revenge (part 2-end)

Angelina put her arm round Elspeth’s shoulder making her feel instantly more relaxed and safe.
The room was exactly what Angelina said it was going to be, quiet. It was tucked some distance from the main kitchen so the noise of shouting voices and clanking of pots and pans had become a faint mumble.
“Well first things first. I think we should put Molly up on this shelf. Otherwise she’ll get covered in flour, butter and chocolate chips.”
Elspeth giggled at the thought of her dolly made to look like a cookie and handed the doll to Angelina.
“Next we have to get the ingredients,” she announced as she walked into a dark little room of to the side. Moments later she returned clutching packets of flour, baking powder, butter, brown sugar, a jar of honey, an egg, a small bottle of vanilla essence and assorted packets of milk, plain, white and multi-coloured chocolate chips and plopped them onto the chrome work surface.
“Now, we need to weigh out 6oz of flour,” Angelina said as she grabbed a large metal weighing scale. “Here, you can do the honours for me. You need to put the flour in that tray there until this little arm comes to this marker,” she continued, pointing to the dial on the face of the scale.
Elspeth did as Angelina asked as watched the little arm carefully as it rose up towards the marker.
“How’s that?” Elspeth said proudly.
“Excellent job. Now tip it into the bowl and do the same with the butter and the sugar but we only need 4oz each of those, so the arm should come to there. Okay?”
“Yep,” Elspeth replied, opened the bag of sugar and poured it into the tray, concentrating so hard her tongue poked out of the side of her mouth. When she’d weighed out the sugar she poured it into the bowl and did the same with the butter.
“You know when mum and dad come back I’m going to ask if you can come to dad’s dinner party.”
“Are you sure you’re allowed to invite staff to that. I’m sure its bound to be a very posh affair.”
“No, not as a guest, silly. To help. You could carry those large plates they have with the can of peas on them.”
“Don’t you mean canapés?
“That’s what I said. Can of peas, silly, you’re not listening.”
“I’m sorry. But anyway helping isn’t nearly as good as being a guest.”
“But you’re not royalty or even important. You can’t expect to go if you’re not royal or important. It’s not allowed.”
“I suppose you’re right but it’s the only way of really enjoying a party. If you’ve been invited I mean,” Angelina said as she measured out two tablespoons of honey and two of baking powder and added them to the bowl along with a pinch of salt, a dash of vanilla essence, a whisked egg and a packet of milk chocolate chips. “Now we mix it all together,” she continued. “So have you been to any of these parties yourself?”
“Oh no. I’m much to young. They don’t let me. But I did sneak downstairs one night when dad had invited guests. I watched them from the bottom of the stairs. They’d all been drinking that red berry juice and were making a lot of noise. Singing loudly and out of tune and dancing about. Well, I think they we’re meant to be dancing. They were wobbly about like this,” Elspeth explained as she held her arms out and wobbled on her legs as though they were made of jelly. “Then mum saw me and came rushing over. Her eyes looked all glassy and she had a big grin on her face. And she called over someone she called the ‘Pry Minstrel’.”
“I think you mean Prime Minister.”
“That’s what I said. Anyway, he bowed at me and I felt very important.”
“Did you now?” Angelina replied, biting her lip as a little snigger escaped her lips. “Okay, I think this is sufficiently mixed up. Now we need to put it on the tray.”
Angelina showed Elspeth how to plop the mixture onto the baking tray to cook, and as Elspeth continued she made up a fresh batch of cookies with plain chocolate chips, then another with white chocolate chips and the last with the multi-coloured chips.
“There, all done. Now we pop them in the oven and wait till they’re cooked.”
Elspeth clapped her hands with glee.
“Now for the fairy cakes,” Angelina said walking over to the store cupboard again.
Elspeth watched as Angelina disappeared into the darkness. She half wanted to follow her, curious to see what it was like inside with all the packets and boxes and jars and bottles, but after the time she hid in Sophie’s wardrobe to spy on her sister and accidentally jammed the door shut, she was a little apprehensive. So she waited until Angelina emerged clutching more ingredients.
By the time they’d weighed and stirred the mixture, ready to go into baking trays that had little wells sunk into them, a loud buzzing sounded. It took Elspeth by surprise and she jumped in the air and clasped her hands round her ears.
“It’s okay,” Angelina reassured as she reached for the oven gloves. “It’s only the cooker. It means our cookies are ready.”
She pulled out the trays and put the fairy cakes in the oven to cook and busily showed Elspeth how to make the buttercream mixture that went on top.
When the buzzer on the cooker went a second time Elspeth knew exactly what it meant and instead of jumping in alarm she dashed to the oven, and eagerly waited for Angelina to bring them out.
“They look really tasty,” she said, her mouth watering as the smell of warm, sweet sponge wafted in the air.
“Now we have to cut the tops of, put the buttercream on top and then,” Angelina said as she showed Elspeth what she meant. “We cut the tops in half, like so, and put them on top of the buttercream like this, so they look like little wings. And there we have a fairy cake.”
“Wow. They look really pretty. Let me do some.”
Half an hour later they were finished, exhausted and covered in flour, cream and butter. Elspeth laughed at her reflection in the mirror that hung on the wall above the sink. She had a dollop of buttercream on the tip of her nose, a dusting of flour in her hair, and chocolate round her mouth after she’d slyly guzzled one of the freshly cooked cookies.
“I think we should take these up to Sophie’s room, with some lemonade,” Angelina announced.
“Perfect,” Elspeth chimed with a broad grin.
When they reached Sophie’s room, Elspeth grabbed a table and laid the cookies, fairy cakes, three glasses and the bottle of lemonade on the table whilst Angelina kept watch by the door to see if Sophie was approaching. No sooner had Elspeth finished than Angelina rushed in.
“She’s coming!”
Elspeth spun round the table and rushed towards the door just as Sophie was about to enter her bedroom.
“Close your eyes, close your eyes!”
“Why? What have you done? I might have guessed it, Elspeth. Just because I wouldn’t let you come with me you decided to trash my room. Well if anything’s broken you going to get it.”
“Close your eyes, please Sophie!”
“Fine. Okay. Whatever.”
“Now come this way,” Elspeth said as she grabbed her sister’s arm and dragged her across the room so abruptly it was a wonder her sister didn’t trip over herself. But Elspeth was too excited to care what she was doing. She just wanted to show her sister what she’d done.
“Now you can open your eyes,” Elspeth said clapping her hands with glee.
She looked up at her sister who clasped her hands together as though in prayer and held them to her lips. She didn’t utter a word.
Elspeth’s heart began to sink, thinking her sister didn’t like what she’d done.
Sophie walked up to the table, with Elspeth close to her side never taking her eyes of her sister’s face, eagerly awaiting a reaction.
“Is this for me?” Sophie said softly as the corners of her mouth rose to a gentle smile.
Elspeth nodded with delight.
“You made these?” Sophie asked pointing to the cookies and fairy cakes on the table.
“With a little help from my new friend, Angelina,” Elspeth replied pointing to Angelina who stood as inconspicuously as she could by the bedroom door. “We’ve been in the kitchen all day making them. See there are fairy cakes and cookies, some with plain chocolate, some with white and some multi-coloured but we made most of them with milk chocolate as I know you like them best.”
Elspeth’s tone suddenly changed when she remembered how she’d started the day, before Angelina had suggested baking, and suddenly felt pangs of guilt in the pit of her stomach. Tears welled in her eyes and her lower lip quivered as she burst out crying and threw her arms around her sister’s waist, burying her head in the folds of her dress.
“Hey, what’s wrong with you?” Sophie said sympathically.
But Elspeth didn’t answer. She clung onto her sister as though her life depended on it, refusing to let go. Finally, she lifted her head up, her eyes stinging from the tears and summoned the courage to confess to her sister.
“I was going to break all your dolls. Once you’d left I pulled them all off the shelf and started pulling their arms and legs off. I would have carried on too if it wasn’t for Angelina.”
“Well you didn’t. So there’s no harm done,” Sophie said bending down to kiss the top of her sister’s head. “Why don’t you invite your friend to join us? Seeing as she made these too I think it’s only fair she gets to enjoy them.”
Elspeth lifted her head, smiled and wiped her eyes with the sleeve of her dress before looking towards the door where Angelina was stood, but there was no-one there.
“She’s gone!” Elspeth cried and rushed to the door to look up and down the corridor, but she’d gone.
“She must have gone back to the kitchens, Elspeth. Don’t worry.”
Solemnly, Elspeth walked back to the table and half-heartedly munched on one of the fairy cakes, getting the tip of her nose covered in buttercream in the process but not caring in the slightest.
“This was my revenge, you know?”
“Revenge? Was it really?” Sophie said sinking her teeth into the largest milk chocolate chip cookie she could find. “Well if that’s the case then I’m going to have to leave you more often.”
Elspeth glowered at her.
“Only kidding, sis!” Sophie said and wiped the buttercream from Elspeth’s nose.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Elspeth's revenge (part 1)

It started of as being a pretty uneventful week for Elspeth. Her parents, the King and Queen, had left days earlier leaving her and her elder sister, Sophie, in the care of their Nanny and Tutor, Delilah. Elspeth didn’t care much for Delilah. She hated the fact that she would wake her at the crack of dawn each day for reading, writing, sums and tests. It was all boring and pointless she thought and resented it all the more when the sun shone brilliantly outside and all she wanted to do was get out there and play with their dogs, pick flowers and make daisy chains. So it was extremely fortunate for her when one morning Delilah tripped down the grand staircase and broke both her legs leaving her and her sister in the care of the servants.
For Elspeth and Sophie this was the most perfect situation they could ever have imagined they’d be in; their parents were away, their guardian incarcerated in the local hospital and a huge Palace to explore at their leisure.
“Seeing as mum and dad are away for a while now is the perfect opportunity for some exploration,” Sophie said delightedly as she added the Greek doll her mother had brought back from her recent trip, to her collection on the shelf above her bed.
“That sounds like a fab idea. I’m coming too,” Elspeth said jumping up and down in excitement.
“You can’t,”
“Why not?”
“Because I’m the eldest so I’m in charge and I say that you should stay here and finish your homework. I’m going to explore the North Tower. Mum and Dad never let us go up there and I want to know why,” Sophie demanded.
“That’s not fair. I want to see the North Tower too.”
“Well you can’t. You’re too young and it might be dangerous so you’ll just have to stay.”
“You can’t make me Sophie and if you do I’ll tell mum on you.”
“And if you tell mum on me I’ll tell her who broke her precious china hand mirror. You know, the one with the roses on the edges.”
“I didn’t mean to break it. I just wanted to look at it. That’s all,” Elspeth huffed.
“Well then you’d best keep quiet hadn’t you,” Sophie said pointedly and waltzed out of the room.
Elspeth couldn’t believe the nerve of her sister. ‘How come she gets to go and I don’t. It’s not fair,’ she thought and folded her arms, screwed up her face and proceeded to kick anything across the floor that was in reach of her foot.
While teddy bears, dolls and plastic horses flew across the room Elspeth failed to notice a young palace maid, had entered and was standing in the doorway, nervously awaiting a moment to address the little princess.
“Excuse me, my lady,” the young maid said. “Can I be of service to you?
“No,” she snapped. “Unless you can get me another sister.”
The maid paused, unsure how to answer her, or if she should answer her at all. After what seemed like an eternity she cautiously asked:
“Are you not happy with the one you have?”
“No,” she snapped again, louder. The sharpness in her tone made the maid jump. “What’s your name anyway?”
“Angelina, my lady.”
“How old are you, Angelina?” she enquired as she stopped kicking toys around, reached for her sister’s collection of dolls on the shelf and began to pull the heads, legs and arms of them.
“Eighteen, my lady,”
“Do you want to be my new sister?” she asked, smiling with delight at how
easy it was to decapitate them.
“I don’t think your mum and dad would like that too much?”
“Why not? You’re much prettier than her and I bet you’d be a better sister. She’s always bossing me around. I never get to have any fun,” she huffed as she reached for a blue felt tip pen and began drawing glasses and bushy moustaches on the decapitated dolls’ heads.
“May I ask what are you doing?”
“Destroying all Sophie’s toys,” she said bluntly as though it should have been obvious to Angelina. “She wouldn’t let me go with her to investigate the North Tower. I wanted to. I wanted to so much. Nasty, evil, horrid sister. She said it was too dangerous and I should stay here finish my homework. But I’ll show her. I’ll show here good and proper. When she comes back and sees these she’s be sorry she didn’t take me with her. Anyway it’s none of your business. I can do what I want.”
“I suppose you can but don’t you think that revenge is a little wicked and spiteful?” the maid protested.
“Raven-jar?” said Elspeth, frowning with confusion. “What kind of word is that?”
“No, not raven-jar. Rev-enge,” Angelina explained, saying the word slowly so Elspeth could understand.
“Well, whatever. She’s got it coming to her. She knew I’d be annoyed she left me, so there.”
“Well if that’s the case then she knows that you’re going to do something to get her back right?”
“Suppose so, yeah,” Elspeth muttered.
“So why don’t you do something that she won’t expect you to do.”
Elspeth thought for a moment or two. She looked up at the dolls on the shelf that were yet to be dismembered and back at the maid.
“What did you have in mind?” she asked curious to know what could possibly be more gratifying than destroying her sister’s prized collection of dolls.
“Well we could start by putting all the legs and arms back on the right dolls,” Angelina said.
“What!” Elspeth said glowering at Angelina.
“Then we’ll clean up the dolls’ faces,” Angelina continued ignoring Elspeth’s outburst.
Elspeth frowned at Angelina, perplexed.
“Then,” Angelina continued. “We’ll put them in a nice orderly fashion back on your sister’s shelf.”
“That won’t annoy her at all. That’s too nice.”
“Won’t it?” Angelina said innocently. “Then after that we’ll go down to the kitchen and make her a nice batch of chocolate chip cookies, buttercream fairy cakes, and fresh lemonade.”
Elspeth stared as Angelina began to pick up the arms, legs and heads that were strewn across the room and sorted them into piles according to which legs matched and which arms matched. She was rather confused as to why being nice to her sister would irritate her but when she thought of melt in the mouth cookies and soft cream and sponge it tantalised her taste buds and made her mouth water and pretty soon she’d forgotten what she’d been doing and could only think of eating sweet treats.
“Can we put different chocolate chips in the cookies? I mean white ones and plain ones and different coloured ones?” she said her eyes gleaming with excitement.
“Certainly. What flavour of chocolate chip does Sophie like the most?”
“Milk chocolate.”
“Okedoke. We’ll make an extra large batch of milk chocolate chip cookies.”
“And can we draw smiley faces on them, with icing?” she added with delight.
“Of course we can.”
Elspeth clapped her hands with excitement as she followed Angelina along the wide, polished floored, corridor that always had a pungent smell of lemon furniture polish that made her scrunch her nose up in repulsion.
Down the grand staircase they both descended until they reached the main hallway where they doubled backed to a door that didn’t look like a door at all. It looked as though it was part of the wall as the top half was papered in the deep red swirling patterned wallpaper and the bottom half was dark wood panelling, just like the wall. Angelina pushed it open, and Elsepth’s eyes widened. She was itching to see what lay beyond the door. But was rather disappointed with what she saw. It was nothing like the rest of the Palace. It was cold and dark and smelt musty, like mould and earth. The walls were bare bricks, with no paint or pictures to adorn it, and the floor was made of horrid grey concrete.
She followed Angelina down a flight of steps where the sound of voices echoed and musty smell had been replaced with the sweet smell of roasted potatoes, gravy, pork and apple sauce. ‘I must be near the kitchen,’ she thought. Usually she would never have been allowed anywhere near the kitchen let alone allowed inside to make cookies and cakes, but as her mum and dad were away there was no-one to say no to her.
“I wish mum and dad would go away more often,” she said casually. “This is fun. Sophie is going to be so jealous when she finds out where I’ve been. What do you think Molly?” she said to the tatty, knitted dolly clutched in her hands.
“I’ve noticed you always seem to be carrying that dolly around with you,” Angelina enquired. “It’s filthy. Why don’t you wash it?”
“Mum’s always telling me to get it washed. She said she’s going to take it one day when I’m not looking and send it down to the laundry room. I told her she couldn’t do that because then it wouldn’t smell the same and I like the way it smells. So I carry it around with me all the time cos that way if I have it she can’t take it away. Right?”
Angelina nodded and chuckled at her as she pushed the swing door into the kitchen narrowly avoiding knocking one of the butlers who was stood on the other side talking to a chef.
Elspeth was a little afraid to go into the kitchen at first. It was a very stark looking place, all white tiles and chrome, and very noisy too. Lots of people dressed head to foot in white clothes, some stained with food, shouted at one another, which made Elspeth think that they may shout at her for being there when she wasn’t supposed to be.
“It’s okay,” Angelina said soothingly. “You can come in. We’ll go into the little workroom round the side. They usually use it to make little sweets and stuff but not today. It’ll be quiet round there.”

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

The last message

Vicky lay awake in her bed, staring up at the velvet black sky through the crack in her curtains. She couldn't sleep. Her mind was replaying the day's event over and over again like a movie on loop.
The image of the deep ravine, her foot slipping off the edge, flashed across her mind's eye. "I can't believe she's gone," she muttered as a lone tear rolled down her cheek. "I'm sorry, Beth."
She reached her hand, bloody and grazed, across her duvet and plucked Jasper the bear from the within the pile of teddys on her bed. She stared at his threadbare face and deep into his scuffed, black, glassy eyes.
"I'm glad to be back, Jasper. I'll never leave you," she said and stuffed Jasper under her duvet, clamping it close to her chest.
As she snuggled under her duvet she spotted a fresh bunch of flowers on her bedside table and a message card resting against the vase.
The card read, "Best friends forever. I'll miss you loads. Love Beth."

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Making hay

Tilly almost didn't recognise the withered, grey form that was her Grammy laying on the bed in the sitting room. The last time she saw her was two months ago. Grammy said she was going into hospital "for a little bit". But now Tilly was confused.
"Mum," Tilly whispered. "I thought people went into hospital to get better. Grammy doesn't look well at all."
When Tilly's mum didn't answer Tilly looked up at her. Her mum was biting her lower lip and her eyes were glazed and red.
"Just go and sit with Grammy, Tilly. She wants to talk to you," said her mum, resting her hand on Tilly's shoulder, gently ushering her over to her grandmother.
Tilly was reluctant at first. The woman in the bed wasn't the grammy she knew. For a start she was grey in colour, her cheeks were sunken and her skin was even more wrinkly than before. But more disturbing was Grammy's bald head and the blonde curly wig placed over a polystyrene head on the beside table. This wasn't the smiley, energetic Grammy she knew.
"Tilly," Grammy croaked from the bed. "Come over here, sweetheart."
Tilly crouched down beside her grandmother, trying to smile through the smell of stale sweat and disinfectant.
"Hi Grammy," Tilly said, reaching out her hand tentatively to her grandmother's.
"Your mother tells me you've been a good girl, since I last saw you."
Tilly mustered a sheepish smile. She knew that wasn't entirely true but realised it was a well-intentioned white lie.
"I'm glad. Because I have something for you," Grammy said reaching across to open the draw of her bedside table.
Tilly watched her grandmother's slender hand pull out a silver locket.
"This is for you," she said, dropping the locket into Tilly's hand. "This will give you all you need to see you through your life."
"What do you mean?" asked Tilly.
"There is nothing that can save me now," whispered her Grandmother. "So I'm passing my luck onto you. Do you know the myth that cats have nine lives?"
Tilly nodded.
"Well humans do as well. In fact with the right help humans can have any number of lives. I have lived many, over thousands of years. But I'm weary now. I see in you a lot of me when I was your age. Your strength, your courage, your wit," she said with a throaty chuckle. "I'm now passing that gift to you. Your essence will live on, from one body to another. You will live a thousand lives so make hay whilst the sun shines," she continued before taking a deep gasp, falling back against the pillow and closing her eyes.
Tilly stared down at the locket in her hand, unable to comprehend what her Grammy had just told her, and unaware of what was about to befall her.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Best things for those who wait

Ricky Plummer could barely contain his excitement as the double decker bus inched its way down Porthampton's high street. There was such a bounce in his step he was sure someone had put springs in his shoes. Though he could have done with them, or a ladder at least. He wasn't the only one standing on the pavement dressed in his regimental blues and whites. Thousands of townsfolk were there for the same reason he was; to welcome home their heroes.
As the cheers and screams crescendoed like waves, Ricky desperately tried to push his small frame through the throng. He wanted to get the best glimpse, the closest glimpse he would ever have of his hero, Porthampton FC's prize striker Robby Simmonds. It wasn't as easy as he thought. He was so used to people avoiding him on the street, recoiling at his size and disfigured face it was a new experience to suddenly feel like he was invisible. Not one person shuffled to the side to let him in. Getting through was like trying to knock down a wall with a feather; completely impossible. Frustration and desperation built up inside him like magma in a volcano. He searched for gaps in the crowd trying any means to get to the barriers that lined the street. All he wanted was a passing shot, something to file away in his memory, something happy for him to relive if ever he was sad but as the minutes passed and the rumble of the bus engines grew louder Ricky's hopes faded. By the time he made it to the metal barriers the bus had passed and the glorious FA Cup winners were meeting and greeting others along the parade route. Ricky's heart sank. It was like someone had just ripped his soul from his body.
One by one the crowds dispersed, leaving Ricky standing alone on the street, utterly despondent. As dark fell Ricky trudged home, with cheeks caked in salty tears. The walk home took him passed Porthampton's stadium, but Ricky was too upset to even acknowledge it was there. He stared at the pavement, and chose to occupy his mind by counting the cracks as he walked.
"eight, nine, ten," he mumbled to himself until he walked smack into a towering, suited figure.
Contrite, Ricky jumped back.
"I'm really sorry," he said sheepishly and looked up.
Recognition was instant. Ricky's legs suddenly went to jelly.
"Umm, I, I, err. R-Ro-Robby!" he stuttered.
"Alright lad?" Robby Simmonds said with a wry smile on his face. He slapped the Ricky's shoulders affectionately before walking on.
Ricky had to lift his jaw from the floor

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Spontaneous healing

Purple bruises, oozing cuts
Bill got from time to time
but cos he never let them heal
they stayed gooey with slime

Til one day on his way from school
freak lightening did strike
it sent electric through him
as he peddled on his bike

The next day when he woke up
he felt all out of sorts
but didn't realise what was wrong
until his class for sports

He took a knock across his knees
with a hockey stick
but when he looked upon the wound
there'd be no scab to pick

Sparks of blue leapt from his skin
where blood dripped from his knee
but before Bill could wipe it up
the wound healed instantly

Saturday, June 5, 2010

A very woolly idea!

"Jamie!" screeched Jamie's mother. "Get your backside down here and mow that lawn."
Jamie pulled his duvet over his head to muffle the sound of her drumbeat voice.
"I can't mum, my legs hurt," he mumbled.
"No excuses, Jamie. When I come back from work today I want that lawn so neat and trim you could use it as a putting green."
The last thing Jamie heard was the front door slam shut.
The race was now on. The only thing was Jamie hated mowing the lawn. Every Spring, Summer and Autumn he had to mow the lawn every fortnight. This year, however, he had a secret weapon.
He leapt out of bed, threw on his clothes and ran into the garden. It took him a good ten minutes to wade through the two foot high grass to get to the back fence, where he put his plan into action. With a set of wire clippers he cut the down the fence and waited for the inevitable woolly stampede.
Sure enough the lure of the lush green, weed-riddled grass was too much for the residents of the field and before Jamie knew it an entire flock of sheep were busily munching on his mother's lawn.
By six in the evening the lawn was as smooth as silk, and riddled with sheep poo.
"That'll do nicely," said Jamie, proudly.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Tales from Grimwold: the legend of Linus Bartleby

It had been two years since Macadam Snore arrived at the white castle of Galdorgalere; home of the heinous Wizard. Ever since the Wizard saved Macadam's village from destruction from the Grima Pinbeam, Macadam had been duty bound to serve the Wizard for eternity. Macadam knew he would never be free to enjoy the life he once knew with his parents-helping his father sow and reap corncrops, baking bread with his mother and playing Wisp with the other village children-but never imagined his servitude would be as ruthless, tiring or dispiriting. No matter what he did he could never seem to please the Wizard. He would follow instructions to the letter but the Wizard would always find a way to critise his work, punishing him with either no food or worse, locking him in the castle basement for a day where spiders the size of his hand scuttled across putrid puddles on the floor, lizards longer than his body climbed the slime covered walls, and skeletons of the Wizards previous assistants lay in corners like discarded kindling.
Every night Macadam tried to stem the tears from flowing down his face at the despair that was his life. He didn't want to give the Wizard the satisfaction of knowing he was being tormented, but invariably one stray droplet of salty water would roll down his cheek before being swiftly brushed away by Macadam's dirty hand.
Then one day the Wizard summoned Macadam to the Grand Reception room where the Wizard was hosting a dinner for the most eminent magicians, sorcerers and shamens in the land. It was the most lavish occasion Macadam had ever seen. Silks of red, gold, blue and green were draped in deep swathes across the ceiling, beautiful girls with long waves of auburn hair danced in the middle of the room whilst a hundred or more magicians dressed in the finest clothes they could conjure watched on from teh comfort of the gold chairs they sat on. But Macadam was drawn to the food; so abundant he was sure it could feed the entire population of Grimwold for a year-one hundred spit-roasted pigs, four thousand potatoes, two thousand carrots, seventy gallons of gravy and more besides were carried through the room on glimmering gold trays.
"Boy, come here," said the Wizard to Macadam.
Macadam, with his head held low in the manner the Wizard expected, shuffled barefoot to the Wizard's side.
"What is your bidding, my master?" Macadam said.
"I grow weary of these dancers. Their toing and froing is making my head hurt. I want you to entertain me and my guests with a story," said the Wizard. With that he slapped his hands in quick succession and the six dancers dispersed, scurring off to the sides of the room.
Macadam starred out to the room of expectant faces that were clearly eager to hear what tale he had to tell. He trembled, not only at the thought of having to tell a story to a room full of strangers but to have to tell one that would please not only the Wizard but all of his guests as well.
He took a deep breath, stepped forward, summoned the strength from within him and took advantage of the only opportunity he had to be heard.
"My tale is one of truth and is about Linus Bartleby, the greatest magician in the world," he began to a chorus of gasps.
From the corner of his eye Macadam could see the bubble of anger forming on the Wizard's ruddy cheeks. It was the effect Macadam had hoped for.
"He was a legend and everywhere he went the people adored him. But he was a good magician. He helped those that most needed it. He gave food to the hungry, water to the thirsty and a home for those with nowhere to live. But the other magicians in the world were jealous of his fame. One day they captured Linus and threatened him to relinquish his powers or face death. Linus, without a glimmer of fear, said that he would only if the magicians could prove they were truely powerful enough. He told them to all cast a vanishing spell on each other. The magician who was left would be crowned the best."
The Wizard arose abruptly, his face purple with rage and his cheeks puffing. "I will not be outdone by this...Linus," he huffed. "I have never heard of such a tale but will heartily say that I am the most powerful wizard in the land."
One of the Wizard's guests rose suddenly and thumped his fist on the table. "That is an outrage I am the most powerful."
"No, I am," said another.
Before long the Wizard's grand reception room was filled with angry, over-inflated claims of grandeur and superiority.
Macadam stood back and waited for what he was sure was the inevitable.
One by one each of the magician's cast fiery bolts of light across the room. They bounced off the walls, brought down the silk veils from the ceiling, set fire to the tables and chairs until puff after puff, each and every magician disappeared, including the great Wizard himself.
Macadam sat back grabbed a leg of pork and feasted like he had never feasted before.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

The pursuit of fame

"He's out there, Sam," Captain Hammer said as he pulled his slimline telescope from its leather sheath and stared out across the ocean. "And I'm going to catch him."
"What's out there?" Sam asked, hesitantly, shuffling from one foot to the other.
Captain Hammer paused. "My future," he said. "All nine hundred pounds of him."
Captain Hammer snapped the telescope shut and marched below deck leaving Sam with a bemused look on his face.
"He's in pursuit, lad," snapped Grim the deckhand, "of the elusive Mambo Snapper, and its fame and fortune."
"Mambo Snapper?" said Sam.
"Yeah, though everyone onboard thinks it's a myth, an old sea legend. I mean who would believe that a fifty foot fish exists."
Sam stared out at the stern of the ship. His jaw dropped. "I do. Because it's chasing us."

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Don't trust your imagination

It was the best invention Milo had ever come up with. Far better than the automated dog walker or the self cleaning hamster cage. He marvelled at his computer chip creation; 'Jerry the homework completer'.
On the first day of term he fired Jerry up, ready to do his duty. He pressed the start button, watched as Jerry's arms jerked into life and his glassy eyes turned from cold black to electric blue.
"First assignment, please," said Jerry in a monotone, tinny voice.
Milo handed Jerry his homework diary, his english text book, a pad of lined paper and a pen.
Within three minutes Jerry had scrawled words across two pages; the answers to three questions on Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
"Cheers, Jerry," Milo said as he took the pages from Jerry's tweezer fingers.
Milo had high hopes. He knew it was risky, not just because Jerry's handwriting didn't match his own but that he had no idea if Jerry had provided plausible answers to his essay questions. Not too accurate, but accurate enough to gain a good grade. He knew he wasn't the brightest light in the room when it came to arts. He was better at science. So he never bothered to read what Jerry had written before he handed it in.
When the moment came for Mrs Norris to hand back the essays Milo felt his palms get sweaty. His heart quickened and his breath became rapid and shallow. He was sure he'd been caught out. As Mrs Norris walked towards him a wry smile formed on her face.
"Well, well, Milo," she said. "Your essay was the biggest surprise of all, especially as it was the same sentence written over and over again."

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Crop circles

"Who is she, Pa? said Tom as he stared through the iron bars of Clear County's only jail cell.
"No idea, son," said his father as he unclipped his gun belt and slung it on the table. "Cricker brought her in."
Cowering in the corner, with her knees clasped to her chest, was a young girl in dirty rags and with a mop of tangled, sandy hair on her head.
When Tom's eyes met hers his body jolted, like a bolt of lightening had just speared him. In his mind's eye he saw his mother mopping his brow when he was sick.
He shook his head.
"Where did he find her?" Tom asked.
"Wandering through one of Hamley's corn field. Damn old coot thought she was making crop circles."
Tom laughed. "Like Mom," he muttered.
"Now, now, Tom, what did I tell you about dragging up the past. It's a whole world of hurt. You've gotta move on. She would have wanted that."
Tom sat back on a wooden bench, unable to take his eyes from the girl.
"I wish you had let me see her, before she died."
"What good would that have done?" said Tom's dad as kicked back and lit a pipe. As ribbons of wispy smoke curled through the air the girl stood up.
She unfurled her body and in doing so her tangled hair blossomed into flowing golden tresses, and her tattered dress burst into a riot of floral colours. As she stepped forward she held her arms out toward Tom.
Mesmermised, Tom walked towards her, drawn in by her angelic form and her soft voice, like a feather on a breeze.
"Goodbye Tom," she said.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Lost in translation...

May has been a difficult month. If you read my post of April 30th you'll probably understand why.

http://imaginaryscrapbook.blogspot.com/2009/10/jasper.html


After a battery of tests, medications and waiting, it turns out my wee man has canine multiple sclerosis. It's incurable and will soon take his life. He's lost so much muscle mass in his back and bum I can feel every bone. He drags his claws on the ground when he walks, struggles to get up off the floor, is completely deaf, has hypothyroidism, hip dysplasia, chronic atopy and arthritis. But what is more heartbreaking is knowing that one day soon he'll lose the ability to use his back legs, bowels, bladder, front legs, lungs and his brain. I've already had a preview when I caught him by surprise one afternoon. He saw me and tried to run towards me but lost control of his back legs and dragged the whole lower half of his body up the road to meet me. The sight was more heartbreaking than words can describe, especially when he's been with me for almost 13 years!

So I've written May off as a non-starter in my project. Anything I have written will be posted in June, when I will restart my endeavour. I am naturally sad and frustrated at the break in my progress. But as committed as I am sometimes there are just more important things in life, and a close companion is one of them.

To all my followers, thank you for your support and I hope you'll continue to keep reading.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Jabba

Pet in the vet,
old and worn,
do I set him free
to heavenly roam?

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Third world

Kevin built a time machine
not bad for a tall, spotty teen
every night instead of sleep
he'd make a distant space time leap
seeing things in his future
wondering if he's rich or poor
but one night he travelled too far
and saw the death of the sun star
a mighty bang he did see
a chance to start world number three

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Little record

Swishing tail
and tiny hooves
now listed in the record books

Could he be
the smallest horse?
according to Guinness of course

Either way
he is too cute
little pinto Brute

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Gilbert and Gerty

Gilbert was laid on the grass
sadly his long life had past
Gerty wouldn't leave her mate
knowing what would be his fate

Crows approached with greedy eyes
but Gerty she was much too wise
she stood beside him faithfully
and fended off the black bullies

They lunged at her, their beaks were wide
hoping to peck at his hide
but Gerty jumped into the air
and whacked them with her tail of hair

You might think she was mighty large
to be able to take such charge
but don't be fooled by your mind
it was a squirrel that was kind

Monday, April 26, 2010

Fur..evenge

In a land turned upside down
humans didn't wear the crown
all those years subservient
animals were discontent

Tired of being stripped down bare
just so humans wear their hair
animals now in control
turned the tables on their role

Sitting meek below the chain
humans now no longer vain
made to atone for their deep sin
for animals now wear their skin

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Run in the sun

Jelly beans and telephones
lots of people jarring bones
start to finish, it's a race
who is going to set the pace

Young and old, tall and small
come together, one and all
Tower bridge and Cutty Sark
they all love this running lark

Some will finish down the Mall
others they may just fall
but no matter how many start
the best thing is just taking part

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Sleight of hand

Cally had always been repulsed by the withered hand her father kept in a glass box. It looked like a giant, wrinkled spider. She hated spiders.
"Why do you have to keep that thing?" she said, slumped over one of the tables in her father's pub, staring at it with a disapproving eye.
"Because it's part of the history of 'The Highwayman's Inn. It brings in visitors; and visitors mean money," her father huffed.
"I don't like it. It's creepy and just plain weird that people want to come here to see a severed hand," she retorted, turning to look through the window at the blizzard raging outside across the moorland.
"Not just any severed hand."
"Yeah, yeah, I know. It belonged to Red Crow, the notorious rogue gambler who had his hand chopped off for cheating the pub landlord out of five guineas," Cally recounted like a mantra.
No sooner had she said it there was a sudden smash behind the bar. Both her and her dad leapt back in fright.
"What was that?" Cally quivered.
"It was just a bottle," replied her dad. "It must have been unstable on the shelf."
Cally sat back on one of the wooden chairs, her heart thumping in her chest. She turned to look back at the thing in the glass case, only to find the door to the case open and the hand missing.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Queenie

There once was a girl called Queenie
who was a troublesome genie
she lived in a lamp
that was so terribly cramped
it squished her til she was quite teeny

Thursday, April 22, 2010

A cure for snoring

There once was a boy called Torr
who every night he did snore
in total despair
his sister grabbed his hair
and dragged him into the house next door

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Sticky Willy

There once was a boy called Willy
who was so incredibly sticky
he spent all his days
rolling in stones and hay
but found picking them off was quite tricky

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Freestyle mutt

Little dancer
furry paws
if he had feathers
he would soar

Graceful doggie
he's a winner
if he keeps on going
he'll be gettin' thinner

He does salsa
he does ballet
adding ballroom
to his tally

Wish my talent
could compete
but I'm cursed with having
two bungling left feet

Monday, April 19, 2010

Born to be wild

There are in the Highlands
wandering wild
the last of the big cats
meek and mild

They skulk in the shadows
timorously
so quiet and quick
nobody can see

Like oversized tabbys
with blunt,stubby tails
and enough attitude
to put them in jail

With razor sharp claws
to bring down their prey
and a lethal bite
so forever they lay

They run at speeds
of thirty miles an hour
like African tigers
with explosive power

But less than four hundred
live in Scotland today
let's do what we can
so they don't go away

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Splat the rat

There once was a boy called Pat
who had a pet rat called Splat
til one day in a rage
he left open its cage
and Splat was eaten by Pat's cat

Friday, April 16, 2010

Face in a mountain

A face in the mountain
looking down from up high
a gaping mouth
and wide open eyes

A roar in the morning
spewing dust in the air
that floated far from
its cold island lair

Then all was silent
the giant was calm
refusing to do
the world more harm

It sunk back below
taking its ash spray
ready to roar
on some other day

Thursday, April 15, 2010

An unfortunate incident

There once was a boy called Brefyl
who often was very forgetful
when he got to his school
he felt quite the fool
forgetting to dress was regretful

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

A croaky problem

There once was a man called Morse
whose voice was incredibly hoarse
it took time to work out
what was causing this bout
but a frog in his throat was the source

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

The great escape

Forty years ago
three men flew into space
but on the second day
trouble they did face

There was a loud bang
onboard their spaceship
that signalled the end
of their planned moon trip

But all wasn't well
whilst floating high up there
the loud bang meant their ship
was running out of air

The men in Houston with
time ticking away fast
made a device that meant
the air inside would last

On the edge of their seat
the world did wait
wondering what would be
the astronauts fate

Everybody's prayers
were answered luckily
they all came home safe
to fly some another day

Monday, April 12, 2010

A fishy tale

There once was a girl called Trish
whose favourite pet was a fish
she loved it a ton
and dreamed to be one
one morn she woke and got her wish

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Collection of scabs

What do you do with your scabs
when you pick them from your skin
flick them at annoying girls
or stick them in the bin

Or perhaps you store them in a jar
to compare with your best mate
who'll claim he had far more
that your little jar of eight

Or maybe you just sprinkle them
over your sister's beans
trying to repulse her
by any way or means

But whatever you do with them
never must you fear
as long as you have cuts and scraps
your scabs will heal you clear

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Pretty Paris

When Paris Harris bat her lashes
boys came flocking to her side
they buzzed like bees around her
there was nowhere she could hide

'Oh woe is me' she said plainly
'for this affliction set on me,
to have a face so pretty
everybody wants to see'

But then one day a stranger
walked bold into her math class
a new girl who went by the name
of Becky-Lee Bluegrass

Becky-Lee with tight blonde curls
and eyes of sparkling blue
stole all the boys' advances
and made Paris number two

Friday, April 9, 2010

Brave little Kevin

Kevin was a Tawny Owl
who was afraid to fly
it wasn't that he couldn't
he didn't like to be so high

His owner tried in vain
taking Kevin out each day
but when he let him go
Kevin wouldn't fly away

Then one day Kevin's mate
the feisty Barn Owl, Kyra
zoomed off on her daily hunt
and got tangled in telephone wire

Kevin panicked at the sight
of Kyra in distress
and dug down deep into his soul
for courage he possessed

She flapped and flailed
and squealed and squawked
til Kevin bold as brass
flew out like a brave hawk

'Don't worry, Kyra,' Kevin cried
trying not to look below
he flapped his wings and clenched his beak
to save his gung-ho beau

'You are so brave,' said Kyra, true
'to overcome your fear.'
'I'd do anything,' Kevin said
'to save your life, my dear.'

Thursday, April 8, 2010

The phantom hand

A fleshy, pulsing, living hand
crept across the floor
and climbed up to a handle
to open the lounge door

Its goal? to find a body
to graft itself upon
longing to revive
a life that was long gone

It used its spindly fingers
to climb high up the stairs
hoping for an answer
to its nightly prayers

Cracked and dirty
finger nails
grabbing at
the staircase rails

Scratching varnish
from the wood
scuttling
as fast as it could

At a doorway
hand stopped dead
breathing sounds
came from a bed

But as it crept
into the room
it roused the person
from its tomb

Sleepy eyes
so wide and clear
makes the hand
now disappear

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Canteen chaos

It started with an accident
Kay slipped on orange jelly
her dinner tray flew through the air
and landed on Bill's belly

He was angry at being smeared
with chips and tomato sauce
so what do you think he did?
retaliate, of course

Bill grabbed a dumpling in his hand
threw it across the room
where it splattered on the head
of Catriona Bloom

Catriona screamed and swept
the trays off her dinner table
sending glasses of ribena
spraying over Mabel

Mabel leapt up on her feet
it gave her quite a fright
but then a smile drew on her face
and screeched 'lunchtime food fight'

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

The furry king

When Rupert the first of Amberland
sadly passed away
in his will he declared his heir
was the dog he took in as a stray

Pixie was scruffy, his body was bald
a tuft of hair grew on his head
the poor little dog had little idea
what would happen in the days ahead

Rupert's son was quite displeased
with his father's choice
he yelled and screamed and stamped his feet
no-one would hear his voice

So one night the human prince
crept up on Pixie's bed
but before he could unleash his wrath
Pixie awoke and fled

Cowered in a little nook
out of sight he stayed
until the royal military
took the prince away

The townsfolk they all cried with joy
they loved King Rupert dear
and were delighted to have
little Pixie as their heir

Monday, April 5, 2010

Carrot top

Suki Bonner bet her brother
to eat carrots for a week
Ramsay Bonner was quite honoured
to prove he wasn't meek

Determindly and quite gladly
he took on the great challenge
but ate so much, like a rabbit in a hutch
his skin turned bright orange

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Mutiny of the bunny

The easter bunnies had enough
of carrying their eggs
so heavy were they in their bags
they tired out their legs

So mutiny they did one year
refused to do their work
collected all the eggs
and considered them a perk

With buddha bellies they sat proud
full till they were sick
chocolate coated whiskers
with their tongues they did lick

Though they were proud of their haul
they felt so awfully guilty
about the children who lost out
on their Easter booty

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Kermit the hermit

Kermit was a hermit
who lived inside a shell
he wouldn't come outside
until someone rang his bell

He didn't have friends
or any family
he lived all alone
feeling melancholy

Then one day the churning sea
washed him out of his house
where he met another hermit
who became his lifelong spouse

Friday, April 2, 2010

Breakaway

T'was the night of April Fool
when the weather turned somewhat cool
the whipping wind began to howl
the lashing rain was truly fowl

The coast of little Andrews town
was beat so hard that it did drown
from cresting waves of foaming steel
they washed away Hardy the seal

Laurel, she was mighty sad
swimming alone in her pool pad
til Hardy leapt out of the sea
to the sound of Laurel's plea

Like a silver bullet he
sacrificed a life at sea
and cried out in a joyful tone
"I'll never leave you all alone."

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Is it true?

Reported on the news today
a new planet found far away
beyond the shores of old Pluto
a gassy mass with a fiery pink glow

No-one knew that it was there
to find one was extremely rare
who dropped it down into the sky
circling round the sun on high

Jagged bolts of lightening fire
into space for you to admire
on the surface Squidgits roam
looking for a squidgy home

Is it false or is it true?
can you tell me if it's new?

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Longing for June

Blustery winds, start of school
Autumn is nobody's fool

Chilly hands, numb fingers
in the Winter cold lingers

Wet feet, soggy toes
in the Spring these are your woes

But Summertime is most divine
Beaches,ice cream and sunshine

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Able Mabel

Mabel had a special talent
her arms and legs were rubber
she could stretch them like elastic
and wibble them like blubber

They came in very handy
when her mother locked them out
she'd squeeze her arms through the letter box
and twist the lock about

But in the middle of the night
she'd twist and turn in bed
and wake up in the morning
with her arms tied round her head

Monday, March 29, 2010

Bold Blue

Chelsea Blue
was happy to
be teased about her nose

She didn't care
the girls would dare
to say it was a hose

It's part of me
she said plainly
an' will always be on show

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Feather clouds

It was a record breaking fight
British kids it did excite
pillows split to their delight
and feathers did block out the light

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Fluff Happy

Fluff Happy was afflicted with
a gaseous behind
it was the most explosive
you could ever hope to find

Wherever he did go he cracked
the most repellent farts
so toxic and so smelly
people fled to other parts

He tried so hard to change his ways
stopped eating sprouts and beans
but no matter what he did
his bum was still a fart machine

Trees and bushes began to wilt
people's hair fell out
nothing within fifty miles
of Fluff would ever sprout

Til one day an inventor
said that Fluff could be a source
his bum could power factories
and save the planet, of course!

Friday, March 26, 2010

Flat Kat

There once was a girl called Katticus
who thought she was a platypus
she jumped in a pool
oh my what a fool
with no water inside she was SPLATypus

Thursday, March 25, 2010

View from the top

Little box floating on high
tell me what you see
mushroom clouds above
and below it deep blue sea

Little box, your digital eye
encased in a silver suit
destined for the stratosphere
photographs to shoot

Little box with Space above
a lonely traveller too
the cusp of Earth within your sights
wish I was there with you

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Bill the beetle

Bill the beetle travelled
quite a long way from his home
inside a box of bananas
for so long he did roam

A giant of the rainforest
an endangered little bug
when he arrived in London
people there could only shrug

It was a shock that he survived
the chemicals and cold
but hardbacked Bill was mighty tough
with guts that made him bold

From there he went to Cambridge
and into an insect zoo
where keepers could make sure
that old Bill made a friend or two

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

A divine game

They didn't know what caused the hail
the size of balls blown with the gale
but up on high throughout the day
the gods above, golf they did play

Monday, March 22, 2010

Fly me to the moon

There was a boy called Willie Fry
who unlike others he could fly
day by day he would try
to fly higher into the sky

His efforts made him mighty proud
when once he reached a fluffy cloud
atop he stood and he avowed
"Moon next" he cried, happy and loud

Launching into deep, dark space
he finally reached his happy place
the moon that only had one face
where he could rest with eternal grace

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Bonebreaker

There once was a boy called Jones
who wanted to break all his bones
when he snapped a wee toe
the pain began to show
and his sister cried "go break your own"

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Cloud climber

There once was a boy called Stroud
who loved climbing so much he felt proud
when stood on a mountain top
he didn't want to stop
so he hitched a lift up on a cloud

Friday, March 19, 2010

SAVE A LIFE

It doesn't take a lot you know
to help someone today
five pounds for a meshed bed net
to keep malaria at bay

You can help to save a life
the old, the young, the poor
they deserve the chance to live
to feel the pain no more

Please donate to Sport Relief. Every little helps!

Thank you

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Adrenaline junkie squirrel

There once was a squirrel called Toestar
who loved riding roller coasters
he was banned from the rides
but Toestar he defied
cos he couldn't read the warning poster

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Lucky bones

Lucky Bones was a ghost with the most
he would haunt the live long day
and though he was alone in his church
he much preferred it that way

But year by year the church grew old
its stone crumbling to sand
and before Lucky could stop it
his church was long lost to the land

For decades after he wandered around
looking for a new home
but because he was all alone
he knew solo he'd roam

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Dog's dinner

There once was a dog called Rymond
who ate a twelve thousand pound diamond
when it came out of his tummy
it was worth so much money
his owner could buy all of Ireland

Monday, March 15, 2010

The witch of Manorly Coast

Johnny was obsessed with ghosts
until one foggy night
he camped out at Manorly Coast
and got a nasty fright

Legend told of ghosts and ghouls
that moaned and wailed and wooed
and a witch, ugly and cruel,
that turned you to worm food

Johnny was too curious
he had to know the truth
but the witch was furious
to see him beneath her roof

Upon his sight she cast a spell
with eyes a fiery glow
and on his knees poor Johnny fell
into her lair below

When he woke he was on fours
with aching, snarling teeth
and giant paws with gleaming claws
he happily unsheathed

The witch knew not what she had done
when he sliced off her head
and dumped it in a cauldron
and proclaimed the witch was dead

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Moan Joan

There was a young girl called Joan
who did nothing each day but moan
she annoyed all her friends
drove them right round the bend
so they left moan Joan all on her own

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Buds of Spring

Little seedling we do sow
into the ground for it to grow
a little water, a little sun
that's all you need your work is done

Day by day a little more
your shoots and leaves begin to soar
flower buds begin to bloom
and wash away the winter gloom

Friday, March 12, 2010

Talk of the town

There once was a rabbit called Hattie
who was so persistently chatty
she sat in her hutch
and chatted so much
the other rabbits all called her batty

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Mr Scruffles

Mr Scruffles, baby miracle
the elephant with no beat
till the day that he was born
and death it appears he did cheat

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

House of cards

Inglebert was an eccentric
who lived in a house of cards
until a stiff wind blew it
down the road five hundred yards

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Hughie the cutie

Hughie was a Kune Kune
living on a farm
he had his own special pen
so he wouldn't come to harm

The other pigs around him
were jealous of his beauty
he attracted so much attention
everybody called him 'Cutie'

Then one night when it was dark
the pigs plotted and schemed
they broke into poor Hughie's pen
and made little Hughie scream

His curly tail quivered and shook
and he backed against a stone wall
as the pigs approached lightening struck
and made bacon out of them all

Monday, March 8, 2010

To pee or not to pee

Bruno was a naughty dog
when his owners were at work
on Monday's in the kitchen
he dined on Sunday's roast pork

He didn't know he had done wrong
he did it all the time
he just wanted to fill his tum
how could that be a crime

But afterwards another urge
took hold of his weak mind
he needed it as much as food
water, he had to find

His own dish it was licked bone dry
but knew where there was water
he stuck his head in the toilet bowl
and drank more than he oughta

When he was full he felt a tingle
that made him hop and prance
the only way he could relieve it
was to pee on his mum's plants

Sunday, March 7, 2010

When am I?

Halley's comet passed on by
so clearly visible to the eye
it was embroidered in a tapestry
so centuries later the world could see

Then in October at Hastings
old Harold got a right pasting
he had no idea he would die
from an arrow in the eye

Upon his death the Duke of Normandy
was crowned England's King on Christmas day
he reclaimed what he though was his
and so ended the dark ages

Can you guess what year this is
in my little history quiz?

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Dot and stripes

Dotty was a little white horse
alone in a herd of Zebra
she wanted to be accepted of course
and roam with them on the savannah

But Dotty lacked the deep black stripe
to mingle with the herd
they said she wasn't quite the type
they said she looked absurd

But one day it hit her with a smack
the answer lay in the wallow
she painted mud stripes across her back
and the herd finally let her follow

Friday, March 5, 2010

Where am I?

I'm on a living mountain
with an internal fountain
which in seventy-nine AD
exploded mightily

On the coast of Italy
it destroyed homes terribly
killed up to twenty thousand
and lasted nineteen hours

It has two angry sisters
both earthly blisters
on islands near
they too are feared

So where am I
where I might die
can you guess
this natural abscess

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Chicken fight

George and Mildred had enough
their poor life was mighty tough
every night a fox appeared
who filled them with feather-trembling fear

They huddled by each others side
looking for a place to hide
from the fox's beady eyes
eyeing them as a prize

Then one night George took a stand
he wanted to get the upper hand
so when the fox, to his cage, came near
George reached out his neck and pecked its ear

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

What am I?

I live high
up in the sky
I'm a solid mound
going round and round

There's nine of me
celestial beauty
some solid mass
some made of gas

I'm far away
in the Milky Way
round a hot star
I always travel far

Can you guess
more or less
what I am
from this exam?

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

A bum deal

There was a boy who was a Prince
he wasn't smart he was quite dense
in exchange for a quid
his sister did give
nothing more than a rusty one pence

Monday, March 1, 2010

Who am I?

Hidden beneath a golden mask
concealed by sand and time
a young boy was finally found
but was his death a crime?

Unearthed in twenty-two
surrounded by solid gold
the unfortunate ruler
died only eighteen years old

Then in twenty-ten
blood tests found out why
he wasn't murdered
he was poisoned by a fly

Sunday, February 28, 2010

In the air

There once was a boy called Pete
who had rubbery feet
he bounced so high
he touched the sky
and the ubiquitous spirit he did meet

Saturday, February 27, 2010

What will you be?

What will you be when you grow older?
write a novel
and become an author

What will you be when you are bigger?
get a licence
to operate a digger

What will you do when you leave home?
ascend to be King
and sit on a throne

Yes, you can be anything you want, take heed
self belief and determination is all you need

So what will you be when you are taller?
skipper a boat
and be a fish trawler

What will you be in twenty years time?
become a policeman
and solve lots of crimes

When you get older, what will you do first?
learn how to help people
and become a good nurse

If you have a wish, you know what you need to do
follow your heart and your wish will come true

Friday, February 26, 2010

Face fuzz

There was an old man called Gwyn
who had the hairiest chin
every night it would itch
and grow another inch
til it reached down as far as his shin

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Wobbly bits

There was a girl called Kelly
who woke up with a wobbly belly
when she looked in the mirror
the reason became clearer
her belly was made of pink jelly

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Toe jam

There was a boy called Cam
whose feet were thick with toe jam
he scooped it up with a spoon
by the light of the moon
and spread it on bread and sliced ham

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Geyser face

There once was a girl called Rose
who had a really runny nose
it gushed like a geyser
she was such a sneezer
her friends called it a snot hose

Monday, February 22, 2010

Great Rocky

Rocky was a giant dog
he stood two metres tall
he didn't have a nice warm home
cos no-one wanted him at all

He spent his days sat in a kennel
in a crumbling old dogs home
the owner kept him locked in
so he never got to roam

He wasn't old, poor Rocky dear
he'd only just turned three
a life inside a prison
wasn't where he wanted to be

He longed to sleep on cushions
dine on roast veg and chopped meat
but most of all he wanted
to curl up by someone's feet

Then one damp day a face appeared
through the foggy gloom
a beaming smile and eyes so wide
Rocky's heart did bloom

The girl rushed up to Rocky's pen
a tear poured from her eye
'He's the one,' she cried with delight
'He's so timid and shy.'

Rocky's breath caught in his mouth
he'd been down this road before
but the girl led him from his pen
to be hers forever more

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Down to the hollow

There once was a boy called Bud
who was always in need of a scud
but it was a bit extreme
to expect him to be clean
for he was a wallowing pig in thick mud

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Magic shoes

There once was a boy called Guy
with a gift to stop himself from being shy
with the girls he did schmooze
wearing his magic shoes
and drifted up into the sky

Friday, February 19, 2010

Rear explosions

There once was a boy called Bart
who managed to hold in his farts
til he ate beans in sauce
you know what happened of course
his butt exploded into a million parts

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Two left feet

There once was a girl called Trace
who thought dancing would be ace
with determination and grit
she put on her dance kit
but tripped and fell on her face

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Chubby bunny

Rupert was a chubby bunny
going for the record
the fattest mammal of them all
so he would be adored

His daily chow consisted of
Seeds and fruit and nuts
and chocolate coated carrots
anything to expand his guts

His dedication was so strong
he never missed a meal
the day before his weighing
he chowed down on a plate of veal

When Rupert's owner placed him
on the vet's flat weighing scale
his heart sighed, he'd been pipped
by a guinea pig from Sale

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Shrove Tuesday

There once was a boy called Grippa
who was a wicked pancake flipper
they flew through the air
stuck on ceiling and chair
and even on Grandma's fur slipper

Monday, February 15, 2010

Freaky fingers

There once was a girl called Ginger
who had ten bendable fingers
she could tie them into a knot
not one but the whole lot
but only her brother could untangle her

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Knock 'em out

There once was a girl called Olive
who had so much love to give
when she fluttered her lashes
boys fell on their asses
and raised their voices an octave

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Absent minded

There once was a girl called Bray
whose imagination went on holiday
hour by hour
she sat by the fire
dreamless and cold as clay

Friday, February 12, 2010

Shiny heads

There once was a girl called Claire
who refused to wash her long hair
her mum had enough
so she cut off the stuff
and now she's as bald as a pear

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Pup surfin'

There once was a dog called Pet
who loved to surf the net
but got carried away
spending his owner's pay
and purchased a house and a jet

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Aerial ears

There once was a boy called Piers
who had exceptionally big ears
they stuck out so far
like vehicle towbars
he could pick up TV in Algiers

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Pat's new job

There once was a girl called Pat
who turned into a ginger cat
it was hard to adjust
to a life where she must
all day long chase mice and brown rats

Monday, February 8, 2010

The wrong nose

There once was a girl called Rose
who insisted on picking her nose
in the middle of the night
something wasn't quite right
she had picked her sister's while she dozed

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Stinky feet

There once was a boy called Pete
who had the worse smelling feet
when he took off his shoes
the smell did effuse
till everyone passed out on the street

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Nostril missiles

There once was a boy called Reece
and every minute he did sneeze
till he realised with joy
he could hit next door's boy
by stuffing his nose with chickpeas

Friday, February 5, 2010

Hugh's Loo

There once was a boy called Hugh
who got sucked down into his loo
as hard as he tried
he continued to slide
down into a vat of fresh poo

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Copper Henry

Copper Henry was a cat
a sunbright ginger tom
he could see into the future
a talent he got from his mum

He knew when it would snow
and when it would rain
he even knew before
he was likely to feel pain

But best of all his talent
came in very handy
when he saved his friend, Jesmond
from his wicked owner, Mandy

Mandy would deny Jes food
and proper medi care
she wouldn't let him out to pee
and never combed his hair

Then one day when Jesmond pooped
across the kitchen floor
Mandy raised her hand to him
so he would do no more

Just as she swooped her rigid palm
to smite the cowering cat
Copper leapt to Jes's aid
and dropped something on the mat

Mandy took one look
and had a panic attack
the sight of the dead rat
made her fall flat dead on her back

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

If my dog could talk

If my dog was to talk to me
I wonder what he'd say
would he ask me for some food
or ask me out to play

If my dog was to talk to me
what would he say to you
would he shock you with a 'boo'
or say 'how do you do?'

If my dog was to talk to me
I know just what he'd utter
he'd tell me 'Cut the baby talk,
you sound like a total nutter!'

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Zombie feast

There once was a zombie called Wayne
who knew he should eat only brains
but contrary to the fable
this zombie was able
to eat nothing but cold veg and grains

Monday, February 1, 2010

Death by ice cream

There once was a girl called Maureen
made entirely of mint ice cream
as she melted away
all she could do was pray
she was inside a horrible dream

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Cartoon boy

There once was a boy called Bruen
who was inside a tv cartoon
when he started to itch
and he found rough hairy bits
he realised he was a baboon

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Pus face

There was a boy called Luke
who had an oozing plook
his sister couldn't look at it
she said it made her puke

Luke, he found it funny
scaring his sibling, Honey
so he squeezed it til it burst
and slid down her face all runny

Friday, January 29, 2010

Hairy faces

There was a one-eyed man called Costas
who was growing a bushy moustache
when he woke at first light
he got quite a fright
it got tangled up with his eyelash

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Fright night

There once was a new ghost called Blair
who just didn't know how to scare
his mum called it "tragic"
as he floated in the attic
"you'll never scare while you're up there"

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Mag's ma

Way down low
where the earth does glow
lived a man whose name was Mag

He lived with his brother
and his angry mother
and he called her his red Ma

Now Mag's ma's temper
was rarely just a whimper
she often blew off steam

It started with a grumble
and a tumble and a rumble
then she spewed forth her vitriolic mass

But it wasn't heated words
that he and his brother heard
it was heated lava and heated gas

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Hot chocolate

There once was a man called Brocklet
who built a grand house made of chocolate
but in the heat of the day
it melted away
so he didn't live in it he drank it

Monday, January 25, 2010

sticky little fingers

Once there lived a girl called Mandy
whose body was made up of candy
but to tell you the truth
she had such a sweet tooth
every night she nibbled her handies

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Eyes front or else!

There once was a young girl called Berty
who was so incredibly flirty
when she saw next door's boy
she bat her lashes with joy
but fell on her face and got dirty

Saturday, January 23, 2010

From pig to twig

There once was a girl called Fig
who ate like a ravenous pig
she was mocked by her friends
so she vowed to amends
and now she's as slim as a twig

Friday, January 22, 2010

Topper's trouble

There once was a bunny called Topper
who wasn't a very good hopper
so he tied metal springs
to his paws with hemp string
but bounced so high he came a cropper

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Friends forever

First day at high school
the pressure is on
to find good friends
you can rely on

Don't be drawn in
by the dazzle of cool
or you may wind up
looking more like a fool

Bad girls will get you
into a whole heap of trouble
your quest for acceptance
will become a burst bubble

Rich girls, they can be
particularly snobby
they look down their nose
and say that you're not worthy

But just when you least expect it
some girls will cross your path
a true connection, unbreakable
a bond to forever last

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Claire de lune

Claire de lune
Claire of the moon
shining bright
celestial sunlight

Looking down
on every town
this nightly guard
of the sun's backyard

Tracking the sky
with stars on standby
til morning time
when the sun does climb

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Electronic loser

There once was a young boy called Wade
who won every game that he played
til one day he got cocky
at a game of field hockey
and lost his cash in the arcade

Monday, January 18, 2010

So ever so pretty

There once lived a girl called Kitty
who thought she was awfully pretty
till her brother had said
she had such a big head
that the whole town looked on her with pity

Sunday, January 17, 2010

The ghostly gravedigger

There was a gravedigger called Jones
who dug holes for skeleton bones
but one spooky dark night
he got quite a fright
when he saw his name on a headstone

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Claire the bear

There once was a girl called Claire
who woke to find she was a bear
if that wasn't enough
she went into a huff
when she saw her butt covered in hair

Friday, January 15, 2010

One spare leg

There once was a girl called Toni
who was given a five-legged pony
it would she proclaimed
give her fortune and fame
til she found the fifth leg was a phony

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Canine olympics

An idea Rory had one day
for winter games his dog could play
he told his friends, they scoffed and jeered
and said that he was just plain weird

Rory branded those as cynics
who poured scorn on his olympics
"I'll show you, I'll be renowned,
when dogs come play from all around."

"I won't be beaten," he did trill
"I'm off to climb up Clatto hill.
Come one, come all I am the pied piper
for playful dogs so keen and hyper."

Behind him village dogs did trail
even ones so old and frail
they heard his call cut through the air
a call to arms, a brave fanfare

Atop the hill the games began
then down the hill the dogs they ran
his friends, in awe, were so struck dumb
upon the sight of dog slalom

Weaving bodies, wagging tails
white puffs of air each dog exhales
at the bottom there's a winner
the bloodhound owned by Stuart Skinner

"That's my mutt," cries Stuart clear
who grabbed his dog with the droopy ears
"What's the prize, what's my dog won?"
"Just chocdrops for him to feast on."

"What's the next race?" shouts a boy
jumping in the snow with joy
"Tobogganning," Rory he says
who tied the dogs to two small sleighs

Kids they scrambled, all on board
Rory's pleas they all ignored
faithful dogs with boys in tow
they dragged them through the foot deep snow

Faster, faster they sped down
each team hoping to take the crown
the sleighs however were much slicker
than the dogs where snow was thicker

The end result of this long tale
the sledging race sadly did fail
the sled ropes snapped the dogs got stuck
the boys slid into fresh cow muck

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

A day on the slopes

Snow and ice are here to stay
but not too cold to go and play
grab your sledge, put on your mitts
and brave the snowy winter blitz

Trudging through the knee deep snow
the walk uphill is long and slow
but at the peak the view is clear
of mountains and their white veneer

No time to stop and see the view
you've got to beat the sledging queue
hop on board, take up your rope
its time to slide right down the slope

Rushing wind and screams of joy
you've just sped past the neighbour's boy
now at the end, your toes are numb
and you've also got a snowy bum

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Bel's locket

Bel ran her forefinger over the fine, filigree on her Grandmother's silver locket and sighed. In her mind's eye she could see the withered face of Granma Bel chuckling back at her-her grey eyes that twinkled like dying stars, her smile that could melt chocolate at fifty paces and her long, molten-silver hair that cascaded over her shoulders.
Bel never thought the distance between them could ever be so great. But now as she stared at the locket and chain that she had only ever seen hanging round her Grandmother's neck, it felt like a universe separated them. How far do souls soar when the body dies?, she wondered, and where is heaven? in the clouds? near the moon? out by the far reaches of the milky way, where the comets swarm round the sun?
She took a deep breath and clutched her hand to her chest, trying to hold down the swell of sadness that rose inside her. All she could think about was the moment Granma Bel gave her that locket. She was sat on the brown velour armchair in her grandmother's lounge. The electric fire was on. The tinny smell of burning metal mingled with the heady aroma of Granma's Lily of the Valley perfume. On every shelf there were porcelain statues of ballet dancers poised on points-a reminder of bygone passions.
"Now remember dear," her grandmother croaked as she pressed the little locket into Bel's palm before curling Bel's fingers protectively around it, "Don't open this locket until I'm gone. You must promise me."
"But I don't want it, Granma. It's yours," Bel said, plaintively holding her hand out, hoping her Grandmother would take it back.
"I have no use for it now, Bel. It's yours."
Bel didn't want to admit it at the time but she knew her Grandmother wouldn't be around for very much longer. She felt her pain. When her Grandmother struggled to walk, Bel felt spasms in her legs. When she struggled to breathe, Bel's chest was tight. And when she could no longer eat, Bel's stomach seized from hunger.
She didn't want the locket, but pleasing her Grandmother was what she did want.
"Thanks, Granma."
Quite why her Grandmother was so sincere about her not opening it Bel wasn't sure. It wasn't something she considered, until now.
"I hope she's put a photograph in it," Bel said as she prised the silver clasp apart.
The moment it released the locket flipped open all by itself, and a silvery light, as bright as a full moon, swirled up into the air from inside it.
It caught Bel by such a surprise she stumbled back and fell onto her bed, dropping the locket to the floor.
"Hello, Bel, dear," said her Grandmother's voice.
Bel looked all around her, wondering where the haunting echo of her Grandmother was coming from. Was it in her head?
"I'm here," said the voice again. "I'm here in the locket. I'll always be with you."
"Granma?" said Bel.
"Yes, dear. It's me."
"I don't understand. You're gone, aren't you?"
"In body yes, but my spirit lives on."
Bel let out a laugh of elation, and tears began to pour down her cheeks.
"I miss you so much," spluttered Bel. "If I could give up this locket to have five more minutes with you I would, I swear it."
"There's no need for that. You can have as long as you need with me. Always. All you have to do is open the locket and I'll be here."
Bel brushed the tears from her cheeks. "You mean I can talk to you whenever I want."
"Yes."
"Forever?"
"And ever."

Monday, January 11, 2010

Honey the money-grower

There once was a girl called Honey
who wanted to grow lots of money
so within the soft ground
she planted one pound
which got nicked by a foraging bunny

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Bonebreaker

There once was a boy called Joe
who wanted to break his big toe
so he grabbed a big mallet
and attempted to whack it
but instead smashed the bridge of his nose

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Cameron's fourth birthday

When Cameron turned four
a party he did host
he invited sixteen friends
to a hall just off Fife's coast

That morning he woke up
to a flurry of fresh snow
falling from the sky
onto the icy ground below

His mother she was worried
that his friends wouldn't arrive
because the laying snow
made it so difficult to drive

The DJ had already called
to say his van was stuck
he was on his way to get a farmer
to dig him from the rut

As time ticked on the hall was dressed
so full of birthday cheer
then Cameron arrived
and wondered if his friends were here

The hall was empty, all alone
disaster on the brink
then one by one his friends turned up
Cameron was tickled pink

The music played while Auntie Kirsty
did some crowd control
but Cameron requested
that she play some Cheryl Cole

Then everyone had food
the theme was Cars, the disney movie
and Cameron's daddy joked that Grandma
burnt the adult's stovies

Parcel the parcel, musical chairs
many games they did play
then birthday cake came out
and Cameron blew the flames away

A few more games, a few more songs
then everyone said bye
"Thank you everyone for coming,"
was Cameron's reply

Then through the snow we all drove home
and Cameron was sad
til he remembered the wii was there
and then was rather glad

After a game of Wii Swordplay
slicing legs and heads and ears
Cameron opened all his presents
and that was it for another year