Just Tricking! (13 page)

Read Just Tricking! Online

Authors: Andy Griffiths

BOOK: Just Tricking!
6.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Ahhh!' I say, smiling. ‘I love it when it's nice and warm and fresh!'

I open my mouth very slowly. I put the teaspoon on my tongue and close my mouth. Then I slowly draw the teaspoon out and lick it clean, making sure I get every last drop. I close my eyes and sigh, as if I'm in heaven.

I open my eyes. I expect to see the seat next to me empty. I expect the old lady to be as far away from me as possible, and warning everybody else to stay away too.

But the seat is not empty.

The old lady is still there. Still watching.

‘Was that nice?' she asks.

‘It was beautiful,' I say. Tasted even better going down than it did coming up.'

‘That's nice,' she says. ‘I'm glad. Have some more.'

What?

If she'd said, ‘Let's take our clothes off and run up and down the aisle,' I would only have been half as surprised.

‘Um, okay, thanks. I will.'

I eat another spoonful. Only this time I finish with a big belch.

‘Excuse me,' I say.

‘Oh, don't mention it,' says the old lady. ‘In some countries it's good manners to burp after a meal. It's considered a compliment to the cook.'

This old lady is unshakeable. If she thinks this is normal, I'd hate to see mealtimes at her house.

This calls for some serious grossering-outering.

I get another spoonful and, instead of putting it in my mouth, I plonk it on top of my head.

‘Makes great shampoo, too,' I say. ‘Or should I say “sham-spew”?'

The old lady just nods.

I load up my spoon again, and this time I splatter spew relish all over my face. I rub it into my eyes, my cheeks, my ears.

‘I reckon it's just a great all-round beauty cream,' I say. ‘Do you find that gross?'

The old lady just looks on, a slight smile on her face.

‘No,' she says calmly. ‘In fact, I'd love to try some of this amazing food that doubles as a beauty cream. What do you call it?'

The penny drops.

I hold up three fingers in front of her face.

‘How many fingers am I holding up?' I ask her.

She pauses.

‘I don't know, dear. I'm blind. Why do you ask?'

‘No reason,' I say, trying not to gag from the stench of the spew relish, which I just know I'm not going to be able to get out of my skin and hair for months. ‘No reason at all. But I think I'm going to be sick again.'

‘Oh, you poor thing,' says the old lady, passing me another sick bag. ‘You poor old thing.'

anny and I are about to play the most wicked joke in history. We've been working on it all morning. We owe the idea to my mum.

Mum listens to the radio non-stop. It's always going in the kitchen. Wouldn't be so bad if she listened to something good, like Triple J, but she prefers the golden-oldie station Triple B. The B stands for Boredom. Talk about sad music. It's so sad and boring they have to run competitions all the time to bribe people to listen to it.

They've got this competition at the moment called Beat the Bomb. Every hour they ring up a listener and then start the clock ticking. Every few seconds, over the sound of the clock, a voice says ever-increasing amounts of money, like ‘One hundred dollars . . . one hundred and fifty-five dollars . . . two hundred and three dollars . . .' and so on. The listener has to tell the DJ when to stop, and if they do it before the bomb explodes, then they get to keep that amount of money. It can last anywhere from a couple of seconds to half a minute.

The trick is having the nerve to let the clock tick for as long as possible. I've never heard anyone win more than a few hundred dollars, but still, that'd buy a lot of CDs, a heap of chocolate, and a lot of drag-racing at Timezone.

All you have to do to be in it is send a letter with your name and telephone number into Triple B. If they draw yours from the barrel they ring you and you get a chance to play.

I've sent in about fifteen envelopes. I reckon that makes me fifteen times more likely to win. I don't think anybody else would be clever enough to have thought of that.

But in the meantime – while I wait for them to call – Danny and I are going to have some fun. We've recorded the station signature tune, a couple of advertisements and a couple of songs. And I can do a pretty convincing imitation of a DJ when I try. We're going to ring Marvin Bonwick and pretend that he's about to play Beat the Bomb.

Why Marvin Bonwick? Because we always play jokes on Marvin Bonwick. He takes everything so seriously. We use his name whenever we get the chance. Like writing comments on the service evaluation cards at Kentucky Fried Chicken. We always write dumb things like: This KFC shop stinks. I wanted fish, but the cashier wouldn't give me any. She said you've got nothing but chicken. That sucks! Yours sincerely, Marvin Bonwick. P.S. What does KFC stand for anyway?

We always supply his full name, address and phone number. I'd give anything to hear what they say when they call him up to discuss his comments.

‘Let's do it,' says Danny. ‘It's ten past four.'

‘Okay,' I say. I pick up the receiver and start punching the buttons.

Danny is laughing.

‘Hey, shut up,' I say. ‘It's ringing!'

‘Hello?'

It's a woman speaking. Must be his mother.

‘Hello – it's Chris Robbins from Triple B FM,' I say in my radio voice. ‘Could I speak to Marvin Bonwick please?'

‘Yes, just a minute.'

‘Marvin!' she calls. ‘Telephone!'

‘He'll be with you in a minute,' she says. ‘Marvin!'

Knowing Marvin, he's probably doing homework.

Finally he picks up the phone.

‘Hello?'

‘Marvin Bonwick?'

‘Yes.'

‘Chris Robbins from Triple B FM here. How are you doing?'

‘Good mate . . . What did you say your name was?'

‘Chris Robbins. Your name's been drawn this hour to play Beat the Bomb.'

‘Beat the what?'

‘Beat the Bomb!'

‘What's that, mate?'

You know, our competition. You should know – you entered it. I've got an envelope here with your name on it.'

‘I don't remember doing that.'

‘Well, maybe a friend did it for you. Would you like to have a go?'

Yeah, mate,' he says. ‘No worries, mate.'

‘Well, stand by, we're about to go to air. I'll just play a couple of ads and a station ID and then you're on. Oh, and by the way, Marvin?'

‘Yes?'

‘Turn your radio off. We will be transmitting on a ten-second delay and it can get very confusing.'

I point at Danny. He presses the tape-recorder. It starts into a jingle for Cheapies carpet-cleaning service. I put the phone right next to the speaker.

‘I think we've got him!' I whisper to Danny.

The carpet ad finishes and one for a supermarket starts. Then the Triple B station ID comes on. It sounds really spacey – like comets and meteorites whizzing past your ears.

‘Triple B – taking you back to the sixties and seventies . . .' says the voice-over. The sound of the meteorites ends in a shower of xylophone notes. It's the only exciting sound on the whole station.

‘Good afternoon,' I say. ‘Chris Robbins with you on Triple B, and to play Beat the Bomb this hour we have Marvin Bonwick on the line. How are you doin,' Marvy?'

‘Good, mate.'

‘Great! What are you up to this afternoon?'

‘Nothing much, you know.'

‘Fantastic! Ready to play?'

‘Yes, mate.'

‘All right – now, you know the rules, Marvy?'

Other books

Betrayal by Julian Stockwin
A Mate for the Savage by Jenika Snow
We Take this Man by Candice Dow, Daaimah S. Poole
Quake by Jacob Chance
A Scots Quair by Lewis Grassic Gibbon
Betrothed Episode One by Odette C. Bell
Remember Love by Nelson, Jessica
Anita Mills by Miss Gordon's Mistake