E-Book, Englisch, Band 3, 288 Seiten
Reihe: The Grunts
Ardagh The Grunts in a Jam
eBook
ISBN: 978-0-85763-076-6
Verlag: Nosy Crow Ltd
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, Band 3, 288 Seiten
Reihe: The Grunts
ISBN: 978-0-85763-076-6
Verlag: Nosy Crow Ltd
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Roald Dahl Funny Prize-winning author Philip Ardagh is the author of The Grunts and National Trust: The Secret Diary series. He is probably best known for his Grubtown Tales, but he is author of over 100 books. He is a 'regular irregular' reviewer of children's books for The Guardian, and is currently developing a series for television. Philip Ardagh is two metres tall with a ridiculously big, bushy beard and size sixteen feet, making him an instantly recognisable figure at literary festivals around the world.
Weitere Infos & Material
Mr Grunt was staring at a squirrel and the squirrel was staring back at Mr Grunt, with his big squirrelly eyes. (The squirrel had the squirrelly eyes. Not Mr Grunt.) The squirrel was a rather mangy-looking thing. His tail looked less like fur and more like a large feather that had been used as a quill pen and played with by small, sticky-fingered children. The animal was up a tree in a hedgerow lining a narrow lane. He stood on a swaying branch that seemed far too thin to take his weight.
Mr Grunt was leaning out of the upstairs bedroom window of the Grunts’ truly dreadful caravan, his head framed either side by a curtain made from an old dressing gown. He was about the same height off the ground as the squirrel and – because the caravan almost took up the width of the lane – very close to the animal indeed.
It was obvious neither of them was going to blink and risk losing the staring match, so Mr Grunt decided to shout instead.
“Tree rat!” he yelled.
“Chrrrrrgggg!” chattered the squirrel.
“Clear off!” said Mr Grunt.
The squirrel quivered his tail in a don’t-mess-with-me manner and ch-ch-chattered some more.
The problem, in Mr Grunt’s eyes at least, was that he was convinced that this squirrel – this self-same squirrel, this one – had been following them for days and was a THIEF. Whenever they stopped for a break, the squirrel would sneak among them and take some of Fingers’ peanuts.
Fingers was the elephant who pulled the Grunts’ caravan. This job used to belong to the two donkeys – Clip and her twin brother Clop – but they’d retired. They now had a trailer all of their very own, hooked to the back of the caravan, and Fingers pulled them all along with a wave of the trunk and the greatest of ease.
Fingers’ favourite, favourite, food was stale currant buns. I suspect an elephantologist at the University of Elephantology will tell you that it’s far healthier for elephants to eat certain types of plant, but what Fingers liked best was BUNS. He was also partial to peanuts in their shells – they made good snacks and rewards – so Mr Grunt took a regular supply from the local grocery store.
I say “local” because, unlike the old days where home was wherever they decided to park their caravan, the Grunts now had a base. They lived in the grounds of Bigg Manor, a stately home that looked very impressive from the outside but which was little more than an empty shell.
I say “took” because he – er – stole them.
The nearby grocery store was called Hall’s Groceries and was owned and run by a woman called Miss Winterbottom. (The last Hall to work at Hall’s Groceries was Mr Jon Hall, who died in 1887.)
Mr and Mrs Grunt used to laugh about Miss Winterbottom’s name behind her back. Actually, they also used to laugh about her name to her left, to her right and directly in front of her. And they pointed.
One day, after about a year, Mrs Grunt came up with an extraordinarily clever and original nickname for Miss Winterbottom. She called her “Miss Cold Bum”, laughed out loud at her own genius wordplay and then promptly almost choked on the dog biscuit she’d just popped in her mouth.
Having been called “Cold Bum” by other children since she was about three years old, Miss Winterbottom was neither impressed by Mrs Grunt’s wit nor bothered by her name-calling. What she bothered by was her shoplifting a dog biscuit, which is why she thwacked Mrs Grunt with one of those wide, flat-brushed brooms.
Mrs Grunt was a large woman, often mistaken for a block of wood or an angry rock, so you could imagine thwacking people with brooms, but Miss Winterbottom was a very different matter. She’d won the southern heat of the Miss Dainty Lady Shopkeeper Contest on a number of occasions. She was very petite, had golden hair and was generally thought to be very pretty indeed. Stick a broom in her hand, though, and it became a lethal weapon.
THWACK!
“Argh!” shouted Mrs Grunt, spitting masticated dog biscuit everywhere. “Stop it!” (“Masticated” is a grown-up word for “chewed”, used by clever authors of children’s books.)
But Miss Winterbottom didn’t stop. “Stop…” she said. THWACK! “…hitting you…” THWACK! “…with this broom…?” THWACK! “Only…” THWACK! “…when you’ve paid…” THWACK! “…for that biscuit!” THWACK! She spoke with a beautiful sing-song voice, just loud enough to be heard above the THWACKS from the broom.
Sadly, what Miss Winterbottom didn’t know was that Mrs Grunt was just a decoy (if now a rather battered and bruised one). Her job was to keep Miss Winterbottom distracted while the thievery was happening at the back of her store. This was the first time Mr Grunt was making off with a large hessian sack marked “BEST PEANUTS”.
What their almost-son Sunny told neither Mr nor Mrs Grunt was that, once he’d found out what they were playing at, he’d snuck back to the store after closing time and posted exactly the right amount of money to pay for the peanuts through the letterbox. He’d saved up the money from coins he’d found on the roads over the months, and earned from doing odd jobs for less odd people.
(NOTE TO ANY READERS WHO MAY NOT KNOW OR MAY HAVE FORGOTTEN: As a baby, Sunny had been either stolen or rescued by Mr Grunt, who’d found him hanging by his ears on a washing line. Cute or what?)
So the Grunts now regularly took – and Sunny regularly later paid for – sacks of peanuts from Hall’s Groceries.
On more than one occasion, Sunny had wondered whether the Grunts secretly that he paid for the peanuts afterwards. On more than one occasion he’d found a surprising number of coins scattered along a single stretch of road. It was as though Mr Grunt might have gone ahead on that rusty old bike of his and tossed them there for him to find. But what would be the point of the Grunts nicking the nuts if they knew Sunny would pay for them straight afterwards? The excitement, perhaps? The thrill? The of it all?
Whether the Grunts did or didn’t know what Sunny was up to, it was some of these “BEST PEANUTS” from Hall’s Groceries that Mr Grunt was this staring-chattering-squirrel-up-a-tree was taking.
Mr Grunt leaned even further out of the bedroom window of the caravan. “THIEF!” he shouted (which was a bit rich, considering how he’d come by the nuts in the first place).
The squirrel studied Mr Grunt’s nose. Because Mr Grunt was angry, his nose was even redder than usual. It looked terribly bite-able. That was the word: . More than anything else in the world, that squirrel now wanted to bite Mr Grunt’s nose.
He needed to.
He to.
Nothing else would do.
With the rear-haunch wiggle of a lioness about to pounce on a passing gazelle, the squirrel launched himself at Mr Grunt, grabbed on to Mr Grunt’s face with all four paws and sunk his teeth into the target…
…the .
Mr Grunt screamed, grabbed hold of the squirrel and toppled forward out of the window, falling sideways from the caravan with a
With casual interest, Clip and Clop peered around the side of the caravan from their trailer hitched on to the back. They were both chewing slowly, and neither seemed surprised nor interested to see Mr Grunt – with a squirrel attached to his face – falling from the sky. They pulled their heads back in and got back to the important matter of eating, and of thinking donkey thoughts.
Fingers, hitched to the front of the van but stationary, turned his mighty head around, trunk high in the air, to see what all the fuss was about. He too didn’t seem fazed by Mr Grunt rolling around in the narrow strip of lane between caravan and hedgerow, with a furry grey thing clamped to his face.
Mrs Grunt threw open a window at the side of the caravan and stuck her head out. “Keep the noise down, mister!” she yelled. “Some of us are trying to watch the goldfish.”
The Grunts had an old television but it didn’t have a screen. They’d replaced it with a fish tank, which they liked to sit and watch. They found it soothing. Sunny liked them watching it too because it was one of the rare times of day when the pair weren’t arguing with each other or with someone or something else (such as a squirrel).
It was Sunny who came to Mr Grunt’s rescue. He’d been up front talking to Fingers, so had to push past the elephant’s tree-trunk-like legs to reach him. He thrust his hand inside the pocket of his blue dress – he always wore Mrs Grunt’s childhood dresses, dyed blue – pulled out a fistful of peanuts and threw them at his father and the squirrel.
Now, although the squirrel was enjoying biting Mr Grunt’s nose, the truth was that it didn’t match the – the delicious – of biting the nose. The lining-up of the nose in his sights had proved to be more exciting than the reality of the actual biting…
…and now he could smell peanuts. Lovely peanuts.
He let go of the raging Mr Grunt, snatched a peanut in his jaw and half-hopped, half-bounced (in the way that only squirrels can,...




