The Bagthorpe Saga: Absolute Zero. Helen Cresswell. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Helen Cresswell
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Детская проза
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780008211721
Скачать книгу

      “You’re joking,” said William after a slight pause.

      “No,” said Mr Bagthorpe, “he is not, unfortunately, joking. I often wonder whether we should have brought children into a world of such colossal triviality.”

      “Well, if you don’t mind my saying,” said William, with true Bagthorpian ruthlessness, “I should think the sales of SUGAR-COATED PUFFBALLS will plummet when that gets out. Go into a fatal nosedive, I should think.”

      “SUGAR-COATED PUFFBALLS will be bankrupt within the month,” affirmed Mr Bagthorpe.

      “When’re you going?” Jack asked. He was going to miss Uncle Parker. He got on well with him, and could feel equal in his company.

      “Next week, we thought,” Uncle Parker replied.

      Mr Bagthorpe rose.

      “I must get back to work,” he said witheringly, and went.

      “I saw that competition, Mr Parker,” said Mrs Fosdyke then. “And d’you know, I nearly went in myself. Worked a slogan out, and all, I did, and never got round to sending it off.”

      “What was the slogan?” asked Rosie.

      “Well…” Mrs Fosdyke cleared her throat, stood up straight and twitched her overall. “Not very good. Not like Mr Parker’s. What I thought of was: ‘Puffballs in fields is poisonous but out of packets is delicious.’”

      There was a puzzled silence.

      “Er – what exactly…?” William groped for an explanation without wishing to appear completely nonplussed.

      “There’s these things grow in fields, see, like mushrooms,” explained Mrs Fosdyke, quite pink with the interest she was creating. “Look a bit like mushrooms, but if you was to eat them they’d kill you, you’d die in agony, my ma used to tell me. Fact is, I look at every mushroom I cook, I do, to be on the safe side. So you see I thought my slogan would be quite a good one, to let people know it wasn’t that kind of puffball.”

      “Mmmmm. Yes.” William tried to sound enthusiastic but came nowhere near it. “I don’t think that would have got you far, though. Too long, for one thing. And I don’t think the breakfast cereal people would want the word ‘poisonous’ in their adverts.”

      “But they’re not poisonous!” cried Mrs Fosdyke. “That’s the whole point!”

      “Anyway, it was a good try,” Jack told her. “I don’t think I could have thought of that.”

      “Oh well!” She shrugged and turned back to the sink. “I don’t pretend to be clever.”

      She began to rattle dishes, which she could do with the best.

      “I’ll go and do my violin practice, I think,” Rosie said.

      William followed her, in a drifting kind of way, hands in his pockets. He had had this kind of look about him ever since the Danish au pair, Atlanta, had left the previous week. If his ears had been the drooping kind, like Zero’s, they would have drooped.

      “I am glad,” observed Uncle Parker, “that I do not live in this house. Everybody is always doing something. Does anybody ever do nothing?”

      “I do,” Jack told him. “And Zero.”

      “Of course. Good for you.”

      “Rubbish!” said Uncle Parker briskly. “It would have made an old man of you. Where’s Grandma?”

      He wanted Grandma to know about his prize because she had a very low estimate of him. It had been very low indeed since the day, some five years previously, when he had run over Thomas, a cantankerous ginger tom who had, she declared, been the light of her life. He had been the light of no one else’s, having been given to scratching, biting and attacking from corners, and none of the other Bagthorpes held his extinction against Uncle Parker. Some of them actually thanked him for it.

      Uncle Parker had a secret admiration for Grandma and wanted her good opinion, though he would never have admitted this.

      “Grandma’s sitting in the dining-room,” Jack told him. “She’s feeling low and talking about Signs again. She’s going on about her Birthday Portrait and all that.”

      At Grandma’s Birthday Party the whole table had gone up in flames and burnt out the dining-room before the fire brigade got there. One of the first things to go up had been Rosie’s Birthday Portrait of Grandma, and ever since Grandma had taken this as a Sign, and thought it showed that the Fates, in some indefinable way, had it in for her. Every now and then she would go and sit on her own in the devastated dining-room and brood about this.

      “I’ll go and cheer her up,” said Uncle Parker.

      “You’ll only go and remind her of Thomas,” said Jack, “and make her worse.”

      “It’s my belief,” remarked Mrs Fosdyke, who put her spoke into the wheels of anyone’s conversation if she felt like it, “that Mrs Bagthorpe Senior is too drawn into herself.”

      “Drawn into herself, you reckon?” said Uncle Parker.

      “All that Breathing, for one thing,” went on Mrs Fosdyke, encouraged by the interest in her diagnosis. “It’s time she stopped Breathing and went in for something else. Something that’d take her out of herself more.”

      It occurred to Jack that if Grandma were to stop breathing, she would most certainly be taken out of herself – permanently. He knew, however, that what was being alluded to was not the common or garden kind of breathing that keeps people alive, but the kind of Breathing she had been doing daily since she had read one of Mrs Bagthorpe’s books about Yoga.

      “What sort of thing had you in mind, Mrs Fosdyke?” asked Uncle Parker.

      Mrs Fosdyke, hugely flattered by the unaccustomed interest being shown in her opinions, turned from the sink and wiped her hands on her pinafore.

      “What I think,” she opined, with the gravity of a Harley Street Man delivering a long-awaited diagnosis, “is that Mrs Bagthorpe Senior should take up Bingo.”

      “Bingo, by Jove!” Uncle Parker was not easily put off balance, but he was now.

      “Should what?” said Jack incredulously.

      Grandma was a notorious cheat at anything from Scrabble to Ludo. Sometimes, at the end of a game of Dominoes, for instance, she would say that a domino with five pips on it had six on it, or even three, and would play it accordingly. She also, at Snakes and Ladders, moved her counter up snakes and ladders alike, and never came down anything. At Monopoly, if she saw funds were getting low, she would declare that the Bank had forgotten to pay her £200 for passing Go on the last five rounds, and would snatch two five-hundred-pound notes out of the Bank before anyone could stop her. She got away with it by being so old and obstinate, and by being able to keep up an argument longer than anyone else. Mostly when the Bagthorpes wanted to play games they went into quiet corners to do it, out of her way.

      Mrs Fosdyke had been with the Bagthorpes long enough to know about Grandma’s cheating, but was clearly not unduly perturbed.

      “She won’t be allowed to cheat,” she said, shaking her head. “It’s not allowed.”

      “She will,” said Jack. “I bet she would.”

      “Can’t.” Mrs Fosdyke shook her head firmly. “They check up, see.”

      “She’d tell them they’d checked up wrong,” Jack said.

      “You can’t argue,” said Mrs Fosdyke. “There’s