Read Nanny Piggins and the Daring Rescue 7 Online
Authors: R. A. Spratt
Tags: #Humanities; sciences; social sciences; scientific rationalism
âThey smell of unhappiness,' said Nanny Piggins.
âI think it's just mould,' said Derrick.
âIs there anything unhappier than living in something that is infested with mould?' said Nanny Piggins.
âPerhaps we should put them up,' said Samantha. âIt's going to be getting dark soon.'
âAll right, go on then,' said Nanny Piggins.
âWhat do you mean, go on?' asked Derrick. âAren't you going to help? You lived in the circus. Don't you know how to put up a tent?'
Nanny Piggins looked horrified.
Boris gasped. âNanny Piggins was a circus star. She never put up a tent,' he said. âThat is what carnies are for. They get very cross with you if you try to encroach on their job description.'
âDo
you
know how to put up a tent?' Michael asked Boris.
âNo, sorry. Bear claws aren't very good for doing practical things. Unless you count ripping people's throats out and I don't see how that would help in this situation,' said Boris.
âMaybe there are some instructions inside the bag,' suggested Samantha optimistically.
An hour later, after much bickering, snatching and several instances of accidentally stabbing each other in the eye with a tent pole, they all sat around a beautiful roaring fire.
Nanny Piggins had made the unilateral decision to burn the tents.
âThere,' said Nanny Piggins happily. âWe're much warmer now than we would be if we were inside the tents.'
âBut where are we going to sleep?' asked Samantha.
âWe'll just sleep in the open tonight,' said Nanny Piggins.
âBut what if it rains?' asked Michael.
âIt will save you having to have a shower in the morning,' said Nanny Piggins.
And so after they had toasted the seven bags of marshmallows that Nanny Piggins had stuffed in a secret compartment in the bottom of her handbag and told a few ghost stories (until Samantha begged them all to stop), they all went to sleep and slept for a total of 38 minutes before they were awoken by screaming.
âAaaagghhh-aagghhh-aggghhh!' screamed Boris.
âWhat is it? What's wrong?' asked Nanny Piggins as she fumbled for her torch.
âI heard a noise,' said Boris.
âWhat sort of noise?' asked Nanny Piggins.
âA little crumply noise,' said Boris.
âWhy on earth did that make you scream?' asked Nanny Piggins.
âWhat if it was a wild animal trying to sneak up and eat us?' said Boris.
âBoris, you're a great big bear,' said Samantha.
âI don't see why you need to bring up my weight issues,' wept Boris.
âNo, I'm just saying, what sort of wild animal did you imagine would attack you?' asked Samantha.
âA hungry one,' said Boris. âThey could put me in their larder and feed off me for months.'
âWe're two kilometres from the centre of Dulsford,' Derrick reminded him. âI don't think there are any wild animals around here. Except perhaps a stray cat, some frogs and maybe some snakes.'
âSnakes!' shrieked Boris, leaping into the air and into Nanny Piggins' arms, flattening her completely.
âWhy did you have to say snakes?' asked Nanny Piggins in a small voice. (It is hard to talk loudly when there is a 700 kilogram bear sitting on your chest.)
âOnly the small non-venomous kind,' said Derrick, trying and failing to be reassuring.
âBut they're so slithery and slimy,' wailed Boris.
âNo they're not,' said Michael. âThey're not slimy at all if you touch one.'
âHe wants me to touch a snake, Sarah, oh help me!' shrieked Boris.
To be fair, it was pitch-black and they were in the middle of the woods and it is much easier to degenerate into a hysterical weeping fool when you are isolated from civilisation.
Nanny Piggins eventually got Boris to calm down by throwing him in the stream. You might wonder how a 40 kilogram pig managed to throw a 700 kilogram bear anywhere. The simple answer is â levers. As Isaac Newton observed, with a lever long enough you could move the earth. Nanny Piggins only needed a twenty-metre-long branch to flip Boris into an icy pool.
âThere will be no animal attack tonight because I will not allow it,' declared Nanny Piggins.
âWhat about pygmies or cannibals?' worried Boris.
âWe're right next to town,' protested Derrick.
âAll right, what about really angry lost motorists looking for someone to give them directions?' panicked Boris.
âNo-one and nothing will attack us tonight,' promised Nanny Piggins, âbecause I will stay up to stand guard over you all.'
âYou would do that?' asked Boris, beginning to weep again. âYou're the best big sister a bear could have.'
âDo I need to throw you in the stream again?' asked Nanny Piggins.
âNo, thank you,' said Boris, snuggling down into his sleeping bag. One bath was enough for him for the day.
They all went to sleep again. This time they slept for several hours before they were again awoken by screaming.
âAaaggghh-aggh-aggh!' screamed Samantha. âWe've been kidnapped.'
The boys and Boris sat up and looked around. It appeared that Samantha was right. They had gone to sleep under the stars but they were now definitely shut inside a native hut.
The door burst open. Now everyone screamed, for there, silhouetted in the doorway, stood a native chieftainess, wearing a skirt made of long grass, a coconut bra and a wild headdress fashioned out of feathers, leaves and string.
âGood morning,' said the native chieftainess, and with a sigh of relief, they all realised it was only Nanny Piggins.
âWhat are you doing?' asked Samantha.
âWhat are you wearing?' asked Boris.
âHow did we get to be inside a native hut?' asked Derrick.
âOh, the hut,' said Nanny Piggins. âWhile I was watching over you last night I had a lot of time to fill, so I thought I'd whip up a wattle and daub structure. I saw a Cambodian stilt house once on a South-East Asian cooking show, so I had a rough idea of the architecture required.'
âWe're in a stilt house?' asked Michael.
âYes, so when you go outside, be careful,' said Nanny Piggins. âOtherwise you might fall two metres and break your leg.'
âWhy are you dressed like that?' asked Samantha.
âMy Chanel twin-set got wet when I was spear-fishing in the river,' explained Nanny Piggins. âBy the way, there's fresh trout for breakfast.'
âI thought you said you didn't like camping?' said Derrick. âThat it was degrading to the human soul?'
âJust because I don't like something doesn't mean I'm not very good at it,' said Nanny Piggins. âIn fact, when you're as very good at as many things as I am, statistically it is highly likely that you will be good at lots of things you don't like.'
âWait a minute. You said there were fish for breakfast. Surely you mean chocolate-covered fish?' asked Michael. âOr chocolate-stuffed fish. Or fish with chocolate sauce.'
âNo, just fish,' said Nanny Piggins. âI have decided that we are not going back to the house. We are going to stay here in the woods and live off the land.'
âBut how?' asked Boris. âThere are no marshmallow trees, or caramel bushes, or lemon bonbon flowers; none of the essential foods we need to survive. And what about honey? Where am I going to get honey if I can't go to a shop? Honey doesn't just grow in the wild!'
âActually, it does,' said Derrick. âYou can find honey in beehives, which are often in old trees or just hanging from a branch.'
âNow Derrick is going delirious with crazy talk too!' exclaimed Boris.
âWe'll be fine,' said Nanny Piggins. âWe'll eat the berries and fish we find in the woods, wear clothes we make out of water reeds, and entertain ourselves by playing “Last of the Mohicans”.'
âIt sounds like fun to me,' said Michael.
âIt does?' asked Samantha sceptically.
âHow do we start?' asked Michael.
âFirst of all I've decided that I am going to declare the woods to be a new country â Chocolatasia,' declared Nanny Piggins.
âHow is that going to work?' asked Samantha.
âWe're all going to be the kings and queens of Chocolatasia,' explained Nanny Piggins.
âThat sounds very democratic,' approved Derrick.
âAnd I shall be the Chief Queen,' added Nanny Piggins. âOnce we are our own country we won't have to follow any rules or laws, we can just do what we like.'
âAnd how will that be different to what we usually do?' asked Derrick.
Nanny Piggins thought for a moment. âWell, instead of having chocolate nine times a day â before, during and after every meal â we can eat five meals a day, allowing us a much healthier fifteen servings of daily chocolate.'
âI think I'm going to like living in Chocolatasia,' said Michael.
And he was right. Nanny Piggins, Boris and the children had a wonderful time creating their own civilisation. First of all they spent a good two hours running around the woods playing âLast of the Mohicans', which involved a lot of chasing each other with pointy sticks. Then they got hungry, so Nanny Piggins took their fish out to the main road to try to barter it for chocolate (they had tried eating the fish, but all agreed it was too disgustingly fishy for that. Fish needs to be thoroughly coated in breadcrumbs, cooking oil and tomato sauce to take away its essential fishy taste).
No-one on the main road wanted to eat fish either but Nanny Piggins found that threatening to hit people with fish if they did not go and fetch her chocolate worked just as well (she lent them Mr Green's credit card to do it).
So they were soon all sitting around the camp fire having polished off a 20 kilogram crate of chocolate and cake, discussing their satisfying morning.
âI think I'm going to like running a country,' said Nanny Piggins. âI've often thought I'd be good at it, but I always assumed I'd have to take over a pre-existing country to find out. I don't know why it never occurred to me to start my own country before.'
âBut, Nanny Piggins, what are we going to do about other essential things?' asked Samantha.
âWhat sort of essential things?' asked Nanny Piggins.
âWell . . . school,' said Samantha.
âYou want to go to school?' asked Nanny Piggins, astounded.
âI don't so much like the going to school part of going to school, but I do like learning things,' admitted Samantha.
âI like the eucalyptus drops you can get in the school canteen,' admitted Michael.
âHmm,' said Nanny Piggins. âI can see that the confectionary they sell in the canteen is probably the best thing about going to school. If you really want a school, we can always have one here. I'll even kidnap a teacher if that would help.'
âBut what about friends?' asked Derrick. âAt school we all had friends. It is going to be hard to make new friends if we are all running around the woods wearing clothes made out of water reeds.'
âAny friend who is going to be funny about spending time with you when you're wearing nothing but dried foliage is not a proper friend,' declared Nanny Piggins.
âBut what about electricity?' argued Samantha. âAren't you going to miss that? The cakes you have baked for us over the open fire have been delicious, but don't you miss having an electric oven?'
âPish!' said Nanny Piggins. âI can build a wood-fired oven. My cakes will be just as delicious as they have ever been. We are forming a new civilisation and that is final. I'm the Chief Queen and what I say goes!'
âThat's a shame,' said Michael, looking at his watch.
âWhat do you mean, “that's a shame”?' asked Nanny Piggins. âYou should be grateful to be a founding citizen of what is sure to be the Nanny Piggins Empire.'
âDon't you mean the Chocolatasia Empire?' asked Samantha.
âSame thing,' said Nanny Piggins.
âI just meant it's a shame because
The Young and the Irritable
starts in twenty minutes and we're going to miss it,' said Michael.
âRight, that's it,' said Nanny Piggins. âI declare Chocolatasia to be over. Pack up, we're getting out of here!'
Obviously Nanny Piggins, Boris and the children could not go home because their house was still full of toxic gas. And as much as Nanny Piggins loved
The Young and the Irritable
, even she was not prepared to risk asphyxiation just to find out if Ridge would finally pop the question to Bethany. (He had been agonising for weeks over whether he should ask her if she really was the reincarnated spirit of his mother's dog, Rosie.) So they were still camping, but they had found a much more satisfactory camp site than the woods.
âIt was a brilliant idea to rebuild our hut inside Hans' bakery,' said Derrick, during an ad break.
âThank you,' said Nanny Piggins. âI don't know why I didn't think of it earlier. If you are going to rough it and live off the land, the land inside a baker's shop is a much more sensible place to be than the woods.'