the laundry basket with all the smelly socks.
I told her that was cheating because I would never hide in a smelly place like that and so it didnât count and sheâd have to hide again.
So she did and then I couldnât find her AGAIN! Even her mum couldnât find her.
Thatâs because Gabby wasnât in the house, she was in the shed. Which is cheating too.
The trouble with people who cheat at hide-and-seek is they never admit it.
Especially Gabby. Sometimes, if sheâs been really cheating a lot, I tell her Iâm never going to play with her again.
Trouble is, she always shares her sweets with me, and sheâs always really good fun too. It was Gabby who taught me how to jump up and down on the sofa and shout, âHowzatcowpat!â at the same time. The first time we did it round her house on her mumâs big leather sofa. Now we do it on my sofa too! Only when my mumâs not looking though.
Actually. Thinking about it . . . Maybe I should have a little bounce on our sofa right now. Just to see if I really am getting better. Iâll do it extra quietly and Iâll whisper âHowzatcowpatâ instead of shouting it . . . just in case Mum hears!
Why donât you have a go on your sofa too? This is how Gabby and me do it.
Chapter 13
Twenty whopping bounces and ten Howzatcowpats without laughing! Thatâs really good! Gabby can never do more than six Howzatcowpats without laughing.
The trouble with laughing is it can make lemonade come out of your nose. Not when youâre doing howzatcowpats â when youâre in restaurants.
Once, when me and Gabby were at Pizza Heaven with my mum, Gabby stuck two marshmallow flumps in her ears and pulled a really funny face.
Trouble is, Iâd only just taken a drink of my lemonade, so when I laughed, my lemonade didnât go down the right hole. It went up all the wrong holes instead. Then my nose started fizzing and my eyes started watering and my mouth started choking.
Well, sort of choking and laughing at the same time, which is a really hard thing to do.
In the end, my mum had to call a waitress to help her pat me on the back. They made me stand up at the table in front of everybody.
The trouble with someone patting you on the back is, if they donât do it hard enough, it doesnât do any good at all, and if they do it too hard, it makes you sound like a seal.
No one had ever heard a seal in Pizza Heaven before, so everyone stopped eating their pizzas and looked at me.
Then Gabby got two dough balls and pretended my eyes had popped out and fallen onto the table, which made me laugh even more.
And choke and splutter.
In the end the manageress came out and took me to the toilets and made me drink a load of water out of the tap. Mum had to rub my back for about ten minutes before we could go back to our table.
Flumps are banned when we go to Pizza Heaven now. And dough balls.
Weâre still allowed lemonade, but only if we donât blow bubbles with our straws.
Which reminds me, I need to drink some more water. Mum says if I drink lots of water today, it will help flush all the dib-dab germs away.
Back in a minute!
Chapter 14
Have you ever blown bubbles in your lemonade with a straw? It sort of still works with water and itâs quite good in milk. But lemonadeâs the best.
I tried to do it in a really thick milkshake once, but my mum told me to stop being silly.
The trouble with being silly is it can give you scabs.
Not silly with straws â silly with skipping ropes.
At school the other day Gabby and I were doing skipping with Liberty Pearce, except we werenât doing the skipping, Liberty was. Gabby and me were doing the rope.
Anyway, Liberty said she was the best skipper in the school and she said she was the fastest. So Gabby and I went faster with the rope because we thought Liberty wanted us to, but when we switched to super-speed, Liberty wasnât
Dorothy L. Sayers, Jill Paton Walsh