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Zap was about to score! He darted towards the empty goal and nudged the grass seed ball forwards, ready to shoot. Suddenly Crunch took up position between the two goalposts. The huge stag beetle spread out his claws.
Slimy snails! thought Zap. How am I going to get the ball past him?
Then he had an idea. He zipped underneath Crunchâs shiny black body, between his legs and out the other side.
âWhereâs Zap gone?â said Crunch, peering between his legs.
âHere I am!â shouted Zap, nudging the ball into the goal.
Zap flew into the air, doing a loop-the-loop in celebration. He may be the smallest beetle in Spinnerâs Wood â but he was faster than the rest of his Bug Buddies.
âNice move,â Buzz the ladybird called. Zap landed on the soft grass. His best friend, Lurch the dung beetle, scuttled over to him.
âIâve seen beetles crawl over somebody to score,â he said, âbut never underneath!â
âI told you this was a good place for a game of Beetle Ball,â said Buzz. âThe short grass makes it perfect for Zapâs fancy moves.â
âWe can play here now that we donât have to worry about Spinner,â said Crunch.
A tingle of nerves ran through Zap. The Bug Buddies never usually played Beetle Ball this close to Shadow Creek. But since the evil spider, Spinner, had been trapped in a tunnel a few weeks ago, everyone in Spinnerâs Wood had livedpeacefully. Zap still kept an eye out for eight hairy legs, though.
After all , he thought, weâve defeated Spinner before and heâs always returned.
The four friends made their way over to Algae Pond. âPlaying Beetle Ball has made me hungry,â said Buzz.
Zap laughed. â Everything makes you hungry!â he said.
Buzz crawled off to search for a snack. Zap smiled as a group of pond-skaters glided over on the surface of the water. Their thin, brown bodies were held above thewater by four long, skinny legs.
âI wish we could play you at Beetle Ball,â one of them called.
âMe too,â said Zap, âbut we canât float on water.â
âI wonder if dung balls float?â said Lurch.
Zap chuckled. His best friend was forever talking about poo!
A pond-skater pointed a leg towards the other side of the pond. âHey,â he said, âI didnât know ladybirds could actually make things go spotty.â
Zap saw Buzz sitting on a rock which was covered in small, black spots.
âTime to play a trick,â said Zap, mischievously.
Zap, Lurch and Crunch flew across the pond, landing next to Buzz.
âOh no,â said Zap, pointing at the rock, âare you losing your spots?â Buzz spat out his snack.
He started scrabbling around on the rock.
âIâm only teasing,â said Zap. âYourspots canât really fall off. Anyway, you donât have this many. Youâve only got seven, remember?â
Lurch scuttled across the rock, examining the dark spots with a worried expression on his face.
âWhatâs wrong?â asked Zap.
âWeâd better be on the lookout for more of these,â said Lurch.
âWhy?â asked Crunch. âTheyâre just a bunch of spots.â
âDepends on who left them here,â said Lurch.
Zap felt a prickle of anxiety.
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When something mysterious happened near Shadow Creek, it usually meant that a certain spider was up to no good â¦
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The Bug Buddies flew through the wood, searching for more dark spots.
âThereâs some!â shouted Zap, pointing to a green and white hosta plant on the edge of a small clearing.
Lurch swooped down on the fatleaves, dashing from spot to spot, peering at each one.
âLook,â said Buzz, pointing his antennae. âTheyâre all along the bank, too.â
Zap looked round to see a trail of spots heading towards GonzoâsRock. Lurch hurried over to the trail. He
Alexandra Ivy, Laura Wright