1
A tiny little book
Andrew laid it on Gemmaâs desk. A cloud of farmyard dust puffed up in her face. The first thing she asked when she stopped sneezing was:
âWhere did you get that?â
âThe chicken gave it to me.â
âWhat chicken? How could a chicken give it to you? Itâs a
book
.â
It was, too. A tiny little book. The cover was just a bit of old farm sack with edges that looked as if they had been â yes â
pecked
. And the writing was all thin andscratchy and â thereâs no way round this â
chickeny
.
âThis is ridiculous! Chickens canât write books. Chickens canât
read
.â
âThe chicken gave it to me,â Andrew repeated helplessly.
âBut
how
?â
So Andrew told her how heâd been walking past the fence that ran round the farm sheds, and suddenly this chicken had leaped out in front of him in the narrow pathway.
âPounced on me, really.â
âDonât be silly, Andrew. Chickens donât pounce.â
âThis one did,â Andrew said stubbornly. âIt fluttered and squawked and made the most tremendous fuss. I was quite frightened. And it kept pushing this book at me with its scabby little foot â just pushing the book towards me whichever way Istepped. The chicken was absolutely determined I should take it.â
Gemma sat back in her desk and stared. She stared at Andrew as if sheâd never even seen him before, as if they hadnât been sharing a desk for weeks and weeks, borrowing each otherâs rubbers, getting on one anotherâs nerves, telling each other secrets. She thought she knew him well. Had he gone
mad
?
âHave you gone
mad
?â
Andrew leaned closer and hissed rather fiercely in her ear.
âListen,â he said. âI didnât
choose
to do this, you know. I didnât
want
this to happen. I didnât get out of bed this morning and fling back the curtains and say to myself, âHeigh-ho! What a great day to walk to school down the path by the farm sheds, minding my own business, and get attacked by some ferocious hen who has decided Iam the one to read his wonderful book âââ
âHer wonderful book,â interrupted Gemma. âHens arenât him. Theyâre all her. Thatâs how they get to lay eggs.â
Andrew chose to ignore this.
âWell,â he said. âThatâs what happened. Believe me or donât believe me. I donât care. Iâm simply telling you that this chicken stood there making a giant fuss and kicking up a storm until I reached down to pick up her dusty little book. Then shecalmed down and strolled off.â
âNot strolled, Andrew,â Gemma said. âChickens donât stroll. She may have strutted off. Or even ââ
But Andrew had shoved his round little face right up close to Gemmaâs, and he was hissing again.
âGemma! This is
important
. Donât you
see
?â
And, all at once, Gemma believed him. Maybe sheâd gone mad too. She didnât know. But she didnât think Andrew was making it up, and she didnât think Andrew was dreaming.
The chicken gave it to him.
She picked it up. More dust puffed out as, carefully, she stretched the sacking cover flat on her desk to read the scratchy chicken writing of the title.
Opening it to the first page, she slid the book until it was exactly halfway between the two of them.
Together they began to read.
2
The True Story of Harrowing Farm
It was a wet and windy night, so wet you could slip and drown, so windy no one would hear your cries. Only a snake or a toad would choose to be away from shelter on such a night. And that is why only the snakes and the toads saw the gleaming green light pouring down from the black sky.
We chickens saw nothing, of course. How could we? There are no windows in the chicken shed. If we had windows, our lives could not be ruled so well by the electric light