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  Monkey

  and Me

  Monkey

  and Me

  DAVID GILMAN

  This book is for

  Denise Ann Gibson

  And all the sick kids who have to be braver

  than the rest of us.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Author’s Note

  If you look at something, say a telephone pole, or a house, or even a dog sitting in the drive, and you close one eye, whatever you’re looking at is in a different place from when you had the other eye closed. That’s called perspective. If you close both eyes then you don’t see anything and that’s called stupid. But if, after rapidly opening and closing each eye, the object jumps left and right, and you’re doing this to Mr Peacock’s dog-from-hell who’s no longer sitting in the drive and is coming at you full tilt because, as everyone knows, staring at a dog is a direct challenge – then that’s called suicidal.

  “Jez! RUN!” yelled Mark.

  He’s my brother, and he had a different perspective. He was on the other side of the mesh fence on his way with his mates to try and finish off the last few remaining windows at the derelict Sweet Dreams Sweet Factory. It’s a place that made beds called Sweet Dreams, but they closed when the owner went to Thailand on holiday. I think he became what’s known as a Missing Person, because the police are still looking for him. Then someone bought it and added the words Sweet Factory. Which was a clever play on words because I often dream of being locked in the school shop and never having to pay for another Swizzle Lick, Juice Fruit Chew or my favourite, Tube Suck. But then they moved their business to China and lots of people around here lost their jobs, including Mum. She was on the Tube Suck quality control line, which is why I got lots of them. She said they were rejects, but that was only because some of the lettering on the packet hadn’t come out properly, like Tub Suck or Tube Su k. It still tasted the same.

  “Jez! Come on! FASTER!” everyone was shouting.

  The dog-from-hell was called Feather but she had a personality disorder and I think that was Mr Peacock’s idea of a joke, another play on words. Peacock’s Feather. I didn’t think it was that clever or even funny; I just thought it was stupid. But I suppose it depends on your perspective.

  Mark threw an empty dustbin – the old kind that Mum used to have before someone in Germany invented the wheelie bin and convinced every government in the world that we all had to have one, at least that’s what Dad says – as Skimp hauled me through the torn fence, which saved me from being savaged to death. And he also did Feather a favour, because the Dangerous Dogs Act would have meant that Feather would have been put to sleep. Not that she had ever, ever bitten anyone; she just liked to scare all the kids in the street. But you never know – one day she might get the taste for human flesh and then the street population of children would be shredded. Bits and pieces of bones and entrails would lead armed police to her lair next to Mr Peacock’s compost bin and then…

  “That was really dumb. You know you can’t mess about with that fleabag!” Mark shouted at me as I sat trying to get my breath back. Big wheezing gulps that made my chest feel as though it had sandpaper inside.

  “You can’t come with us if you can’t keep up!” Skimp said, though I know he didn’t mean it.

  “And stopping and doing things like opening and closing one eye,” said Pete-the-Feet.

  “It’s called perspective,” I told him.

  “This gang has to be light on its feet. We have to move like a Rapid Deployment Force, responding to every danger without hesitation. Not standing around picking your nose while Peacock’s Paranoid Pet attacks,” Rocky said.

  I tried to imagine standing with my finger up my nose as Peacock’s Feather attacked. But I couldn’t. Bogey picking would seriously slow down your escape.

  Mark’s gang always let me go along with them although I wasn’t in double digits. You had to be ten or older to join and I was nine years, eleven months and seven days, so I was designated Probationary Gang Member, though Rocky said I was Tail-end Charlie. This was what anyone at the back of an army patrol was called and, as I was always bringing up the rear, it sort of made sense, even though we weren’t actually in the army like Rocky’s uncle.

  Gangs, I discovered, are not democratic. Pete-the-Feet, Skimp and Rocky had voted against me joining, but after Mark had called an Extraordinary Meeting of the Executive Council, and took them to one side, they all came back and voted me in. After all, it’s his gang and I’m his brother, so it’s always good to have a relative in a position of power. That’s called nepotism.

  Anyway, we broke four windows on the third floor, with the best throw going to Pete-the-Feet, who took a run at the corner of the building, threw the half brick like Freddie Flintoff on a fast wicket and bowled out the fourth floor corner window. He was going so fast he fell head over heels and tore the back of his jacket, which we thought was hilarious, but his mum would give him what-for because she paid seven pounds fifty for it at the Oxfam shop.

  All in all it was a lot of fun. No one got eaten alive and we got our own back on the man who took away our sweets and Mum’s job. Somewhere in an unpronounceable province of China I bet there’s another boy getting reject Tube Sucks because his mum says the letter is missing. I wonder what a missing ‘c’ or ‘e’ is in their alphabet. Maybe I should learn Chinese, then I could always emigrate to the unpronounceable province, move in with the boy’s family, teach him English and share his reject Tube Sucks. I’ll ask Dad and see if he can’t get transferred to the Chinese Post Office. Life should be an adventure, that’s what he always says, and you can’t get a bigger adventure than becoming a Chinese postman.

  Because I get tired after an exhausting day breaking windows (well, half an hour probably) I always like going home. I think it’s the toast, though Mum and Dad are also part of it. But toast always fills the house with a smell that makes my mouth water. Mark says it’s a Pavlovian response – I thought that was some kind of foreign cake he was talking about. Hot toast – home – mouth-watering – hug from Mum. It’s learned behaviour, says my know-it-all brother, which I think is a bit rich coming from him, because he never seems to learn things except the hard way. He’s always getting thumped by Ronnie Rogers, who’s bigger than him. How many times have I told him –“Don’t pick fights with kids who are bigger and better fighters than you are.” But every week, sometimes once a day, there he is whacking Rogers with his schoolbag and wrestling him to the ground. I don’t know why he does it, and he won’t tell me either. I think Mark’s a bit too sensitive for his age, that’s what Mum says too, while Dad just puts his arm around him and speaks quietly to him out in the garden, then they kick a ball around for a while. Being sensitive is difficult for a twelve-year-old boy. I’m sensitive as well, but I’m only nine years, eleven months and seven days old and that must make a difference, I suppose. Besides, I’ve learned to ignore what Gobby Rogers and his mates yell at me. I like the way I look. I’ve got no choice. I wear a beanie hat all the time and that’s what everyone calls me – Beanie. That’s what’s called a nickname but it can also be an insult – it’s all about perspective again. I think it’s a great beanie. It’s got a nice soft cotton lining and a red, black and orange knit that makes my head look like a wasp. It keeps my head and ears warm and it muffles the insults. It’s perfect. And I wear it everywhere, I mean all the tim
e, even in the bath, except when Mum whips it off and lathers my head with soap that smells like…

  “Mark! Look at this scratch on Jez’s neck.”

  “It’s nothing, Mum,” I told her as I got the toast and raspberry jam in as far as it would go.

  “Don’t talk with your mouth full, Jez. How many times do I have to tell you?”

  “But you’re always telling me to eat while the food’s hot. If I waited it’d be cold.”

  “Don’t be clever, it doesn’t suit you.” Which shows how grown-ups always contradict themselves. Mum’s usually telling me how clever I am.

  “He got caught going under a fence, that’s all,” Mark explained.

  “And if Skimp hadn’t pulled me through, Peacock’s Feather would’ve…” A swift kick to the shins under the table nearly made me choke and I regurgitated a clump of soggy bread and jam. It was disgusting, but it took Mum’s mind off asking any more questions. She fussed and patted my back, wiped my face and slumped in the chair between us.

  She seemed a bit tired today. I wondered if it was the visits to the hospital. Mum and Dad are beginning to cause me some concern. She’s a bit weepy and Dad often puts his arms around her, not at the same time as Mark, but you have to think that his arms are put to a lot of use in our house. Mark knows something, but isn’t saying. I wonder if she’s pregnant. She’s getting a bit old for another baby and she’d never manage because she’s always saying Mark and me are a handful. Though, to be fair, she doesn’t say that as much any more.

  She sipped her tea. “Mark, don’t let Jez get hurt, all right? You promised.”

  He nodded and pinched the last piece of toast.

  I didn’t know he’d promised. It’s most likely because he’s older and it’s the burden of responsibility that big brothers have. I suppose if she is pregnant then I’ll have to do the same for the new baby. Anyway, that’s something I can’t even think about because by the time it goes to school I’ll be too old. They’ll have to hire a private bodyguard instead.

  Mum smiled at me. “Come on, let’s get some antiseptic on that scratch. We don’t want it getting infected.”

  Anyone would think the Sweet Dreams Sweet Factory’s fence had been contaminated with bubonic plague to keep kids out. What if it hadn’t been a sweet factory? What if they used that as cover for a secret biological warfare plant? Maybe they’ve sold deadly germs to the Chinese instead of Tube Sucks and Swizzle Licks. The words undercover and subterfuge sprang to mind – deception and spying. Vital information that puts everyone’s life in danger. Maybe Mum had inside information. Maybe she was part of a Witness Protection Programme, which was why she’s on Checkout 14 at Sainsbury’s. It was a secret identity.

  “Mum, were those Tube Sucks really what you said they were?”

  “What?”

  “Were the missing letters on the label really some kind of code? Was quality control some kind of weapons’ grade inspection facility? How could the government let the Chinese have our secrets for germ warfare? Were you really on subterfuge duty?”

  By now we’d reached the bathroom, and she was looking for the tube of antiseptic. “Subterfuge? How do you know words like that? Where do you get all these ideas from?”

  “Everything You Need to Know in the World. Volume Five. Seventy-five p at the RSPCA charity shop.”

  She shook her head and squeezed the ointment. “This is the closest I’ll ever get to germ warfare. Keep still.”

  That wasn’t a definite no, then.

  You know how sometimes you wake up in the morning and you don’t know where you are? That happens to me quite a lot. I lie still and there’s just me and the duvet in some kind of cloud formation floating in a Nowhere Zone. I can’t hear anything. I’m not asleep but I’m not really awake either, so I drift along like a feather being bumped by the breeze. Then I know what it is I’m remembering. Dad’s cab. There are 308,562 kilometres of roads in the UK, give or take the odd country lane, and Dad used to drive a monster articulated lorry everywhere there was a road big enough to drive down. All in all, with the trailer, it was an eighteen-wheeler, 13.6 metres long, three axles and six super singles; that’s what you call the wheels because there’s six of them and they’re all singles. And the nice thing about the Scania Topliner was that it had two bunks behind the cab. The one above the driver’s seat was for me. That’s where I used to snuggle when we went on those long journeys during school holidays and where Dad hid me when we went into the docks to unload, because it’s illegal to take kids there – so I’d stay wedged behind the curtain. There was a fridge, microwave and a telly, it was heated, and if I’m honest I preferred being in there to being in my own room. I think with a bit more time I could have driven it myself, though the sixteen gears might have taken a bit of getting used to. I’ve eaten Dundee cake in Dundee and scones and cream in Devon, and I’ve scoffed fish and chips in Whitby, but didn’t fancy the jellied eels in east London. That’s called discretion. Or, as Mark says, that’s me being chicken. But I don’t eat chicken any more either since I saw on the telly how thousands of them are crammed into sheds. That’s horrible. That’s cheap food, says Mark. That’s like a concentration camp, Dad says and Mum now has to buy cowboy chickens, which is what Dad calls them because they are free-range. I still don’t eat them. So, that’s the feeling I have lying under my duvet – rocking gently along, to the purring of Dad’s big diesel engine, swaying me gently beneath the duvet in the sleeping cab behind him.

  But I don’t go with him any more. He gave up being a long-distance lorry driver because he said he wanted to be closer to home, what with Mum working shifts at the supermarket and everything. I miss the cab, but I’m glad he’s home. So’s Mum. I think it’s the hospital thing again.

  Sometimes, on my way home, I watch him (when he’s on a double round) pushing that big trolley with the huge red Royal Mail bag strapped to it. He’s not that young any more and I wish I could think of something to get him back on the road with McKinley’s Transport Company Limited, so he could sit in his nice heated cab with the pneumatic seat, his power steering and the comfy bunk in the back of the cab with the little telly set up. Maybe I could get Mark’s gang to steal his postman’s trolley, then he’d get sacked. But losing the Royal Mail is a pretty serious offence, and how cross would the Queen be if all the postcards of Windsor Castle she sent everyone never got delivered? It might be better to sneak out at night and seal up all the letter boxes, then he couldn’t deliver any mail. If I wrote to everyone I know I could ask them never to write to anyone ever again, that might make his load lighter; but the trouble with that idea is that he would have to deliver the letters that I’ve written. I’ll have to think about this again.

  My brain often jumbles loads of thoughts together. I can hear Feather barking down the street and Mrs Tomkinson shouting, “Shut that flaming dog up!” Light creeps around and through the curtains (they’re not very thick: X-Men prints, seventy per cent cotton, thirty per cent poly-something – the label’s worn away – made in China).

  Mum’s shouting for Mark and me to get up. In the half-light I see Steven Gerrard’s poster on the wall, leg extended, striking the ball. Michael Owen (who was arguably the world’s best ever player for Liverpool – before Steven Gerrard, that is) doesn’t play for Liverpool any more. Even though he left home, and went to play for another club – whose name shall not be mentioned (says Dad) – he’s still here, in our hearts (says Dad). He never really went away. You don’t. It’s where you belong. That’s called Emotional Ties.

  Then I have to pee.

  This was a capital letter day. It was a BIG day. When countries declare war they have special meetings in the War Room. Skimp and Rocky were sitting on the wall during break. Mark was kicking his ball, concentrating hard, though not on the kicking – he just does that on automatic – but on what Skimp had just told him.

  “It’s being pulled down.”

  “What is?” I asked.

  “Clear off, Jez,”
Mark said, “this is an EMEC – an Extraordinary Meeting of the Executive Council.”

  “About what?”

  “They’re demolishing Sweet Dreams,” said Pete-the-Feet.

  “Shut up, you! EMECs are secret!” Mark hit him on the head with the ball.

  “Well, it’s not a secret now,” Rocky said, retrieving it.

  “Beanie’s on the council anyway,” Skimp told them. “He’s already been voted into the gang, so how can we keep him out?”

  They all looked at Mark and he looked at me. He must have realised that the process of democratic decision-making sometimes overrules nepotism.

  “All right. Look, we’ve got to find a new headquarters,” Mark told us. I could see he was back in command again.

  “Why can’t we keep the factory?” I asked.

  They look at me as if I was deaf, like that Tracy Lewis who lives across the other side of the estate and goes to a special school. “I mean, they can’t knock it down all at once. There must be a bit of it we can use.”

  “You’re not allowed to make suggestions, Beanie. You’re still on probation,” Rocky said. “Besides, we could get trapped underground and end up like Hitler in his bunker.”

  I didn’t think Hitler was ever at the Sweet Dreams Sweet Factory, but I didn’t say anything.

  “We could always have a protest,” Pete-the-Feet suggested. “Y’know, link arms, ‘We shall not be moved,’ and all that. I mean, perhaps Sweet Dreams might even be some kind of Victorian heritage building. We could tell everyone it’s important to the nation.”

  “After we’ve smashed all the windows, I don’t think so,” said Skimp.

  “There’s one window left,” I told them. “The fourth floor, top right.”

  “So what? There won’t be any floors left after today,” Rocky moaned.

  Then the bell went. Obviously we were in some kind of crisis. The gang’s secret hideout was about to be demolished. “Dad says we must never give up without a fight,” I shouted at them as they walked back.