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Sleepover Club 2000. Angie Bates
Читать онлайн.Название Sleepover Club 2000
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007401161
Автор произведения Angie Bates
Жанр Детская проза
Издательство HarperCollins
But as they disappeared round the corner, I heard gasps of astonishment.
“Coo-ell!” shouted Lyndz.
“Hey, Fliss!” yelled Kenny. “What a wicked surprise!”
I followed them. It was a surprise all right.
Fairy lights twinkled on the snowy patio. Wispy blue smoke rose into the evening air.
The barbecue, I thought in a daze. That’s what I could smell. It had reached exactly the right red-hot stage for cooking too – something Mum doesn’t always get right. Foil-wrapped goodies were roasting on the bars, alongside sizzling sausages and burgers.
Mum was handing round steaming mugs. “It should be vodka,” she teased. “But I thought your parents might not approve.”
When Kenny looked up from her mug, she had a blob of cream on her nose. “Heaven,” she whispered. “I’m in hot chocolate heaven.”
Mum had thought of absolutely everything. She’d even set up a big spotty parasol to keep off the snow. The table was laid with cutlery, pretty paper plates, and even more goodies.
Mum put her arm round me. “This man on the radio said that in Siberia it’s perfectly normal to have winter picnics. So I thought, if the Russians can do it, why can’t we?” Her voice trailed off. “You don’t mind having a picnic in the snow, do you?”
“Mind!” shrieked Kenny. “This is ACE!”
“It’s magic!” chortled Rosie.
“Outrageous,” agreed Lyndz.
Frankie didn’t say a word. She stared around our back garden as if she couldn’t believe her eyes. I couldn’t tell what she was thinking. But being Frankie, I knew it was bound to be something dead sarky.
Suddenly she started fumbling in her bag. She fished out a canary-yellow camera, one of those funky Polaroid ones.
“Mrs Sidebotham,” she said, in her most polite voice. “Would you take a picture of us, please? I want to remember this awesome sleepover my whole life!”
When I was little, every time I got the teensiest bit excited about anything, Granny Sidebotham (that’s my real dad’s mum) used to say, “Mark my words. There’ll be tears before bedtime.”
What a thing to say to a little kid! Like, “Don’t ever have fun, Felicity, or something bad will happen!”
Well, it’s a good thing Gran wasn’t invited to our snow picnic, because, not counting Christmas, it has to be the MOST fun I ever had in winter!
We stuffed our faces till our buttons practically popped off. But even after the food was gone, our fairy-lit garden felt so incredibly magic, no-one could bear to go back indoors.
It had practically stopped snowing by this time. Just an occasional, totally perfect snowflake drifted down. Lyndz stuck out her tongue and tasted one. “I wish we could stay out here all night,” she said.
“Andy would have to thaw us with his blowtorch in the morning,” I shivered.
The temperature was so far below zero by this time, Mum’s picnicking Siberians would have been completely at home.
Suddenly Kenny had the bright idea of putting on all the clothes she’d brought with her! We all rushed inside, and soon we were all throwing on every garment we could find. It was like that dressing up-race we had on Sports Day in the Infants. (Which I always lost, incidentally. Not because I was bad at sports. I was ace, thanks very much! More because I was the only kid who took the dressing-up part really seriously!)
I think Mum still felt bad about her New Year freak-out, because she kept herself totally under control while we piled on the layers, even though it meant us dripping melted snow all over her clean kitchen floor.
“That’s better,” sighed Lyndz, when we were back outside. “Nice and toasty again.”
The only problem was that all the extra clothes made our arms totally stick out at the sides. We were all moving dead stiffly.
“We look like robots,” Lyndz giggled.
“Or Teletubbies,” suggested Rosie. And she went into this hysterical Teletubby impersonation. Soon we were all waddling about, talking in silly baby voices like Tinky Winky and La La and whatever.
“Hey, we can be the Snowtubbies,” I said suddenly.
This made Lyndz laugh so hard she had a complete choking fit, which probably makes her the only hiccupping Snowtubby in history. Mind you, her hiccups stopped in record time when Kenny threatened to stuff a big handful of snow down her neck! Now all we had to do was get Lyndz out of her major sulk! Eventually Rosie persuaded her to make snow angels with us.
Oh, if you’re interested in having a go, here’s the Sleepover Club’s Three-Step Guide to snow-angel making!
FIRST, you fall backwards gracefully into a snowdrift, OK? Oh, yeah! TOP TIP. Pick a patch of snow without a prickly bush underneath. Frankie didn’t. So her first attempt wasn’t as graceful as it could have been. It also hurt a LOT!!!
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