Buried Alive! Read online



  Even Mum seemed impressed with the proper flushing toilet and the television and the frilly curtains up at the window.

  ‘It’s like a little palace,’ she said politely.

  ‘And here’s my princess,’ said Kelly’s mum’s boyfriend Dave, and he put his arm round Kelly’s mum and squeezed her tight.

  ‘Get off of me,’ she said, but you could tell she was pleased.

  Kelly pulled a yuck face at Biscuits and me.

  ‘Do you want a Coke, you two? We’ve got lots in the fridge.’

  ‘You’ve even got a fridge!’ said Mum.

  We all had drinks. Dad and Kelly’s mum’s boyfriend Dave had a can of beer. Mum said ‘No, thank you’ when she got offered a beer too.

  ‘I know what you’d like,’ said Kelly’s mum.

  Mum’s eyebrows went up as if she didn’t think that very likely.

  ‘I’m not really a drinker,’ she murmured, as Kelly’s mum produced a bottle of Baileys.

  ‘You try a drop of this,’ said Kelly’s mum. ‘Got a sweet tooth, have you? It tastes just like chocolate.’

  ‘Like chocolate!’ said Biscuits. ‘Can I have some too?’

  Kelly’s mum gave him one weeny sip. Mum looked horrified – but when she took an even weenier sip of her own glassful she looked surprised. She didn’t say anything, but she drank it all up. And had another glass after that.

  It seemed to put her in a good mood because she didn’t say no when we all ordered take-away pizzas on Kelly’s mum’s boyfriend Dave’s mobile phone.

  ‘I’d never have thought I’d be ordering a pizza in Llanpistyll,’ said Dad.

  ‘Well, don’t get too excited. We ordered them last night and the first lot went astray,’ said Kelly’s mum. ‘Some of them little toerags waylaid the guy on the pizza-bike. Honestly! Kids nowadays!’

  All the grown-ups started in on one of those yawny-yawny kids-of-today conversations while Dean showed us all his toys. I started fooling around with his Lego bricks and made him a little castle.

  ‘Oh wow! That’s great, Tim,’ said Kelly. ‘Make one for me, eh?’

  The four of us played with the Lego. Baby Keanu kept trying to smash everything in sight. Then he mistook a red Lego brick for a baby rusk and rammed it in his mouth. He did his best to swallow. He started to turn as red as the brick.

  ‘Keanu’s choking,’ said Kelly calmly, and she tipped him upside down and thumped him on the back.

  The brick came shooting out like a bullet. Keanu crowed happily, none the worse.

  ‘That’s some party trick, Kelly,’ I said. ‘Does he often swallow things?’

  ‘All the time,’ said Kelly. ‘Hey, I wonder what you were like as a baby, Biscuits! I bet you stuffed everything in your little gob. Bricks, rubber dollies, your own little booties . . .’

  ‘His dummy, yum yum, chew chew, swallow! His baby bottle, yum yum, crunch crunch, swallow! Hey, his pottie, yum yum OUCH!’

  Biscuits was doing his best to turn me upside down, but mercifully the pizzas arrived just at that moment. We all went yum yum, munch munch. We ate outdoors because the caravan was quite a squash with eight and a half people shut inside. Lots of other people were sitting outside their caravans chatting and eating and drinking. Kelly and her family had only arrived yesterday but already everyone knew them. Some kids came over and asked if Kelly was coming over to the swings with them.

  ‘Maybe later. I’ve got my friends here, see,’ said Kelly. ‘Isn’t that right, Tim?’

  ‘Sure, Kelly,’ I said, pleased to be singled out as Kelly’s special friend.

  Biscuits didn’t mind. He was busy with his second pizza.

  But then Dad went and spoilt it all.

  ‘Why don’t you all play together, eh? How about a game of French cricket? I’ll show you how to play if you like.’

  ‘Oh no,’ I mumbled. ‘Please don’t let’s play, Dad.’

  ‘I shall get hiccups if I have to play,’ said Biscuits, his mouth full.

  ‘I don’t want to play with those kids anyway, they’re boring,’ said Kelly.

  Dad didn’t listen to any of us. He started careering round looking for a bat and ball. He couldn’t find a bat at all and the only ball was a red and yellow stripey one belonging to Keanu. He’d just started the mammoth task of hugging it to his chest and licking it all over and he didn’t appreciate Dad taking it. Not one bit.

  ‘There must be an old cricket bat somewhere,’ said Dad.

  ‘Sorry, mate. Not my cup of tea, cricket,’ said Kelly’s mum’s boyfriend Dave.

  ‘What about using my umbrella?’ said Kelly’s mum, hitching the howling Keanu onto her hip. ‘Oh do put a sock in it, young man! Kelly, find my brolly.’

  Kelly nipped inside the caravan and came out with a very fancy spotty umbrella. She aimed it at a stone with a nifty little swing.

  ‘Watch it, Kelly! Maybe that umbrella’s a bit fragile.’

  ‘Let’s play golf instead of cricket,’ said Kelly, giving another stone a whack. Then she squealed, her pony-tail waving like a flag as she jumped up and down.

  ‘I know! Let’s go and play Crazy Golf. Let’s, let’s, let’s!’

  ‘How can you play Crazy Golf now, dear? It’s nearly dark,’ said Mum, looking at her watch. ‘Oh my goodness, we’d better be getting back to the hotel.’

  ‘No, one of the kids on the site told me, you can play it by floodlight. Oh please!’

  ‘No, I don’t really think—’ Mum started.

  ‘Just one quick round. And it’s on us,’ said Dad.

  There’d been a lot of adult argy-bargy about who was paying for the pizzas. Kelly’s mum’s boyfriend Dave had won. Mum was mega-fussed about it, so she couldn’t really back out of the Crazy Golf idea, seeing as it was now our treat.

  There was just one problem. One huge enormous disastrous drawback.

  ‘I’ve never played Crazy Golf!’ I said.

  ‘Neither have I – but it’s great,’ said Kelly.

  ‘Have you played Crazy Golf, Biscuits?’ I asked.

  ‘Nope. Like the sound of Crazy. Not too nuts about the Golf bit though,’ said Biscuits, easing the waistband on his straining tracksuit trousers.

  ‘We all need a bit of exercise,’ said Dad, patting his own tummy. He seized Kelly’s mum’s umbrella and did a fancy golf swing of his own.

  ‘Oooh, I can see we’ve got an expert here,’ said Kelly’s mum, fluttering her eyelashes at him.

  Dad gave a silly laugh and then patted baby Keanu on the head. Keanu howled harder.

  I felt like howling myself when we got to the Crazy Golf. It was brilliantly lit up by floodlight, with heaps of people playing. The course was huge, with little waterfalls trickling here and there, and all sorts of twisty bits and hidey holes and hillocks. There was a wide wall all the way round the course so that people could peer over and gawp at the golfers.

  Dad was a bit taken aback when he saw how much it was, but he said, swallowing hard, that he’d like tickets for seven players, him and Mum, Kelly’s mum and Kelly’s mum’s boyfriend Dave, Kelly herself and Biscuits and me.

  ‘And me!’ Dean said, outraged. ‘Me play too! I can play, can’t I, Mum, can’t I?’

  ‘Of course you can play. Sorry, pal, I just didn’t realize you were big enough,’ said Dad.

  ‘I’m ever so big,’ said Dean, standing on tiptoe.

  I was huddling up in horror.

  ‘Dad, just get seven tickets. I won’t play,’ I said.

  ‘What? Of course you’re playing, Tim,’ said Dad.

  ‘But I don’t want to,’ I hissed. ‘I can’t play Crazy Golf. I’ll be useless.’

  ‘Don’t be silly, Tim. It’s fun,’ said Dad.

  Everyone else thought it was fun. We were all given golf clubs, big ones for the grown-ups, middley ones for Biscuits and Kelly and me, and a little one for Dean. He waved it above his head excitedly. It caught me on the chin. It hurt a lot but Dad gave me a warning glance and I couldn’t say anythi