Authors: Debbie Thomas
Brian came ⦠not with but
at
him. He rushed towards the open door and hurled himself against Quincy, knocking him sideways. âNow!' he yelled to Alec, Tracy and Pete. âGet out of here!'
But as they reached the door, Quincy regained his balance. He threw Brian towards the children, sending them all sprawling backwards. âYou traitor!' he screamed. âYou had your chance! You can fry with the rest of 'em.' And with that, the grey-trousered, blue-jerseyed, school-mottoed maniac was gone. The door slammed. The key creakety-squeaked in the lock.
C
HAPTER
23
HOTTING UP
Alec, Tracy and Pete stared in horror at the door. Then they sank to the ground, their last hope of honey in tatters. Brian looked round wildly. The fire at the bookshelf was gaining strength. Smoke was thickening quickly below the ceiling. They had minutes left to act before it sank and filled their lungs.
Or rather he did. The honey-starved children were no use at all. âGet back to the window!' he ordered. âAnd keep low.' At least that would buy them more air and time while he thought of something.
But what?
If I smash the other window, more smoke can escape. But the extra air will feed the flames.
Panic clouded his brain. He couldn't think straight. He needed help.
âDulcie!' He raised his left arm, brought his shirt sleeve to his ear and rubbed like he'd never rubbed before.
âStop the fire first!' she shrieked. âUse the trousers!'
Brian seized the gardening trousers still lying by the door and rushed back to the bookshelf.
Over and over he smacked at the flames, trousers in one hand, jersey in the other, his eyes stinging from the heat, his hands from the pain and his throat from the smoke that scratched with vicious fingernails. He kicked books away from the edge of the pile, coughing and spluttering.
âThat's it!' squealed Dulcie. The flames shrank under the heavy fabric of the trousers as he pounded with a strength scooped from nowhere. âYou've done it!' The last flame flickered and died. âNow smash the other window! You have to get rid of the smoke.'
She was right. But there was something else he had to do first. The children were lying on the floor by the window where the last clean air lingered. But Florrie was higher, still sat in her chair, her head shrouded in smoke. If Brian didn't get to her, the fumes would.
âI said the window!' peeped Dulcie as instead he snatched up an unburned book from the floor and crouch-ran to the front desk. He lay on his back, raised his legs and pushed the chair over with his feet. The gasping Florrie toppled onto her side.
Wriggling on his bottom and still clutching the book he elbowed and shouldered a desk to the wall below the other window. He took a deep gulp of precious air and hauled himself onto the desk. He staggered to his feet. Smoke stuffed his nose like boiling carpet. He raised his arm and flung the book at the window. It smashed through the glass and thudded outside.
Shot
, he thought vaguely as his brain began to melt.
Good
, he thought dimly as smoke billowed through the hole.
Nothing
, he thought blankly as he crashed to the ground.
C
HAPTER
24
THE FLIGHT
When you haven't stretched your legs for a while, they can feel a little stiff. And when your wings have been clipped and your living room cramped for a good few million years, it takes time to adjust to freedom.
But time was something Dulcie didn't have. And freedom was proving scary. It wasn't just the jolting shock as Brian's head hit the floor ear-first. Or the heat that struck as the amber cracked around her. It was more than the sour stench, coiling smoke and wicked fumes that made her antennae flinch. It was Brian.
Or rather the lack of him. Taking her deepest breath for twenty million years, she yelled, âWake up!'
No response.
Standing on the amber shards, she stuck a feeler into his ear.
Not a twitch.
She lifted a front leg, greeting each muscle as it rippled into life. When all six legs had rehearsed, they performed together, a tiny orchestra of movement that carried her over the shattered amber. She crawled round the rim of Brian's ear and across his cheek. Reaching an eye, she wedged her antennae underneath the wiry lashes.
His lid didn't budge.
She stopped to catch her breath.
My breath! I'm alive!
All that fear of freedom â all that refusing to let Brian crack the amber â what a waste. Because here she was, alive and almost kicking, while the children gasped for breath and Brian lay there unconscious or â¦
No!
She crawled down the scorched red ridge of his nose. Perching on his upper lip, she stuck a feeler up each nostril.
Thank goodness.
Her antennae swayed gently in the darkness between crusty, singed hairs. He was still breathing. But for how long?
She pulled out her feelers and fluttered her wings.
Come
on,
Dulcie!
She tensed her shoulders and fluttered again. The hairs on her abdomen trembled in the draught.
You can do it.
She flapped her forewings and twisted her hind wings.
Harder.
Flap and twist.
Again
. Flap-twist.
That's it.
Flap-twist and â¦
lift off
! With a mighty gasp she was flying through the stinking smoke, up the wall and out through the window hole. She collapsed on the ground, trembling from head to sting.
I haven't got the puff. I can't do this.
Can't wasn't an option. Brian was dying. Time for some flying.
Where to? The police â then what? A buzz round their heads, a squeak in their ears? Even if she had the breath, they'd swat her before she could open her mouth â and so would everyone else in Tullybun.
Hang on. Not everyone.
She sniffed. They'd never be up to the job.
But if not them, who?
Wiggling her wings, Dulcie eased herself into the air.
Oh, thank you, breeze!
Like a breathy hand it scooped her up and along.
Oh, thank you, trees!
They rustled their leaves, cheering her on like a crowd at a race.
Oh, thank you, sun!
The evening light slanted into her, a solar sat nav that bypassed her mind and led her muscles out of the woods, across the field and back to Tullybun.
*
Jan looked up from her sweeping. There was someone at the door. She could smell it: a musty, dusty, unfamiliar scent. She froze. Who could it be? She crept towards the entrance, the hairs on the back of her neck stiffening. The smell grew stronger. She peeked through the doorway.
Phew.
The guards were there, weapons aimed, interrogating the stranger.
And what a stranger she was! A jumble of contradictions: fully formed but tiny; laden with food but underfed. Not a wasp, not a hornet, definitely not bumbly, but hardly a honey bee either.
Claire and Louisa joined her at the door. Sue and Beyoncé followed. Her sisters were abandoning their work, buzzing to the entrance to see the action, nudging their wings and wiggling their feelers for a better view.
The tension in the air turned to excitement. The weary visitor didn't look much of a threat. And her hind leg bulged with the biggest bag of pollen Jan had ever seen.
The guards lowered their bottoms. Turning round, they aimed their stings
inside
the hive, telling the crowd to make way.
The sisters bowed their heads and cleared a path for the guest who'd come to guide them to a feast. Leonora pointed her feelers towards a cell full of honey, inviting the visitor to feed. But the tiny bee shook her head and crawled into the clearing, desperate to start her dance.
Left and up at fifty degrees
, wiggled Dulcie's bottom.
Left and up at forty degrees. Right and across at thirty degrees.
She shimmied as if there was no tomorrow â which for Brian there might not be.
Down at a hundred and eighty degrees
. Her mind might be fuzzy but her butt was as clear as a summer's day.
Left and up again, fifty degrees.
She poured herself into the dance of a very long lifetime.
But it wasn't the dance she'd dreamed of for twenty million years. Instead of flowers and food, it spoke of fire and fumes and trapped bodies. A horrified buzz ran through the audience as they learned how life was slipping from their master's beloved friend. They had to help Cap'n O'Bunion. But how?
As Dulcie waggled the answer, a ripple ran through the crowd. It was bold. It was brilliant. But it needed a leader.
Not this strange little bee from the blue. Finishing her desperate dance, her legs gave way and she collapsed on the comb.
Leonora rushed to the honey-filled cell. She scooped the sticky paste onto her tongue and scurried back. While Sue and Sadie pried the stranger's jaws apart, Leonora pushed the honey into her mouth. There was a twitch of legs and a flutter of wings. Then the little bee went still again.
Maybe I was wrong
, thought Dulcie faintly.
Maybe, just maybe, they
can
do the job.
In the crowd Jan sniffed. A new smell crept into the air: heavy and rich, noble and kind. The queen was agreeing to share her food.
A lady-in-waiting bustled through. Lowering her head, Nurse Nessa thrust her proboscis into the guest's tiny mouth. On the tip was a blob of royal jelly. If that vitamin-stuffed, energy-boosting, royal supersnack couldn't revive her, then â¦
All heads turned. The queen herself was arriving. Not in her usual stately procession, flanked by bodyguards and cleaners, hairdressers and leg waxers, but alone. Her Royal Humness Queen Beatrice had accepted the mission.
Crawling to the entrance and spreading her wings, Queen Bea led her girls from the hive.
*
Alf shuffled into the kitchen, his slippers smacking on the tiles. Yawning, he crossed to the fridge. Time for his night-cap, the hot milk and honey that always helped him sleep.
His hand paused on the door. Funny. The dear old fridge he'd refused to change since Elsie died was buzzing more loudly than usual. He peered inside. Nothing. And come to think of it, the buzzing was coming from behind. Taking out the milk bottle, he turned round.
And dropped it.
âAlice?' he gasped. âKatie? Gladys, Sadie ⦠Charlotte, Jan â¦
Queen Bea
?' His hands flew to his cheeks as they swarmed through the window faster than he could name them. âWhat is it?' They buzzed and flurried, haloed his head, tickled his ears, mumbled and muttered, crowded and clouded. âCalm down, girls. Tell me what you want.'
They did. Forming an arrow-shape, with the queen at the tip, they flew down the hall. Alf tied the belt of his dressing gown and hurried after them. âCome on then,' he said, opening the front door. âWhere are we going?' The bees hung in a dark cloud while about thirty broke off and buzzed back inside. They landed on his mobile on the hall table. âAll right, all right.' Alf picked it up and slipped it into his dressing-gown pocket. âHappy now? Lead on, Queen Bea.'
*
Mrs Fripp squealed. It wasn't at the blob of chewing gum that she'd just spotted on the lamp-post during her evening patrol. It wasn't at the Wrigley's wrapper that had missed the dustbin and was shimmering on the pavement in the dying light. It wasn't even at Anemia Pickles who, on her way home from work, was pressing â yes,
pressing
â a piece of gum onto a fence post. In fact she was squealing too. âWhat the bleedin' 'ell is
that
?'
âKeep back.' Mrs Fripp grabbed Anemia's arm and pulled her behind the lamp-post. âAlf's bees are swarming. They must be looking for a new home. Leave them to him. He'll catch them when they land.'
But they didn't. In a rare moment of harmony, the founder of the âTullybun Says No to Gum' campaign stood arm in arm with the village's greatest gum-chewer, gawping at the little old man who'd turned right off High Street in pursuit of the buzzing cloud.
âSlow down,' he panted. But they were already at the far end of Gandhi Way.
âGive us a sec,' he puffed as they veered left into Joan of Arc Street, then right down Spartacus Lane.
But as they buzzed across the field and into the woods, he began to understand that there wasn't a sec to be had. And when they led him through the gate in the wall, which some hasty person had forgotten to padlock, he started to think it was a matter of life and death.
And as he rushed to the side of the house, where smoke was curling from two holes at the bottom, and shone the light of his mobile through, he began to doubt the life bit.
âFire,' sobbed Alf into his phone. âTullybough Woods, cottage by the path. Kids here. Quick.'