Read The Day the Ear Fell Off Online
Authors: T.M. Alexander
Fifty was staring at Copper Pie, who had just blasted a ball into the top left-hand corner of the goal. He did a high five with his partner on the stall, none other than Callum – the
meanest and nastiest boy in our class. In the whole school probably. The world. The universe, etc.
‘Can you believe he’s gone over to the dark side?’
I shook my head again. There weren’t any words for how I felt.
I looked across for the hundredth time. How could Copper Pie, my oldest friend, be running a stall at the summer fair with
Callum
? Copper Pie was the one who saved me from being bitten by
Annabel Ellis in nursery, the one who tickled me to stop me from holding my breath and fainting in the nativity play, the one who ate my lunch every time I didn’t like it.
If anyone had told me that he would desert me, desert Tribe, I’d have said they were lying. No way would he ever, ever leave: that’s what I would have said. But I was wrong.
I’d been looking forward to the summer fair for ages. We all had. In Year 6, you’re allowed to have your own stall. The five members of Tribe (me, Fifty, Jonno, Bee
and Copper Pie) had agreed what we were doing but at the last minute Copper Pie had switched allegiance to do ‘Save or Score’ with Callum.
For a pound, you could choose either three shots at Callum in goal or three turns in goal trying to stop Copper Pie scoring. Their sign said,
Save three goals or score three and win a
fiver
.
And to make it worse, their stall had the biggest queue. There were masses of dads and toddlers and a few girls and even some mums waiting for a turn. Every time there was a good save or an
awesome shot the crowds oooh-ed and aaaaah-ed. Copper Pie was in full Manchester United strip, like Ronaldo. Callum was in a Liverpool shirt with Stevie G written on the back. I wished they
weren’t the centre of attention, showing off in front of the rest of Tribe. It didn’t seem fair. We, the loyal ones, were doing a stall
together
, the way you should do if
you’re friends.
If you want to understand how I felt, imagine your mum has left you and chosen another family – a better one, tidier or funnier or better looking. Imagine watching her having a great time
with them, while you stood at the side and watched.
I wanted to bang my head against something hard, except that it would hurt. I wanted to smack Copper Pie in the face and yell, but I’ve never hit anyone and I didn’t want to start
with him because he’s a lot more experienced with his fists. I turned away and looked back at Fifty. He sighed. We didn’t need words to know what the other one was thinking.
Bee and Jonno were sitting cross-legged under our table, talking to each other. I thought about joining them, but I didn’t. I stayed where I was and watched all the people enjoying
themselves.
We’d run out of things to sell on our stall. In fact we had run out twenty-two minutes after the fair started. It didn’t matter – we’d made loads of money.
I thought about having a go on ‘Splat the Rat’. I’m good at that. If you watch the people who go before you, you can work out how many seconds it takes the rat to slide down
the pipe. When it’s your turn, all you have to do is count and, when you reach the magic number, wham the stick at the space below the pipe. Everyone else waits for the rat to poke its nose
out, but by then it’s too late.
I decided not to have a go. I knew it wouldn’t make me feel any better. How could it? Tribe couldn’t carry on without Copper Pie. I can’t explain why. It’s not as though
he was the leader or anything – we don’t have one. But he was part of its beginning and we agreed no one could leave and no one could join. So it was broken. Tribe was broken.
Will Tribe survive?
Find out in
Tribe: A Thousand Water Bombs
ISBN: 978 1 84812 294 9
Get to know
the Tribers at:
www.tribes.co.uk