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Fing

Page 1

by David Walliams




  Copyright

  First published in Great Britain by

  HarperCollins Children’s Books in 2018

  HarperCollins Children’s Books is a division of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd,

  HarperCollins Publishers

  1 London Bridge Street

  London SE1 9GF

  The HarperCollins website address is:

  www.harpercollins.co.uk

  Text copyright © David Walliams 2019

  Cover illustration copyright © Tony Ross 2019

  Cover lettering of author’s name copyright © Quentin Blake 2010

  David Walliams and Tony Ross assert the moral right to be identified as the author and illustrator of the work respectively.

  Cover design copyright © HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2019

  A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this eBook on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins Publishers.

  Source ISBN: 9780008349134

  Ebook Edition © 2019 ISBN: 9780008349103

  Version: 2019-02-15

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Thank-Yous

  Prologue

  Part 1: More, More, More

  Chapter 1: Howling

  Chapter 2: An Alphabet of Stuff

  Chapter 3: Fury

  Chapter 4: Bestest Best

  Chapter 5: Giant Poops

  Chapter 6: Two Evils

  Chapter 7: Ancient, Obscure and Bizarre

  Part 2: The Monsterpedia

  Chapter 8: An Encyclopedia of Monsters

  Chapter 9: Rolled in Rabbit Droppings

  Chapter 10: Aghastliest

  Chapter 11: Twin Beds

  Chapter 12: Some Light Reading

  Part 3: Deepest, Darkest, Jungliest Jungle

  Chapter 13: Underpants and Socks

  Chapter 14: Up a Tree

  Chapter 15: Trap!

  Chapter 16: Suspicious Droppings

  Chapter 17: Wiggled, Waggled and Woggled

  Chapter 18: Double Trouble

  Chapter 19: Flying Sausage

  Chapter 20: Furry Finger-Warmer

  Chapter 21: Hot-Air Fing-Ing

  Chapter 22: Beard Down to his Belly Button

  Part 4: Big Fing and Little Fing

  Chapter 23: How We Laughed

  Chapter 24: Being British

  Chapter 25: Wart

  Chapter 26: A Volcanic Explosion of Tears, Snot and Dribble

  Chapter 27: Custard-Cream-Induced Frenzy

  Chapter 28: Gobble!

  Chapter 29: Big Fing, Meet Little Fing

  Part 5: Kaboom!

  Chapter 30: Instant Replay

  Chapter 31: Pong

  Chapter 32: Fizzling Fur

  Chapter 33: Nightmare

  Chapter 34: Escaped Burp

  Chapter 35: Behind You

  Chapter 36: A Ginormous Boot Up the Bottom

  Chapter 37: Silence

  Epilogue

  Footnotes

  More from the World of David Walliams

  Also by David Walliams

  About the Publisher

  For Percy, Wilfred and Gilbert

  Sometimes perfectly nice parents have children who are monsters.

  Meet the Meeks.

  This is Father, Mr Maurice Meek. As his name suggests, Mr Meek is a mild-mannered man. He likes to wear socks with his sandals, and would not dare to eat a peach in public. Mr Meek works as a librarian. He loves LIBRARIES as they are quiet, like him. This is a man who wouldn’t say boo to a goose. Or, indeed, any species of bird.

  This is Mother, Mrs Meredith Meek. She wears her glasses on a chain round her neck.

  The most embarrassing moment of her life was when she once sneezed on a bus, and everybody turned round and looked. It will not surprise you to learn that she is also a librarian. Meredith met Maurice at the LIBRARY. They were both so painfully shy that they never spoke a word to each other for the first ten years of working there. Eventually, across the poetry aisle, Maurice and Meredith fell in love. Some years later, they were married, and some years after that they had a baby girl.

  This is their daughter, Myrtle. You might be thinking that nothing could be sweeter than a little baby girl. WRONG! From the moment she was born, Myrtle was an absolute HORROR. Whatever she was given – dummies, cuddly toys, rubber duckies – the baby demanded more.

  Myrtle’s first-ever word was “more”, and she uttered it on the very day she was born. It was more milk Baby Myrtle was demanding, even though she had already guzzled a gallon. “More” was a word the infant would say over and over and over again.

  “MORE! MORE! MORE!”

  Being Meek by name and meek by nature, Maurice and Meredith didn’t dare stand up to their monster of a child. Whatever Baby Myrtle wanted, Baby Myrtle got. Her parents bought their baby daughter toys and toys and MORE toys, even though she would instantly smash them to pieces. BISH! BASH! BOSH!

  “MORE! MORE! MORE!”

  As a toddler, they gave their daughter crayons and crayons and MORE crayons. Myrtle would use them to scrawl all over the walls.

  SCRATCH!

  Before snapping them in two.

  SNAP!

  “MORE! MORE! MORE!”

  As she grew bigger and bigger and bigger still, Mr and Mrs Meek would feed Myrtle chocolate biscuit after chocolate biscuit after chocolate biscuit. More and more and more. Even though Myrtle would take great delight in spitting the crumbs back in their faces.

  The years passed. Mr and Mrs Meek secretly hoped that their daughter was just “going through a phase”. But this “phase” was not one she ever grew out of. In fact, Myrtle’s behaviour became worse and worse* over the years.

  The nasty noughts turned into the outrageous ones. Then followed the terrible twos, and the tumultuous threes. After the fearsome fours and the frightful fives came the sickening sixes and the spiteful sevens. Then there were the egregious eights and the noisy nines.

  Oh my word, they were noisy. Now nine, Myrtle would wake her parents up every morning by howling…

  I wanna teddy bear!”

  I wanna pony!”

  I wanna suitcase full of money!”

  The girl would make such a din that the little Meek family house would actually shake.

  RATTLE!

  Books would fly off the shelves.

  WHOOSH! BONK!

  Pictures would fall off the walls.

  DUNK! SHATTER!

  Plaster would shower down from the ceiling.

  CRUMBLE! DUNK!

  Poor Mr and Mrs Meek would be hurled out of bed.

  DOOF! DOOF!

  They would scramble to their feet, and immediately run around doing their daughter’s bidding. They gave Myrtle everything. But everything was never, ever enough.

  Oh no.

  The girl wanted

  one more

  “FING”.

  Over the years, Myrtle’s bedroom became so piled high with stuff her parents had got her that you could barely get in or out. She demanded more and more and more, and she got more and more and more.

  Myrtle had at least one thing for every letter of the alphabet:

  Ant farm. Home to a million and one ants.

  Boo
merang that doesn’t come back. Myrtle lost that on her first throw.

  Cowbell, which the girl put round her mother’s neck so she could locate her easily.

  Dog-grooming set. Even though she didn’t have a dog.

  Elf.

  Finger puppets of every king and queen of England from 1066 to the present day.

  Gravel collection. It was the biggest in Europe.

  Ham slicer. Even though she hated ham.

  Ice skates made for an elephant. Four of them.

  Jar containing one of scientist Albert Einstein’s burps.*

  Knee warmers.

  Lucky sausage. Actually it was unlucky.

  Map of Belgium. A country she had no intention of ever visiting as it was, in her words, “too Belgiumy”.

  Nelson’s Column made out of sultanas. Life-size.

  Owl fudge. This is fudge made of melted-down owls. It is even more disgusting than it sounds.

  Painting of some air. It wasn’t much to look at.

  Quicksand. Children who came over for a playdate and ended up displeasing Myrtle met their doom in it.

  Remote-controlled hedge (which could reach speeds of up to one mile an hour).

  Stuffed flea. It was so small that it was impossible to see.

  Turnip shampoo. It made your hair smell “as fresh as a turnip”.

  Underpants for worms. Only come in size “small”.

  Venom from a poisonous aubergine. Deadly.

  Wombat juicer. Perfect for producing a cool, refreshing glass of wombat juice.

  Xylophone case. Myrtle didn’t want an actual xylophone, just the case for one.

  Yeti. It hasn’t been sighted in the Himalayan mountains for years because Myrtle kept it locked in her cupboard.

  zebra dung. It was the only thing she could think of that began with a “z”.

  One thing Myrtle didn’t have any of was books. Despite her parents being librarians, she DETESTED books and thought they were B-O-O-O-R-R-R-I-I-I-N-N-N-G-G-G!*

  The girl had all this stuff, a universe of junk, but still she wanted something more. The funny thing was that she just didn’t know what.

  Can you guess what Myrtle demanded for her tenth birthday? In the incredibly unlikely event that you guessed…

  A pair of exploding socks.

  A life-sized blue-whale bath toy. When it went in the bath, all the water spilled out.

  A balloon model of the Taj Mahal.

  A pencil un-sharpener.

  And a robot pea.

  …then congratulations. You were correct and win one pound.*

  Mr and Mrs Meek were forced to give their daughter all these things that she had demanded for her birthday. If they hadn’t, Myrtle would have howled the house down.

  “Happy birthday, our beautiful angel!” they called out as Myrtle lay in bed, ripping open the presents and throwing the scrunched-up balls of wrapping paper back at them.

  RUSTLE!

  DOINK!

  Moments later, she was demanding something more. What was unusual this time, though, was that the girl had absolutely no idea what that something should be. Myrtle had so many things that she couldn’t think of a single thing in the world she didn’t have.

  “I wanna FING!”

  she announced over breakfast. The girl was scoffing a ginormous bowl of chocolate ice cream with seventeen chocolate flakes stuck in it, and an ocean of chocolate sauce on top. Yes, Myrtle had chocolate for breakfast. And lunch. And dinner. Well, would you say no to her?

  Mr and Mrs Meek, who were dipping their neatly cut soldiers into boiled eggs, shared a worried look. A “FING”?

  Whatever did she mean?

  “A ‘FING’, my dearest darling?” asked Mother, putting down her book, One Hundred Poems for Ladies.

  “Yeah. Are you deaf? A FING!”

  “What’s a ‘FING’, sweetness?” enquired Father, putting down his book, One Hundred Poems for Gentlemen.

  “I dunno, but I want one!”

  “How do you spell it?” asked Mother.

  Myrtle’s face went scarlet with fury.

  “I ain’t fick! You spell it the normal way. F! I! N! G! FING!”

  The girl thumped the breakfast table with her fist to add emphasis.

  BASH!

  All the crockery flew into the air, and smashed on to the floor.

  “Pick up the pieces! NOW!” the girl ordered.

  On their hands and knees under the kitchen table, Mr Meek whispered to his wife, “What are we to do? Our beloved offspring wants a ‘FING’. But I don’t think a ‘FING’ is a real thing. I worry a ‘FING’ is a made-up thing.”

  “We’ll have to think of SOMEFING – I mean, something,” replied Mrs Meek just before she felt a boot up her bottom.

  BOOF!

  “OUCH!” she cried.

  “SHUT UP DOWN THERE!” came the voice from above. “I can barely hear myself blow off!”

  “That’s better.”

  Mr and Mrs Meek were in a panic. If they didn’t come up with some “FING”, there was going to be TROUBLE.

  BIG

  TROUBLE.

  After breakfast that morning, Mr and Mrs Meek gave their daughter a lift to school. And I mean “lift”, literally. Every morning, they were forced to lift her up and carry her there. Myrtle refused to walk even though it was only a short distance away. It was a mighty effort carrying her. As she mostly ate chocolate, Myrtle was as heavy as an ox.*

  “PUT ME DOWN!” Myrtle ordered as her poor parents made their final stagger to the school gates. Once they’d carefully lowered her to the ground, Father passed his daughter her industrial-sized lunchbox. It was so big and heavy it was on wheels.

  “Have a lovely day at school, my sweetest of hearts,” he said.

  “DON’T FORGET – BY THE TIME I GET HOME FROM SCHOOL I WANNA FING!” she bawled, before waddling off into the playground, knocking several smaller children to the ground as she did so.

  “My angel of heaven, we promise we will do our absolute bestest best!” called out Mother brightly.

  This stopped Myrtle in her tracks. Slowly she turned round and reached into her lunchbox.

  “BESTEST BEST ISN’T GOOD ENOUGH!” she hollered. Myrtle pulled out one of the tall cartons of chocolate milk and lobbed it at her mother.

  It hit poor Mrs Meek right in the face, soaking her and her pink flowery dress.

  “Thanking you kindly,” remarked the lady, not sure what else to say.

  Father passed his wife the handkerchief he always kept in his breast pocket.

  “There we are, Mother.”

  Mrs Meek dabbed at the chocolate milk. It was little use. The pink flowery dress was now a brown chocolatey mess.

  “BESTEST BETTER THAN BEST!” appealed Father.

  Once again, Myrtle reached into her lunchbox.

  “Oh dear,” muttered Father, closing his eyes as he was sure something was about to be lobbed in his direction.

  He was right.

  A bucket of chocolate mousse hit him – BANG! – on the top of his head.

  “Thanking you muchly!” he said, like his wife, not knowing what else to say.

  Without a word, Mother passed the handkerchief back to her husband, and he attempted to de-mousse himself.*

  “Don’t you worry your pretty little head!” called out Father, lying. There was nothing pretty or little about Myrtle’s head. “We will have that FING for you as soon as you are home from school.”

  “YOU BETTER!” replied Myrtle. “Or else.”

  Neither Mr Meek nor Mrs Meek knew what “else” was, but, whatever it was, it sounded nasty.

  The school bell rang.

  As soon as Myrtle began lumbering off towards her classroom, Father took his wife’s hand.

  “Ooh, you are very forward, Mr Meek,” she remarked.

  “I know the perfect place to start looking for a FING,” said the librarian.

  “Where?”

  “The LIBRARY, of course!”

&n
bsp; Mr and Mrs Meek bolted down the street. They were quite a sight, both covered as they were in chocolatey-brown gunge. The pair looked like two giant poops making a dash for freedom.

  As soon as they reached the doors to the LIBRARY, they slowed to a stroll.

  PITTER-PATTER…

  After all, the LIBRARY is a place where you should always be on your best behaviour. Especially if you are a librarian.

  “W-w-where to begin?” whispered an out-of-breath Father as they strolled through the aisles and aisles of floor-to-ceiling books, leaving a trail of brown sludge behind them. OOZE!

  “The d-d-dictionary?” replied an out-of-breath Mother.

  Their eyes searched the shelves of dictionaries until they found the widest, weightiest one. They eased it off the shelf together. The book was almost as heavy as their daughter.*

  Mrs Meek eagerly flicked through the pages until she reached the long, long list of words that began with F. However, soon a word that began with F, “frustration”, was painted all over her face.

  “‘FING’ isn’t in the dictionary,” she whispered.

  “OH, FOR GOODNESS’ SAKE!” exclaimed Father.

  “SHUSH!” shushed Mrs Meek, pointing to a sign that her husband himself had put up, which read “SILENCE”.

  “Sorry,” he mouthed, before continuing in hushed tones. “That doesn’t mean there is no such thing as a ‘FING’. There are thousands and thousands of books in the LIBRARY. Surely one of them must mention a ‘FING’.”

 

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