The Adventures of Bottersnikes and Gumbles. Desmond Digby
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The Gumbles thought this was one of the best games they’d had since last spring. While they were waiting for their turn to jump they tried to make up a Gumblesong about it, but they couldn’t think of a rhyme for Berlumf.
Suddenly the noise changed to Wheee Blap! though they didn’t know why; they thought it might be easier to find a rhyme for Blap, but by the time they found out why they were going Blap instead of Berlumf it was too late to be bothering about Gumblesongs.
The rest of the Bottersnikes had arrived, expecting to have a good laugh at Chank — but this was better, much better! They sneaked past the tree one at a time, each holding out his tin and catching the Gumbles before they bounced on Chank. Naturally, the noise of their falling changed to Blap.
Chank woke up just in time to catch little Willigumble, who was the last to jump. He couldn’t find his jam tin and had to put him in his roof instead. Chank was very pleased to have his roof back though annoyed at not finding his jam tin, because it was the one with the wire handle. It was a good thing he did not find the tin as Wagtail had lined it with soft grass and laid an egg in it.
‘The King’s Party is going to be put off until it stops raining,’ Willigumble whispered to Happigumble and the others nearby. ‘So there won’t be any nasty work for you for a bit. Now we’ve got to find a way of getting you out of the jam tins. I’ll go and see if Tinkingumble’s managed to have a tink yet — he’s sure to think of something.’
He scurried across to Tinkingumble’s tin, taking care the Bottersnikes did not see him. This was not difficult. They were all under cover so as not to get wet in the sun. The King was in his car, Chank was wearing his roof, the Weathersnike was under his bathtub as usual and the rest were sulking beneath their pots and pans, bits of iron, mattresses, kettles, watering cans and buckets, waiting for the rain that never came.
‘No,’ said Tinkingumble sadly, ‘I haven’t had a tink, and I’ve tried and tried. D’you know what, Willigumble? I think I’ve lost my tink!’
‘Perhaps you dropped it somewhere,’ Willigumble suggested. ‘I’ll go and hunt for it. What does it look like?’
Neither knew for certain. They imagined it would be a small bag with a bell that rang as each good idea popped out.
‘I’ll get the bees to help me look,’ said Willi, trying to sound cheerful. ‘They go everywhere.’
Willigumble went off. It was a lovely spring day with a blue sky and a breeze that blew in playful puffs, just enough to keep the leaves from dozing. Down below, flowers were warming themselves in the sun, the bitter peas, red spiders and coral heath in the damp places; bees were busy looking for pollen and birds flying for the fun of it.
Lower still, right on the warm earth, thousands of ants, beetles and spiders were on the move, each one busy doing what it should do on a fine spring morning.
It is good to be friendly with these little people. Willigumble was, and very soon he had an army of ants and bees, birds, cicadas, frogs and spiders helping him by keeping an eye open as they went about their work, but none of them saw anything that looked like the lost tink.
‘Whew! The bush is a big place,’ said Willigumble, after he had been searching for a long time without success. ‘And we’re not even sure what the tink looks like. I’d better have a rest and a think.’ He sat on an old spring mattress in the rubbish, far enough from the Bottersnikes to be safe. The cover was quite rotten and he fell in amongst the springs and the things that happen in old mattresses, but it did not matter. Willigumble settled in the coil of a spring and bounced lightly to help him think things over.
‘Now I’m out,’ he thought, ‘and the rest are in — tins, that is. They can’t get out and I’m not strong enough to pull them out. Tinkingumble’s lost his tink and it can’t be found, and if they don’t escape soon, by tink or by think, there’ll be all that horrible work to do for the King’s Party. This is serious. Very serious.’
There came a loud laugh from a branch above his head. ‘Hahahahahohohohohaha!’ Kookaburra, of course.
‘Lovely day,’ remarked the bird to Willigumble. ‘What are you doing down there?’
‘I’m thinking how serious it is.’
‘Ar, it doesn’t do to think,’ said Kookaburra. ‘Bad for the brain. That’s the trouble with you ground creatures. Too much thinking, not enough flying. Look at those Bottersnikes now — what do they think they’re doing, cooped up in their pots and pans on a lovely day like this?’
‘They think it’s going to rain,’ said Willigumble.
‘Hahahahahoho! Rain? On a day like this? This is the sort of day that makes you glad to be a bird,’ Kookaburra said. ‘Why, it’s spring in the air today!’
‘What’s that?’ said Willigumble, bouncing higher.
‘What’s the matter with you? I said spring’s in the air. Can’t you feel it?’
‘Grasshoppers!’ shouted Willigumble. ‘Spring. In the air. I believe you’re right! Help me, please, Kookaburra, with your strong beak,’ and he did a very strange thing for a Gumble. He began pulling the old mattress to bits.
‘Everybody’s mad!’ said Kookaburra.
With the help of the astonished bird Willigumble had stripped the rotting cover from the mattress and laid bare the springs when they heard shouting and snuffle-nose noises from the Bottersnikes, and saw smoke rising.
‘Have they started a bushfire?’ Willigumble asked anxiously.
It wasn’t a bushfire. It was Chank’s roof. Chank had got angry waiting for the rain that didn’t rain and his straw hat had caught alight from his red-hot ears.
Chank was extremely angry when he saw that his beautiful roof was smouldering, and the angrier he became the hotter the fire flared. The other Bottersnikes stood giving good advice but they did not do anything to put the fire out.
‘It must be cosy in there with a nice fire,’ Snorg said.
‘But you should have a chimney to let the smoke out,’ said Glob.
‘Keep still, Chank, while we cook a bit of toast,’ and they snuffled in high glee.
Slightly overheated now, Chank started running about madly. He could not see where