Джим Филд – The Person Controller (страница 2)
Chapter 40: Pure Power
Chapter 41: …
Chapter 42: I’ve felt better
Part 3: Highest Level
Chapter 43: A big, flat, cardboard shoe
Chapter 44: The Bracket Wood and Surrounding Area Inter-school Winter Trophy
Chapter 45: The next game
Chapter 46: There’s only really one place
Chapter 47: What happened?
Chapter 48: Never even come near me with a football again
Chapter 49: Like this one?
Chapter 50: Paired
Chapter 51: Gravity Rush
Chapter 52: When it comes to the crunch
Chapter 53: Single bow
Chapter 54: Watch Out!
Chapter 55: 110 per cent
Chapter 56: A gentle little push
Part 4: Bonus
Chapter 57: Bonus Easter egg. On Christmas Day
Footnotes
Acknowledgements
Books by David Baddiel
About the Publisher
Fred and Ellie Stone were twins. But they were never sure whether or not they could call themselves identical. They certainly shared exactly the same birthday (20th September, eleven years ago) and they had the same mum and dad (Eric and Janine). But their names were Fred and Ellie. And a boy and a girl are, clearly, not identical.fn1
Yet they
They also both
Which was why what happened to it was quite so upsetting.
Eric Stone was – there is no nice way of saying this – fat. Well, there
To be fair to Eric, he did – normally after a bit of prompting from his wife, Janine, and his children, Fred and Ellie – go on a lot of diets.
He’d been on the High Fibre diet, and the Low Carb diet, and the Juice diet, and the No Juice diet, and the Cabbage Soup diet, and the Pea and Mint Soup diet, and a diet he made up where he only ate banana muffins and cheese. He’d been on the 5:2 diet and the 6:1 diet and the 4:3 diet and the 2:5 diet and even the 17:28 diet (which meant not eating anything for a minute between 17:27 and 17:29 every day). He’d been to Weight Watchers and Chocaholics Anonymous and Sixteen-stoners’ Self-help and Big-boned Portly Bacon Sandwich Retentors Sit Around in a Circle and Say How it isn’t Really Their Fault (actually this last one was what Janine called
Trouble was, the diets didn’t make Eric any lighter. If anything, they made him heavier because every time he finished one – and he did
Eric was just tucking into a bacon sandwich – the first one he’d had after giving up on the Jacket Potato Skin diet, which he’d followed for two whole days (it allowed you to eat jacket potato skins and you could put low-fat spread on them, which Eric had decided included mayonnaise) – when
The bacon sandwich, in a way, was what caused the whole thing. Because, whenever Eric Stone had his first bacon sandwich after a diet, he would become so entranced by the fatty saltiness of the pork rashers and how deliciously it sat against the brown-sauce-smeared white bread that he would forget everything else and close his eyes. He would lose himself in that bacon sandwich.
Unfortunately, the point at which he was losing himself in this
His big, grey, bought-in-1987 Y-front PANTS.
He had been planning to open his eyes shortly and watch TV. But not for a little while. Not until he’d really savoured the saltiness. Not until … “Ow!!!” said Eric, opening his eyes very wide.
“What is it?” said Janine, not bothering to turn away from
“I’ve sat on something, J!” said Eric.
“Well, move off it then,” said Janine, still looking at the screen while stroking the family cat, a white fluffy beast called Margaret Scratcher.
“I can’t!”
“You can’t?”
“I think … I think it’s stuck!”
Eric stood up.
He turned round, facing away from his wife. Interestingly, despite the obvious pain he was in, at no point did he stop eating his bacon sandwich.
“Can you see it?” he said.
“What do you mean can I see it?”
He glanced over his shoulder. “Stop watching
With a big
“What’s that?” she said.
“What’s what?”
“That black thing. Poking out of your pants.”
“That’s what I want to know!” said Eric. “Never mind it poking out, it’s
There was another
“For pity’s sake, Eric. Bend over.”
Eric did as he was told. There was a short pause as Janine – and Margaret Scratcher – peered. Eric felt he could
“How on earth did I get
“MY VIDEO-GAME CONTROLLER!!!” said another voice.
Ellie’s voice in fact. Sounding very upset. Reasonably, really, since she had just come into the living room to see her mother reaching out a slightly disgusted hand to retrieve her most prized possession from between the cheeks of her father’s 1987 Y-front-panted bottom.
As it happened, Ellie’s controller wasn’t actually broken. The toggle had gone a touch floppy and the X button looked like it had been knocked diagonal by whatever G-force it sustained while between Eric’s bottom cheeks. But it worked, kind of. If you ignored the fact that when it shuddered – like controllers do when you hit the bar in