The Indian in the Cupboard Complete Collection. Lynne Banks Reid

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The Indian in the Cupboard Complete Collection - Lynne Banks Reid


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and, picking up the approved figure, made his way to the counter.

      “Just this one, please,” he said.

      Mr Yapp was looking at him. A very odd look.

      “Are you sure you only want the one?” he asked.

      “Yes.”

      Mr Yapp took the plastic figure, dropped it into a bag, and gave it back to Omri.

      “Ten pence.”

      Omri paid and left the shop. Suddenly he felt a hand on his shoulder. He spun round. It was Mr Yapp. The look on his face was now not odd at all, but red and angry.

      “Now you can hand over the two you stole.”

      Omri stood aghast. “I didn’t steal any!”

      “Don’t add lying to your faults, my lad! I watched you put them in your pocket – a cowboy and an Indian.”

      Omri’s mouth hung open. He thought he was going to be sick.

      “I didn’t—” he tried to say, but no words came out.

      “Turn out your pockets.”

      “They’re mine!” Omri managed to gasp.

      “A likely story! And I suppose you brought them out to help you choose the new one?”

      “Yes!”

      “Ha, ha, ha,” said Mr Yapp heavily. “Come on, stop playing around. I lose hundreds of pounds’ worth of stuff a year to you thieving kids. When I do catch one of you red-handed, I’m not likely to let it pass – I know your sort – if I let you off, you’d be boasting to your pals at school how easy it is to get away with it, and most likely back you’d come tomorrow for another pocketful!”

      Omri was now fighting back tears. Quite a crowd had collected, much like the crowd in the art-room – some of the same people, even – but his feelings were no longer so pleasant. He wished he could die or disappear.

      “It’s no good trying to get round me by crying!” shouted Mr Yapp. “Give me them back – right now, or I’ll call the police!”

      All at once Patrick was beside him.

      “They’re his,” he said. “I know they’re his because he showed them to me at school. A cowboy with a white stetson hat and an Indian in a Chief’s headdress. He told me he was coming to buy a new one. Omri wouldn’t steal.”

      Mr Yapp let go of Omri and looked at Patrick. He knew Patrick quite well, because it happened that Patrick’s brother had once been his paper-boy.

      “Will you vouch for him, then?”

      “Course I will!” said Patrick staunchly. “I’m telling you, I saw ’em both this afternoon.”

      But still the shopkeeper wasn’t convinced. “Let’s see if they fit your description,” he said.

      Omri, who had been staring at Patrick as at some miraculous deliverer, felt his stomach drop into his shoes once more. But then he had an idea.

      He reached both hands into his pockets. Then he held out one hand slowly, still closed, and everyone looked at it, though it was actually empty. The other hand he lifted to his mouth as if to stifle a cough, and whispered into it, “Lie still! Don’t move! Plastic!” Then he put both hands before him and opened them.

      The men played along beautifully. There they lay, side by side, stiff and stark, as like lifeless plastic figures as could possibly be. In any case Omri was taking no chances. He gave Mr Yapp just long enough to see that they were dressed as Patrick had said before closing his fingers again.

      Mr Yapp grunted.

      “Those aren’t from my shop anyhow,” he said. “All my Indian Chiefs are sitting down, and that sort of cowboy is always on a horse. Well, I’m sorry, lad. You’ll have to excuse me, but you must admit, it did look suspicious.”

      Omri managed a sickly smile. The crowd were melting away. Mr Yapp shuffled back into the shop. Omri and Patrick were left alone on the pavement.

      “Thanks,” said Omri. It came out as croaky as a frog.

      “That’s okay. Have a Toffo.”

      They had a Toffo each and walked along side by side. After a while Omri said, “A man’s gotta chew what a man’s gotta chew.”

      They gave each other a quick grin.

      “Let’s give them some.”

      They stopped, took the men out, and gave them each some bits of the chocolate covering on the Toffo.

      “That’s a reward,” said Patrick, “for playing dead.”

      Little Bull then naturally demanded to know what it had all been about, and the boys explained as well as they could. Little Bull was quite intrigued.

      “Man say that Omri steal Little Bull?”

      “Yes.”

      “And Boone?”

      Omri nodded.

      “Omri fool to steal Boone!” roared Little Bull, laughing. Boone, stuffing himself with chocolate, gave him a dirty look.

      “Where woman?” Little Bull asked eagerly.

      “I’ve got her.”

      “When make real?”

      “Tonight.”

      Patrick gave him a look of pure longing. But he didn’t say anything. They walked along again. They were getting near Omri’s house.

      Omri was thinking. After a while he said, “Patrick, what about you staying the night?”

      Patrick’s face lit up like a bulb.

      “Could I? And see—”

      “Yes.”

      “Wow! Thanks!”

      They ran the rest of the way home.

       Chapter Fourteen THE FATEFUL ARROW

      OMRI’S BROTHERS WERE already sitting at the tea-table when the two boys rushed in.

      “Hi! What’s for tea?” Omri asked automatically.

      Gillon and Adiel didn’t answer. Adiel had a funny smirk on his face. Omri hardly noticed.

      “Let’s make a sandwich and eat it upstairs,” he suggested to Patrick.

      They slapped some peanut butter on bread, poured mugs of milk, and hurried up the stairs to Omri’s room, whispering all the way.

      “How long does it take?”

      “Only a few minutes.”

      “Can I see her?”

      “Wait till we get upstairs!”

      Omri opened the door – and stopped dead.

      The white medicine-cupboard was gone.

      “Wh-where is it?” gasped Patrick.

      Omri didn’t say a word. He turned and rushed downstairs again, with Patrick behind him.

      “Okay, where’ve you hidden it?” he shouted as soon as he burst into the kitchen.

      “I don’t know what you’re referring to,” said Adiel loftily.

      “Yes


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