If you’re like most of our readers, you’re probably wondering whether we have a building permit for our treehouse. Well, of course we do. Terry organised it. ‘Didn’t you, Terry? Terry?! Where are you?’
‘Ah, there you are,’ I say. ‘I was telling the readers how you got a permit for the treehouse.’
‘GRRRR!’ says Terry.
‘Terry,’ I say, ‘quit messing around.’
‘GRRRRR!’
He looks kind of weird. And I think I know why. He’s covered in ants!
‘Have you been playing in the ant farm again?’ I say.
But Terry doesn’t answer. He just reaches out and grabs me by the throat.
‘TERRY?!’ I gasp.
Just when I can hardly breathe a moment longer, another Terry rushes in.
‘Don’t worry, Andy,’ says the second Terry. ‘I’ll save you!’
The second Terry whacks the first Terry with a badminton racquet. WHAP!
And all of a sudden the air is filled with …
There are ants everywhere (which is bad). But I’m not being strangled any more (which is good).
‘Are you okay, Andy?’ says Terry.
‘Yes,’ I say. ‘I think so, but what’s going on? Why did you attack me like that?’
‘That wasn’t me,’ says Terry. ‘It was the ants pretending to be me. I accidentally left the ant farm gate open and they escaped. I tried to get them all back in but they made themselves into a fake me and knocked me out. Then they must have come after you.’
‘But why?’ I say. ‘I didn’t do anything to them!’
‘Me, neither,’ says Terry. ‘All I know is that now they’ve turned into a giant foot and are about to stomp on us! Run!’
‘What are we going to do?’ says Terry.
‘There’s only one thing we can do,’ I say.
‘Become dog poo, of course!’
‘Dog poo?’ says Terry. ‘But I hate dog poo!’
‘So do feet,’ I say. ‘They will do anything to avoid stepping in it.’
‘Okay,’ says Terry. ‘How do we do it?’
‘Simple,’ I say. ‘Just make yourself soft, squishy and really stinky.’
‘How’s this?’ says Terry. ‘Stinky enough for you?’
‘Perfect,’ I say. ‘Perfectly disgusting.’
And, sure enough, the ant foot stops stomping and just hovers cautiously in the air above us.
‘It’s working!’ says Terry. ‘They can’t squash us now!’
‘No,’ I say, ‘not unless they change shape again.’
‘Oh no,’ says Terry. ‘They are changing shape again—into a giant pooper scooper!’
‘No problem,’ I say. ‘We’ll just change ourselves into a puddle of water.’
‘We’ll be safe now,’ I say. ‘Pooper scoopers can scoop up poop … but they can’t scoop up water!’
‘We really fooled those ants,’ I say.
‘Yeah,’ says Terry. ‘Ants may be smart, but we’re even smarter.’
‘But maybe not quite smart enough,’ I say. ‘Now the ants are becoming a giant paper towel. They’re going to absorb us!’
‘But I like being water!’ says Terry. ‘I don’t want to be absorbed.’
‘Me neither,’ I say. ‘But we will be unless we change back into us … right now!’
We change back. We don’t get absorbed (which is good. But we do get scrunched up) which is bad.
‘If only we had some fire,’ says Terry, ‘we could burn the paper.’
‘I’ve got a match,’ I say, ‘but I don’t have a matchbox.’
‘That’s too bad,’ says Terry. ‘Because I’ve got a matchbox, but I don’t have a match.’
‘Hmmm,’ I say.
‘Hmmm,’ says Terry.
‘Hmmm.’
‘Hmmm.’
‘Hmmm.’
‘Hmmm.’
‘Hey,’ I say, ‘I’ve got a great idea!’
‘What?’ says Terry.
‘Why don’t we put my match and your matchbox together?’
‘That sounds dangerous,’ says Terry. ‘It might start a fire.’
‘Exactly!’ I say. ‘Take that, ants!’
‘It’s working!’ says Terry. ‘The paper towel is burning up!’
‘Yes,’ I say. ‘But I think we’re burning up, too!’
‘Yeah,’ says Terry. ‘My head is getting quite hot.’
‘That’s probably because your hair is on fire,’ I say.
‘So is yours,’ says Terry.
‘AAAGGGGHHHH!’ we scream.
But we don’t scream for long, because next thing we know the ants turn into a giant hose and start blasting us and themselves with cool, fresh, fire-quenching ant-water!
They blast and they blast and they keep on blasting until we are trapped at the top of a gushing geyser of angry ants.
‘What do we do now?’ says Terry.
‘Call for help,’ I say, ‘and hope like crazy that Jill hears us.’