The Chicken Gave It To Me
Also by Anne Fine
Bill’s New Frock
How to Write Really Badly
Saving Miss Mirabelle
Anneli the Art Hater
The Angel of Nitshill Road
Ivan the Terrible
Genie, Genie, Genie
Press Play
Illustrated by Philippe Dupasquier
First published in Great Britain 1992
by Methuen Children’s Books
This edition published 2010
by Egmont UK Limited
239 Kensington High Street
London W8 6SA
Text copyright © Anne Fine 1992
Illustrations copyright © Philippe Dupasquier 1992
The moral rights of the author and illustrator have been asserted
ISBN 978 1 4052 3321 7
eBook ISBN 978 1 7803 1165 4
A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library
Printed and bound in Great Britain by the CPI Group
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher and copyright owner.
For Clare Druce
You can visit Anne Fine’s website
www.annefine.co.uk
and download free bookplates from
www.myhomelibrary.org
Contents
1 A tiny little book
2 The True Story of Harrowing Farm
3 Harpoon . . . Harpsichord . . . Harridan
4 I go chicken-dippy
5 Penguins or cheetahs, whales or sharks
6 I show myself to be naturally chicken-hearted
7 ‘Not today, thank you.’
8 Chicken no longer
9 Just a toy
10 Green sky. Green earth. Green wind. Green sand.
11 ‘No fear!’
12 Chicken of history
13 Been done before
14 Chat show chicken
15 In front of frillions
16 Chicken celebrity
17 Out it came
18 Surprises, surprises!
19 The last few words
20 Close them all
1
A tiny little book
Andrew laid it on Gemma’s desk. A cloud of farmyard dust puffed up in her face. The first thing she asked when she stopped sneezing was:
‘Where did you get that?’
‘The chicken gave it to me.’
‘What chicken? How could a chicken give it to you? It’s a book.’
It was, too. A tiny little book. The cover was just a bit of old farm sack with edges that looked as if they had been – yes – pecked. And the writing was all thin and scratchy and – there’s no way round this – chickeny.
‘This is ridiculous! Chickens can’t write books. Chickens can’t read.’
‘The chicken gave it to me,’ Andrew repeated helplessly.
‘But how?’
So Andrew told her how he’d been walking past the fence that ran round the farm sheds, and suddenly this chicken had leaped out in front of him in the narrow pathway.
‘Pounced on me, really.’
‘Don’t be silly, Andrew. Chickens don’t pounce.’
‘This one did,’ Andrew said stubbornly. ‘It fluttered and squawked and made the most tremendous fuss. I was quite frightened. And it kept pushing this book at me with its scabby little foot – just pushing the book towards me whichever way I stepped. The chicken was absolutely determined I should take it.’
Gemma sat back in her desk and stared. She stared at Andrew as if she’d never even seen him before, as if they hadn’t been sharing a desk for weeks and weeks, borrowing each other’s rubbers, getting on one another’s nerves, telling each other secrets. She thought she knew him well. Had he gone mad?
‘Have you gone mad?’
Andrew leaned closer and hissed rather fiercely in her ear.
‘Listen,’ he said. ‘I didn’t choose to do this, you know. I didn’t want this to happen. I didn’t get out of bed this morning and fling back the curtains and say to myself, “Heigh-ho! What a great day to walk to school down the path by the farm sheds, minding my own business, and get attacked by some ferocious hen who has decided I am the one to read his wonderful book –”’
‘Her wonderful book,’ interrupted Gemma. ‘Hens aren’t him. They’re all her. That’s how they get to lay eggs.’
Andrew chose to ignore this.
‘Well,’ he said. ‘That’s what happened. Believe me or don’t believe me. I don’t care. I’m simply telling you that this chicken stood there making a giant fuss and kicking up a storm until I reached down to pick up her dusty little book. Then she calmed down and strolled off.’
‘Not strolled, Andrew,’ Gemma said. ‘Chickens don’t stroll. She may have strutted off. Or even –’
But Andrew had shoved his round little face right up close to Gemma’s, and he was hissing again.
‘Gemma! This is important. Don’t you see?’
And, all at once, Gemma believed him. Maybe she’d gone mad too. She didn’t know. But she didn’t think Andrew was making it up, and she didn’t think Andrew was dreaming.
The chicken gave it to him.
She picked it up. More dust puffed out as, carefully, she stretched the sacking cover flat on her desk to read the scratchy chicken writing of the title.
Opening it to the first page, she slid the book until it was exactly halfway between the two of them.
Together they began to read.
2
The True Story of Harrowing Farm
It was a wet and windy night, so wet you could slip and drown, so windy no one would hear your cries. Only a snake or a toad would choose to be away from shelter on such a night. And that is why only the snakes and the toads saw the gleaming green light pouring down from the black sky.
We chickens saw nothing, of course. How could we? There are no windows in the chicken shed. If we had windows, our lives could not be ruled so well by the electric light that decides when we wake and when we sleep and when we lay our eggs. After – oh, yes, of course, after – some of the hens in the cages by the door said that they’d heard the soft hum of the engines over the howling of the wind. But the rest of us think they were boasting. On that black night, the spaceship landed without a sound. And it was not until the shed door flew open, flooding us with an eerie green light, that most of us chickens woke with a flutter and a squawk.
Little green men.
And they spoke perfect Chicken. (Later we found out they spoke Pig and Cow and Crow and pretty well everything. It’s one of the ways in which they are, as they put it, ‘superior’. They can speak any language they happen to meet. But on that first night we were amazed that they spoke perfect Chicken.)
Not that they were polite with it.
‘Chickens!’ said the spindliest and greenest, and it was almost like a groan. ‘Travel a frillion miles, and what do you find when you arrive? A chicken!’
The others flicked the catches of our cage doors with their willowy green fingers.
‘Out, out!’ they called. ‘Wakey, wakey! Make room! Out you get! Clear off! Go and make your own nests! The party’s over!’
The party’s over? We chickens couldn’t believe our luck. We’d been locked in those cages almost since we were born. Nothing to do. You can’t even stretch your wings. You just stand there on a wire rack (ruining your feet) for your whole life. And the one thing they want you to do – laying your egg – you’d far rather do in private.
The party’s over! I can’t describ
e to you the din as we all fluttered clumsily down, and scrambled unsteadily for the door.
The little green men were even ruder now.
‘Call themselves chickens? I’ve seen finer specimens on other planets begging to be put down!’
‘Look at them! Twisted feet. Bare patches all over. And look at their beaks!’
‘Disgusting!’
‘Leave the door open as you go, please. This shed needs some fresh air.’
Fresh air! And we were out in it for the first time in our lives. We weren’t going to hang around shutting the shed door. No fear. We were away. The last I heard as I went hobbling off on my poor feet into the night was one of the little green men scolding the stragglers.
‘Hurry up. Out of those cages, please! We need tham for others.’
With one last shudder and a flutter, I was off.
3
Harpoon . . . Harpsichord . . . Harridan . . .
Gemma read faster than Andrew. By the time he reached the bottom of the page, her eyes were already on him.
‘What do you think?’
He twisted his face into a worried frown. He was about to speak, she knew. But then he just shook his head. He couldn’t find the words.
‘You think the chicken might have come from one of the farm sheds you pass on the way to school, don’t you?’ said Gemma. ‘I didn’t know the place had a name.’
Andrew turned back a page.
‘Harrowing Farm . . .’ he read aloud. ‘Funny name.’
‘Not funny,’ said Gemma. ‘That’s just what harrowing doesn’t mean.’
‘Harrowing means raking,’ Andrew corrected her. ‘A harrow is a tool that breaks up lumps in the soil.’
Now it was Gemma’s turn to correct him.
‘When we went to London,’ she told him, ‘my dad wouldn’t let me go in the Chamber of Horrors. He said it would be too harrowing.’
Andrew lifted his desk lid and rooted in the mess till he found his dictionary.
‘Harpoon . . . harpsichord . . . harridan . . .’ His finger slid down the side of the page. ‘Here we are. Harrowing.’
She leaned across, but he lifted the book and turned to face her so she couldn’t see. She just had to listen to him reading it.
‘Harrowing: breaking the clods in soil; or: terribly upsetting and distressing.’
Gemma ran her finger over the rough edge of the sacking cover.
‘So which do you think they meant?’
‘Maybe they meant both.’
‘Oh, Andrew! Surely not! Farms aren’t . . . Farms shouldn’t be . . . Why, everyone knows that farms are . . .’
Even before her voice trailed away, she was out of her seat and over to the bookshelf. Her fingers ran across the spines of the books as she read the titles aloud:
‘Life in the Arctic . . . China . . . Pterodactyls . . . Meet the Stone Age People . . . On the Farm. Here it is!’
She pulled out On the Farm. The book was for younger children really, but since the pictures were bright and clear, and there was quite a lot of information in it, their teacher had left it in the class library instead of sending it back to the Infants.
Gemma opened the pages at random. The pig was rooting contentedly with its snout in a frosty tussock of grass. The cow stood beside her calf, nudging her affectionately out of the ditch beside the hedge. In the soft summer evening sunlight, the hen ran happily round the orchard with her chicks.
‘Well!’ Andrew said. ‘The farm doesn’t look like that. It never has.’
Andrew should know. He’d walked past every day since he was five. There were no orchards, no hedges, no ditches, not even any tussocks of grass. There was fencing – miles of it to keep people out, and the land behind lay as flat and boring as a huge square of giant’s knitting. When Andrew thought about it, he realised he only knew it was a farm at all because he had been told. You never saw an animal as you passed by. All you saw standing in rows on the far side were six great long brown sheds.
‘The sheds! They’re not at all like the ones in this book.’
He pointed to the page with the picture of the pig. The shed behind stood crooked, with a drooping roof. Some of the tiles had slipped, leaving holes over the slats. The door hung on one hinge. And all around lay stones from a low wall outside that had tumbled down long ago.
And everywhere was green. Green, green, green, green. The shed was drowning in green – strangled with brambles, choked with weeds, surrounded by nettles, crowned with moss.
‘You could muck about in that shed for hours. Days! Weeks! Years!’
‘No wonder the pig looks happy . . .’
She sounded so wistful. Andrew looked up and saw she was gazing out of the window. She couldn’t see the farm from here. But he knew from the look on Gemma’s face that she had it in mind – the locked gate and the endless wire, the rows of huge brown sheds.
Suddenly the blood rushed to her cheeks. She stabbed the brightly coloured book fiercely with her finger.
‘If it’s not true,’ she cried, ‘if it’s not like this, why do people give us these books? Why do they try and trick us into thinking everything’s fine and hunky-dory? This book is as bad as a lie! So why do they do it?’
Andrew prised her stiff, angry finger off the page of On the Farm before she made a hole. Then he turned the next page of the book the chicken gave him.
‘Maybe,’ he said, ‘they don’t want you to think about it.’
They read on.
4
I go chicken-dippy
I’d never been outside before. Never in my whole life. I went quite silly, really. I feel a bit of a fool even now, thinking back on it. But I went chicken-dippy. I couldn’t handle it at all, not everything at once. Not when the only thing I’d known since I was hatched was wire netting and other chickens.
Try and imagine!
First, how it felt. All that wet air and wind. I’d never felt wind ruffling my feathers before. I’d never even been wet. Now here I was staggering about in a slimy mud puddle, stung by fierce little cold raindrops. It was so wonderful! It was like being born again. I felt I’d come alive!
And the noise! Roaring wind. Creaking tree tops. Deafening! The storm sounded like the world cracking in half, just for me, to wake me after a lifetime of having my ears stuffed with chicken cackle. I wanted to do my bit, so I joined in, clucking and squawking like something gone loopy.
Being outside in the fresh air was great.
And it was fresh. Fresh and cold. But what I’d never guessed was how many smells go to make up fresh air. Inside the shed was terrible – terrible! Too awful to describe. And at weekends, when we weren’t cleaned out, it was even worse. The workers always wore masks, but even so, on some mornings they coughed and choked, and their eyes were red-rimmed.
(Imagine how we felt. We’d been in there all night!)
Outside, I smelled a thousand things I couldn’t even name until later – the leaf-mould underfoot, wet bracken, a thread of exhaust fumes from the road behind, cow parsnip, smoke from the chimney over the hill, the film of oil on the puddles.
A giant stew. Smells of the World! And I was breathing it for the first time. Me – a bedraggled, middle-aged feather baby.
But I felt good.
And there was so much to feel good about. Everywhere I looked were things I’d never seen. Inside the shed it’s bright lights or total dark. Here, if I looked one way, I could see the eerie green glow of the spaceship. The other way, I saw the silver gleam of moonlight slicing through cloud, shadows and darker shadows. Ripples over the puddle. Dark grasses doubled in the wind, but still higher than my head. And, on the ground –
On the ground –
Peck! Peck! Peck! Peck!
Don’t think I usually eat at night. (I hope I know better than that!) But if you’ve never ever had the chance to pick your food out of the ground – dig out a seed here, spot a bit of root there, pounce on a grub . . .
And, boy, did it taste good!
If you, like me, had spent your life eating the same old dry pellets day after day, you’d understand how something fresh, something juicy, something wriggling and alive, could taste so perfect. Perfect!
Oh, try to imagine! I was wet. I was cold. And (now I look back on it) I think I must have been terrified.
But I was ecstatic! I was free!
And like all the other hens, I was hoping to stay so. By now, of course, everyone else had sensibly taken off. Some hid in the bushes the farmer had planted to try to hide the sheds from the road. The ones that hadn’t rubbed too many feathers off on their cage wire managed to get up in the tree to roost. And I, too, staggered off in search of shelter.
(You’ll not believe this.)
THE WRONG WAY!
Yes! Call me feather-brained! Call me chicken-dippy! Everyone else makes for the safety of black night. I go for the eerie green light! I make for the spaceship!
I have the thinking power of a vegetable, truly I do. I go and roost right under one of its gleaming sides.
And that is why I am the only one to hear, down the ventilation shaft, two of the little green men having a chat.
LGM 1: ‘So what’s for dinner?’
LGM 2: ‘Not chicken, anyway!’
(They fell about laughing at this one, you could tell.)
LGM1: ‘People?’
LGM2: ‘You’ll be lucky. We haven’t even cleaned out the cages yet, let alone filled them up again.’
LGM1: ‘So it’s boring old breads, seeds, grains, beans, cheese, eggs, salads and vegetables and stuff, is it?’
LGM2: ‘Don’t knock ’em. Tasty and good for you.’
LGM1: ‘But people taste so much better!’
LGM2: ‘Oh, don’t I know it! I agree. There’s simply nothing to beat a nice roasting joint of –’
A metal door banged and I heard no more.