Read Harriet Bright in a Pickle Online
Authors: Claire Craig
Little gusts of wind rippled across the blue pool. Red, green and yellow flags fluttered above the water.
It looked just like a fair, thought Harriet Bright. But without the Ferris wheel and toffee apples and fairy floss.
And fun
. She shivered in her swimming togs.
The stands were full of people who'd been watching the swimming all morning. The Year 4 races were the last ones of the day.
Harriet Bright looked up at the sky. Big black clouds were moving in to form bigger
above.
âPlease rain in the next three minutes,' she said to the clouds. âI promise I'll never complain about anything again. I promise I'll feed the cat every day, even though cat food really stinks.'
Melly Fanshawe came and stood beside her. They were in the same heat. âDon't worry, Harriet. It's
only
25 metres. It'll be over soon.'
âLet's swim together,' said Harriet Bright.
Melly Fanshawe looked at her doubtfully. âI'll try,' she said. âBut I don't know if I can swim as slow as you. I might drown.'
Everyone was lined up on the blocks, waiting.
Harriet Bright looked at Mrs Fletcher, the school principal. She was supposed to be starting the race, but she seemed to be in a bit of a flap.
She was waving her hands in the air and shouting,
My husband Arnold gave it to me before he left for a safari in Africa.'
Her face was all red and upset.
Mr Moody looked impatiently at his watch.
âAh, Mrs Fletcher?' he said. âI really think we should begin â'
âYes, yes, all right,' she snapped.
âONYOURMARKSGETSET
GO!'
she shouted very quickly.
Harriet Bright jumped into the water. It was
freezing!
Goosebumps
on her arms and legs.
Paul Picklebottom was in the lane next to her. Splashing and kicking furiously.
He looked like a sleek fast fish.
Harriet Bright tried to get her arms and her legs to move at the same time but they just didn't seem to want to. She kept swallowing big gulps of water when she opened her mouth to breathe.
She thought of Great Uncle Cedric and his
Nasty Moment
when he was forty-four.
Paul Picklebottom was halfway down the pool, and Melly Fanshawe wasn't far behind.
Harriet Bright was coming second to last.
Reece Thomas was just behind her.
He had broken his arm a couple of months ago and it still wasn't very strong.
At least I'll be faster than Reece Thomas, she thought.
But then Reece Thomas passed her.
Harriet Bright was coming last!
I wonder if you can die from embarrassment? she thought. Maybe I'll be the first person ever.
Luckily she had her face in the water so no one could see her red cheeks.
Paul Picklebottom was already at the end of the pool. The crowd was cheering loudly.
Harriet Bright put her head right under the water so she couldn't hear them.
It's very quiet down here, she thought as she looked around in the bleached-blue water. If I really
was
a whale, I could stay here forever.
And then she saw something, lying right in the corner at the bottom of the pool, tucked half under a leaf.
A gold ring.
Harriet Bright bobbed up to the surface, took a great mouthful of air and dived straight down towards the leaf.
She curled her finger around the ring and headed for the surface again. She could see the smudgy reflections of people staring down and pointing at her.
She held her hand up in the air, and the ring glittered in the sunlight.
It was just like an
OLYMPIC MOMENT
.
The crowd stood and cheered.
Melly Fanshawe raced over with a towel and a big smile.
Mrs Fletcher began to cry, big fat tears rolling down her blotchy cheeks.
âWell done, Harriet,' said Mr Moody as he helped her out of the water. He didn't look so fierce when he smiled, thought Harriet Bright.
After all the races had finished, Paul Picklebottom got a medal for winning the Year 4 final. The spectators cheered and stamped their feet.
âAnd we have another
very special
award,' said Mrs Fletcher. âTo Harriet Bright, for her deep-diving skills â and for finding my precious gold ring. Thank you, Harriet.'
The crowd clapped very loudly.
Harriet Bright didn't have a poem for this special occasion but she thought she would make one up on the spot.
She was about to speak when, suddenly, everyone jumped up and ran for cover.
It had just started to rain.
âHarriet â look!' said Melly Fanshawe, pointing at the noticeboard.
Harriet Bright beamed.
âCinderella is my
Most Favourite
fairy tale,' she said. âThere's a ball, and a prince and a
dress with sparkly bits.'
âI like the fairy godmother,' said Melly Fanshawe. âShe turns the mice into four white horses. That's much nicer than catching them in mouse traps.'
Paul Picklebottom was kicking a soccer ball against the wall. âFairy tales are for girls,' he said.
âAnd brick walls are for boys,' whispered Harriet Bright to Melly Fanshawe as they all hurried into the classroom.
Mrs Glossia was writing the parts in Cinderella on the blackboard as they sat down at their desks.
âHEY, Harriet Bright,'
shouted Paul Picklebottom from the back of the class. âYou could be the pumpkin.'
âAnd you could be the
sister of them all,' muttered Harriet Bright from the front of the class.
âDoes anyone have any questions about Cinderella?' said Mrs Glossia.
âAre there any dragons in it?' asked Paul Picklebottom. âOr big monsters with
Mrs Glossia sighed.
Harriet Bright sighed too.
She was nine but Paul Picklebottom was ten!
How could he get to be double digits and not know
anything
about Cinderella?
Harriet Bright was planning to know something about
everything
by the time she was twenty and really old.
âCinderella is a fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm,' said Mrs Glossia, writing their name on the blackboard.
âWhy was she called Cinderella?' asked Ruby Frost.
âShe used to sit by the cinders of the fire at night, lonely and tired,' said Mrs Glossia.
âMost people don't have real fires anymore,' said Harriet Bright. âShould we call her something else?'
âWhat, like, Heaterella?' sniggered Paul Picklebottom.
Harriet Bright ignored him.
Sometimes it was the best thing to do with boys.
Especially
Paul Picklebottom.
âI've got some special homework for you over the weekend,' said Mrs Glossia.
Harriet Bright sat up straight.
She
special homework.
âFirst,' said Mrs Glossia, âI want you to decide who you'd like to be in the play.'
Well, that's easy, thought Harriet Bright. I know who I want to be.
âThen,' said Mrs Glossia, âfrom the moment you wake up on Saturday morning, and for the rest of the day, I want you to pretend you
are
that person.'
âWhat do you mean, Mrs Glossia?' asked Polly Manning, flicking her blonde ponytail over her shoulder.
Harriet Bright glared at Polly Manning's perfect ponytail.
Polly Manning always got the best parts in school plays.
She said that acting was in her blood. Her mother was in a TV commercial for hair shampoo.
Polly Manning had been Rapunzel last year. She had had to sit on top of a ladder all night and wait to be rescued by the prince.
When the prince finally climbed up the ladder, Polly Manning cried out that she had pins and needles in her feet and couldn't move.
Nobody had known what to do after that because Rapunzel didn't say that in the play.
There had been a
Great Big Silence
.
Mrs Glossia had had to rush on stage with a sign saying:
âIt's called “getting into character”, Polly,' continued Mrs Glossia. âI want you to understand what it's like to actually
be
that person.'
Paul Picklebottom looked at Mrs Glossia blankly.
But Harriet Bright knew
exactly
what she meant.
She could see it all:
And, suddenly, she knew.
Harriet Bright wasn't going to be a world-famous poet anymore.
That had just been a phase she'd been going through.
Harriet Bright was going to be a â¦
WORLD-FAMOUS
ACTOR.