Read Chew Bee or Not Chew Bee Online
Authors: Martin Chatterton
Willy found himself being dragged backwards into the wings by Yorick. The big man's hand was clamped firmly over his mouth.
Sir Anstruther Skellington climbed the few steps onto the stage and waddled across to Charlie. The effort made him short of breath and his face turned even redder. He motioned to his goons and pointed at his mouth. Goldstein lumbered onstage and produced a small pot of honey and a silver spoon. Skellington pulled the cork out of the pot and scooped out a big spoonful of golden honey, which he wolfed down greedily. He handed the spoon back to Goldstein and tossed the pot over his shoulder. It hit the boards and rolled backstage.
Refreshed, Skellington turned back to Charlie. âI'd muzzle that yapping pup, if I were you, Mr Ginnell. Before I get Goldstein here to do it for me. Understood?'
Willy was doing his best to wriggle free
from Yorick's grasp. âI'm not a pup!' he managed to yell, before Yorick clamped a hand over his mouth again.
Charlie bowed to Sir Anstruther Skellington. âYou'll have no more problems from that direction, you have my word as a man of the theatre.'
Willy struggled harder to get away from Yorick. He was dying to kick Sir Anstruther Skellington squarely in his ample rear end.
Skellington pursed his wet lips doubtfully. âYes, well, I'll be popping back in an hour or so to see how your little pwoduction is coming along. And, of course, I will attend the opening-night performance, in order to decide if your play is borwing enough to go ahead. We don't want the London public to get too excited and have a wiot on our hands, do we?'
Then, with a final glare at Willy, he trotted out of the theatre as fast as his little legs could carry him.
Willy tore himself away from Yorick's grip and scrambled through a maze of boxes and corridors until he found a dark, deserted corner. He needed somewhere to think. He sat down on a dusty packing case, let out a long sigh and slumped forward, his head in his hands.
What a lousy day this was turning out to be.
Not many people find a good-hearted uncle and then lose him all over again in the same morning.
It wasn't fair.
Carrot-crunching Uncle Aaron hadn't
deserved what happened. The disgusting Sir Anstruther Skellington was right about that. Drowning in a bowl of Pig's Ear soup was a horrible way for anyone to go.
Something about that soup business was still nagging at Willy. And it wasn't just the sad fact of his uncle's death. There was an important detail wrong with the whole scene, like a bum note in a sad tune. The answer lay tantalisingly just out of Willy's grasp.
Skellington's great fat face swam back into Willy's mind. He was laughing his awful high-pitched laugh and saying insulting things about Uncle Aaron.
Willy wished he could have shut the heartless old goat up, but it would only have meant trouble for the Skulls.
He slammed his fist down on the packing case.
âOw!'
he said, and looked closely at the packing case. A single nail stuck out of the top.
A tiny patch of Willy's skin was caught on it.
He leaned back against the wall, pulled off his glove and inspected his hand. A drop of blood splashed onto his tunic. Willy put the side of his hand to his mouth.
âBloody business, Master Shakespeare,' said a low voice, rumbling from the shadows behind another stack of packing cases.
Willy pulled on his glove and jumped to his feet. He looked around wildly and realised that he'd ended up in a pretty spooky part of the theatre. âWho's there?' he gasped. âAnd my name's Waggledagger,' he added.
A tall grey shape slowly disengaged itself from a patch of shadow and came gliding forward. It loomed above Willy like an upright coffin.
Willy staggered backwards and banged into the packing case he'd been sitting on. âWh-wh-who are you?' he said. His voice sounded panicky, even to himself.
The figure glided further forward. It wore a hooded cape. If it had a face, it was lost somewhere deep inside the hood. âWaggledagger, eh? Most amusing,' it said. âClever, really; Shakespeare, Waggledagger.'
âHow do you know who I am?'
âThat's not important, Masterâ¦
Waggledagger.'
âAre youâ¦a ghost?' Willy said, looking around for an escape route.
âIt doesn't matter who I am,' said the figure. âFor now. You may as well call me “The Ghost”. But I'm not here to hurt you.'
âI'd better be going,' said Willy, edging sideways. âYorick will be wondering where I am.'
âNever mind Yorick,' said The Ghost. âIt's your uncle you should be worrying about.'
âUncle Aaron?' said Willy, suddenly interested, despite himself. âWhat about him? How do you know who my uncle was? He's dead, I already know that.'
âAll who live must die,' murmured The Ghost. âThe big question is: who killed him?'
Willy blinked. âWhat do you mean, “who”? It was an accident. He drowned in a bowl of soup.'
The Ghost paused for a moment before speaking. âPig's Ear soup,' he said softly. âStrange choice of meal for someone who didn't eat meat.'
Willy blinked. An image of Uncle Aaron eating a great plateful of carrots came into his head. âThat's right!' he exclaimed. âUncle Aaron was a vegetarian! So why would he be eating Pig's Ear soup?'
âThat is the kind of question that needs to be asked, young man,' The Ghost continued. âAnd you are the person to ask them.'
âWhy me?' said Willy.
The Ghost paused. âYou said it yourself, I am nothing but a ghost. I cannot start asking questions all over London. You must do it. You loved your uncle, didn't you?'
Willy nodded.
âThen it's settled,' said The Ghost. âYou must discover the truth behind his death.'
âHow?' said Willy.
âYou must ask questions such as: who would want Ardent dead? Who would know where to find him every day at lunchtime? And why did he end up in the soup? Have you asked
yourself
that question?'
âHeart attack?' said Willy.
âYour uncle was as strong as an ox,' said The Ghost. âAnd vegetarians usually have very healthy hearts.'
Willy didn't know if that was true. Uncle Aaron was the only vegetarian he'd ever met. But The Ghost sounded like he knew what he was talking about.
âSomething strange was found in your dead uncle's ear,' The Ghost said. âYou must find out who put it there. Then you must discover if that person is linked to your uncle's death.'
âWhat?' said Willy.
The Ghost leaned closer and drew a closed fist from the pocket of his robe. âHold out your hand,' he said.
Willy did as he was told. The Ghost dropped a small yellow-and-black object onto Willy's palm.
It was a dead bee.
âUncle Aaron died with a
bee
in his ear?' said Willy.
The Ghost ignored him. âIt is dangerous for me to stay in this theatre much longer,' he said, gliding back into the darkness. âI will be back to see you as soon as I can.'
âWait!' cried Willy. âWhy should I believe anything you say?'
There was a silence. The silence grew into a longer silence.
The Ghost had gone.
Yorick looked at the bee as if it might explode.
âA ghost gave you this?' he said. âNo offence, old cock, but that don't sound likely, if you arsks me. Ghosts generally don't go around givin' blokes dead bees.'
âNow I think about it, I'm not sure he was an actual ghost,' said Willy. âBut he did call himself “The Ghost”. And he was pretty scary.'
âWell, it still don't seem right to me, Waggledagger,' said Yorick. âMeddlin' wiv fings you don't know nuffink about.'
âBees?' said Willy. âI know plenty about bees. This one's got something very strange
going on with its stripes.' He held the bee closer to Yorick. âLook, the stripes run
down
the body, not around it.'
âNever mind the bee!' snapped Yorick. He climbed under his fog machine and began banging bits of wood with his hammer. âGhost or no ghost, this bloke sounds like trouble. And trouble is one fing we don't need! That Skellington bloke 'as already got 'is eye on you. If you go around spoutin' crazy talk about ghosts, Charlie will 'ave you out of the Black Skulls and on yer way back to Stratford before you know wot's wot. So give it a rest, and pass me that 'ose.'
Willy lifted the canvas hose and thought about what Yorick had just said. If The Ghost wasn't a ghost, then who was he? And how could Willy know if anything The Ghost had said was true? Maybe Yorick was right. Perhaps he should just forget about the whole thing and get on with trying to keep his job in the Skulls.
Yorick passed Willy a hammer and pointed to the top of the machine. âMake yerself useful, Waggledagger,' he said. âFasten that 'ose to the top end. Nice and tight. We don't want any of the smoke escapin'.'
Willy clambered up onto a small set of stepladders and grabbed a box of nails. âSmoke?' he said.
âThat's wot makes the fog, Waggledagger,' Yorick said. His voice trembled with pride. âShe's a beauty, ain't she?'
Willy wouldn't have said the fog machine was beautiful, but it did look complicated. And the Skulls play
The Sheeted Dead
used a lot of smoke. Until now, they'd used Yorick's smelly smoke pots, which had meant a lot of work for Willy.
âWhat about Uncle Aaron being a vegetarian?' said Willy as he banged the first nail home. âWhy would he be eating Pig's Ear soup if he was a vegetarian?'
âA veggie wot?' said Yorick from underneath the fog machine.
âA vegetarian. Someone who doesn't eat meat.'
Yorick slid out from beneath the machine and sat up. âNow I know yer pullin' ole Yorick's leg! Not eatin' meat! The very idea! That's some imagination you got there, Waggledagger! But you ought to keep loopy notions like that to yerself, or people really will fink you've gone off yer rocker.'
Yorick shook his shaggy head, dislodging a mouse that had temporarily set up home in his hair, and picked up a saw. Not eating meat! Whatever next?
Willy banged home a couple more nails, giving the hammer an extra bit of biff. Sometimes Yorick could be
so
irritating. âJust because you've never heard of something, it doesn't mean it doesn't exist,' he said.
âI suppose so,' grunted Yorick. âAnd I s'pose
it
is a
bit weird for a bloke who didn't eat meat to die eatin' Pig's Ear soup. I'm partial to a bit of Pig's Ear soup meself. Nice an' chunky! Jist like ole Yorick, eh?'
Willy finished attaching the hose and climbed down. As he stepped off the ladder, his toe knocked into something half-hidden under a coil of rope. He stooped and picked it up.
It was the empty honey pot that Skellington had chucked away earlier. There was a handwritten label pasted on one side.
London's Finest Honey,
it read.
And then, in smaller letters:
Manufactured at Devil's Dock, London, by A. Skellington & Co.
Willy dropped the hammer. It bounced off Yorick's head.
âOi!' Yorick said. He scrambled to his feet, rubbing his head with one hand, and holding the saw in the other. âCareful!' he muttered.
âSorry, Yorick,' said Willy. He held out the honey pot, his eyes shining. âBut look!
Skellington! He makes honey! Perhaps he knows something about the bee that was in Uncle Aaron's ear when he died.'
âWhoa, whoa, whoa!'
Yorick put a grimy finger to his lips and looked around. âThat's dangerous talk, young feller,' he said, lowering his voice and waggling the saw for emphasis. It made a funny wobbling sound. âAnd more than a bit loopy if you arsks me. There's gotta be a fousand honey manufacturers in London. That bee coulda come from any one of 'em. You steer clear of Skellington, see? 'Im and those two great pet trolls could make life very difficult if you go around arskin' crazy questions all over the place. My advice is ter give yer thoughts no tongue.'
âI'm not crazy!' cried Willy.
âIf you goes pokin' yer nose in where it's not wanted it could all get very nasty, very quickly,' said Yorick. âYou 'eard wot Charlie said to Skellington. 'E promised there'd be
no problems. If you start runnin' yer mouth off it could mean trouble fer us. Morty Coil told me not ten minutes ago that, last week, Skellington took a dislike to a bunch of actors who went around arskin' questions about fings. 'E's banned 'em from hever working in a theatre again. Guess wot they're doin' now?' He glared at Willy for effect, before adding, âChildren's bleedin' birthday parties!'
Yorick turned back to the fog machine and began furiously fiddling with various cogs and levers. âNow attach that uvver end and we'll speak no more about it,' he said.
Willy stared at the empty honey pot.
Maybe Yorick was right. He really
shouldn't
be poking his nose into his uncle's death.
It wasn't the sensible thing to do.
It wasn't the safest thing to do.
It wasn't the thing to do
at all
if he didn't want trouble.
The problem was, with every minute that
passed, Willy's curiosity was getting the better of him. He couldn't help wondering if The Ghost had been telling him the truth. Perhaps Uncle Aaron's death really wasn't an accident.
He stuffed the honey pot into his breeches pocket next to the dead bee and crept towards the stage. He needed some time on his own to think things through.
â'Ere!' yelled Yorick. âWhere do you fink yer goin', Waggledagger?'
âEr, to get some more nails,' Willy said over his shoulder.