jumpy-jumpy.â
Kevinâs wife tried to smile. She loved Kevin, but she was very depressed.
âPoor Kevin.â
âNo, no,â said Kevin. âRich Kevin! Expensive Kevin!â
The kids dashed past. Kevin looked back at the wall and shouted one last time. âGo get him, kiddos!â
âWho said that?â said Gloria.
She saw the top of a meerkatâs headâ
ââTwas meeeee!â
She saw the little head for just a second. Then he dropped back down to the grass of his enclosure. But she heard him again. They all did.
âI wish you successssss!â
None of them stopped running, but all of them were amazed. Sheâd heard it before, but Gloria only now really understood. It dawned on her, and on the rest of the kids, just as the sun began to rise over Dublin.
âAll the animals can talk!â
The meerkat, behind them, confirmed it.
âYesss!â he shouted. âI never stop!â
He jumped again and tried to grab the top of the wall.
âCome back to bed, Kevin,â said his wife.
âI want to go with the kiddos!â
âYou have a job here,â said his wife.
âBut, my love!â said Kevin. âThat Black Dog has made your life a misery! He has tormented you! He has filled you up with big unhappiness!â
He jumped again.
âStay with me, Kevin,â said his wife. âThe children will defeat the Black Dog.â
âButâ!â
âAnd your job here is important,â said Kevinâs wife.
âChildren love meerkats. Especially you.â
Kevin stopped jumping.
âOnly because they think I was in
The Lion King
,â he said.
The kids were near the gate of the zoo. The air was full of the animalsâ messages. The grunts and chirps had become good luck wishes and shouts of encouragement.
âCatch him!â
âBop him!â
âBite his bum!â
It was brighter now, dawn, and the birds all around the park were working hard.
âCheep, cheep! Cheaper, cheaper!â
âAre you not afraid of the daylight, Ernie?â asked Raymond.
âNo way,â said Ernie. âThatâs only an oulâ myth.â
âThe Black Dogâs afraid, though. Isnât he?â
âMaybe,â said Ernie. âBut Iâm not convinced.â
âWhy not?â said Gloria.
âDunno,â said Ernie. âI canât work it out.â
âMore than just
brilliant
,â said Raymond.
âYeah,â said Ernie. âIt has to be. My dog, likeâFang. The only word heâs afraid of is
bath
.â
The zoo was open. There was a man, one of the zookeepers, opening the gate. He was yawning when he heard a noise and saw the huge gang of kids running straight at him. And his yawn became a silent scream.
Ernie stopped in front of him and showed him his fangs.
âSay your prayers, bud,â said Ernie. âAnd wash your neck.â
Then he ran after Raymond and Gloria. He shouted back at the zookeeper. âIâll be back.â
The zookeeper held onto the gateâand his neck. He thought he was going to faint.
âHere, Mister,â said Paddy. âDo we have to pay to get out?â
The zookeeper had breath left for one word. âNo.â
âSeeyeh, so,â said Paddy, and he kept running.
Alice was beside him. She thought it was the funniest thing sheâd ever heard. She wanted to tell Paddy that, but she needed all her breath to keep up.
The kids all ran past the zookeeper.
They were gone.
Early-morning life seemed to be back to normal, although the animals inside were making a lot more noise than usual. All sorts of grunts and yaps and howls and barks and chatter. The zookeeper would go in now and shout at them.
But the kidsâthe sight and the sound of all those kids, their excitement. It had reminded the zookeeper of something. He remembered now. He used to sing to the animals every morning. Before the
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