Chapter 1 On Board âAre you flying alone?â asked the elderly woman. The twins nodded. People often worried about that. The elderly woman wore gold chains, gold earrings and gold bracelets. Her friend alongside wore silver chains, silver earrings and silver bracelets. They were moving bling displays. When she introduced herself, the twins grinned. They couldnât help it. âIâm Mrs Silver and this is my friend, Mrs Gold.â âAre you sure?â muttered Christopher. They were the wrong way around! Mrs Silver was wearing gold! The friend, Mrs Gold, was wearing silver bling. They both clanked. In case they heard Christopherâs comment, Amy said quickly, âWeâre UMs.â âWhat are they?â Puzzled, Mrs Silver tugged at her heavy earring. The gold bracelet jangled as she lifted her arm. Amy was a coin collector so she noticed the coins set as brooches. Later, she was glad she had noticed them. Mrs. Silverâs jewellery was very noisy. Youâd have to be deaf and blind to miss it. âUnaccompanied Minors. Kids travelling alone. The flight crew look after us. Theyâre great.â âDo you have parents?â Mrs Silver looked a bit worried at the thought of ten year old twins flying around the world alone. She didnât know that the twins had clocked up more kilometres than most adults. Theyâd worn out two passports flying to meet their parents at various airports. And that was just since their eighth birthday! âOur parents are still âshootingâ in Singapore.â Amy paused, then added. âShooting film. Theyâre eco-photographers. But theyâll meet us in Cairns later. Theyâre making a doco about the Great Barrier Reef.â âA documentary film,â explained Christopher. Amy liked using work jargon. It made her feel important to know the short words. The flight attendant bustled up. She had a clipboard on her arm. Food trays were being collected. The plane would be landing soon. âExcuse me. Youâre the Lee twins arenât you?â The twins said, âYes.â âSorry. Iâve got bad news for you. From your aunt. Sheâs lost the goat.â Mrs Silver and Mrs Gold exclaimed, âA goat! A real one?â Amy nodded. âIs Aunty Viv going to be late AGAIN?â groaned Christopher. âShe rang our parents in Singapore before we left.â Their Aunty Viv was supposed to meet them at Cairns Airport. She was driving from Sydney in her âAnimal Actorsâ van because Aunty Viv hated flying. Her âAnimal Actorsâ animal actors were booked to perform at the International Games. âWhy is your aunt taking a goat to the Games? Is she riding it?â The flight attendant was puzzled, but then she didnât know Aunty Viv. The twins laughed. âThe animals arenât competing. Theyâre supposed to be the entertainment between events.â âWell, the arrangements have been changed. Your auntâs van broke down. Some of the animals escaped. Sheâs lost several hours looking for her goat in Surfers Paradise.â The twins smiled. That sounded like their Aunty Viv. She was always losing something. âShe wants you to wait at Cairns Airport for two hours. If she hasnât arrived by then, weâre to take you to the hotel and wait. The room is booked in your parentsâ name. Sheâll meet you there.â âWhere is she now?â asked Christopher pushing back his glasses. He always did that when he was thinking. âOn the road into Cairns. She rang from a public phone.â âAunty Viv has a mobile phone. Dad bought it last time she got lost. So we could keep in touch. I wonder whatâs happened to that?â Christopher put his pencils away. âProbably the goat ate it!â suggested Amy. Aunty Vivâs animals acted in TV commercials. But sometimes they just played up. And