Green Planet
by
Anthony E Southby
* * * * *
Copyright
All rights reserved under International and South African Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the exclusive press written permission of Anthony E. Soutby (Author).
PUBLISHED BY:
Green Planet
Copyright © 2013 by Anthony E Southby
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank everyone for their support during this work. To my parents Anne and Ernie Hoffmann, and my grandmother Winsley Morris, whose continued support and encouragement have helped me realize my true potential as a writer.
To the following friends for reading and insisting on my good work: Sharon Warne, Helena Metcalf, Erika Wernich, Colleen Bond, Lezell Roodt, Karen Ingram, Valerie Venter, Liezel Mentz , Mimi Ferreira and Amy Baird.
Then there are the friends who really made the whole venture possible for me. These are the people who encouraged me and absolutely insisted on how wonderful my work was. And insisted beyond any shadow of a doubt that I should have my book published. Special thanks go to: Alba Baird and Mariaan de Vernon, my faithful work colleagues. If it was not for their continued encouragement I may never have persisted with finding a publisher.
Then last but not least my lifelong friends Sean Bothma, Gary Posthumus and Alex Joseph. If it was not for your ongoing pestering, loudmouthing and general great support as best friends, I doubt there would be enough inspiration for me to write down even a single word.
Chapter 1
Philip Birch sat unconcernedly staring across the classroom while Mr Whittle, his 8th Grade maths teacher, droned on about the basic principles of geometry. He was a wiry looking man with a very high receding hairline and he wore a pair of small spectacles perched on the end of his unusually large nose. He wore old shirts with long sleeves and frayed edges. He wasn’t exactly the sharpest maths teacher either, so quite a lot of typical classroom fooling around went unnoticed.
Philip eyed his best friend Robert who sat three rows in front of him, and noticed his head bob up and down slowly. A clear indication that Mr Whittle’s droning magic was working; Robert would soon be fast asleep. He was a fairly overweight pupil who hated to overexert himself. He wasn’t all that bright either; a round of maths was a guaranteed way of putting him to sleep.
Philip on the other hand was tall and lanky with a fair complexion. He had a freckled face with a pointed nose and a scruffy thatch of red hair. Not only was his hair scruffy, but so was his appearance in general. His shirts were usually stained with some unrecognisable substance, and his trousers always had a hole in them somewhere. Philip was always in the wars, usually covered in cuts and bruises, and wherever he went trouble seemed to follow.
A round of maths only spurred Philip on to get up to some kind of trouble, and getting into trouble was something he managed quite well.
Wham! ‘Oh shucks, I missed,’ he gasped. The eraser he had thrown had been intended for his friend Robert and not for Frank Featherstone. In fact, hitting Frank was a mistake that would be paid for dearly. Frank had dark brown hair, shaved into a neat brush cut. He had an olive skinned complexion and was always neatly dressed for the sake of his image. He had a hardened face with a flat nose and a large mole on his left cheek. Frank was not only six feet tall as well as wide, but he had been kept back a couple of years due to lack of observation, and was quite a lot older than Philip, not to mention the fact that he was Senton High’s lightweight boxing champion.
Frank stood up in disgust. ‘Who hit me?’ he shouted. ‘Whoever did this is going to pay!’
Philip sank back into his chair, his face bright beetroot red. If there had been a big black hole next to him, he would have gladly crawled into it and dissolved.
‘It was you, wasn’t it Birch?’ Frank roared, pointing his finger accusingly. ‘I’m going to kill you, you rotten turd!’
Frank motioned forward then suddenly stopped dead in his tracks. Mr Whittle was tapping his shoulder with his pointer stick, and he looked anything but pleased.
‘Listen here, Mr Featherstone, I will not tolerate this aggressive behaviour in my classroom!’ he demanded, prodding him behind his ear like a farmer with his sheep. ‘This is not an arena. Detention for Frank Featherstone on Friday afternoon!’
‘But it wasn’t me!’ he cried in disgust. ‘Philip hit my head with an eraser; he is the culprit here!’
‘Listen here young man; you are nothing but a bully, always picking on others weaker than yourself. I think that it is about time that you were punished for your bursts of uncontrolled rage!’
So detention it was. The one thing about Mr Whittle was that he was very stubborn in his ways, and once his mind was made up, things were final.
Philip shrank back in his chair, and a cold fear crept up his spine. How was he supposed to escape the vicious clutches of Frank Featherstone? Mr Whittle could have put him in detention as well, then at least things wouldn’t have looked so bad. Philip was beginning to feel desperate, what on earth was he going to do?
Robert glanced back, realizing who the eraser had been intended for. Beads of perspiration welled up on his fat forehead as he empathized with his friend who now sat in awkward silent anguish. White-faced, Philip stared back at Rob.
As the minutes ticked by, Philip’s heart rate quickened. He had to come up with some kind of a game plan to escape Frank’s evil grasp, knowing very well that sooner or later he would be punished for his terrible mistake. To endure a beating from Frank Featherstone would be like getting run over by an entire rugby team.
Frank turned his head slowly, his eyes pointing forward like the barrel of a loaded shotgun, with the veins on his head standing out like cords. He frowned at Philip. ‘I’m going to get you, Birch!’ he quietly mouthed in rage.
Philip was a ball of nervous jelly by then, and any ideas of escape were few and far between. He glanced forward at the clock on the wall – quarter to two, fifteen minutes to home time. The question was: how on earth was he supposed to get from the classroom into the sweet smelling safety of his bedroom without being caught?
Five minutes to two. Time was definitely ticking. Philip squirmed at his desk, wishing for some kind of magic disappearing ointment, so he could smear himself into thin air.
He gazed across at the classroom window. Fortunately they were on the ground floor, and because of his tall lanky structure there was a good chance he could squeeze out through the narrow bars to the back of the school.
Robert looked back at Philip. He suddenly realized his friend’s exact intentions, and shook his head in horror. ‘No, don’t do that, you will get into trouble,’ he mouthed cautiously.
The way Philip figured, he was in so much trouble already, what difference would a little more make? As he very well knew, climbing through a window at Senton High was a very serious offence.
Finally the time had come – RRRRiiiing! The school bell sounded. Philip’s heart felt as if it was stopping. If only he could travel back in time and undo the mistake he had made.
Frank stood up and edged slowly towards the door, constantly looking back to check Philip’s exact position, thrusting his fists viciously through the air as he walked. He swung his right arm forward and his left arm into an undercut.
‘You are a dead man Birch,’ he mouthed, rolling back his shoulders and smirking.
&nbs
p; As Frank passed through the door, Philip checked to see if Mr Whittle was looking in his direction. No problem – his nose was pasted to the blackboard. Philip darted forward to an open window, squeezing his legs through the open bars, and forcing his lanky body through the narrow gap. ‘Ouch!’ he squeaked, finally forcing his chest through the narrow space between the bars. His head was nearly through, although not quite; his ears were still jammed in between the bars. Fortunately for Philip the outside turf wasn’t very low down and he managed to get a good foothold to help pry himself free. His ears throbbed as he tugged at the bars in frustration, yelping like a starved puppy.
Robert was standing by the window, and whispered loudly to him, ‘You’ve got to get out right now or Mr Whittle will see you!’
‘I know that Robert but I’m stuck!’ Philip bleated.
‘Robert, what are you doing by the window?’ A voice suddenly boomed across the classroom.
‘Nothing,’ Robert answered sheepishly, using the more popular schoolboy reply, which always raised the most suspicion.
In Robert’s distress, he sent Philip flying through the bars with a quick frantic shove, forcing him out onto the grass below. The poor boy’s ears throbbed as though he had already received a good walloping from Frank. He groped at his head, fondling his throbbing ears gingerly. He tried his best to ignore the intense pain because it would end up making short work of his secret escape plan.
* * * * * * * *
Meanwhile Frank had been waiting outside by the water fountain, kicking up stones in frustration, and wondering why the wretched Birch brat was taking so long to show his face.
He marched back to the classroom in rage, the hairs on his neck standing up like a wild dog in attack mode.
He stormed in, gazing left and right in fury.
‘Damn, there are only two people here!’ Frank muttered to himself in disgust. ‘Mr Whittle the bumbling maths teacher and Fatso himself. Where did Birch get to now? Where on earth did that red-headed clown go?’
‘Robert, why are you making funny noises by the window?’ Mr Whittle demanded.
Robert stood there looking confused, trying his best to cover for his friend who had thankfully run away before Mr Whittle could approach the scene.
‘Er – the birds, Sir.’
‘What about the birds, Robert?’
‘Well I was kind of standing at your window making bird noises, Sir.’
‘That’s very nice young man, now would you kindly step outside, where you can complete your biology lesson,’ he rapped, pointing the nervous schoolboy towards the door.
Robert’s face was soaked with perspiration, yet he was very relieved that the interrogation had come to an end. Now he only had Frank ‘The Great’ to deal with.
‘Oh no, it looks like I am going to have to die for my friend,’ Robert squirmed, walking fearfully towards the boxing champion fiend. Frank waited outside the classroom, and glared at him as he passed through the door.
‘Not to worry, Fatso, I know very well where your friend is, considering he hasn’t come through this door. He went through the window, didn’t he?’
Robert stared at Frank in fear; his face turned from bright red to pale. Frank clutched him by the shirt, and shoved him roughly against the classroom wall, causing him to wet his trousers in fright.
‘Yes, he went through the window,’ Robert muttered, feeling a warm unpleasant sensation trickle down his leg as he betrayed his friend. Luckily for Robert, Frank hadn’t noticed his little accident, so he snuck off home clutching his schoolbag carefully at his front, and hoped that no one would notice his soaked trousers.
Frank disappeared around the side of the classroom like lightning, knowing that Philip would have a good head start on him by then. Frank knew very well that there was a big field behind the school, cordoned off all the way around by a high fence, which allowed very few options for places to run to or places to hide away. Another thing Frank knew was that his fitness far outshone Philip’s, and catching him wouldn’t pose too much of a problem.
Chapter 2
Startled, Philip stood up from the grass, and dashed to the side of the classroom to avoid being seen by Mr Whittle. His head throbbed and his ears rang with pain. In the background he could hear his poor friend Robert stuttering and squirming under pressure. Philip braced himself against the wall, his heart beating furiously. At any minute he expected Frank to appear from behind the classroom. He didn’t even dare to go back toward the school; his only option now was to run to the end of the field in the hope that there would be a small hole at the end of the fence through which he could worm himself.
Philip waited for the voices to die down so that he could attempt to make a run for it.
Finally the classroom grew quiet. Philip took a peak behind the classroom wall corridor. ‘Now or never,’ he whispered.
He dashed across the sports field, wishing he had taken part in some sort of school sport activity before, instead of just sitting in the stadium, eating chocolates and drinking cool drink. As he ran he could almost hear his heart beat, his head still throbbed, and he was dripping with perspiration. He constantly looked around to see whether Frank was anywhere to be seen.
Thank goodness the coast was clear! He panted towards the fence at the far end of the field, and finally reached the end drooling like a bulldog lost in the Sahara desert. He slipped and slid down the embankment, hoping and praying that the fence had been vandalised in some way so he could force a way through.
‘Oh shucks!’ he exclaimed in utter dismay. The fence was completely intact. It seemed as though it was going to be very difficult for him to make his escape. As he crept up the embankment to check if the coast was clear, who should he see dashing towards him?
Frank was in close range, sprinting after him like a raging bull.
‘Now I am really in serious trouble,’ Philip muttered in desperation. ‘If Frank catches me I am dead.’ He began shaking at the knees as he fumbled back down the embankment. He had to keep telling himself to keep calm and stay focused. Landing back at the bottom by the fence, he got up and ran further along. ‘Let me check along the fence; maybe I will get lucky and find a hole somewhere.’
Frank shouted from the top of the embankment, ‘Birch, you stupid twit, I’m going to tear you into little pieces when I catch you!’
Philip increased his pace, pushing his system into overdrive, not daring to look back for a single moment. He raced forward, expecting Frank’s large boxing fists to grab him at any minute. Still there was no sign of any opening, just an endless stretch of perfect fence. Even the top had been laced with barbed wire, so what other option was there now?
Philip continued forward, close to the point of surrendering himself to his fate. The stretch of embankment fencing was speedily coming to its end, and Philip knew very well that if he had to run back up the hill again that would most surely be his end.
Something gleamed in the distance, close to the opposite corner of the sports field. Was that a break in the fencing?
Philip leapt forward with Frank trailing very close behind; in fact Frank was virtually breathing down his neck.
‘Got you, Birch, where are you going to run to now?’ Philip rushed towards where the fence seemed broken, walking a bit unsteadily on his tired jelly like legs.
‘Yes!’ Philip grunted with relief, noticing a large hole in the fence up ahead, big enough for one lanky boy to fit through with a bit of a push.
Philip popped through in seconds, leaving Frank behind to force his way through to the other side in painful frustration. ‘Birch, I’m going to crush your puny head in when I get through this fence!’
Frank squirmed and struggled, scratching himself viciously with the jagged mesh. He was determined to get through to the other side; he would even die doing it if he had to.
After a few minutes of bending jagged wires and twisting his body into knots like Houdini the Great, he finally managed to force his way through.
&nb
sp; Philip rushed across the road, hastily checking to see whether there was any oncoming traffic or not.
Fortunately for Philip there weren’t any speeding vehicles coming along the road, as he would most surely have been knocked over in his eagerness to get to the other side.
On the other side of the road, Philip could see workers in the process of digging a very large trench running along the roadside. Monotonous droning of earth-moving equipment could be heard – large graders digging the soil over, shovels steadily spading turf into the air.
Philip remembered his mother mentioning the roadworks’ project.
These people were in the process of erecting a high thick wall, running around the perimeter of the woods which were situated behind the school. Apparently, many of the animals living in the woods were running out across the road and causing nasty road accidents, pasted over the tar like strawberry jam. What made things rather creepy about the woods was: many people had ventured there, either on a picnic, or maybe just for a walk, and had vanished. Even search party members had gone missing in an effort to find them.
For this reason it was seen necessary to erect an 8 foot double wall, which was really serving a double purpose.
Frank glanced ahead, and spotted Philip on the other side of the road, heading towards a large clump of trees.
‘Now I’ve got you Birch, now you are really trapped!’ Frank bellowed, not even bothering to check for cars.
Philip looked around quickly to see where his enemy was, and noticed him jogging towards him not very far behind.
He stared down at the trench in front. Fortunately for him, there weren’t any workers around to tell him to get lost, so he plunged forward, and fell hands first into the slippery mud. With Frank close behind he struggled frantically to his feet and pulled himself up over to the other side, then headed straight for the woods. After all, what other choice did he have right then?
‘In a matter of seconds I will have you by your scruffy neck, Birch!’ Frank croaked, slipping and sliding in the muddy trench.