telling silly stories after all. I owe you an apology.â
âThatâs O.K., Mr Maini,â I grinned. âIt
was
all rather strange.â
Only Miss Dodds didnât mention it. Not even when the big pirate ship opened and news of it was in the local paper.
Everyone from miles around went to the opening dressed as a pirate, though Dad wasnât too pleased when I called him Peg Leg.
Captain Cross-eyed looked fantastic. He stood at the shipâs wheel in his full pirate outfit. âWelcome aboard!â he cried. âEveryone must have fun or my nameâs not Captain Cross-eyed.â Then he crossed his eyes and made people laugh.
Not to be outdone, Olly hopped about cackling. âWhereâs the treasure? Whereâs the treasure?â And tried to poke his beak into peopleâs pockets.
Everyone had a wonderful time, especially Captain Cross-eyed. âIâm a real pirate at last,â he grinned. âAnd itâs all thanks to you, Jonny.â Then he put his hand into his pocket and handed me a large coin. âItâs a gold doubloon. Your dad was telling me youâre saving up to buy a new bike.â And before I could thank him, he strode off to show two girls how to have a proper sword fight.
Dad was really pleased at how well everything had gone, too. âIâm sorry I thought the idea of a pirate in Weir Street was nonsense,â he said.
âThatâs all right,â I grinned, âbecause Iâve got something else tell you. Captain Cross-eyedâs not the only strange person to live in Weird Street. Guess who lives at number 34 and a halfâ¦â
WeirD Street
Just how weird can the people in Weir Street be? Join Jonny on
all
his adventuresâ¦
First published 2009 by
A & C Black
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
50 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3DP
www.acblack.com
This electronic edition published in April 2012 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
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eISBN 978 1 4081 6374 0
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