Newt Nemesis

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Newt Nemesis Page 1

by Ali Sparkes




  Books in the

  S.W.I.T.C.H. series

  #1 Spider Stampede

  #2 Fly Frenzy

  #3 Grasshopper Glitch

  #4 Ant Attack

  #5 Crane Fly Crash

  #6 Beetle Blast

  #7 Frog Freakout

  #8 Newt Nemesis

  #9 Lizard Loopy

  #10 Chameleon Chaos

  #11 Turtle Terror

  #12 Gecko Gladiator

  #13 Anaconda Adventure

  #14 Alligator Action

  Text © Ali Sparkes 2011

  Illustrations © Ross Collins 2011

  “SWITCH: Newt Nemesis!” was originally published in English in 2011. This edition is published by an arrangement with Oxford University Press.

  Copyright © 2014 by Darby Creek

  All rights reserved. International copyright secured. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc., except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.

  Darby Creek

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  241 First Avenue North

  Minneapolis, MN 55401 U.S.A.

  For reading levels and more invormation, look up this title at

  www.lernerbooks.com

  Main body text set in ITC Goudy Sans Std. 14/19.

  Typeface provided by Monotype Typography.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Sparkes, Ali.

  Newt nemesis / by Ali Sparkes ; illustrated by Ross Collins.

  pages cm. — (S.W.I.T.C.H. ; #8)

  Summary: At summer camp, twins Josh and Danny and their new friend, Charlie, still have frog’s legs from when “camp counselor” Petty Potts sprayed them with her new AMPHISWITCH, but a second attempt to restore them turns them into newts, instead.

  ISBN 978–1–4677–3233–8 (lib. bdg. : alk. paper)

  ISBN 978–1–4677–3235–2 (eBook)

  [1. Camps—Fiction. 2. Newts—Fiction. 3. Brothers—Fiction.

  4. Twins—Fiction. 5. Friendship—Fiction. 6. Science fiction.]

  I. Collins, Ross, illustrator. II. Title.

  PZ7.S73712Fro 2014

  [Fic]—dc23

  2013019711

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  1 – SB – 12/31/13

  eISBN: 978-1-4677-3235-2 (pdf)

  eISBN: 978-1-4677-4018-0 (ePub)

  eISBN: 978-1-4677-4017-3 (mobi)

  With grateful thanks to John Buckley, fabulous

  amphibian* and reptile guru, and ARC, without

  whom this book might be full of embarrassing errors.

  For Maisy, Lewis and Rosie

  (*And no, I don’t mean John Buckley is a fabulous amphibian)

  Toe Trouble

  Wrong Footed

  Fang You Very Much

  FETCH!

  Canine Catastrophe

  Fun with Prickles

  Spray You, Spray Me

  Prehistoric Pogo

  Top Secret!

  Glossary

  Recommended Reading

  SOCKS. And not just any socks. LONG socks. THICK socks. HOT socks. Socks that had no business being dragged up the legs of any normal person on a day like this.

  Camp counselor Amy Jessup was a little worried.

  The kids at Outdoor Action Camp were cool. Fashionable. They had the latest footwear and funky, messy haircuts. One of the girls even had a tattoo, it was rumored (although others claimed it was just a lick-and-stick job out of a fashion magazine).

  Looking at them, there was no doubt, thought Amy, that they were up-to-the-minute twenty-first century kids.

  “So what’s with the 1950s Boy Scout SOCKS?” she murmured, aloud, staring at Josh and Danny and Charlie, the girl always getting into mischief.

  While all the other kids had got rid of their shoes and were wearing surfer-style sandals or flip-flops—or going barefoot—these three were all wearing long gray socks, pulled up to their knees, and heavy hiking boots. And they weren’t going anywhere near the lake or the shallow, winding river where so much fun was being had in the hot sun with dinghies and rafts. Instead, they were huddled under a large oak tree, whispering together.

  “What are you three up to?” called out Amy as she strode toward them. “Don’t you want to play in the water? It’s a perfect day for it . . . I’m surprised you’re not eager to get your feet wet!”

  “Ummm,” said Josh, while Danny and Charlie plastered wide grins across their faces so fast, Amy was even more suspicious.

  “Yeah, well . . . actually,” said Josh, scratching his short, tufty, fair hair nervously. “We were wondering about building a tree house—up there!” He pointed up into the impossibly high branches of the oak tree.

  “Josh, you’d need mountaineering gear to get up this one.” Amy laughed. She was nice, sturdy, and jolly with her wavy, brown hair always in a ponytail, and everyone at Outdoor Action Camp liked her.

  “OK—well go and find a better tree!” said Charlie with a bright smile, and she grabbed Josh’s and Danny’s arms and tugged them away while Amy shook her head and shrugged. Kids. Weird. In so many ways.

  And these three were weirder than most. As soon as they got around the far side of a small clump of holly bushes, Josh, Danny, and Charlie sat down and sighed. “Let’s look again,” said Charlie after a few seconds. “It might have worn off a bit.”

  They all rolled their long gray knee socks down to their boots. It looked as if they’d all recently smacked their ankles with bats. The skin was greeny-brown, as if it were covered in a massive bruise. A bit weird.

  Danny unlaced his boots first and pulled them off with a groan of relief. Then the rolled-down socks followed, allowing his poor cramped feet to spread out. Soon all three had their boots off and weird just went right off the super-weird-of-allweirdness scale.

  All of them had perfectly formed frogs’ feet.

  Josh flexed his webbed toes. “Aaaah, that’s better.”

  “How long is this going to go on?” asked Charlie, anxiously chewing on one of her many beaded dark plaits. “We can’t hide these forever. These boots are killing me. Why can’t I just wear my rain boots? There’s more room!”

  “We’re trying not to stand out, remember?” Josh sighed. “On a hot, dry day, we can just about explain socks and ankle boots . . . but rain boots? I don’t think so.”

  “And I SOOOOO want to get them wet,” moaned Charlie, her shiny green flippers waggling up and down. “They belong in water! Can’t we just creep into the river and have a little paddle? It’ll be lovely and cool and sloshy and slippy . . .”

  “And funny and strange and then shouty and screamy,” pointed out Danny. “And then doctory and ambulancey and FREAK SHOWY!”

  “Fair point,” admitted Charlie. “But what if they never change back? We’ll get found out sooner or later . . . and then what will we tell people?”

  “Oh, I dunno,” said Danny, rubbing his green ankles vigorously. “The truth?”

  “What?” said Charlie. “That your next door neighbor, who seems like a nice old lady, is actually a bonkers genius scientist with a S.W.I.T.C.H. spray for turning humans into creatures? And that she turned us into frogs yesterday? And this is . . . just an aftereffect? Oh. OK then. Nothing to worry about. Yeah—I’m sure they’ll all believe THAT!”

  “Well, trouble is . . .” said Danny, picking a small black beetle out of his scruffy, spiky, fair hair and absentmindedly eating it, “there’s nothing else that makes any better sense, is there?”

  “Petty Potts MUST have the
antidote spray!” said Charlie. “I can’t believe she just lost it! She has to find it and change us back properly. I want to go rafting and—”

  “Well . . . actually . . . we did ask her to S.W.I.T.C.H. us, didn’t we? Begged her, in fact.” Josh could hardly believe these words were coming out of his mouth. Only a couple of weeks ago, he and Danny had vowed solemnly that they would NEVER let Petty Potts S.W.I.T.C.H. them into anything ever again.

  After a summer of being S.W.I.T.C.H.ed into spiders, insects, and beetles, they’d really had enough of Petty’s Serum Which Instigates Total Cellular Hijack. Their cells had been hijacked way too many times.

  “I can’t believe we really begged her to S.W.I.T.C.H. us, this time,” muttered Danny. “I want to swim! It’s not fair! She S.W.I.T.C.H.ed us into frogs—she should S.W.I.T.C.H. us back again—properly!”

  “We must have been insane,” said Josh.

  “It was my fault,” sighed Charlie. “I had to go and ‘borrow’ that key, didn’t I? And then lose it in the pond . . . ”

  “Yeah, but it was our idea to get Petty to spray us with FrogSWITCH and go frog diving for it,” admitted Danny. “We couldn’t let you get sent home in disgrace.”

  “It’s never taken this long to wear off before,” Josh went on. “I guess it’s because we got a double dose when she sprayed us with the antidote, which turned out to be more FrogSWITCH. I think my ankles are a bit less froggy. Hopefully, they’ll be normal again tomorrow. And maybe Danny will stop eating bugs.”

  “I’m NOT eating bugs!” Danny shuddered, a long brown feeler stuck to his lip. “As IF!” Danny loathed creepy-crawlies of all kinds. Even though he’d been quite a few.

  “What side effects did you get from being creepy-crawlies?” asked Charlie.

  Danny grimaced. “After we were houseflies, I kept trying to lick the trash bin. And I spat goo on my doughnut before eating it. And Josh’s.”

  “On my doughnut?” squawked Josh. “You never told me that!”

  “Sorry,” Danny shrugged.

  “And when we’d been daddy longlegs,” said Josh, after a short, doughnut-related freeze, “you know . . . crane flies . . . we kept staring at lights, and sometimes even running at them, for days afterward.”

  “But those were all, kind of, in our heads,” added Danny. “Not physical stuff, like this. And they all wore off after a week.”

  “A week?” Charlie stared at her green shiny feet, aghast. “You mean this could last another five or six days?”

  “Maybe,” said Josh. “Unless Petty uses her antidote on us. The right one this time. We need to find her and get her on her own. I haven’t seen her all day—but her car’s still in the parking lot, so she must be around somewhere. Let’s go and find her.” He started to pull the socks back on again.

  Danny and Charlie did the same, with much grumpy muttering. It was hot and uncomfortable. Their froggy feet were flat and splayed out and didn’t fit properly inside socks and boots. They had to crumple them up.

  “Hey! You lot!” bellowed a familiar voice. They all jumped. Rather high. And Danny definitely croaked, but luckily Drill Sergeant was shouting so loudly at them he didn’t hear.

  “What are you doing hiding away out here?” he yelled. His real name was Steve, but everyone called him Drill Sergeant because of all the shouting. He didn’t seem to be able to talk in a normal voice.

  “Just . . . looking at wildlife,” mumbled Josh. It was partly true.

  “Well, hop it back to the tepee!” roared Drill Sergeant. “We’re practicing the show—remember your parents are all coming to see it at teatime!”

  “Ooh yes,” Charlie grinned. “The show! I’m going to star in it, I am!”

  The show was to have a caveman theme. They were all dressing up in caveman outfits and putting on a caveman dance. They’d made outfits out of old sacks and bits of fake fur earlier that week. Charlie had found an old bone in the kitchen bin and was planning to shove it in her hair. Danny and Josh had both made axes out of bits of flint and sticks and sticky tape.

  Charlie suddenly gulped and looked worried, as they hurried after Drill Sergeant. “Erm . . . Sergea—I mean, Steve—what are we wearing on our feet? In the show . . . ?”

  “Your feet?” bawled Drill Sergeant. “Nothing! Barefoot, as nature intended! Go straight to the tepee now, though. No costumes until the proper show.” Drill Sergeant marched them into the tepee ,and there they had to practice the caveman dance in their hot, hot socks and boots while everyone else stayed cool in sandals or bare feet.

  “Why’ve you got them on?” asked Sayid, one of the boys in Josh and Danny’s dormitory cabin, as he pointed with his papier-mâché club at Josh’s boots.

  “Um . . . warts,” said Josh.

  “And me,” said Danny. “Caught ’em off Josh.”

  “And me,” said Charlie. “Caught one on each foot from both of them. It’s a wart plague.”

  “You are nutjobs,” commented Sayid and ran away, viciously clubbing an imaginary dinosaur (he wouldn’t believe Josh when he told him there were no dinosaurs in caveman times).

  Half an hour later, Josh, Danny, and Charlie were allowed back outside. They ran into a bush and checked their ankles.

  Still.

  Very.

  Green.

  “Mom and Dad will be here in two hours!” moaned Josh, peering down inside his socks in horror. “I don’t think they’ll be pleased to find we’re semiaquatic mutants. We have to find Petty NOW!”

  Charlie and Danny and Josh gulped. Their eyes bulged a little. Small croaks of fear came from their throats. And Danny ate a fly.

  “Aaaah,” said Petty, behind the canteen cabin an hour later. “I see.”

  Josh, Danny, and Charlie were sockless, and the shiny web-toed truth was hard to miss.

  “You have frogs’ legs,” said Petty, rather unnecessarily.

  “Yesss! We have frogs’ legs!” hissed Danny. “What are you going to do about it?”

  “Erm . . . strike a really good deal with a French restaurant?” smirked Petty, raising her shaggy gray eyebrows behind her slightly smeary round spectacles.

  “This isn’t flippin’ FUNNY!” Josh stamped his froggy foot, and Petty snorted with laughter.

  “We’ve had to keep them hidden ever since we got up this morning!” said Charlie. “In long socks and boots! We’re roasting hot.” It was very warm where they were standing and the big wooden kitchen compost bin was sending out steam just behind them as the sun dried out yesterday’s rain. “But that’s not the serious problem. The BIG problem is . . .”

  “Danny eating bugs?” queried Petty.

  “I am NOT eating bugs!” squawked Danny. A wing and a green leg were stuck between his front teeth. “Why does everyone keep saying that? I hate creepy-crawlies! If one even landed on me, I’d rip it off me.”

  “Sorry—was that rip it or ribbet?” Petty bit her lip.

  “Yes—ribbet!” snapped Danny.

  “You know, frogs don’t even say ribbet, really,” Josh reminded him.

  “Oh, will you shut up, you freaky little frog nerd?” snapped Danny.

  “I can see we have a problem here,” said Petty.

  “It’s not just Danny,” said Charlie, glancing around to be sure nobody was within earshot. “Soon our parents are coming to see us in the show and we’re supposed to dance around like cavemen—with bare feet!”

  “Aaaah,” said Petty, again.

  “So you’ve GOT to get us the antidote!” said Josh. “Or this could be really bad for all of us.”

  Petty scratched her gray hair and frowned. “It’s normally worn off of its own accord by now,” she pondered.

  “Yes—but you gave us a second FrogSWITCH dose, didn’t you? While we were still froggy from the first dose,” said Danny. “It did wear off after we hopped back into bed and went to sleep . . . but not properly. It must be the accidental double dose that did it.”

  Petty opened her long red raincoat, which sh
e had kept on all day despite the hot sun. In its lining were four bottles of AMPHISWITCH formula. One of them was meant to be the antidote—but at least two of them had turned out to be FrogSWITCH. “I wrote A for “Antidote” on one and A1, A2, and A3 for each of the different types of AMPHISWITCH sprays,” sighed Petty. “A1 was frog and A2 was . . . oh, but look! The rain must have got into my coat and smeared them all about. I just don’t know which one is AMPHISWITCH Antidote!”

  “For a genius,” said Danny, “you’re quite dim. Exactly when did you think that identical bottles were a good idea?”

  Petty glared at him. “Look, when you have a brain as exceptional as mine, endlessly working on projects of astonishing brilliance, the small things sometimes have to make room for the big things.”

  “Yes, well, this small thing has turned out to be pretty BIG for us, hasn’t it?” said Josh. “You’ve had another fun experiment—and we’ve all ended up with comedy legs! I don’t know about Danny and Charlie, but always coming first in long jump competitions isn’t going to make up for the laughing and the pointing and the cable news film crews!”

  “The only thing to do,” murmured Petty, staring thoughtfully at the bottles, “is try them out.”

  “Oh yeah! That’ll help! Turn us into some other freaky amphibian!” Danny shook his head, shooting out his tongue as he did so and collecting an unwary moth from the side of the compost bin. He chewed sarcastically.

  “Oh don’t be such a fusspot,” said Petty, pulling out the first bottle with a smeary A marked on it. “If I get it wrong with this one . . . and maybe even the second and third one, as soon as I’ve found the AMPHISWITCH antidote, I can change you back right away.”

  “We’ve got no choice,” said Charlie. “Our moms and dads will be here in less than an hour!”

  Petty nodded and sprayed Danny’s froggy legs. They all peered at the greeny-brown skin and webbed toes and held their breath.

 

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