her. âWhere is it?â he yelled in a shrill voice. âWhereâs the snake?â
A wide grin spread across Snookâs face. âThere,â he said, pointing to the ground. âThereâs your snake. A great big skink!â
They watched as the lizard, no longer than a pencil, hurried towards the tentâs opening. Snook laughed. âThe poor little thing. I reckon you gave it a right scare.â
Quenton tightened the cord on his pyjamas then wiped his eyes. âYou donât have to laugh. Itâs not funny. I could have died.â
Snook tossed the stick to the ground and waved a hand in the air. âAh, can it, you were just lucky we were around to save you.â Then, eyes still laughing, he added, âAnd by the way, I like what youâre wearing. What do you reckon, Jars? They suit him donât they?â
Jars stepped back and looked at Quenton. She couldnât help smiling. His pyjamas were silk, bright red and dotted with pictures of tiny brown koalas. Suddenly, her face became serious. She walked over to Snook, grabbed him by the arm and pushed him outside. âThereâs just one thing I want to know, Snook Kelly, and that is how that lizard got into Quentonâs sleeping bag?â
âUh?â
âYou know what I mean.â Jars met Snookâs eyes. âDid you put it there?â
âNo, I wouldnât do a thing like that.â
âBut you laughed.â
âWell, you gotta admit, seeing that little skink and Quigley in his flash pyjamas was a funny sight. But you know, I canât help thinking about something else.â
âWhatâs that?â
âHave you ever heard of karma?â
âNo,â Jars said, âI donât think so.â
âDad told me once. It means when you do something bad, something bad will happen to you. The same goes for doing something good.â
âSo, because Quenton told lies about me, this karma thing punished him for it?â
âThatâs what I reckon. Anyway, I gotta go get some wood for the fire. Dadâll be awake soon.â
Jars watched as he strode towards the forest. She couldnât help smiling. She had to admit, it was funny. As long as Quenton doesnât think it was Snook who put the lizard in his bed, she said to herself. Heâd be seriously ticked off if he did. Then there would be more trouble.
Jim Kelly came out of his tent. He ran a hand through his hair and walked over to where Snook and Jars were coaxing the fire into life. âMorning, you two. Ready for some breakfast?â
Jars waved some smoke away from her eyes then turned to her uncle. âI found some footprints in the camp this morning that donât belong to us.â
âFootprints? How do you know theyâre not ours?â
âI just know. They were made by two people, both wearing heavy boots. One set of prints goes deeper into the ground than the other, so Iâd say one of the two was big. I also heard some strange sounds last night. I thought it might have been some wild animals. But now Iâm not so sure.â
Jim frowned. âOkay, youâd better show me.â
Jars, followed by Snook and her uncle, led the way. âThere,â she said, pointing to the prints.
Jim bent over, peering at the ground. âDarned if I can see anything. Are you sure youâre not just imagining things, Jars?â
She shook her head. âNo, theyâre there, but youâre looking from the wrong angle. The sun has to be behind you.â
Changing position, he bent over once again, nodding. âYes, I see them. Youâre right. It looks like we did have a visitor last night.â
Snook looked over his shoulder at the forest. âTwo visitors,â he reminded his father. âThere were two of them.â
Snookâs dad walked slowly back to the fire, rubbing his chin, as though thinking. âWhat time of night did you hear noises,
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