said.
Limpy didn't understand at first, not until the girl came grinning over to the tank, took the lid off, and gave him a big kiss.
Later, after Limpy had got over his disappointment about the girl putting the lid back on the tank and leaving without him, he decided it was time to escape. Later still, after he'd climbed up the wall of the tank about a million times and tried to push the lid off about a million times and fallen on his head about a million times, he realized he couldn't.
Then the lab filled up with humans in white coats, all staring up at a telly on the wall.
On the screen, Limpy saw the girl.
She was in the middle of the stadium, soaring over a crossbar that looked even higher than before.
All the humans in the lab started cheering and hugging each other.
Then they left.
Limpy smiled.
He was glad the girl had made them cheer. She must have done well.
Perhaps she'll come back and kiss me again, thought Limpy hopefully. And then take me back to Goliath.
He waited, not hoping too hard in case she didn't.
A long time passed. Even though he didn't want to, Limpy found himself thinking sadly about Charm.
Then he realized with a start that someone was standing behind the tank, watching him.
It wasn't the girl.
Limpy's insides sank as he saw a clipboard and a red face with hard, shiny eyes.
The bloke in the suit reached into the tank and lifted Limpy out and held him up and stared at him with a thin-lipped expression. Limpy felt pretty sure that whatever was going to happen next wouldn't involve a kiss.
L impy had never been on a winner's podium at a Games before, and he felt a bit overwhelmed.
It was partly the noise.
A stadium full of humans applauding and cheering was the loudest thing Limpy had ever heard, including some pretty big thunderstorms back home.
Another reason was that he was still in shock.
When the bloke with the clipboard had hurried out of the lab with Limpy in a manila envelope, Limpy had been pretty sure they were heading for somewhere unpleasant. A loading dock perhaps. Or a highway so the bloke could run Limpy over with his car.
So when the bloke hurried into the stadium and handed Limpy to the girl just before she stepped onto the podium and received her gold medal, Limpy had been pretty surprised.
The main reason he was a bit overwhelmed, though, was what was happening to him now.
The girl was holding Limpy over her head and the humans in the stadium were cheering even louder.
At him.
Stack me, thought Limpy, I think they like me.
Phew, thought Limpy as the girl carried him into the boardroom, it's all go being a national hero.
The girl had barely had time for a shower and Limpy had barely had time for a drink of water, and now the bloke with the clipboard was rushing them into a meeting.
Limpy didn't know what the meeting was about, but he hoped it would go on long enough for him to catch his breath.
The girl sat at the head of a long table and put Limpy down in front of her.
Limpy looked round.
There were several humans seated at the table and they were all grinning at him.
Limpy swallowed nervously.
He knew he should like it, but it felt weird.
The bloke with the clipboard took a seat at the other end of the table and started talking.
Limpy couldn't understand what he was saying, but he was obviously very enthusiastic about something. It seemed to be Limpy.
Then one of the other humans held up some sheets of drawing paper and Limpy became very enthusiastic as well.
They were sketches of cane toads.
In display bins.
In shops.
Stack me, thought Limpy delightedly.
Fluffy cane toad toys.
It's happened.
We're saved.
Limpy had a wonderful vision of every vehicle in Australia with a fluffy brushed-polyester cane toad hanging from its rearview mirror. A cute, lovable, fluffy cane toad that would remind the driver to be very careful not to run over any cute, lovable, real cane toads.
Not Charm, not Goliath, not any of them.
Limpy felt like doing
Candice Hern, Bárbara Metzger, Emma Wildes, Sharon Page, Delilah Marvelle, Anna Campbell, Lorraine Heath, Elizabeth Boyle, Deborah Raleigh, Margo Maguire, Michèle Ann Young, Sara Bennett, Anthea Lawson, Trisha Telep, Robyn DeHart, Carolyn Jewel, Amanda Grange, Vanessa Kelly, Patricia Rice, Christie Kelley, Leah Ball, Caroline Linden, Shirley Kennedy, Julia Templeton
Jenn Marlow
Hailey Edwards
P. W. Catanese
Will Self
Daisy Banks
Amanda Hilton
Codi Gary
Karolyn James
Cynthia Voigt