The Adventures Of A Travelling Cat - Giles Ekins - E-Book

The Adventures Of A Travelling Cat E-Book

Giles Ekins

0,0
3,49 €

oder
-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Meet Bubbles the Travelling Cat, as he journeys around the world looking for adventure and excitement.

One fateful day, Bubbles introduces Suzi, his human, to his best friend Matty, a clever mouse. But as Suzi really, really doesn't like mice, she throws Bubbles out of the house, and now he's homeless. Encouraged by other homeless cats, Bubbles decides to travel to London to complain about his treatment to The Queen.

Follow Bubbles on his journey as he sails up the mighty Amazon River, climbs Mount Everest and visits many other exciting destinations in this lighthearted story for readers of all ages.

Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:

EPUB

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2022

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.



THE ADVENTURES OF A TRAVELLING CAT

GILES EKINS

CONTENTS

Bubbles Meets The Queen

Bubbles In Paris

Bubbles Goes To Disneyworld

Bubbles At The Niagara Falls

Bubbles In New York

Bubbles The Ship’s Cat

Bubbles In The Amazon Jungle

Bubbles And The Condor

Bubbles Escapes From The Condor’s Nest

Bubbles At The Taj Mahal

Bubbles And The Tigers

Bubbles On Mount Everest

Bubbles Meets The Queen Again

Bubbles And The Loch Ness Monster

Bubbles In Greenland

Bubbles And The Polar Bears

Bubbles Saves His Best Friend Matty

Bubbles And The Hungry Fox

Bubbles Meets The Lion King

Bubbles And The Elephants

Bubbles And The Wildebeest Migration

Bubbles And The Sharks

Bubbles Rescued From The Sharks

Bubbles And The Penguins

Bubbles And The Sphinx

Bubbles And Lily Lollipop

Next in the Series

About the Author

Copyright (C) 2021 Giles Ekins

Layout design and Copyright (C) 2022 by Next Chapter

Published 2022 by Next Chapter

Cover art by CoverMint

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the author’s permission.

Dedicated with lots of love and hugs to my granddaughter Lily Louise Ekins

BUBBLES MEETS THE QUEEN

Hello, I’m a cat, a very handsome ginger cat with some dark brown stripes down my side. I think my grandfather must have been a tiger.

My humans call me Bubbles, a name I hate because I’m a boy cat.

Of course Bubbles is not my proper cat name, but I can’t tell you what that is because you are not another cat, are you?

I lived with my humans David and Suzi in a nice house and my best friend was a very clever mouse called Matty. Matty and I played a game where I pretended to chase him around the garden and catch him and Matty often did tricks. It was such good fun and one day we decided to show the humans what fun it was, sure that they would enjoy it.

I carefully picked up Matty in my mouth and carried him though the cat-flap and into the front room where David and Suzi were watching television.

I dropped him gently on the carpet. ‘A mouse, a mouse!’ Suzi screamed excitedly, which seemed a bit obvious, and jumped up on her chair to get a better look.

Matty then began to do his tricks. He did forwards somersaults, backwards flips, he danced on his front legs, he danced on his back legs and finally balanced on the very tip of his tail and spun around like a top.

David then joined in the fun, pretending to chase us with a broom. Finally I picked up Matty and put him on Suzi’s chair. She screamed even louder in excitement as Matty ran up her leg and leapt off into the air. I jumped up and caught him in my mouth and put him down.

Suzi shouted, ‘Get them out of here, get them out of here!’ and David chased us with the broom and out into the garden.

‘I don’t think they liked that very much,’ said Matty.

‘Of course they did, look how excited Suzi was, shouting with excitement.’

‘No, Bubbles, Suzi obviously does not like mice and I’m certain she didn’t enjoy it one bit.’

‘Oh,’ I said, thinking Matty was right. I had heard that some humans don’t like mice, I don’t know why, mice are very cuddly. But not as cuddly as cats.

‘I think you’re in big, big trouble,’ said Matty.

He was right.

When I tried to get back into the house, the cat-flap was blocked.

I meowed and meowed but nobody let me in.

I was homeless and so went to join some other homeless cats and told them my story.

‘That’s outrageous,’ said Silas, an old tabby cat, ‘you should complain to somebody.’

‘Yes, you must,’ agreed Lily Lollipop, a pretty white Persian cat.

‘It’s a cat-astrophe’ joked Mingo, a black and white cat who thought he was a comedian.

‘But who?’ I asked, ’Who do I complain to?’

‘You should go and see the Queen, she rules the country, doesn’t she?’ Silas said.

‘Good idea,’ I said,’ but I don’t know where the Queen lives,’

‘She must live in London,’ Lily Lollipop said.

‘How do you know?’ asked Mingo.

‘I remember the nursery rhyme my Mummy sang to me when I was a kitten.

Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been.

I’ve been up to London to visit the Queen,

Pussy cat, pussy, what did you there,

I frightened a little mouse under her chair,

So, she must live in London.’

It was agreed and next morning I caught the bus to London. At the bus station I asked a black cat where the Queen lived.

‘Buckingham Palace, walk up this road and you’ll see the palace, big white building but be careful, the Queen doesn’t like cats. She’s got lots and lots of dogs and they’ll have you for breakfast.’

I reached the palace, slipped through the fence and ran across into an open door. I walked down long corridors, peering into the rooms, looking for a lady sitting on a big chair with a crown on her head.

I didn’t see any dogs but I could smell where they had been.

Then I saw very nice lady sitting at a desk and wondered if she knew where the Queen might be. I ran across the room and I jumped up onto the desk.

‘My goodness me,’ exclaimed the lady, ‘where on earth did you come from?’

I told her but she didn’t seem to understand cat language.

‘My, you are a handsome beast,’ she said and began to stroke me as I purred loudly. ‘I’m sure you’re hungry, would you care for some food?’ she asked, ringing a little bell and a man in a bright red and gold tunic came in.

‘Yes, Your Majesty,’ he said and I realised that this very nice lady was the Queen, herself.

‘Please go to the kitchens and bring some food for this lovely animal, I believe there should be some salmon and roast beef left over from last nights’ banquet.’

Talk about a feast fit for a Queen. It was delicious.

‘I think you enjoyed that,’ the Queen said and stroked me again. I tried to tell her why I was there, but she just nodded politely. I didn’t mind that she didn’t understand me.

‘I do wish I could keep you,’ she said, ‘I would call you Harry because you’re ginger, but my dogs would get so terribly jealous, I’m afraid, so off you go. So nice to have met you,’ and she picked me and put me down on the thick carpet and gently shooed me away. ‘I must get on with reading these papers,’ she said.

I walked back to the bus station and jumped onto first bus I saw. I don’t know where it was going but I was sure it was going to be another adventure. I had realised there was a whole wide world out there, far away from the confines of my home with David and Suzi.

I was going to become a travelling cat.

BUBBLES IN PARIS

I jumped on the coach even though didn’t know where it was going, but I didn’t mind because I knew that I was going on another adventure.

My name is Bubbles and I am a travelling cat.

I’d had a long day and was very, very, tired, so I settled down to sleep as the coach drove off to wherever it was headed.

When I woke up it was dark, there was no-one on the coach and it was swaying violently up and down, up and down, swaying wildly from side to side, tossing me all over so that I kept on sliding off the seat. What was going on, was it an earthquake? Or an erupting volcano? I didn’t know but it seemed to last for hours and hours before the violent movements finally stopped.

By then however I needed a litter tray but of course there wasn’t one available so I had to use an old newspaper I found under a seat but when the driver and the passengers came back and found it, they chased me out.

But I was not worried. There were several other coaches nearby and so I jumped onto another one. It was then I realised that I had been on a ship, a ferry, and we must have crossed over the sea. But where to?

A kindly lady fed me some chicken from a sandwich and then picked me up and settled me onto her lap for the rest of the journey. Eventually the coach stopped and the driver shouted, ‘Ladies and gentlemen. Paris.’

So, there I was in Paris, France. I left the bus station and walked along the road and soon came to another large building. Deciding to go inside, I found that it was a train station with blue coloured trains busily pulling in and going out. I wandered around looking for something to eat, and then went up some stairs to a restaurant from which delicious smells were coming. I boldly walked inside, strolling around as if I owned the place but I had not got very far before a waiter picked me up and threw me outside, shouting ‘Stray cats are not allowed inside the famous Blue Train restaurant, who do you think you are, one of the Aristocats?’

Near to the train station was a wide river and so I walked along the riverbank for a while. I talked to some of the cats on the boats moored alongside– cat language is the same all over the world, you know -and one them, a tabby cat called Napoleon shared a nice piece of fish with me because I was still hungry.

It was a fine day and I really enjoyed that walk along the river taking in the sights. And then in the distance I saw the Eiffel Tower. I knew what it was because when I lived with my humans (before they threw me out of the house) I watched a programme about Paris on television with them.

I decided to go there, to go to the very top to see the view. There were a lot a people milling about when I got there but I found the entrance and ran up some stairs but then I had to get into a glass sided lift to go the rest of the way to the summit. The lift was very full of people and three times somebody trod on my tail.

Some people have no consideration.

At the top there were many people pushing to get to the railings and look out over Paris but eventually I manged the squeeze through and jump up onto the top of the railings. The view was magnificent. As I stood there on the railings, some more people rushed forward to see the view and accidentally pushed me in the back and then I was falling, falling down from the very top of the tower.

It was a very, very, long way down, 300 metres which is the same as 85 elephants standing one on top of each other. That poor elephant at the bottom of the pile would get quite squashed.

The ground was rushing towards me, the tower was rushing past me so I spread out my front and back legs as far as I could to slow me down and using my tail as a rudder I glided towards the open ground.

A pair of pigeons flew by. ‘Oh look’ said one. ‘a flying cat.’ ‘You watch,’ said the other, ‘There’ll be pigs flying next.’

The ground grew close, very close, then at the last minute I lowered my legs and landed on my feet. Bump!

We cats always land on our feet you know.

I sat down for a moment or two to get my breath back and then got up and walked away.

Where to go to next? Then I heard an elderly couple saying that they were going to take a taxi to Montmartre, ‘That’s where all the artists live’ said the old lady and so I decided to go with them and jumped into the taxi and sat down between them but they didn’t seemed to be at all surprised.

‘Thank you’ I said when we got there, but I don’t think they understood.

I walked around the streets and squares of Montmartre. There were lots and lots of cafes and restaurants with people sitting outside in the evening sun eating and drinking and as I walked around between the tables the diners would give me little pieces of meat or fish. So kind. Everywhere I looked artists had set up their easels and were painting pictures. of the scenery or of people posing for their portraits.

One of the artists saw me and said, ‘’Ah, Monsieur Pussy Cat’ - monsieur is French for mister – ‘such a handsome beast, may I paint you?’

Paint me? He wanted to paint me? What colour? Red? Blue? Pink? Then I realised that he meant to paint a picture of me, not cover me in paint.

Stupid cat.

OK, I agreed,

He painted me as I sat on a low stone wall with a big white church called the Sacré-Coeur in the background.

‘One day, Monsieur Pussy Cat’, he said when he had finished, ‘this portrait will be hanging in the Louvre art gallery and be as famous as the Mona Lisa’ which I gathered was a famous portrait of a lady. He then gave me a piece of very smelly sausage which I pretended to eat but spat it out when he wasn’t looking. A cat, even a travelling cat, has to have certain standards.

I wandered around for a bit longer and then strolled into a dark alley. Big, big, mistake.

Next to an overflowing dustbin stood five angry alley cats, staring at me. ‘Hello’ I said, trying to be friendly but they just hissed and snarled and then began to chase me.

I turned and ran as fast as I could, out into the streets and without looking ran all the way down a long, long, flight of stairs that went all the way from the top of the hill down to the bottom.

I turned around to look back up the stairs but the alley cats were nowhere to be seen.

Nevertheless, I decided, it was time to move on.

I walked into the Metro underground and following the signs, caught the trains which took me to the airport. Once there I got onto the first aeroplane that I came to. Where it was going I did not know but there was sure to be another adventure at the end of the flight.