1
Until the angel came . . .
Until the angel came, there were three terribly unhappy children at Nitshill Road School: Penny, Mark and Marigold.
Shall we take Penny first?
Penny was plump. If you werenât friends with her, you might even say that she was getting on for fat. She had a pretty face, and lovely hair, and she was bright enough in class. But as the hands of the clock rolled round towards playtime sheâd get a horrible feeling, as if her stomach was being gripped by a hard, invisible hand. However boring the lesson was, she wanted it to go on for ever and ever. Inside the classroom she was safe. Outside, Barry Hunter might go wheeling past, his arms stuck out like jet-plane wings, making theusual big show of having to swerve to avoid her.
âBeware of the mountain! Danger! Danger! The moving mountain is coming this way!â
âHeâs just stupid,â said Lisa, her friend. âIgnore him.â
âYou must treat him with the contempt he deserves,â said her father.
âSome people are just born pig-ignorant,â said her gran.
But Penny still felt terribly unhappy.
And so did Mark. Mark was small for his age. He had strange sticky-up hair, and he wore glasses thick as bottle-ends. He gnawed his fingernails and his pencils, and fussed and fidgeted, and even when he finally stopped racketing around the classroom and tried to sit down and work â not very well â he still got on everyoneâs nerves. But only Barry Hunter knew how topush him and push him and push him, till he flew into a temper.
âMark the Martian!â heâd call from behind, imitating the rather peculiar stiff way Mark walked.
âBionic eyes!â heâd shout, swooping up and peering through the thick lenses of Markâs spectacles.
âControls not working properly?â heâd jeer whenever Mark dropped a ball, or missed a kick, or ran into a wall by mistake.
And sooner or later, unless the bell rang in time, Mark lost his temper â not like you or me, just getting red in the face and yelling, âOh, shut up, Barry Hunter! Youâre so stupid!â No. Mark went haywire, right out of control. With tears of rage spurting behind his glasses, heâd scream and howl and rush at Barry Hunter, trying to tear out chunks of his hair. Everyone turned to stare at him clawing and kicking andyelling. Some couldnât help grinning quietly to themselves, but Barry Hunter laughed out loud. He was so big, he could hold Mark at armâs length and watch him flailing about like a windmill in a high gale.
Then heâd tease him some more. âNow, now, now! Temper, temper!â
Markâs elder sister said:
âJust stay right away from him, Mark. Then maybe he wonât bother you.â
The teachers said:
âReally, Mark brings a lot of it on himself. He has to learn a bit of self-control. Theyâll have to sort themselves out.â
Markâs mother said:
âIâm going up to see the school if it doesnât stop.â
It didnât stop.
The third child was Marigold. Nobody knew that Marigold was unhappy. She never looked particularly sad, but thenagain she never looked particularly happy. In fact, she never looked anything. A portrait painter would have had no trouble at all with Marigold. Her face never cracked into a smile, or darkened with a scowl. People had tried to make friends with her but they never got very far. Sheâd beaway from school for a whole week, but only shrug when you asked what had been wrong with her. Sheâd hear your secrets, but sheâd never tell you hers. In fact, come to think of it, she hardly ever spoke, even when Mr Fairway sighed over her slipshod and unfinished work, or Barry Hunter and his gang tormented her in the playground.
âWhere do you live, Marigold? Is it that really smelly street we see you walking down after school?â
Marigold didnât answer. Others