|
The
Chocolate Shock
a read aloud story
by Sharon Tregenza
China loved Chocolate. She loved chocolate in all its
forms and all its flavours. China loved chocolate so much
that she even made up a little song about it – the
song went like this:
Chocolate bars and chocolate cake
and chocolate anything,
Chocolate whipped and chocolate chipped
and sprinkled on ice cream.
Buttons, bars and biscuits
I like my chocolate lots.
I eat my chocolate every day
my Mum says I'll get spots.
The bit about China’s mum was all too true. Her mother
had decided that China ate far too much chocolate and that
it was unhealthy. She’d cut China’s chocolate
down by half, so that chocolate was very much on China’s
mind when she walked through the wood that day.
It was a warm day, a cool breeze in the trees day but China
couldn’t feel it. It was a blue day, a cloud free
fresh and new day but China couldn’t see it. All China
could think about was chocolate. As she walked through the
woods everything reminded her of the chocolate she couldn’t
have and the more she walked the crosser she got. She sang
her chocolate song to herself:
Chocolate bars and chocolate cake
and chocolate anything,
chocolate whipped and chocolate chipped
and sprinkled on ice cream.
Buttons, bars and biscuits
I like my chocolate lots.
I eat my chocolate every day
my Mum says I'll get spots.
China was so busy thinking about chocolate she didn’t
see the old lady on the ground until she had almost fallen
over her.
‘Please help me up,’ said the old lady. ‘I
fell down and my old bones won’t let me get back up
again.’ But China wasn’t listening. She was
staring very hard at the old lady’s basket. In the
basket was a huge chocolate cake. It was topped with chocolate
cream and chocolate flakes and was the most delicious looking
chocolate cake China had ever seen. Her mouth watered.
Then she realised that the old lady was speaking to her.
‘Could you help me up,’ said the old lady.
‘A big girl like you could easily lift me onto my
feet.’
China thought for a minute.
‘ I’ll help you up if you’ll give me
the chocolate cake in your basket,’ she said.
The old lady looked surprised, ‘but I made that
cake for a special reason,’ she said.
‘No cake, no help!’ said China stubbornly.
‘Then I suppose I must give it to you,’ said
the old lady. ‘I don’t want to be stuck down
here all morning,’
China rushed over and helped the old lady to her feet.
It wasn’t difficult - the old lady was tiny and light
as a bird.
‘Now,’ said China, ‘my reward.’
The old lady’s eyes narrowed and she glared at China.
‘I’ll give you one more chance,’ she said.
‘I made that chocolate cake for someone in particular
-- it’s a very special cake. You won’t find
another cake like it.’
‘I can see that,’ said China greedily. ‘Now
give it to me!’
The old lady handed over the basket with the cake in.
China couldn’t wait to take it home. She broke off
a large piece with her hands and stuffed it into her mouth.
It was delicious. The most delicious chocolate cake she’d
ever tasted. But as she chewed something odd happened. The
cake in her mouth got stickier and sticker and China couldn’t
swallow it.
The old lady watched as China’s eyes grew wide with
panic.
‘I tried to warn you,’ said the old lady. ‘I
baked that cake for someone in particular, I baked it for
the woodland witch who put a curse on my cabbages. I added
a special little ingredient of my own --glue!”
China’s mouth was still crammed full of the awful
sticky cake and she couldn’t speak.
She ran home as fast as she could. It was a while before
she could make her mother understand what she was saying
because the sticky chocolate stuck to the roof of her mouth.
It took lots of glasses of water and several days before
the taste of chocolate was gone completely.
And after that China couldn’t even look at chocolate
without feeling sick. She sang a different song after her
chocolate shock. It went like this . . .
I love apples. I love pears,
grapes and cherries too,
I think plums and wonderful
would you like a few?
THE END
|