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    The Truth Pixie Goes to School


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      Also by Matt Haig

      Shadow Forest

      The Runaway Troll

      To Be A Cat

      Echo Boy

      A Boy Called Christmas

      The Girl Who Saved Christmas

      Father Christmas and Me

      The Truth Pixie

      Evie and the Animals

      First published in Great Britain, the USA and Canada in 2019

      by Canongate Books Ltd,

      14 High Street, Edinburgh EH1 1TE

      Distributed in the USA by Publishers Group West

      and in Canada by Publishers Group Canada

      canongate.co.uk

      This digital edition first published in 2019 by Canongate Books

      Copyright © Matt Haig, 2019

      Illustrations copyright © Chris Mould, 2019

      The moral rights of the author and the illustrator have been asserted

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A catalogue record for this book is available on

      request from the British Library

      ISBN 978 1 78689 826 5

      eISBN 978 1 78689 827 2

      To Pearl and Lucas

      Contents

      Also by Matt Haig

      The Truth Pixie: Goes to School

      There once was a girl

      Who lived far away,

      And who tried to be kind,

      Whatever the day.

      This girl was called Aada.

      She lived with her dad.

      She was sometimes happy,

      But now she was sad.

      She’d had a bad year,

      She’d had to move town,

      And start a new school,

      And wear a new frown.

      Her gran had died,

      Her dad lost his job.

      Aada spent the whole year

      Trying not to sob.

      But this isn’t a sad story –

      Not really, no –

      The pixie lived

      In Aada’s house,

      And in her hair

      Was Maarta the mouse.

      This pixie slept

      Under Aada’s bed,

      And Aada trusted

      Whatever she said.

      You see . . .

      And Aada was pleased

      That she had such a friend.

      She hoped that these days

      Would never end.

      When the Truth Pixie and Aada

      Went into town,

      They’d laugh when they saw

      Everyone frown.

      ‘Hello,’ said Aada.

      ‘We’d like a loaf of bread.’

      ‘No pixies allowed!’

      The shopkeeper said.

      ‘Well!’ said the pixie.

      ‘That’s just rude!

      Especially when you sell

      Such disgusting food!’

      Back at home

      With Aada and her dad,

      She watched the news

      But it drove her mad.

      ‘Why do humans chop down trees

      When forests are so fantastic?

      And why do you clog your oceans

      With all that horrible plastic?’

      Aada’s dad sighed.

      ‘It’s not that simple.’

      Aada agreed with the pixie

      As she picked at a pimple.

      Aada loved the pixie.

      They had great times together,

      Such as snowball fights

      In wintry weather.

      Aada told her stories,

      Made up in her head,

      And the pixie listened closely

      To everything she said.

      Aada played piano,

      The pixie sang along,

      And they both laughed happily

      Whenever it went wrong.

      When Aada was happy,

      The pixie was there.

      (The best kind of happy

      Is the kind you can share.)

      And when times were tough,

      And when Aada felt bad,

      The pixie was there

      To make her less sad.

      She told Aada the truth,

      She told her what was real,

      She told her it’s okay

      To feel what she feels.

      Aada started a new school,

      And the pixie came too.

      But this school was a place

      Where it was hard to be true.

      ‘Infinity,’ said the maths teacher,

      ‘Is the largest number ever!’

      ‘Nope,’ said the pixie.

      ‘Oh,’ Teacher sighed. ‘So you think you are clever?’

      ‘Not really,’ said the pixie.

      ‘But there’s a rabbit called Bangly-Bon,

      Who says there’s a number that’s

      In a history lesson,

      The pixie was amused,

      Because history was a subject

      That left her confused.

      ‘It seems strange,’

      She told the very strict teacher,

      ‘That your history

      Is full of only one creature.’

      ‘There are no dogs,

      Pixies or even elves.

      It seems like humans

      Are obsessed with themselves!’

      Aada was embarrassed,

      And turned bright red,

      Every time the pixie

      Said what she said.

      And outside, later on,

      When the lesson was sports,

      The pixie was laughed at,

      In her silly yellow shorts.

      She couldn’t catch a ball

      And she couldn’t run fast,

      And in every single race

      She always came last.

      The children thought

      The pixie was strange.

      They laughed at her difference

      And they didn’t like change.

      The Truth Pixie didn’t mind,

      She really didn’t care.

      (And nor did the mouse

      Who lived in her hair.)

      The trouble was

      That Aada did care,

      Because the children at school

      Would always be there.

      There was one girl

      Whose name was Leena.

      She had cold eyes

      And couldn’t be meaner.

      She laughed at Aada

      And her pixie friend,

      So Aada tried to be normal,

      But couldn’t pretend.

      ‘You aren’t normal’ –

      That’s what Leena told her.

      Aada closed her eyes,

      And wished she was older.

      Aada was quiet,

      Aada couldn’t speak.

      Aada’s legs

      Felt really weak.

      The pixie was there,

      And she got really cross.

      She had to show this girl

      Who was actually the boss.

      ‘You ask me why

      I smell of poo.

      It’s ’cos the mouse in my hair

      Has got no loo.

      And listen, why must you always

      Pick on Aada?

      Why must you try

      To make her life harder?

      Pixies aren’t evil,

      Pixies aren’t bad.

      I hate your lies,

      ’Cos they make me sad.’

      Leena leaned in,

      ‘Well, you see,

      You can’t fix me,

      Because I’m an actual

      . . . Truth Pixie.

      I tell the truth

      In what I say.

      I tell it at night

      And I tell it all day.

      And the truth about you,


      I can explain fully:

      You’re being a nasty,

      Insecure bully.

      You pick on others

      To make you feel better,

      Which is like trying to dry

      By getting even wetter.

      I’ll give you some advice,

      I hope you don’t mind.

      Leena stared at the pixie

      And stamped her feet.

      ‘You are such a freak!

      And you think you’re sweet.

      You’re not a human,

      You shouldn’t be here,

      With your silly voice

      And your pointy ears.

      I think it’s funny that Aada

      Has no friends,

      Except a pixie

      Whose truth never ends.’

      She grabbed the pixie,

      Dangled her above the ground,

      As Maarta the mouse

      Squeaked a frightened sound.

      ‘Please,’ said Aada,

      ‘Leave her alone.’

      But into the air

      The pixie was thrown.

      She flew down the corridor

      Where Aada couldn’t reach her

      And landed in the arms

      Of their least favourite teacher.

      ‘Pixie!’ said the teacher.

      ‘What are you doing?

      ‘Ummm, I was flung in the air

      By Leena Gruing.’

      And from that day on,

      Things got even worse.

      The Truth Pixie felt less like a friend

      And more like a curse.

      One day, Aada,

      Wishing no one could see her,

      Saw there in her path

      That bully Leena.

      ‘Please,’ Aada said,

      ‘I’ve got to go to class.’

      But Leena stood in the way

      And wouldn’t let her past.

      Aada pushed her and ran

      And didn’t look back.

      It felt like the whole school

      Was on the attack.

      People laughed in class,

      Ignored her at break.

      There wasn’t a single

      Friend it seemed she could make.

      The Truth Pixie sighed

      When she saw this sad stuff,

      And wished she could tell Aada

      She was more than enough.

      ‘Oh, Aada, I’m sorry

      About these people at school.

      I had no idea

      Humans could be so cruel.’

      ‘But it’s the truth,’ said Aada.

      ‘I really am a bit strange.

      I wish I was normal,

      I wish I could change.

      I wish I could speak

      Like the others do.

      I wish I could smile

      And not look so blue.

      I wish I didn’t care about people

      Who make me a joke.

      I wish we had money

      And weren’t so broke.

      I wish I had their faces

      With their natural smiles.

      And I wish I didn’t have thoughts

      Like snapping crocodiles.

      I wish Mum was still here,

      And my gran too.

      But I know, at least,

      That I still have you.’

      ‘Oh, thank you,’ said the pixie.

      ‘That’s good to hear.

      But I don’t like to see

      Your mind full of fear.

      You’re not normal,

      That much is true.

      But why be normal,

      When you could also be you?

      If everyone was normal,

      All of the time,

      Life would be a poem

      With only one rhyme.

      The best people I’ve met

      Were always rather weird,

      Like that man Father Christmas,

      With his funny clothes and beard.

      And the Easter Bunny,

      With long ears and silly short legs,

      Who gives the world chocolate

      That is turned into EGGS!!!’

      Aada smiled,

      But still looked sad.

      The Truth Pixie felt

      Really quite bad.

      Late at night,

      There was no denying,

      The sound from the bed

      Was the sound of crying.

      ‘I’m sorry,’ said the pixie.

      ‘This is all my fault,’

      As Aada shed a tear

      That tasted of salt.

      At school the next day,

      The pixie kept out of sight,

      So Aada could make friends

      And try to put things right.

      But it wasn’t that easy,

      Not at first.

      In fact, for a while,

      Aada’s day got worse.

      They laughed at her drawings

      Of trolls and elves,

      Though some felt bad

      And ashamed of themselves.

      One girl approached, said,

      ‘I’m sorry you feel sad.

      I’d be your friend,

      But it’s just . . . my dad.

      He says that pixies

      Are full of evil powers.

      They make the sky dark,

      And like to kill flowers.’

      The girl walked away,

      And Aada felt lonely.

      All she wanted was a human friend,

      And she thought, ‘If only . . .’

      She thought having human friends

      Would be like being in a bubble

      That could keep her away

      From playground trouble.

      Maybe the pixie was right,

      With the words she had spoken late last night.

      Perhaps it was all the pixie’s fault?

      With that thought, she stood up with a jolt.

      Aada said to the girl

      Something REALLY bad.

      She said, ‘I’m not friends with the pixie,

      That would be mad!’

      And the girl stopped,

      And turned to say,

      ‘Well, in that case,

      Let’s go and play.’

      And Aada went off

      With her human friend,

      And felt something new start

      And something else end.

      Nearby, the Truth Pixie

      Heard every word.

      And wished she could fly away

      Like a lonely bird.

      ‘Aada is better off without me,’

      The pixie told her mouse.

      ‘We should go back home

      To our little yellow house.’

      So the Truth Pixie left Aada

      On April the fourth,

      Wrote her a letter

      And then travelled north.

      It took two hundred days,

      And was such a hard trek.

      When she got to her old home

      She felt quite a wreck.

      On her first week back,

      She went to see her brother Cyril.

      He was super short,

      About the height of a squirrel.

      They hadn’t spoken for a while,

      And Truth Pixie wanted to make amends.

      She wanted to know why Cyril

      Had three thousand friends.

      So she went to his house,

      Deep in the trees.

      He was having a party

      And gave Maarta some cheese.

      ‘Ah,’ said Cyril. ‘Sister! Sister!

      Sister, my dear!

      It’s SO good to see you

      And to have you here!’

      ‘Is it?’ she asked.

      ‘Is that really the case?

      I feel like these days

      I should be hiding my face.’

      ‘Of course, Anoushka.

      Of course I want to see you.

      In fact, you’re so brilliant

      I always wanted to BE you.’


      ‘Anoushka?’ said the Truth Pixie.

      She’d forgotten her own name.

      She’d always been ‘Truth Pixie’,

      And great-aunt Julia was to blame.

      But then, at that moment,

      Came a whisper in her ear.

      It was from an old elf

      By the name of Mother Breer.

      ‘Hello, Truth Pixie,’

      Said the wise little elf.

      ‘Please be careful,

      And watch yourself.’

      ‘Why?’ asked the pixie.

      ‘What is the matter?’

      ‘It’s Cyril,’ said the elf.

      ‘Don’t believe his chatter.

      Yes, everyone likes him,

      But do you know why?

      It’s because everything he says

      Is a total lie.

      Since the last time you saw him,

      He’s become quite peculiar,

      And the reason for that

      is your great-aunt Julia.

      She’s been fooling around,

      She’s been rather tricksy,

      And now your brother

      Is a new kind of pixie!

      Like us, now he speaks

      Always in rhyme,

      But unlike us, he

      LIES ALL THE TIME!’

      ‘A Lie Pixie? A Lie Pixie?’

      She began to understand,

      As her brother came

      And took her hand.

      ‘Everyone is amazing!

      Everyone is great!’

      ‘Hmmm,’ said his sister.

      ‘If you lie, they’ll be your mate.’

      So she followed him around

      As he introduced her to his guests.

      More elves than pixies,

      Because, he lied, ‘Elves are the best!’

      ‘Here’s Father Topo,

      An elf like no other!

      I sometimes wish

      He was my brother!’

      They went outside,

      And Cyril saw a troll.

      ‘So good to see you!’

      And his sister said, ‘LOL!’

      Said the troll:

      ‘I never ’ave been to a party!’

      Said the pixie:

      ‘Perhaps because you smell so farty!’

     


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