swishes around his magic wand. It snaps! âOh no,â wails Merlin. âSee? Everything is breaking down or getting lost. Last night I forgot which carpark I left my car in, so I caught the train home.â I looked into Merlinâs mind for clues. His memory is a bit murky. I see toothpaste, breakfast muffins and a dark hole. This must be where he forgets things. Merlin tries to superglue his broken wand. His fingers are stuck to the wand now. At least he wonât be able to lose that! âGo and find the car first, âorders Flopsy.â I donât want to walk to work.â I wonder if Flopsy has anything to do with Merlinâs missing sense of humour?
I try all my contacts. I peck around a bit. I find Merlinâs car. Itâs a bit hard to miss a van with MERLIN THE MARVELLOUS written on the side. Especially when itâs the only vehicle left in the carpark. I hit the buttons on my mobile. Merlin is still stuck at home. âThanks for finding the car,â says Merlin grumpily. âBut I donât feel like laughing.â âDonât worry. Iâll find your sense of humour next.â I say. Merlin used to smile. He used to laugh. And he played jokes. Where did he laugh for the last time? On the train last night? Is that where he might have lost it? I visit the railway Lost Property Office. Umbrellas, shoes and sports gear fill the room. But no clues to a lost sense of humour. So then I check the henhouse. Itâs the gossip centre of the yard. The hens know everything. âHave you heard anything funny?â I ask the hens. âWe might have. Cluck! Cluck! Cluck!â âMerlinâs lost his sense of humour,â I explain. âHe needs it for his show this afternoon. I must find it before three oâclock.â âSo youâre the hard-boiled detective?â says Rooster loudly. He makes the same joke every time we meet. It isnât funny. âRooster fell off the henhouse roof yesterday morning. Merlin was here and he laughed. So he still had it then,â says Inspector Clues, the French chick. âWould you like some help with this case?â I shake my beak. âNot yet, thanks.â Unless itâs a French mystery, where you have to speak French, I think Iâm better at the job. Yesterdayâs laugh was a clue. But that was yesterday, not today. Rooster thinks heâs top of the pecking order. His job is to look after his hens. âHeard any laughs around here?â I ask him very politely. âAny giggles? Or even some smiles?â âWhy? Is laughing a crime?â Rooster says. Then he laughs at his own joke. But he doesnât look where he is going. He trips and falls into the water bowl, beak first. I try not to laugh. The hens giggle. Then they laugh aloud. Rooster shakes himself and stalks away. Drops of water fall on the ground from his dripping beak. In his mind, I can picture fireworks. He is very angry. I sigh. What happened to Merlinâs sense of humour? Where could it be?
Chapter 3 Eggs-actly Right In between jobs, I stay in the bird yard. Itâs a great place! All kinds of birds rent a space. Ducks. Geese. Even a swan who teaches ballet. The bird yard is beside the community gardens in the park. I have my own loft where I keep my gear. Thereâs a space for my bike and the sidecar. And I can scratch around in the garden too. When I get home, I turn on my tablet. I tap my keyboard. Not everybody talks Chook. So a tablet screen is useful for a hi-tech chook like me. I try Chooks Anonymous. You can leave a question. Other people read it, and they leave answers if theyâve got any. I write: âLost sense of humour belonging to Merlin. Please contact Astrid the Mind-reading Chookâ I type in my link. I hope someone leaves me a clue before three o clock. I peck in a few messages. Youâve heard of e-mail. Well, I use c(hook) mail. Then I play a few