Description
To William George Bunter, finding most definitely means keeping, and if he finds a postal order worth forty shillings – and the amount of tuck corresponding to that sum brings joy to his fat mind – he does his best to keep it. Unfortunately, the money belongs to Coker, and the Famous Five feel they must return it. But the treatment of their Captain when he goes on his unselfish mission cannot be left unavenged, and so when Coker, his arms full of tuck, finds himself set upon by five energetic juniors, it is not surprising that he drops it all, and less surprising that the fat Owl is on the spot to pick up a large and luscious box of chocolates.
Bunter has no mind to share his ill-gotten gains, and his fat thoughts turn to a suitable hiding place for his treasure, where it can rest until he has time to enjoy it in solitary joy. But it is what Billy Bunter finds in the hiding place that starts off his treasure-hunt.
For there is a faded Latin-written parchment, which actually sends Bunter to his grammar books. Long ago the monks who lived at Greyfriars hid their hoard of gold from the hands of King Henry VIII. If the gold were to be discovered, the piles of tuck that it would pay for would surpass the dreams even of the fattest imagination in the Remove.

