ALSO BY GORDON KORMAN
The Juvie Three
Schooled
Born to Rock
Son of the Mob: Hollywood Hustle
Jake, Reinvented
Son of the Mob
The 6th Grade Nickname Game
Copyright © 2000 by Gordon Korman
All rights reserved. Published by Disney • Hyperion Books, an imprint of Disney Book Group. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. For information address Disney • Hyperion Books, 114 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10011-5690.
ISBN 978-1-4231-4120-4
Visit www.disneyhyperionbooks.com
For M. Jerry Weiss,
who has been encouraging me to write about
Rick-isms since the eternal equinox
CONTENTS
Title Page
Copyright Page
Cast of characters
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Enter…Rachel Turner
Enter…Wallace Wallace
“Gimme an A or I Won’t Play!”
Enter…Rachel Turner
Enter…Trudi Davis
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Enter…Rachel Turner
Enter…Mr. Fogelman
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Wallace Wallace, Secret Agent
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Enter…Rachel Turner
Enter…Mr. Fogelman
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Enter…Trudi Davis
Loverboy Football Hero Follows His Heart
Enter…Rachel Turner
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Enter…Mr. Fogelman
Enter…Rachel Turner
Enter…Trudi Davis
Enter…Wallace Wallace
Enter…Rachel Turner
Cast of characters
The football players:
Hero Wallace Wallace
Quarterback Rick Falconi
Celery Eater Feather Wrigley
Ex–Best Friend Steve Cavanaugh
The drama club:
Actress Rachel Turner
Co-star Trudi Davis
Insect Nathaniel Spitzner
Cast and Crew Vito Brundia
Leticia Ogden
Leo Samuels
Everton Wu
Kelly Ramone
The adults:
Director Mr. Fogelman
Coach Coach Wrigley
Mom Mrs. Wallace
And featuring:
Porker Zit Parker Schmidt
Rollerblader Rory Piper
Kid Brother Dylan Turner
Road Rage Laszlo Tamas
And special guests the Dead Mangoes
Old Shep appears courtesy of Zack Paris Enterprises, XK-9
The characters in this book are fictional. Any resemblance you may find to actual persons or dogs, living or dead, proves that you have a lot of strange friends.
Enter…
WALLACE WALLACE
When my dad was a helicopter pilot in Vietnam, he once rescued eight Navy SEALs who were stranded behind enemy lines. He flew back using only his left hand, because the right one had taken a bullet. With the chopper on fire, and running on an empty tank and just gas fumes, he managed to outmaneuver a squadron of MiG fighters and make it safely home to base.
That was my favorite story when I was small. It was also a total pack of lies. The bullet “scar” on Dad’s arm was really left over from a big infected pimple. And by the time I was old enough to do the math, I realized that when the war ended in Vietnam, my father was fourteen.
I was pretty clueless, like little kids can be. I thought my parents had a great relationship. The only thing they ever fought about was lying. And even then the arguments were short: Mom wanted the truth, and Dad wouldn’t recognize it if it danced up and bit him on the nose.
But even though I didn’t really understand what was going on, I guess it percolated down to me somehow. The more Dad lied, the more I told the truth.
My earliest memory is of my mother complaining that the laundry had shrunk her new pants.
“Your pants didn’t get smaller, Mommy,” I assured her. “Your butt got bigger.”
Little kids get away with that kind of stuff, so she laughed it off.
But she wasn’t laughing three years later when the next-door neighbor asked my opinion of her light and fluffy cake.
I thought it over. “It tastes like vacuum cleaner fuzz. And the icing reminds me of antifreeze.”
“Wally, how could you say such a thing?” my mother wailed when we got home.
“Mom,” I asked, “did Dad really miss my birthday party because he had to visit a sick friend?”
It didn’t matter that she didn’t answer. I had already seen the hotel bill on my father’s night table. The Desert Inn, Las Vegas.
I was more stuck on the truth than ever. For me, honesty wasn’t just the best policy; it was the only one.
I told my soon-to-be ex–piano teacher that her fingernails reminded me of velociraptor claws. The cook at summer camp I informed that his pork chop could double as a bulletproof vest. My cousin Melinda’s clarinet playing I described as “somebody strangling a duck.”
“Must you be so—you know—colorful?” my mother moaned.
“When it’s the truth,” I said firmly.
“But the Abernathys are so proud of their new house! Did you have to announce that it’s built on a slant?”
“It is! I dropped my yo-yo, and it rolled all the way to the kitchen.”
“Wally,” she pleaded, “how can I make you understand—”
I used to wonder if things would have been different if I’d had the guts to tell my dad that he didn’t have to be a war hero or an astronaut or a CIA agent. It was enough for me that he was my dad.
I almost did it once. I was so close! But before I could get my mouth open, he said, “Wally, have I ever told you about the time I led a crew that put out oil well fires?”
Oil well fires.
So I gave up, and, eventually, so did Mom. I was in fifth grade when they got their divorce. By then, I wouldn’t have told a lie at gunpoint.
That’s why I never once complained about the black eye I got for telling Buzz Bolitsky he had the IQ of a Ring Ding. You won’t see me crying over the fact that I haven’t received a birthday present from Uncle Ted for two years. The fact is, Uncle Ted’s toupee really did look like a small animal had crawled up onto his head and died there. If he didn’t want the truth, he shouldn’t have said those fateful words: “Do you notice anything different about me?”
So when Mr. Fogelman had us write book reviews in eighth-grade English, I wasn’t trying to be rude or disrespectful or even smart-alecky. I gave Fogelman what I give everybody—the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth:
Mr. Fogelman scanned the few lines, and glared at me, face flaming in anger. “This isn’t what I assigned!”
I should say that I had nothing against Mr. Fogelman at that moment. He was okay—the kind of young teacher who tries to be “one of the guys,” but everything he does only shows how out of it he is. I just wanted to set the record straight.
“Yes, it is,” I told him. “The assignment sheet said to give our honest opinion, write what was our favorite part and character, and make a recommendation. It’s all there.”
“Old Shep, My Pal is a timeless classic!” roared the teacher. “It won the Gunhold Award! It was my favorite book growing up. Everybody loves it.” He turned to the rest of the class. “Right?”
The reaction w
as a murmur of mixed reviews.
“It was okay, I guess.”
“Not too bad.”
“Why did it have to be so sad?”
“Exactly!” Fogelman pounced on the comment. “It was sad. What a heartbreaking surprise ending!”
“I wasn’t surprised,” I said. “I knew Old Shep was going to die before I started page one.”
“Don’t be ridiculous,” the teacher snapped. “How?”
I shrugged. “Because the dog always dies. Go to the library and pick out a book with an award sticker and a dog on the cover. Trust me, that dog is going down.”
“Not true!” stormed Mr. Fogelman.
“Well,” I challenged, “what happened to Old Yeller?”
“Oh, all right,” the teacher admitted. “So Old Yeller died.”
“What about Sounder?” piped up Joey Quick.
“And Bristle Face,” added Mike “Feather” Wrigley, one of my football teammates.
“Don’t forget Where the Red Fern Grows,” I put in. “The double whammy—two dogs die in that one.”
“You’ve made your point,” growled Mr. Fogelman. “And now I’m going to make mine. I expect a proper review. And you’re going to give it to me—during detention!”
“Nice grab, Wallace!”
I caught the short pass, and turned upfield.
WHAM!
Steve Cavanaugh hit me at hip level, and I saw stars. It was a clean tackle—totally legal—but it was pretty hard for practice. This had less to do with Cavanaugh’s toughness than it did with the fact that we used to be best friends.
“Steve, are you crazy?”
Cavanaugh’s body was yanked off of me, and the face of Rick Falconi, our quarterback, took its place in my field of vision.
“Wallace, are you okay? Speak to me!”
I pushed him away and jumped up. “I’m fine, Rick. It was a legal hit.”
Rick looked daggers at Cavanaugh. “You idiot! You could’ve injured our best player. Why’d you have to nail him?”
Cavanaugh pulled off his helmet, and down cascaded the longest, blondest hair at Bedford Middle School. “What did you want me to do? Give him a pedicure?”
If there was one thing Cavanaugh had more of than hair, it was sarcasm.
“I’m not the best player,” I told Rick.
“Yes, you are,” Rick countered.
“I scored one touchdown all year,” I insisted.
“Well, Jackass Jackass,” my ex–best friend reminded me, “one is a pretty big number for a guy who spent the whole season on the bench.”
“One is all it takes,” Rick pointed out, “when it comes with three seconds to go in the county championship.”
Okay, that part was true. Actually, I was only on the field as a blocker. But Rick panicked, and handed off too high, stuffing the ball into my ex–best friend’s face, jamming it between the mouth guard and the visor. Poor Cavanaugh never saw the two linebackers who sandwiched him. The ball popped out. It sailed over the heads of both teams, and blooped into the end zone.
“It was a total fluke,” I insisted. “Anybody could’ve jumped on that ball.”
“But you did,” Rick told me. “And we won the championship.”
They just didn’t get it. It would have been great to be a football titan if it was the truth. But to act like an all-star when I was really a pretty mediocre player—that was almost as bad as lying.
I didn’t give in. “Why does that make me the hero? Why not Cavanaugh’s face, or even you, Rick? Without that bonehead handoff, we probably would have lost.”
“Hey, man,” Rick said angrily. “Deep, deep down, a tiny little part of my brain sensed that I needed to do that. It was, you know, subhuman.”
“You mean subconscious,” I supplied.
“Whatever.”
At that moment, Feather sprinted up, with two of the defensive backs hot on his heels. “What’s going on?” he panted. “Did Wallace get hurt?”
“He’s fine,” Cavanaugh assured him. My ex–best friend sounded disappointed.
In a way, I couldn’t blame him. I was getting all this credit for being the best player, which is what Cavanaugh really was. He was an explosive receiver with great hands, he ran like a deer, and he could cover any position on defense. He was even the kicker, so good field position, extra points, and field goals all came from him. He ate right and worked out like a maniac. As team captain he had every reason to expect to be admired.
I didn’t blame him for hating me; I blamed him for being a total jerk about everything else.
“Uh-oh,” Feather said suddenly. “Quit goofing off. Here comes my dad.”
His father, Coach Wrigley, jogged up, blowing sharp blasts on his whistle. “Wait a minute, Wallace! What are you doing here?”
The coach always called us by our last names, which in my case made no difference. “Short passes, Coach.”
“Not today,” said Wrigley. “You’re supposed to be on detention right now.”
I gazed over the coach’s shoulder. There, at the edge of the field, stood Mr. Fogelman.
“Detention?” repeated Rick. “But our first game is tomorrow.”
“He should have thought of that before opening up his big mouth to Mr. Fogelman,” growled Coach Wrigley.
“I’m ready for tomorrow,” I assured Rick.
My ex–best friend reached out and patted the seat of my pants with his helmet. “I agree. Your butt is in perfect shape. Get ready to sit on the bench for another grueling season.”
Rick was not consoled. “But I wanted to practice the flea-flicker! Check it out: You take the handoff, toss it back to me, and I hit Cavanaugh with a fifty-yard bomb!”
I had to laugh. “You couldn’t throw a ball fifty yards if you swallowed a booster rocket off the space shuttle.”
The coach rolled his eyes. “There’s that famous honesty that makes people love you so much, Wallace.”
“Well, how about an extra workout tonight?” Rick persisted.
“Can’t,” I said. “I’ve got to paint the garage door.”
“Can’t you get out of it?” wheedled the quarterback.
I dug in my heels. “It’s just me and my mom. If I don’t do it, who will? Unless”—I popped a sly grin—“you guys want to come and help.”
“Not me!” chorused everybody.
“Come on,” I coaxed. “Last year it took ten minutes.”
“Because you bamboozled half the team into painting with you,” Cavanaugh pointed out.
“Not bamboozled,” I said. “The guys all knew what they were getting into.”
“Great,” complained Rick. “First you’re on detention, and now we have to paint your stupid garage door if we want to have a flea-flicker. It’s the icing on the gravy!”
I should probably explain about Rick-isms. Our quarterback had a way with words—the wrong ones. He could take two perfectly normal expressions and wind them together like a pretzel. The icing on the gravy was probably supposed to be the icing on the cake, but Rick got mixed up with the idea that something extra could be described as gravy.
I had them hooked, so I reeled them in. “Come by right after practice,” I invited. “I bought extra brushes for the whole offense.”
There were groans of resignation from the team.
Coach Wrigley waved to Fogelman on the sidelines. “All right, he’s coming.” He turned to me. “Get out of here, Wallace. Go serve your time.”
Enter…
RACHEL TURNER
It was a long letter. I told her everything—about how I knew that acting was going to be my real career. Ever since my third-grade play, Land of the Butterflies. All the other kids rushed off the stage screaming when Justin Kidd, the gypsy moth, threw up all over his cardboard wings (gross). I alone held my place among the giant construction-paper flowers, hugging my caterpillar costume tight and holding my breath until I passed out. Even at eight years old, I was the only one who understood—the show must go on! I?
??m sure Julia knew exactly what I was talking about.
Okay, I realized that Julia probably wasn’t going to read this personally. When I write to movie stars, all I ever get back is an autographed picture or a postcard, or whatever they send to their fans. It just felt good to be communicating with Julia Roberts—you know, actress to actress.
“Ow!”
Trudi Davis elbowed me in the ribs. My pen clattered to the gym floor, but I held on to all four pages of Julia’s letter and jammed it into my book bag.
“Look,” Trudi whispered. “Know who that is?”
Mr. Fogelman, the director of our play, had just come in.
“Not him!” Trudi hissed. “Him! The kid toweling off his hair.”
I shrugged. “Some eighth grader. Why? Should I know him?”
“That’s Wallace Wallace,” Trudi whispered.
“It can’t be,” I said sarcastically. “Where are his bodyguards?” No offense to the football hero (I’d never even met him). But if you weren’t sick of hearing about last year’s championship yet, you obviously didn’t live in Bedford.
Trudi ignored my humor. “He’s hot.”
I rolled my eyes. “Every time you’re about to make an idiot out of yourself over some guy, it usually starts with the words ‘He’s hot.’ That’s warning sign number one.”
“Well, he is!” she insisted. “Look!”
And actually, Trudi had a point. I’d always thought football players were neckless wonders with muscles that went all the way up to the tops of their heads. But Wallace was almost slim, and really good-looking in a boy-next-door kind of way.
“His hair’s too short,” I murmured just to prove nobody’s perfect.
“Too long,” Trudi corrected. “When you’re clipped that close, you should probably buzz it all off and go for the bald look. A lot of athletes do that.”
That’s when it dawned on me. “This is fantastic. I’ll bet the whole school will come out for the performance when we spread the word that Wallace Wallace is working with us.”
“Don’t count on it,” warned Trudi. “Cool guys never go in for drama. If you want to act, you better do it for pure art, because guy-wise, it’s the Doofus Patrol. See?” she added as Nathaniel Spitzner walked up to us.