by Damian Davis
Little Hare Books
an imprint of
Hardie Grant Egmont
Ground Floor, Building 1, 658 Church Street
Richmond, VIC 3121, Australia
www.littleharebooks.com
Text copyright © Damian Davis 2011
Illustrations copyright © Andrew Joyner 2011
First published 2011
This edition published 2011
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Cataloguing-in-Publication details are available from the National Library of Australia
ISBN 978 1 742736 68 6 (epub)
Cover design by Vida & Luke Kelly
For Georgia,
For Oscar,
For Sally,
With love.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
COPYRIGHT PAGE
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 30
CHAPTER 31
CHAPTER 32
CHAPTER 33
CHAPTER 34
CHAPTER 35
HOW TO SKIM A STONE
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER 1
Friday
Last day of school. I’ve got a plan.
The most extraordinary thing about me is that I’m not extraordinary in any way. I can’t kick a ball. I can’t heelflip a skateboard. I can’t say the alphabet backwards.
There’s a kid in my class who’s been invited to sing at the Opera House. That’ll never happen to me.
Y’know how I know? Because I got kicked out of the school choir in the middle of the end-of-year concert. I was belting out the national anthem when Ms Wilson stopped the choir and kicked me offstage. Right in the middle of the chorus. And it was in front of six hundred parents. Two of them were mine. Mum said she had never been so embarrassed.
I can’t do anything well. I guess that does make me extraordinary in a way. But not really in a way you’d want. Extraordinarily lame. So I’m going to do something to change all that. I’ve got a plan that will make me stand out from the pack.
By the end of these summer holidays I will be the rock skimming champion of the world. Skimming is throwing a rock so it skips across the surface of the water.
My name is Digger Field. Well, not really. My name is David Field, but for some reason I’ve always been Digger.
My Mum is Polish and my Dad is a dag. We live a couple of streets away from the Clarry River in the most boring suburb in the world. It’s called Pensdale. Nothing ever happens here.
I have two brothers, Dean and Squid.
Dean is fourteen. I’m eleven. The only thing we have in common is that we’ve been at war with each other all my life.
He looks more like a stick insect than a human. He’s all arms and legs. Even if you can work out where his face is, you can’t really see much through the pimples. We share a room and I can hear him scratching his zits all night. It’s gross.
Squid is five going on six. He has the biggest head in the world. It’s so big it’s amazing he doesn’t faceplant every time he walks. He’s got a mop of curly brown hair that looks like a wig and he talks with a lisp that makes him sound like a three-year-old. For some reason people say he’s cute. People are stupid.
Me and my best mate Wriggler skim rocks every afternoon on the river on our way home from school.
There’s an art to it. I’m a natural. Wriggler isn’t. My record is twelve skims. He’s lucky to make three. I can’t tell him he’s hopeless because he’s my best mate and I need someone to hang around with all holidays. Besides, it’s good to watch someone who is more hopeless than me. And also, he’s got a video camera.
Guinness World Records say the world record for skimming is fifty-one skips.
I’ve worked out that if I can improve by one skim every day I will get to fifty by the end of the holidays. All I need to do is have two really good days when I improve by two and the record will be mine.
Tomorrow is day one of the countdown to me becoming world champion.
CHAPTER 2
DAY 1: Saturday
My skims: 13
Wriggler’s skims: 9 (!)
Days to becoming world champion: 38
Perfect conditions. No wind. Top day.
The first day of the big world-championship attempt.
Where we skim is on a couple of empty housing blocks next to the Clarry River. One block is covered in weeds. The other’s got an old falling-down house on it.
The river is so muddy that it’s brown, not blue. And the mud really stinks at low tide.
A few boats go up and down the river, mainly old guys fishing or water-skiers going past. They are coming from the coast, where the river is deeper and wider. Down there, the houses are bigger and nicer and the people are richer and younger. Out here in Pensdale, the houses are made out of fibro and wood and the people are poorer and older. On a hot day Pensdale is like a sauna.
Elite sportspeople need to warm up. Before we started Wrigs and I did some leg stretches, neck rolls and half-a-dozen one-handed pushups. Well, I did the push-ups. Wrigs just lay on the ground doing his best impression of an oversized red-headed blue-tongue lizard.
If you want to be a world champion rock skimmer, it’s important to find the right stone to skim with. You need the flattest one you can find. It should fit in between your thumb and your index finger. To skim, you peg it sidearm, as hard as you can, and see how many times you can make it bounce across the top of the water. The trick is to throw it as flat as possible so, by the time it hits the water, it’s still flying flat. That’s what makes it skip along the surface instead of sinking.
On my first throw I got thirteen skims. This world record is going to be a cinch.
Wriggler tried out a new technique. Every time he released a stone he grunted like a tennis player. He started with a simple ‘Aagggh!’ Then he moved onto ‘Aaoooeeee-ah!’ Then, ‘Graa-aa-ee-agh!’
He said that yelling sucked all the air out of his lungs and pushed the strength to his arms. He could be right because that’s how he got his record.
Just as he let go of his eighth throw he yelled so loud I thought my eardrums would burst. He also let out the hugest fart you’ve ever heard. He got nine skims. I fell over laughing.
If he perfects the grunt’n’ fart technique he’ll get to fifty-two skims and become world champion instead of me.
The rock skimming attempt is not our first crack at a world record. We tried for a different one a few years ago when I was eight. Eight years, three hundred and sixty-four days, twenty-three hours, fifty-nine minutes and fifty-nine seconds to be exact.
I had worked out that I was going to be the world’s oldest eight-year-old. I had to be. A second later and I would be nine. It would be impossible to be any older and still be eight.
/> I was born at 4.38 in the afternoon. On my ninth birthday Wriggler borrowed his mum’s camera and a digital clock. We worked out what the delay was between Wriggler pressing the button and the camera taking the photo.
We had to time it perfectly for the record attempt to work. I stood looking at the camera, holding the clock close to my face so you could read the time. At precisely 4.37.58 and a half Wriggler took the photo and I smiled. Then he took another one, just to be sure.
And it worked. The first picture was of my grinning face next to the clock, which said: 4.37.59. I was the world’s oldest eight-year-old. In the next photo the clock said: 4.38.00.
Wriggler said, ‘Look at the times. The first photo shows the world’s oldest eight-year-old and the second one shows the world’s youngest nine-year-old. That’s two records.’
Guinness World Records have never got back to me.
CHAPTER 3
DAY 2: Sunday
My skims: 0
Wriggler’s skims: 0
Days to becoming world champion: 37 (If Dean doesn’t stuff it up for me.)
Today was a disaster.
My big brother Dean is the biggest dropkick of a disappointment of an excuse of an embarrassment of a brother that you could ever have.
He was supposed to look after my little brother Squid when Mum went to work. But the moment Mum left the house Dean picked up his surfboard.
‘Where are you going?’ I asked him.
‘Where does it look like, Einstein?’
‘You’re supposed to be looking after Squid.’
Dean just ignored me and loped out the front door.
I’ve started a list of all the things he does so I know how not to be an annoying teenager when I get there.
When Wriggler came around to go skimming I had to say training was off. Mum would kill me if I took Squid to the river. She reckons by the time I noticed he was missing he’d already be bobbing out to sea.
‘What are we gonna do about the world championship?’ Wriggler said.
‘Y’know, it’s good for top sportspeople to have days off,’ I told him. ‘Good for their bodies.’
‘What do they do on those days?’
‘Make stuff,’ I said.
‘What stuff?’
‘Y’know, stuff. Stuff they can sell.’
Wriggler thought for a moment. ‘You mean like jerseys and balls and all those things they put their own names and photos on?’
‘Yeah, they make a fortune out of them.’
Wriggler and I are looking for ways to make money. We’re desperate to buy my uncle’s boat. Uncle Scott wants to sell his three-and-a-half metre tinnie with a 7.5 horsepower outboard motor. If me and Wriggler could buy the tinnie we would never be bored in the holidays again. We’d go wakeboarding, fishing and crabbing. And, best of all, there’s a national park on the other side of the river that we could explore by ourselves.
The tinnie is worth thirteen hundred dollars but Uncle Scott said he’d sell it to us for seven hundred and fifty. That’s five hundred and fifty dollars we’d save. The only problem is that Uncle Scott wants to start a mobile coffee business called ‘Coffee with Scotty’ and he needs the cash to fit out his van. He can only wait until the end of the holidays before he puts the tinnie on eBay. So far we’ve only made fifteen dollars.
‘Let’s invent a sports drink,’ I said to Wriggler. ‘We’ll make a zillion.’
All we had to do was work out what goes into a sports drink. Wriggler thought it was lemonade, sugar and a bit of food colouring.
There was a bottle of lemonade in the fridge. It was Dean’s, but I was sure if we paid him a small percentage of the profits he wouldn’t mind us using it. If he did mind, I’d tell Mum he had nicked off to the beach when he was meant to be looking after Squid.
The secret to a great sports drink is the colour. It’s got to scream, ‘Drink me and you’ll feel good.’
I had a look for some food colouring in the pantry but I couldn’t find any. So I got Squid to grab a tomato from the vegie patch.
We squashed it then poured the juice into the lemonade. It sank straight to the bottom. It looked really lame. It was just a red blob at the bottom of a bottle, like a broken version of one of those lava lamps where coloured bubbles of oil go up and down.
There was nothing else in the kitchen that would work, so we went looking around the house. I found a jellybean that Squid had been saving in his secret hiding place under the cushion at the back of the couch. It was green—completely the wrong colour—so I ate it. Luckily Squid didn’t see me because he would have got upset.
I grabbed his favourite orange crayon and attacked it with a cheese grater, which he did see and he did get upset about. Quite a lot really. Wrigs had to hold him back while I grated the whole crayon and we ended up with a big pile of orange shavings. We put them in the bottle but all they did was float down and join the red blob of tomato at the bottom.
The only thing that our sports drink was screaming was, ‘It’d be better to die of thirst than drink this.’
Then … whacko! An idea hit me like a ball to the back of the head. Dad is a car freak. He has a thirty-year-old, two-door, bright orange Ford Falcon 351. He pulls it out every weekend and polishes and buffs and drools over it. He always has a tin of orange touch-up paint around in case the car gets scratched.
I found the tin in the garage and brought it back to the kitchen.
We strained the lemonade to get as much of the tomato and crayon out of it as we could, then poured the lemonade back into the bottle.
Then we added the orange touch-up paint slowly, a little bit at a time. The paint mixed with the lemonade and spread through the bottle. A little shake, and it was perfect. It was the exact shade of orange that screamed, ‘Drink me now.’
Diggerade, the Choice of Champions.
It looked great but you couldn’t drink it of course. The paint was poisonous. The drink company would have to work out a drinkable non-poisonous version.
The only other problem was that all the pouring and straining had made the lemonade go a bit flat. Sports drinks need to be really fizzy to work. We needed to make it as fizzy as we could.
I once saw a trick online where a kid put a mint into a fizzy drink and it exploded like a volcano. Wriggler had a flip-top box of little mints in his pocket, so I thought we should give it a crack.
Wriggler didn’t want to. He said the drink would go everywhere. I pointed out that he had mini-mints which are about a fifteenth the size of normal ones.
We took the bottle out onto the front lawn. Squid and I stood back while Wriggler dropped one of his mints in, very carefully. The mint started dissolving at the bottom of the bottle and a few more bubbles came up.
Then the bubbles stopped, so Wriggler poured the rest of the mints into the bottle.
Nothing happened for a second. Then there was a rumble and the bottle started shaking. The drink frothed up and a torrent of dark orange blew the top off the bottle and sent the Diggerade into the air like it had been fired out of a cannon.
I think my next invention will be something that gets stains off clothes. And skin. And Wriggler’s teeth. At least he’s got red hair, so you can’t really notice where the drink splashed on his head. The orange paint will grow out some day.
CHAPTER 4
DAY 3: Monday
My skims: 14
Wriggler’s skims: 7
Days to becoming world champion: 36 (Easy-peasy.)
Excellent day. I got 14 skims. Wriggler reckons it was only 13.
Money made for tinnie: $0 ($735 to go—we already have $15.)
It says in the laws of Guinness World Records that you need video evidence to prove you’ve broken a record. So whenever Wriggler and I go skimming we take it in turns to film each other’s throws. That way when we break the record we’ll be able to prove it. When I say we break the record I’m being polite. What I really mean is, when I break the record.
Video evidence
is not perfect though. Wriggler is pretty hopeless on the camera and he missed my throw when I got the new record of fourteen. He reckons it was only thirteen so it’s his word against mine. Fourteen it is.
I would have got more but I accidentally pegged a kayaker with a rock. One thing I’ve learnt in life is that kayakers don’t have a sense of humour. It wasn’t like I was aiming at him. I didn’t even notice him until I let go of the rock. It was such a good throw I reckon if the kayaker’s head hadn’t got in the way I would have got twenty skims.
The other thing I learnt was how quickly a kayaker can move when he’s angry. Well, at least how quickly this huge, sandy-haired bloke could. We had to run and hide in the old falling-down house until he went away.
The old house stands next to the vacant lot where we go to skim. It’s a deserted sandstone place that no one has lived in for hundreds of years. It’s just a shell of a house really.
All the windows have been broken and most of the roof is missing. The floorboards are rotten and most are cracked. Some of them are missing completely. You need to be careful where you step. The whole place is covered in dirt and dried mud.
Everyone I know reckons the house is haunted. All the locals tell horror stories about what happened to the boy that lived there. Some say he was killed by robbers, others reckon his grandfather went mad and strangled him because he thought the boy was the devil. Wriggler reckons that the kid was ripped apart by feral dogs. The only thing everyone agrees on is that the kid’s ghost still hangs around. If you listen closely you can hear weird noises, like water dripping when it isn’t even raining, or wind howling even though it’s a still day.
Wrigs didn’t want to hang around by the river in case the kayaker came looking for us, so we headed back to my house. When we got there we realised we had the whole day ahead of us and nothing to do.
Until I came up with the most excellent money-making plan ever. Everyone knows the best way to get famous is by posting something on YouTube. All you need to do is get a video camera, push someone over and make it look like an accident.