The World's Greatest Underachiever and the Parent-Teacher Trouble

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The World's Greatest Underachiever and the Parent-Teacher Trouble Page 6

by Henry Winkler


  “Is the doctor in?” I asked. I was pretty much out of breath.

  “Breathe,” Mrs Crock suggested.

  “Hey, are you friends with Frankie?” I asked. “Because you sound just like him.”

  Before Mrs Crock could answer, Dr Berger appeared at the door.

  “Come in, Hank,” she said. She always smiles when she sees me, which is a really special thing. It’s amazing how many people don’t smile at kids, like the grumpy guy who works at the video arcade round the corner from my flat. If you even ask him for change, he frowns and says, “No change. You leave now.” Personally, I think that’s very bad for business.

  Dr Berger took me into her office and gestured towards the blue plastic chair next to her desk. I sat down. I noticed that she was watching my leg as it bounced up and down like it had an engine in it. My leg has a lot of energy.

  “Aren’t you supposed to be in class, Hank?” she began.

  “Yeah, but I couldn’t concentrate.”

  “What’s on your mind?” Dr Berger took a sip of coffee from this mug she has that says: “Kids are people too.”

  Suddenly, I felt nervous about asking my question. I mean, what if I asked Dr Berger if I was being held back and she said yes? Then what? Would I cry? That would be so embarrassing.

  “I came here early because I wanted to ask a question about a friend of mine named Bernice,” my mouth said, before I could stop it. “He … I mean, she … has a question for you.”

  “Go ahead,” Dr Berger said. “What is it your … um … friend wants to know?”

  This was good. I could get an answer to my question and not have to worry about being embarrassed.

  “My friend is worried that he is going to be held back and have to repeat a grade,” I said, trying to sound like I didn’t care too much about the answer.

  “He?”

  “Oh … I mean, she. She’s worried. She’s very worried.”

  “Well, I think you should tell your friend that being held back isn’t necessarily the worst thing in the world,” Dr Berger said.

  “Can you possibly think of anything worse?” I asked.

  “Sometimes, Hank, it really is in the student’s best interest. However, the good news is that it’s rare that a student is made to repeat a year. Redo, if you will.”

  Oh no. Did she just say it? She did! Redo.

  “Redo?” I heard myself saying. Whoa! Whose voice was that? It sounded so little and high-pitched, like something that would come out of a Cabbage Patch Kid.

  “Redo,” Dr Berger repeated. “As in repeat a grade.”

  So it does mean that. It does mean my life is over.

  “Hank, are you following me?” Dr Berger asked.

  “What? Yes. Yes, I am. It’s just that he, I mean, she … Bernice … will feel so bad. Everyone will make fun of her,” I said.

  “Hank, has your friend had her parent-teacher meeting yet?” Dr Berger asked.

  “No, I don’t think so,” I answered.

  “No, I didn’t think so either. They are not until this Friday. If there are any big decisions to be made, they will be discussed at the meeting.”

  I nodded. There they were again, those words. Parent-teacher meeting. The three worst words in the English language – after redo, that is.

  “Can I know who your friend is, Hank?” Dr Berger put her hand on my leg to slow down the bouncing. “Maybe I can talk to her and make her feel better.”

  “Oh no. I’ll tell her what you said. Thank you so much, Dr Berger.”

  “Tell her not to worry,” Dr Berger said. “I’m confident the school will make the decision that is best for her.”

  All the way back to class, I told myself not to worry. But what was waiting for me in class told me just the opposite. It told me to worry.

  Big time.

  It was just an envelope. From looking at it, you wouldn’t think it was any big deal – a brown envelope, that’s all. Ms Adolf was passing one out to everyone in class.

  “You are to give this envelope to your parents,” Ms Adolf said as she walked up and down the aisles handing one to each student. “It contains some information that we’ll need for the parent-teacher day.”

  The problem was, mine wasn’t a thin brown envelope like every other kid in class got. Nope, mine was a thick brown envelope, Scotch-taped closed, and about as thick as the short stack of blueberry pancakes I get at the International House of Pancakes.

  Large, thick envelopes are a reason to worry. I know this because the only other kid who got the big, thick envelope was Luke Whitman. That should tell you something. Luke Whitman isn’t exactly the shiniest marble in the pouch. Let me put it another way. When they’re dividing you into reading groups, you don’t want to be put in Luke’s group. It’s not a good sign.

  Naturally, the first person to notice that my envelope was different was Nick McKelty. I’m telling you, that guy has some kind of built-in radar that signals to him when you’re feeling your lowest.

  “Looks like Zippy Boy got a thick envelope.” Nick the Tick smirked before I could hide the envelope at the bottom of my rucksack. “You know what they say, Zippy Boy. The thicker the envelope, the thicker the kid.”

  Usually, I can come up with something to say that puts McKelty in his place, but I was so upset when I saw the envelope that my mind went blank. I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. It felt like there were a million cottonwool balls stuffed inside there. When I tried to talk, I made a noise that sounded like a cat spitting up a fur ball.

  “Lay off, McKelty,” Frankie said to him, trying to cover for my fur-ball problem.

  “Yeah, mind your own beeswax,” Ashley added. In typical Ashley style, she crouched down and got right in his face, putting the peak of her cap next to his hairy unibrow. If he exhaled any of his toxic breath on her, she was going to get blasted into the stratosphere. But she didn’t care. She’s my friend through and through.

  The bell rang. I was still just sitting at my desk, staring at the awful brown envelope. I was sure it contained the news that I was dreading.

  Attention, world. Hank Zipzer, loser of all time, is being kept back.

  I felt a big lump rise up in my throat, the one that comes just before you’re going to cry.

  I will not cry. I will not cry. I will not cry.

  “Come on, let’s get out of here, Zip,” Frankie said.

  Ashley scooped up the envelope from my desk and Frankie grabbed my rucksack. Before I knew it, Frankie had me by one arm, and Ashley had me by the other, and we were on our feet and on our way out the door.

  “I got the thick envelope,” I whispered to them as we shoved our way down the stairs to the ground floor.

  “Me too,” a voice said from behind. It was Luke Whitman. “I already looked inside mine.”

  “You weren’t supposed to do that,” Ashley said to him.

  “Hey, I already know they’re recommending I repeat fourth grade,” Luke said. “As if they need to prove it, they stuffed this envelope full of my really lousy tests and homework. But I figure I’m pretty lucky.”

  “Why are you lucky?” I snapped. I could feel that lump moving from my throat to the back of my eyes.

  I will not cry.

  “First of all, fourth-graders get longer break times than fifth-graders,” said Luke. “And break is my favourite subject next to lunch.”

  Oh, great. I’m going to have to sit next to this genius all next year.

  “And, second of all, I’m not going to have to do any homework for a whole year.” Luke had a big smile on his face. “I just have to change the dates on this year’s homework and, you know, like I’m done. Cool, huh?”

  That did it. I took off down the stairs, and I didn’t stop.

  Two at a time. Three at a time.

  Watch me, Head Teacher Love! I can go as fast as I want.

  You can’t hold me back!

  When I reached the front door of the school, I pushed it open and bolted out into th
e fresh air. The tears were just forming on my eyeballs. Everything was all blurry, but I could make out a bright red object standing in front of the school. It looked like a giant strawberry. I ran towards it, slammed into it as hard as I could and buried my head.

  Then the tears came.

  “Hey, what’s wrong, Hankie?” Papa Pete asked me, rubbing my head as I buried it in the strawberry red tracksuit he always wears to pick me up.

  “It stinks,” I said, wiping my tears and my runny nose on his jumper. I hate to confess that I wiped my nose on his top, but it’s true, and I wouldn’t lie to you, not even when it concerns snot.

  “What stinks?” he asked. “My tracksuit? Sorry, Hankie, I just came from bowling.”

  “No, school stinks,” I said. “Fourth grade stinks. And now I have to do it all over again, and it’s going to stink even more.”

  “Who said you have to do fourth grade again?” Papa Pete asked, reaching into his pocket and handing me his big tartan handkerchief.

  “No one … yet,” I said. “But they’re going to say that.”

  “But they haven’t said it yet – whoever they are?”

  “No.”

  “Then there’s nothing to worry about. I have a rule, Hankie. If it hasn’t happened, don’t worry about it.”

  Papa Pete has a way of always making you feel better, no matter what’s wrong. Last year when I cut my thumb and had to go to casualty to get stitches, he took the doctor’s rubber glove and blew it up into a big balloon and played balloon volleyball with me in the waiting room. Since I could only use my left hand, Papa Pete did the same. How many grandfathers do you know who’d do that?

  Frankie and Ashley came running out of the main door, and when they saw me with Papa Pete, they dashed over to us.

  “Zengawii, Zip,” said Frankie. “You disappeared.”

  “Yeah, and you forgot this,” Ashley said, handing me the thick brown envelope.

  I hate you, brown envelope. Zengawii! Disappear!

  “What’s in there?” asked Papa Pete. He was busy giving Ashley and Frankie a big pinch on the cheek, which is his way of saying hello.

  “Papers from my teacher,” I answered. “Trust me, they’re not going to make my dad very happy.”

  “I happen to have just come from your father, and I can tell you this, darling grandson,” Papa Pete said, “he is at this moment a very happy man. And your darling mother, otherwise known as my darling daughter, is also a very happy girl.”

  “Papa Pete, Mrs Zipzer’s not a girl.” Ashley giggled. “She’s almost forty years old!”

  “To me, she’ll always be my little girl.” Papa Pete flashed me a smile from under his bushy, black moustache. “Just like you, Hankie, will always be my favourite oldest grandson.”

  “But he’s your only oldest grandson,” Ashley pointed out.

  “Oh, I hadn’t realized that,” Papa Pete said, giving my cheek a man-sized pinch.

  Papa Pete was teasing Ashley, but she doesn’t always get his jokes. She’s not too swift on the grandparent-joke connection, since her grandma isn’t much good with jokes.

  Papa Pete waved to Mr Baker as we crossed the street and headed over to Columbus Avenue.

  “Why are Mum and Dad in such a good mood?” I asked.

  “Your father wants to tell you himself,” Papa Pete said. “He asked if I’d come and collect you and take you to The Crunchy Pickle. He’s helping your mum and Carlos with a big party order for Mr and Mrs Tallchief’s anniversary party.”

  “Can we come?” Ashley asked.

  “To the party? I don’t know, let’s ask the Tallchiefs. They seem like friendly people.”

  “I’m not talking about the Tallchiefs.” Ashley laughed. “I’m asking if we can come to The Crunchy Pickle.”

  “Only if you’ll let me buy you a black-and-white cookie,” said Papa Pete.

  “Deal,” Frankie and Ashley both said at once.

  They took off running down Columbus Avenue.

  I looked at the brown envelope. I figured whatever bad news was inside that envelope was still going to be there after I ate the cookie.

  I stuffed the envelope into my rucksack and took off after my pals.

  When we reached The Crunchy Pickle, the whole crew was working at triple speed to get the order ready for the Tallchief party. Carlos was arranging pickles and olives on a big platter. Vlady was putting fancy toothpicks in the sandwich halves, because his sandwiches are so big they need toothpicks to hold them together. My mum was spooning her high-protein, low-carbohydrate, no-taste pretend potato salad into the reusable, recyclable containers she’d had made especially for our deli. My dad was trying to add up the bill while looking for his glasses that were sitting on top of his head.

  Papa Pete tiptoed over to the glass counter where we display the cookies and other baked goods like marble cake and chocolate éclairs. He picked out the four biggest black-and-white cookies. Then he poured himself a cup of coffee and got us each a small carton of milk from the fridge. You need to have milk with your black-and-whites, so you can dunk. We sat down in the turquoise leather corner booth and had ourselves the after-school snack of your dreams.

  If you’re ever in a place where they have those big, round cookies that have half white icing and half chocolate, eat one immediately. You won’t be sorry.

  “Hey, niños,” Carlos called out as he passed our booth with the order loaded up on his bicycle. “You clean me out of my black-and-whites. Save some for the customers.”

  My mum held open the heavy glass door, and Carlos jumped on his bike and rode off to make his delivery. He should work in a circus because he has great balance. My mum let out a sigh of relief. My dad, who had a real sparkle in his eye, immediately grabbed a piece of paper from the counter and practically skipped over to our booth. He pulled up a chair from one of the neighbouring tables.

  “Do you know what this says, son?” he asked me, pointing to some words he had written down on a piece of paper.

  I looked at the paper, but it looked like random scribbling to me. I thought I saw an F at the beginning of the scribbling.

  “Flipper Frisbee fork,” I guessed, saying the first three words that came to my mind that started with F. Who knows? Maybe one of them was right.

  “Hank, that doesn’t make any sense,” my dad said, looking at me like my brains had turned into mushy peas. OK, so I guessed wrong.

  Frankie leaned over my shoulder and glanced at the paper.

  “It says Filbert Funk,” he whispered to me.

  “That’s what I was just going to say next,” I said to my dad.

  “And do you know who Filbert Funk was?” my dad asked.

  My dad doesn’t like it when he asks a question and you say, “I don’t know.” He says that “I don’t know” is a lazy man’s answer. So I’ve got used to taking a guess when he asks me something, even if I don’t know the slightest thing about the question.

  “Filbert Funk was an English man who invented funk music in November 1974,” I answered without skipping a beat.

  “No, Hank,” said my dad. “Filbert Funk is one of my heroes. He was the younger brother of Isaac K. Funk.”

  “Oh, Isaac,” I said. “He must’ve been the guy who invented funk music in November 1974.”

  Frankie and Ashley cracked up. Needless to say, my dad didn’t. He was on a Funk Brothers roll, and he didn’t want to be interrupted by a dumb joke.

  “Isaac K. Funk, along with his partner, Adam Wagnalls, published The Standard Dictionary of the English Language in 1894,” my dad explained. “It’s one of everybody’s favourite books.”

  “Except mine,” I said, which was the understatement of the year.

  I can’t stand dictionaries. I can’t sound the word out that I’m looking up, so I can never find it buried in all those dictionary pages. You try looking up a word in the dictionary if you’re dyslexic like I am. The letters flip around on the page, and before you know it, there are letters floating in f
ront of your eyes like synchronized swimmers in the Olympics. Oops, there I go again, going off on the subject of synchronized swimmers. Sorry. It won’t happen again.

  “Isaac Funk’s younger brother, Filbert, wrote and edited the first Crossword Puzzle Dictionary ever published,” my dad said.

  He looked so happy with that little announcement that I thought his face was going to light up and start to buzz.

  “Wow, Dad,” I said. And because I couldn’t think of anything else to say, I said it again. “Wow.”

  By now, my mum had joined us in the booth. She looked very happy herself. I wondered why both my parents were so pumped up about the Funk Brothers.

  “And here’s the truly exciting part,” my dad said. I think his voice was actually shaking. “Guess where Filbert Funk was born?”

  “Blowing Rock, North Carolina,” I said.

  “No, Hank. Filbert was born in Philadelphia.” My dad broke into a grin the size of the Brooklyn Bridge. “I just happened to read that this morning in Crossword Puzzle Monthly.”

  I wasn’t sure where this conversation was going, but I had a hunch. And I liked my hunch. I liked it a lot.

  “Did you say Philadelphia?” I said. “As in the place where the Stone Cold Rock concert is?”

  “Yes, Hank,” my dad said. “When I mentioned this little-known fact to your mother, do you know what she did? She called and arranged for us to get a private tour of Filbert Funk’s home in Philadelphia. I am going to be able to sit in the very chair where he created the Crossword Puzzle Dictionary.”

  “Your father and I are going to tour the Funk House in the afternoon,” my mum said. “And he said if I go with him, he’ll go with me to the Stone Cold Rock concert in the evening. How’s that for the give-and-take of marriage?”

  She leaned over and planted a big kiss on my dad’s cheek.

  I could feel Frankie and Ashley kicking me under the table. I glanced over at them. Boy, did they look happy. Ashley’s eyebrows were wiggling up and down over her purple glasses, a thing she does when she’s trying to keep a secret. And Frankie had such a big grin on his face that his dimple popped out. It looked like a moon crater.

 

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