The Stench of Honolulu: A Tropical Adventure

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The Stench of Honolulu: A Tropical Adventure Page 9

by Jack Handey


  I was sentenced to six months of community service. The service was to stay in jail. I plotted an escape. The key to my plan would focus on one central element: waiting until the guard left, and then, before he got back, escaping. For complicated reasons, the escape never worked out.

  Uncle Lou made it back to America with the Golden Monkey. Hawaii requested that it be sent back, but Uncle Lou told them to perform oral sex on him.

  Am I angry that Uncle Lou stole the Golden Monkey from me? Of course I am—what kind of a question is that?

  I thought about going back and stealing the Golden Monkey from Uncle Lou, or at least vandalizing his house. But every time I mentioned this idea to anyone I got an electric shock in my tooth. At least I got to keep the Nobel Prize and the gun. And really, what else do you need in life?

  In case you’re worried about the black pepper bug, don’t be. I released him in Honolulu. The town never had black pepper bugs before, but then, for some reason, it was swarming with them.

  The Wedding

  DOCTOR PONZARI survived the sharp sticks and the fall, although he spent nearly a week in the hospital. I billed him for my belt and my new glasses. Don and Leilani went to work for him, developing medicines from leaves. Great, that’s all we need, more medicines. Maybe one day Doctor Ponzari will turn his jungle estate into a place for good. Maybe a carnival. With a sideshow of freaks.

  Leilani said she would give me pekoocha if I would sign the stupid insurance paper Doctor Ponzari kept waving at me. I signed. But it turned out pekoocha is just a kiss on the cheek. It sounds a lot better than that, doesn’t it?

  Bizzy became head of the Tourist Board. It was he who came up with the idea of adding an extra “i” to Hawaii, so it’s now Hawaiii.

  Don and Leilani got married. Leilani was radiant in her skirt of rarest ivory grass and her bra made from two albino starfish. And Don didn’t look like the total jerk he is. At the ceremony Leilani did a hula dance that made my little statuette look like a stupid souvenir on a spring.

  Picking Up the Pieces

  I DECIDED to stay in Hawaiii. It was Pingle free, for one thing. I got an apartment down in Appliance Town and started my own business. It was a boardwalk booth where you paid to shoot me with a blow dart. If you didn’t believe it was real poison, you could shoot a bum that I hired. Some people said the bum was just faking it, but you can’t fake convulsions like that. The only catch was I had to keep changing bums before they got used to the poison, too.

  I was making good money. And there were the little rewards. You never forget the look on a child’s face the first time he hits you with a blow dart. “I got him!” they squeal.

  I continued to practice Pelicanism, but it was a less strict form of Pelicanism. I even made some headway on my novel, Muscular Angry Clown. I got to the part where the other clowns accuse him of using steroids and he gives them all karate chops.

  Then my whole world came crashing down.

  It All Falls Apart

  THE CHIEF of the Patangis was sitting on the edge of my bed when I came in. He held up my little stenchite hula girl and began shouting angrily at me. He raised his spear. I flashed my medallion at him, but he threw the spear anyway. It stuck in the door as I dove out.

  The chief dragged me back inside. He began pounding my head against the radiator. I know what you’re thinking: a radiator in Honolulu? Look, don’t worry about that right now. The main thing is, I was getting killed.

  Every head bang brought me closer to unconsciousness. And jolted the hula girl closer and closer to the edge of the bed. Would she be the last thing I ever saw? One final, tremendous head slam sent her tumbling onto the wooden floor. The building began to tremble. Everything was cracking and splitting apart, plaster falling, pictures on the wall tilting so they weren’t lined up straight anymore. I broke free and stumbled out into the street. People were screaming and tripping as they fled in all directions. Building after building collapsed, like dominoes. Big pieces of debris were flipped into the air, like tiddlywinks. The noise was tremendous, like shaking dice in a giant Yahtzee cup.

  As I ran, I tried to help out where I could. I helped an old man in a wheelchair get out of my way and into a ditch, where he’d be safe. I helped some people carry some things out of a store. I led a group of young nurses into a dark culvert, where we huddled together for safety. Finally the noise stopped. The whole of Honolulu lay in ruins, as it does to this day. What had caused it? An earthquake? Gophers? The wrath of the Pelican God?

  The saddest thing for me was that my lovely hula girl was now buried under rubble. She deserved better. She should be sitting on a wooden mantel at the White House. Or on the throne of England.

  The Death of Uncle Lou

  I DECIDED to leave Honolulu. There was nothing left for me there. I moved over to Diarroa, which turned out to be a shithole.

  Will I ever get back to America? Will the Golden Monkey ever be returned to Hawaiii? Will I ever find true love? These are questions that only the writer of this book can answer, and I cannot.

  I was pondering this when a messenger arrived with a package. The monkey who lives in the garden jumped into the open window, thinking it might be food. But it wasn’t. It was a letter saying that Uncle Lou had died. His body had rejected his new Tomlin. The note said he had left something for me in his will. Which was in the package.

  I couldn’t help feeling sad at Uncle Lou’s death, yet also pleased that all those dinners at his house were finally going to pay off. I opened the package, and there was one of Uncle Lou’s old boxing gloves. Huh?! A button said “Press Here.” I did. The boxing glove shot up on the end of a spring and knocked me out.

  When I woke up, the monkey was chewing on my glasses.

  Acknowledgments

  Thanks, most especially, to my wife, Marta Chavez Handey, for her tireless help with this project. Many thanks also to Bill Novak, George Meyer, Kit Boss, Maria Semple, Chris Hart, Max Pross, Tom Gammill, T. Sean Shannon, and Lev Novak.

  Thanks, too, to my editor, Ben Greenberg, and my agent, Jin Auh.

  Apologies to the people of Honolulu.

  About the Author

  JACK HANDEY is the author of the “Deep Thoughts” series of humor books. He lives in New Mexico.

  OTHER BOOKS BY JACK HANDEY

  Deep Thoughts

  Deeper Thoughts: All New, All Crispy

  Deepest Thoughts: So Deep they Squeak

  Fuzzy Memories

  The Lost Deep Thoughts: Don’t Fight the Deepness

  What I’d Say to the Martians and Other Veiled Threats

  Thank you for buying this ebook, published by Hachette Digital.

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  For more about this book and author, visit Bookish.com.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Welcome

  Dedication

  Don’s Offer

  Warnings

  The Gift

  The Bible

  Uncle Lou

  The Flight

  Honolulu

  Coca-Cola

  Supplies

  The Sights

  The Souvenir

  Angry Don

  Reality

  Eating Crow

  No Way Out

  A New World

  You?!

  A Rocky Start

  Up the Paloonga

  Memories

  The Pelican God

  The Institute

  The Grounds

  Breakfast at Ponzari’s

  Theories

  Escape

  A Strange Noise

  The Point of No Return

  The Ruins

  An Ancient Clue

  Ride the Wild Wind

  Mementos

  Carrying On

  Leilani
<
br />   Leilani Joins Up

  Mars

  The Red Boat

  Gloating

  A Pirate’s Laugh

  Radio Shack

  Fishing

  Drums

  Turtle Man

  Leftovers

  Puppets and Pulp

  Blow-Dart Dreams

  Hangover

  More Darts

  The Helicopter

  Lost

  The Laughter of Children

  Patangis

  The Feast

  Decisions

  Adiós, Patangis

  Dump Leilani

  A Distant Crash

  Devil in a Grass Skirt

  Red Hot Chili Gum

  What Kind of World

  What a Fool I’d Been

  Killing Don

  The Plan

  The Cave of the Golden Monkey

  You’d Do the Same

  Diversions

  Vines

  The Coconut

  The Skeleton

  The Tracking Device

  The Airplane

  Highway 14

  The Wedding

  Picking Up the Pieces

  It All Falls Apart

  The Death of Uncle Lou

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Other Books by Jack Handey

  Newsletters

  Copyright

  Copyright

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Copyright © 2013 by Jack Handey

  Illustrations copyright © 2013 by Jim Cook

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher is unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Grand Central Publishing

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

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  twitter.com/grandcentralpub

  First ebook edition: July 2013

  Grand Central Publishing is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The Grand Central Publishing name and logo is a trademark of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

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  ISBN 978-1-4555-2239-2

 

 

 


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