Teddy Mars Book #3

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Teddy Mars Book #3 Page 1

by Molly B. Burnham




  DEDICATION

  To my husband, Sean Greene.

  You are my Collaborator, Constructor,

  Supreme Laugherator, and without a doubt,

  one of my favorite Distractors of all time.

  CONTENTS

  Dedication

  June

  July

  Rules for Acknowledgments

  A List of the Almost Best Lists in the World

  Teddy’s Pigeon Trivia Challenge

  Back Ad

  About the Author and Illustrator

  Books by Molly B. Burnham

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  JUNE

  MOST WALNUTS

  The day Lonnie, Viva, and I started breathing like Darth Vader was the same day we tried breaking the world record for cracking the most walnuts with only our heads.

  Strange but true, it was not a coincidence.

  Cracking walnuts with our heads was not the smartest record we’ve tried to break, and I’ll be the first to say it was the most painful, but months ago we said we’d break a world record together—and we’re not stopping until we do.

  We’ve definitely had some distractions along the way, like collecting the most plastic bags with our classmates. I don’t know if it was because of the plastic bags, or how many kids were involved, but that one almost ended our friendship. Luckily we sorted it out, and now we’re back and stronger than ever.

  THE EXTRAORDINARY FORCE OF OUR HEADS

  This is why when Viva walks into my kitchen after school, plops down a bag of walnuts, and tells Lonnie and me her idea, we don’t think twice. The fact that she kept it a secret from us in school all day makes it even better.

  “But you’ve only brought twenty,” Lonnie says. “The record must be higher.”

  I nod. “The record is 150.” I know a lot of world records.

  Viva rolls her eyes. “I know the record. This is just practice. First, we learn the technique; then we break the record.”

  “Good thinking.” Lonnie smiles.

  Our cat, Smarty Pants, meows loudly at me. I reach down to pet her, but she runs away.

  Viva places a walnut in front of each one of us. “On the count of three,” she says, “we bring the extraordinary force of our heads down onto those measly walnuts.”

  We do a high five, then count, “One. Two. Three!”

  As it turns out, our heads are not so forceful, and the walnuts are not so measly. And once more, we prove that breaking a world record is way harder than it looks.

  And that’s when Lonnie closes his eyes and starts breathing like Darth Vader, which also proves that a head injury can make a person do weird things.

  DARTH VADER BREATHING

  Viva and I stare at Lonnie, who sounds like a combination of being underwater, being in an echo chamber, and purring like Smarty Pants.

  “Are you okay?” I ask as I wipe my eyes. Tears really make it hard to see. I reach in the freezer, grab three pieces of ice, and hand them around.

  Lonnie takes the ice and keeps breathing in that raspy way.

  “Are you going to tell us what is going on?” Viva squeaks, because pain makes it harder to talk.

  “I’m breathing,” Lonnie explains.

  “Got that part,” Viva says. “My question is, why are you breathing like Darth Vader?”

  Lonnie stops breathing. “I read about this thing called deep breathing and how it helps with concentrating, calming down, and pain management, which is what I need right now.”

  “But why Darth Vader?” I ask.

  Lonnie shrugs. “Darth Vader breathes more than anyone else in the world and he was powerful at using the Force. So he must have known something about deep breathing.”

  This is why Lonnie is my best friend, because he’s just weird enough and just cool enough to think of something like Darth Vader breathing.

  Before you know it all three of us are breathing like Darth Vader. The only distraction comes from Smarty Pants’s meows. We keep breathing and pretty soon, the pain is gone.

  Viva looks at Lonnie. “You really are a Jedi.”

  He smiles, because if Lonnie could pick one thing to be, besides a world record breaker, he’d be a Jedi.

  That’s when The Destructor runs in, screaming his head off, and a whole different kind of pain crushes my head.

  RULES FOR SURVIVING THE DESTRUCTOR

  1. Hide all the things you love. (Or never see them in one piece again.)

  2. Watch him like a hawk. (Or prepare to suffer the consequences.)

  3. Trust him as far as you can throw him. (He’s only five, and could probably be thrown pretty far, so I’m changing this one to: trust him as far as you can drop him.)

  CAN BOY VERSUS THE DESTRUCTOR

  About a month ago, The Destructor, or Jake, as the rest of my family calls him, taped twenty tin cans to his clothes and called himself Can Boy. Since then he’s taped them back on about a million times. Even duct tape gets destroyed by The Destructor.

  My parents maintain that his can outfit is far better than what he’s done in the past:

  1. Living in a cat box.

  2. Sticking feathers to himself with pigeon poo.

  They might be right.

  For now.

  But I know The Destructor, and I know what he is capable of. No matter what he wants to be called, he’ll always be The Destructor to me.

  THE DESTRUCTION CONTINUES

  So there we are, Lonnie, Viva, and me, all thinking about the power of breathing like Darth Vader, when The Destructor runs straight into me. I fall over and he and his tin cans fall on top of me. Grace follows right behind, holding up her camera and shouting, “Just one picture! I only need one!” My sister Grace is a photographer for her school newspaper. She takes her job very seriously.

  “Come on, Jake!” Grace yells. “Stand still!”

  The Destructor does not stand still; instead he leaps up, jumping from foot to foot.

  “No!” The Destructor hollers back.

  “Come on, Jake. You’ll be famous.”

  “I don’t want to be famous!”

  Grace tries to grab him but The Destructor slips out of her grasp and dives into Smarty Pants’s cat box. Months ago, when he basically lived in the cat box, my parents bought one just for him. But, of course, he doesn’t go for that one. He goes for the dirty one. The good news is he doesn’t get far because halfway in his tin can outfit stops him.

  The bad news is that Smarty Pants is inside doing what she does in there. The worse news is that Grace pulls him out by his feet, but before she can even focus her camera, The Destructor takes off, spraying cat litter all over the place.

  By all over the place, I do mean all over me.

  HARD TO BREATHE

  I’m shaking cat litter out of my hair when Grace says, “Why didn’t you stop him?” Then she asks, “What are you all up to?”

  “Nothing,” I say, hiding the walnuts we didn’t crush under Mom’s newspaper. It’s always safer if Grace knows as little as possible.

  “Then why are your foreheads all red?” She peers closer. “And swollen.”

  Grace holds up her camera and snaps away. It’s clear from how we all cringe that being photographed is about as pleasant as breaking the record for kissing the most cobras (11). In other words, not at all.

  Grace stops and looks at the pictures so far. “Oh, never mind. I can’t get a clear image of it. Next time I see you three, you better be doing something newsworthy!”

  On her way out, Grace stomps on my foot. After photography, Grace’s favorite thing to do is stomp on my feet.

  While I’m doubled over in agony, Mom walks in. Smarty Pants meows again.

&nb
sp; “Teddy? Can you feed Smarty Pants?” Mom asks as she walks out of the room, not noticing my suffering.

  Lonnie says, “Don’t forget to breathe.”

  “Like Darth Vader,” Viva adds.

  I do what they say because it worked so well the first time. But between the cat litter showering down on me from my hair, the foot that is probably broken, and Mom asking me to feed the cat, it’s actually impossible to breathe at all.

  THE ONLY PLACE TO THINK

  In my house there’s only one place to get any thinking done, and in fact, it’s not in my house. It’s in the pigeons’ house next door.

  That is where Lonnie, Viva, and I go to continue our world-record-breaking plans.

  Grumpy Pigeon Man owns the pigeons. Mom likes me to call him Mr. Marney, but he likes Grumpy Pigeon Man, so we have a deal. I call him Grumpy Pigeon Man, feed his pigeons twice a day, and he pays me and calls me Tent Boy, because of how I lived in a tent for a while.

  Grumpy Pigeon Man owns fifty-seven pigeons. That’s quite a lot. They all live in a shed thing in his backyard. He calls it an aviary. It does have a screened-in porch section, where they spend most of their time. He calls it a loft. They are allowed to fly outside, but only when he’s around.

  There are lots of rules about the pigeons and how to take care of them, and Grumpy Pigeon Man likes to explain them over and over again. I let him because there’s no point in stopping him. He wouldn’t listen anyway.

  RULES FOR GETTING ALONG WITH GRUMPY PIGEON MAN

  1. Do what he says when he says it.

  2. Don’t talk too much.

  3. Treat his pigeons like they are worth more to us than the largest diamond in the universe, which happens to be a dwarf star fifty light-years away. It is estimated that that diamond is 2,500 miles across and is worth $16 undecillion, which looks like this in numbers: $16,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.

  Treating his pigeons like this is not hard, because they are priceless to both Grumpy Pigeon Man and to me.

  WHY HAVE RULES IF WE NEVER FOLLOW THEM?

  Lonnie and Viva pull up two buckets, tip them over, and sit down. We’re in the screened-in part—the loft. Unlike the inside section, which is full of cubbies—nesting boxes—and is enclosed, the loft has lots of perches for the pigeons to sit on. They talk to each other, preen their feathers, fly closer to one another, basically hang out like friends do.

  Immediately, Obi-Wan Kenobi flies over and lands on Lonnie. Lando Calrissian flaps down onto Viva’s knee. We named a lot of the pigeons after Star Wars characters.

  Princess Leia flies over to me, flutters by my shoulder for a second, then settles right on top of my head. I don’t move because I know better than to move when a pigeon is on my head. You don’t want to startle a pigeon, unless you want to be pooed on.

  Viva pets Lando. “I’m sorry about the walnuts.”

  Lonnie says, “It’s our own fault. We forgot our rules.” Lonnie shakes his head.

  Of course, the rules.

  Really we’re about as good at following rules as we are about breaking records, which is lousy.

  RULES FOR BREAKING A WORLD RECORD

  1. It can’t hurt.

  2. It can’t make us sick.

  3. It can’t cost a lot of money.

  SILENT AND STINKY

  Lando Calrissian flies off Viva’s leg, replaced immediately by Admiral Ackbar.

  Meanwhile Princess Leia is now pretty much nesting on my head.

  “Maybe if we think about records we’ve tried, it will help us know what we should do.”

  Lonnie nods. “Good point.” He holds up one finger. “We crushed eggs with our toes.”

  “Couldn’t stand on our feet,” Viva says.

  Lonnie holds up two fingers. “Longest time doing jumping jacks.”

  “Couldn’t move at all.” Viva smiles. “I think I’m seeing a pattern.”

  “Most books balanced on our heads,” Lonnie says.

  “Too many bruises.” Viva nods as she remembers that idea of hers.

  “Most marshmallows eaten.” Lonnie puts up four fingers.

  “Toothaches, stomachaches, and you threw up.” I point at Viva, but stay very still so I don’t scare Princess Leia.

  “What am I forgetting?” Lonnie asks.

  “Oh!” Viva says. “There was the garlic.”

  “The garlic,” Lonnie repeats. “That was the worst.”

  “We farted for hours!” Viva exclaims.

  “And we were at school,” I say.

  “And they were silent,” Viva adds.

  “And stinky,” Lonnie says.

  Princess Leia, who is still settled on top of my head, coos loudly as if she remembers the stink, too.

  And that’s when a scream explodes from my house, loud enough to startle not just me, but Lonnie and Viva, and the pigeons. Princess Leia takes off, and as she flies away, she does the thing all pigeons do when they are scared: she poos.

  And of course, it splats on me, which is gross, but is still not as bad as those farts.

  THE SCREAMER

  I have two goals in mind when I head back to my house. One is to wash the pigeon poo off my face, the other is to find out who screamed. Lonnie and Viva follow close behind. Somehow they escaped getting pooed on.

  Lonnie smiles and says, “Considering how much good luck you have, you’d think we’d have broken a record together by now.”

  Lonnie has this whole theory about how being pooed on is good luck. I like the idea because I have the bad luck of being pooed on a lot, and it would be nice to think that it’s all adding up to something great.

  When we walk into the kitchen, I’m both surprised and not surprised.

  I’m not surprised that The Destructor is in the kitchen making a mess.

  I am surprised that The Destructor is in the middle of the floor making a mess with a pile of trash. I repeat: TRASH! Trash from the garbage can, which is tipped over and lying right beside him.

  I’m not surprised because I knew he would take this Can Boy thing further.

  I am surprised because Dad is standing in the doorway absolutely frozen with his mouth wide open, which has to mean that he was the screamer.

  Right then, everyone else in the family clatters down the stairs, bumping into Dad like the record for most dominoes toppled by an individual (321,197).

  “Oh, Jake,” Dad says.

  “How many times do I have to tell you, call me Can Boy!” The Destructor shakes his head at Dad. “And I’m recycling.” He reaches into the garbage can next to him and pulls out a plastic lid. “This can be recycled.”

  That’s when I notice that the trash around him is sorted into piles. One of the piles is trash, one is recycling, and one is old food scraps.

  For the record, I’m a big fan of recycling. After all, it’s the small things we do in this world that have a big effect.

  Take for instance the tallest toothpick sculpture in The Guinness Book of World Records. Each toothpick is tiny, but all the toothpicks together, about 25,000 of them, make a 16-foot-8-inch-tall model of the Burj Khalifa tower, which happens to hold the record for the tallest building in the world. This means the person who made the toothpick sculpture broke a record with a record. Very cool.

  But back to my point. I’m glad The Destructor cares about the small stuff, I just wish he didn’t take it so far.

  SISTERS

  Sharon holds her nose. “I am so glad I’m going to college next year.” She walks back up the stairs, singing, “All by myself! I wanna beeee allll by myyyyyself!”

  As Caitlin and Casey snap on their bike helmets, they say, “When you’re older you can work for us.” Besides talking at the same time, they collect trash on their bikes.

  Maggie shrugs. “Running is definitely a better way to spend your free time.” And leaves for a run.

  Grace pulls out her camera. “My editor is going to love this.” She clicks away. “I’m emailing these to her right away.” And
she dashes out.

  My sisters clearly know that it’s best to get away. I am about to do the same when Mom walks in with the phone up to her ear.

  She freezes, and then says, “Can you hold on for one minute?” She closes her eyes and sighs.

  Mom hands me a wet paper towel to wipe the poo off my face, which is very nice of her.

  THE LONGEST SAUSAGE

  Mom brings the phone back to her ear. “Sorry about that,” she says. She listens for a minute, then says, “Oh, they have excellent manners.”

  I wonder who she could be talking to, but more than that, I wonder who she could be talking about. It can’t be my family, because good manners and us are as far apart as the two ends of the longest sausage in the world (38.99 miles).

  Mom covers the phone and leans over to Dad, who is still frozen to the same spot. “Can you please take care of this?” she whispers, and walks out of the room.

  Dad finally moves, picking up the garbage can so it’s upright. “Jake,” he says.

  “Can Boy,” The Destructor says, standing up.

  Just then Mom calls Dad into the living room. “Teddy,” Mom calls, “watch your brother for a minute.”

  “Watch The Destructor?” I repeat.

  The Destructor gives me a smile, then stands up and reaches into the bowels of the garbage can, digging deeper and deeper until he tips all the way in.

  “Help!” he shouts. “Help!” His feet flail around in the air.

  “Do something,” Lonnie says.

  “Save him,” Viva says.

  “Do I have to?” I ask. They both push me forward.

  “Okay,” I say. Viva and Lonnie take the trash-can side. I take The Destructor’s feet, and on the count of three we tip him upright and pull the can off. Trash pours out around our feet.

  The Destructor stands there, dripping in garbage. “Thanks,” he says. “I can always count on you.”

 

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