by Davy Ocean
With thanks to Paul Ebbs
I’m having my favorite dream again—the one where I’m about to be crowned Greatest Underwater Wrestling Champion of the World, Ever. I swim up to the top rope of the ring and prepare to launch.
“I think he’s going for a dropflick!” a jellyfish commentator shouts into his microphone.
“There’s no stopping this hammerhead shark tonight,” adds his partner, a bright orange clown fish.
“Har-ry! Har-ry!” the crowd begins to chant.
One diving dropflick and the blue shark I’m fighting will be fish food and the underwater wrestling belt will be mine. I dive down from the rope and pin my opponent to the canvas.
“Har-ry! Har-ry!” The crowd’s voices get louder and louder. And louder. And then too loud. Like they are shouting right in my ear.
“HARRY-GET OFF!”
I open my left eye and swivel it around. The wrestling ring disappears and I am in my bedroom. Next to my bed. And Humphrey, my humming-fish alarm clock, is pinned to the floor under me.
“Let me go!” he yells.
“All right, all right,” I mutter, swimming back into bed. “Why did you have to wake me up? I was having a really cool dream.”
“Don’t tell me, the one about the wrestling match?” Humphrey says grumpily.
“Yes.”
“I hate that dream.”
“Why?”
“I always end up getting hurt.”
I open my right eye and glare at him. “Only because you try to wake me up.”
Humphrey starts swimming around in circles above my head. “It’s my job to wake you up-I’m your alarm clock, and you’ve got school.”
I groan. From almost being crowned Underwater Wrestling Champion of the World to having to get ready for school, in less than ten seconds.
“So, are you awake, then?”
“Yes!”
“Cool. See you tomorrow.”
“Can’t wait.”
Humphrey swims off out the window to go and get his breakfast.
I swivel my right eye around until I can see the huge poster of Gregor the Gnasher hanging on the rocky wall at the end of my bed. Gregor the Gnasher is the actual Underwater Wrestling Champion of the World. In the poster, he’s holding his winner’s belt high above his head and smiling so widely you can see all of his 3,017 teeth.
Gregor is a great white shark and as well as his rows and rows of razor-sharp teeth, he has a long pointed snout and a humongous body. He’s exactly what a shark should look like. And he’s scary. Super scary. Even my poster of him makes my pet catfish poop itself.
If they made a poster of me, my catfish would probably just laugh. You see, I’m a hammerhead shark, which, for those of you who haven’t already figured it out, means I have a head that’s the shape of a hammer. With goggly eyes so far apart they look like they don’t even talk to each other. It’s not a great look. Especially if you want to be taken seriously in the shark world.
I once made a list of the five coolest sharks in existence. It went like this:
1. The great white–obviously.
2. The blue shark– the fastest fish in the sea.
3. The tiger shark–scary and stripy.
4. The whale shark–its mouth is so huge it can swallow a dolphin in one gulp!
5. The bull shark–it can swim in rivers as well as the sea, which is very handy if you’re going on vacation and stuff.
You may have noticed that the hammerhead shark isn’t on the list. That’s because the hammerhead shark is seriously uncool. In fact, the only shark less cool than a hammerhead is the nurse shark. Nurse sharks are the girliest sharks in the ocean-which is fine if you’re a girl and everything, but I’m not.
Gregor doesn’t just look cool, he can do lots of cool stuff too. Then I have an idea. I might not look like Gregor, but that doesn’t mean I can’t be like him. I swim out of bed and over to the old treasure chest where I keep my collection of shells shaped like famous sports stars and all my lists. I once made a list of all the cool stuff Gregor can do. I take it out and study it.
Number one is out, obviously.
1. Wrestling–he’s the Underwater Champion ten years running.
2. Eating boats–which scares the life out of the leggy air-breathers.
3. Looking really mean–without even trying.
4. Swimming fast–as fast as any speedboat.
5. Ambushing prey–they never see him coming.
You can’t just be Underwater Wrestling Champion of the World in, like, two weeks or something. It takes years of deep-sea training: weight-lifting anchors, eating high-energy seaweed bars, and swimming laps around ocean liners.
Number two is a no-no as well. First of all, my mouth is way too small. Sometimes I find it hard swallowing a crab. Also, I’m not allowed up to the surface without one of my parents being with me. I know that sounds really lame-I mean, I’m ten years old. What do they think I’m going to do? Go sunbathing on the beach?
And I’m not going to eat any strange food dangling from fishing lines either. Everyone knows what fishermen do to sharks when they catch them. They make their fins into soup, that’s what. And there’s no way I’d risk losing my fins. Imagine what a laughingstock I’d be then, with a head like a hammer and a body like an eel!
I put on my school tie and blazer and then read number three on my list: Looking really mean. Hmm, now that sounds a bit easier. And if I looked really mean, certain sharks might not make fun of me anymore. I swim over to my mirror and scrunch my eyes shut. Then I make my meanest face. I imagine I’m giving the sort of scary scowl that Gregor makes when he’s entering the wrestling ring. It feels pretty good. I can already imagine Rick Reef and his goofy sidekick, Donny Dogfish, taking one look at the new me and speeding off to hide behind the school cafeteria.
But when I open my eyes and look in the mirror, I don’t see the mean monster of my dreams-and Rick Reef’s nightmares-I see a schoolkid who looks like he’s having trouble making a poop!
I swim back to the list, feeling a bit worried. I’m starting to run out of options. Okay, number four: Swimming fast. I’m not bad at this, actually, but I’m not clueless-I’m never going to be as fast as Gregor. I look at number five: Ambushing prey. Aha-now, surely I can do that. I mean, how hard can it be? I scan my bedroom, looking for a victim. My eyes come to rest upon Lenny, my lantern fish, snoozing away above my desk, his antennae glowing softly in the dark. Being careful not to make a sound, I start to glide through the water, Gregor’s scary theme song playing in my head.
DERRRRRRR-DUN! DERRRRRR-DUN! DER-DUN! DER-DUN! DER-DUN! DER-DUN!
But just as I get to the desk, disaster strikes. My tail gets caught in a strand from my seaweed blanket. I try to tug it free but end up getting even more tangled. I pull as hard as I can. The balled-up blanket sails through the water, hits the shelf above my bed, and sends my finball trophy flying.
“Eh? Uh! Wass going on?” Lenny says sleepily as I try to untangle myself from the seaweed.
Hmm, not exactly the kind of surprise attack I’d been planning. But the problem is, my room’s way too small. You can’t really sneak up on something when it’s really close to begin with. You need a little distance from the target to be able to plan your attack. I decide to investigate the rest of the house to see what I can find.
But as I swim through my bedroom door, I hear a really horrible noise. It’s like a crab grinding glass with its pincers. Or a ship’s foghorn that has a seagull stuck inside it. It can only be one thing-my mom, singing while she makes breakfast. I start to grin. When Mom is singing, she goes off into her own little world and doesn’t notice a thing. She will make the perfect target. Let the ambushing begin!
While Mom keeps s
creeching like a harpooned mermaid, I get to the kitchen door without being seen. Then I poke one side of my hammerhead through the door and swivel my eye around, trying to spot my prey. There she is, at the far end of the kitchen, putting breakfast things on a tray, still singing away. Now that I’m closer I can actually make out some of the words in between the screeches:
“Like an anchor-dropped for the very first time. Like an a-a-a-anchor . . .”
Oh, please!
I slink my way into the room and slide behind the giant glass vase of flower fish in the corner. Honestly, I don’t know why we can’t just have regular sea flowers like everyone else. It was my dad’s idea of a joke. But the trouble is, my dad’s idea of a joke isn’t ever anybody else’s idea of a joke. I don’t know how he managed to get elected as the new Shark Point mayor.
I get myself ready to pounce. This must be how Gregor feels before a fight, I think as my heart starts to pound.
I hear my unsuspecting prey swimming for the door, her apron strings swishing in the water behind her. Closer and closer she comes.
“Made of iron, shiny and fine,” she wails.
I tense my muscles. Closer she comes. I arch my back. And closer. I get ready to pounce. Closer. NOW!
Okay, I’ll admit it, the ambush didn’t go 100 percent according to plan. It went about 10 percent according to plan. The surprise part worked great-that was the 10 percent-but what happened right after wasn’t so good. The chain of events went like this:
1. I leaped out from behind the flower fish, yelling at the top of my lungs . . .
2. Mom screeched—and this time she wasn’t singing . . .
3. Mom dropped the breakfast tray . . .
4. I smashed into it . . .
5. And sent everything flying EVERYWHERE.
And now everything has gone dark on one side of the room. I swivel my right eye but can’t see anything out of it. My ambush has turned into a terrible tragedy!
“I’m blind! I’m blind!” I cry.
Mom stops screaming. “Breakfast bowl,” she gasps, pointing a shaking fin at me.
I blink my working eye at her in disbelief. Why is she calling me breakfast bowl? Has my ambush made her go crazy? And why isn’t she looking more concerned? Her only son has just told her he can’t see anymore! From one eye, at least.
“What?” I say.
“Breakfast bowl.”
“Why do you keep calling me that?” I yell. “I’ve gone blind in one eye.”
“It’s a breakfast bowl,” she squeals.
“What are you talking about?” I start to panic. I have gone blind and my mom has gone crazy. So far this is not turning out to be a very good morning.
“You’ve got a breakfast bowl over your eye,” Mom explains.
I shake my head and, sure enough, a bowl falls off and drifts to the floor, leaving Kelp Krispies trickling down my face. Although I’m relieved I’m not actually blind and my mom isn’t actually crazy, I can’t help thinking sadly that this would never, ever happen to Gregor the Gnasher.
“What in the name of all the oceans were you doing, Harry?” Mom asks.
“Sorry, Mom,” I reply, looking at the floor. “I was only trying to ambush you.”
“Only trying to ambush me!” Mom echoes, wiping the Kelp Krispies off my head with the bottom of her apron. (I bet that’s never happened to Gregor either!) “Hammerheads don’t ambush things, you silly little starfish!”
I cringe with embarrassment. How am I ever going to be taken as seriously as a great white when my mom calls me names like that? “I was trying to be like Gregor the Gnasher,” I try to explain.
Mom sighs. “I’ll never understand why you kids think that tooth-head is some kind of hero.”
“Hero? Did someone say hero?” my dad booms, entering the kitchen. “Well, here I am! Ha, ha, ha!”
I told you his jokes weren’t funny.
“Oh, you’ll always be our hero, darling,” laughs Mom, before giving him a massive kiss.
I think I might be sick. There’s only so much a ten-year-old hammerhead can take in one morning.
“What was all that noise about?” Dad asks. He looks around at the mess. “And why’s my breakfast on the floor?”
To stop Mom from going through the whole ambush disaster again, I decide to change the conversation.
“How’s the speech going, Dad?”
My dad’s working on his first ever speech as mayor. Most of Shark Point will be there to hear it, so I hope he doesn’t tell any jokes.
“It’s going great,” Dad replies, “but I think I should start with a joke. Better yet, maybe two jokes. . . . ”
Where’s a fisherman’s hook when you need one?
“How about this one?” says Dad as Mom starts picking up the plates and bowls from the floor. “What do you call a fish with no eyes?”
I stare at him and shake my head. “I dunno.”
“A fsh!” he replies, before roaring with laughter. “Get it? No i’s. Ha ha ha!”
He sees me staring at him, not laughing. “Okay, well, maybe I’ll think of a different joke. I’ll be in the living room.” And with that, he turns and swims back down the hall.
“Honey, can you turn on your hammer-vision and see if you can find the lid for the teapot while I clean up?” Mom asks. “I must have dropped it in your . . . ambush.”
I turn on the special sensors in my head and start swimming around the kitchen. Having sensors is like having a bunch of extra eyes that can see inside and through things. And because our heads are so big, hammerheads have the most powerful sensors in the entire ocean. It’s pretty cool. Especially if you want to find out where your parents have hidden your Christmas presents. Mom goes crazy when I do this. She says the reason we have sensors is so that we can find food even if it’s buried deep beneath the seabed. She says that using our sensors to find hidden presents is wrong. But then, she would say that-she’s a parent. As far as parents are concerned, everything that’s fun is “wrong”!
I find the teapot lid right away-behind a sea cucumber on the table.
“Thank you, dear,” Mom says as I give it to her. “You’ve certainly got excellent hammer-vision-and it’s so much more useful than ambushing. I mean, who needs to hunt for prey these days, when you can just go to the supermarket?”
“But ambushing’s exciting and cool,” I reply. “When I use my sensors, I’m just . . . trying to find stuff.”
“What is cool,” says Mom, “is your class outing to the Titan today. So you’d better get some breakfast inside you or you’re going to be late.”
The Titan! I’d completely forgotten about the school trip to the shipwreck. It wasn’t as exciting as going out to the deep ocean to see great whites—but it was a day out of school.
I barely manage to cram down some breakfast before I hear Ralph shouting for me outside. Ralph is a pilot fish and one of my best friends.
I grab my backpack and head for the door.
“Bye, Mom. Bye, Dad.”
“Bye, angelfish!” Mom calls.
“Bye, son,” Dad hollers. “What kind of fish feels the most pain?”
I pretend not to hear him.
“A sore-dine! Ha, ha, ha!”
My parents are so embarrassing!
Outside, Ralph is swimming around our front yard, his silver stripes glinting in the sunshine.
“Hey, Harry, all ready for the school trip?” he says as soon as he sees me.
“You bet,” I reply.
“So what did you have for breakfast today?” he asks.
“Shrimp Pop-Tarts.”
“Cool, my favorite. Okay then, open wide, I’m going in!”
I open my mouth as wide as I can and Ralph dives in and starts nibbling at my teeth.
This is what pilot fish do, by the way-they eat the scraps of food from between sharks’ teeth. They’re kind of like swimming, talking toothbrushes.
As soon as Ralph has finished we start making our way toward the c
enter of town.
We’ve just reached the water park when Joe shows up. Joe is a bright yellow jellyfish and another one of my friends. One of the coolest things about Joe is that he has a bunch of arms. Well, a lot of arms. The only uncool thing about Joe’s arms is that it can take a long time to high-fin. I like him a lot, but he can be a worrier.
“Good morning, Joe,” I say.
“Is it?” Joe replies.
Ralph and I stare at him.
“Of course it is-we’re going on the trip to the Titan,” says Ralph.
“Aren’t you looking forward to it?” I ask.
“Not really,” says Joe. “I’ll probably get my tentacles trapped in a porthole, or be harpooned by a diver. Or lose my packed lunch in the wreckage, or—”
“Okay, okay, we get the point,” says Ralph.
Joe’s yellow tentacles quiver. “Why can’t we just stay in school? It’s much safer.”
“Oh, come on, Joe,” I say. “It’ll be good to see more of the ocean.”
“Why?” he replies. “It’s all the same-just a lot of wet.”
You can’t really argue with that, so we stop at the stores and look in Seahorse Sports and Leisure to check out the latest games. Then we make our way to school. My heart sinks as I see Rick Reef and Donny Dogfish by the gates. Rick is a blacktip reef shark, which means he has this really cool black tip on his dorsal fin. He is wearing his matching black leather jacket (as usual) and showing off (as usual) by swimming really quickly through all the groups of kids. Donny is cheering him on (as usual), doing a sports commentary as Rick speeds around.
“And Rick Reef takes a sharp right past some second-grade clown fish and a left through a group of first-grade dolphins. See them scatter as the swimming captain speeds down the lane.”