Timmy Failure: The Cat Stole My Pants

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Timmy Failure: The Cat Stole My Pants Page 7

by Stephan Pastis


  wrecker from the nineteenth century.”

  “A wrecker?” asks Emilio.

  “Yeah, a wrecker,” answers Dave. “You

  know, when ships used to get stuck on the

  reefs, wreckers were the people who would go

  out there and take all the valuables.”

  “I know all about history,” I tell Dave.

  “You don’t need to educate me.”

  “Well, great, then. So you know what he

  did with the loot?” asks Dave.

  “I know everything,” I answer. “But tell

  Emilio. He’s still an unpaid intern.”

  “Yeah. Tell me,” says Emilio, neatly

  spreading mustard onto his Cubano sand-

  wich.

  “Well, people say the old captain stashed it

  somewhere on the island. And he never came

  back to get it.”

  “Why not?” asks Emilio.

  “Two women,” says Dave.

  “Dames,” I add. “It’s always dames.”

  “Their names were Rita and Marge,”

  continues Dave. “He loved them both. And

  when Rita found out about Marge, she wasn’t

  very happy. So she poisoned the old captain’s

  rum.”

  “He died?” asks Emilio.

  “Yep,” answers Dave. “Wasted away and

  died.”

  “And so nobody knows where he left the

  treasure?” asks Emilio.

  “Nope,” replies Dave.

  “I do,” I answer. “Follow me.”

  “What is the most feared creature on earth?”

  I ask Emilio as we run down the sidewalk in

  our bathing suits.

  “Where are we going?” replies Emilio.

  “Never mind that,” I answer. “What’s the

  most feared creature on earth?”

  “Lions.”

  “No.”

  “Tigers?”

  “No.”

  “Bears?”

  “Oh, my,” I answer. “Think.”

  “I don’t know,” he says. “But can we

  please stop running? My stomach is filled with

  that Cubano sandwich. I think it’s about to

  explode.”

  “Only one more block,” I answer. “Now

  concentrate. What’s the most feared creature

  on earth?”

  “I don’t know,” says Emilio, holding his

  stomach.

  “The butterfly!” I shout. “What else?”

  “The butterfly?” replies Emilio. “Timmy,

  nobody fears butterflies.”

  “Wrong!” I answer. “Butterflies come from

  worms. And everyone hates worms!”

  “Butterflies don’t come from worms. They

  come from caterpillars.”

  “There is no difference. Both are slimy

  and long.”

  “So is a garden hose,” says Emilio. “But

  that doesn’t turn into a butterfly.”

  “Will you please focus?” I lecture Emilio.

  “We’re here.”

  “A butterfly conservatory? Timmy, what

  does this have to do with anything?”

  “Oh, good gosh. I know you’re an intern,

  but don’t you get anything?”

  “Yes, I get an upset stomach when you

  make me run after eating a Cubano sandwich.”

  “No, Emilio Empanada. Focus. If you were

  a captain with the biggest treasure on the

  island of Key West, where would you hide it?”

  “In a Key West bank.”

  “In a butterfly conservatory!” I shout.

  “Where it’d be safe! Because nobody wants to

  get eaten alive by butterflies! And nobody but

  a fearless detective would go inside.”

  And thus, we burst into the conservatory.

  Or rather, I do.

  “What are you doing?” I ask, poking my

  head back outside through the thick rubber

  strips that keep the butterflies from escaping.

  “I’ll be in there in a minute,” says Emilio.

  “Don’t tell me you’re afraid again.”

  “Of a butterfly?” mutters Emilio. “That’s

  one thing I’m definitely not afraid of.”

  “Then what is it?”

  “All that running on a full stomach. I think

  I’m gonna throw up.”

  A gurgling sound erupts from his mouth,

  like Mount Kilimanjaro ready to blow.

  So he rushes into the bathroom.

  And I rush in to see the butterflies.

  And as soon as I am inside, I spot a little

  girl.

  Being eaten alive.

  And it is a horror to behold.

  So I pass carefully by her.

  “Hey, you—do you want a butterfly?” she

  asks as I pass.

  “A what?” I ask, startled by the voice of

  the doomed soul.

  “Hold your arm out and we’ll see if I can

  get one of these little guys to fly onto you.”

  Oh, good God, I think. She is dead already,

  and like a zombie risen from the grave,

  her only satisfaction is in destroying other

  humans.

  “You will do nothing of the kind!” I assert

  as I pass.

  And as I do, there is a tiny itch-like crawl

  upon the top of my head.

  And I look up.

  And see my brains are being eaten.

  We are asked to leave the conservatory by

  an employee who says that we are creating a

  disturbance.

  Emilio blames me.

  I blame Emilio.

  2

  The only thing we agree upon is what hap-

  pened next.

  Which is that when we got home, we found

  something on our porch.

  2. I am right. He is wrong.

  With a poem inside.

  “I think Dr. Seuss is trying to kill us,” I tell

  Emilio.

  “No, Timmy,” answers Emilio.

  “He’s the only guy who can rhyme like

  that.”

  “No.”

  “It’s a shame, too. Because I was a big fan

  of One Fish Two Fish. And now he wants me

  dead.”

  “Timmy, it’s not Dr. Seuss,” he says, pac-

  ing the porch.

  I hold the conch shell to my ear.

  “Hey, Emilio, I can hear the ocean. It’s say-

  ing, ‘Emilio Empanada knows nothing about

  detective work.’”

  “Yes, well, I know that conch shells don’t

  talk.”

  “This one does.”

  “Terrific. Then what’s it say we should do

  next?”

  “Raise money. Lots of it. For more can-

  nons. Tanks. And perhaps dolphins.”

  “Dolphins?”

  “Yes. So we can ride them from island to

  island.”

  “Speaking of money,” says Emilio, “do we

  still have that hundred dollars we were gonna

  use for the boat?”

  “No. It’s been sent to Cuba,” I answer.

  “I’ve been the victim of an outrageous extor-

  tion scheme.”

  “Oh, no,” says Emilio.

  “Yes,” I answer. “My polar bear is trying

  to extort me into making him a name partner

  in my detective agency. He is an evil fiend.”

  “I see.”

  “But extortion or no extortion, we are run-

  ning out of time. And my precious life hangs

  in the balance. So we cannot let the investi
ga-

  tion be hindered.”

  But the investigation is immediately

  hindered.

  By the person who always hinders.

  “Timmy, I need you to get dressed,” says

  my mom. “Your clothes are on the bed. They’re

  new, so I hope they fit.”

  “New clothes? What now?”

  “We have to meet someone.”

  “Who?” I ask.

  “Let’s talk about it inside.”

  My mom talked forever.

  And she was weird and made me hold her

  hand and sometimes she seemed sad.

  But I’m a detective. And we don’t have

  feelings.

  At least not ones we show.

  So I’m gonna keep this short.

  The person we have to meet is my dad.

  “I had to call him to let him know I was

  getting remarried,” she said. “Then he asked

  some questions. And I happened to mention

  that we were going to Key West for the honey-

  moon. And it turns out he’s been living in the

  Keys. And he’d like to say hi to you.”

  And on and on she went.

  Telling me I’ve met him before.

  Telling me I used to call him Papa.

  Telling me he may or may not show up.

  Now I know I haven’t said much about

  him before, or even mentioned him.

  But there are reasons for that.

  All of which are contained in this memo.

  From deep within the Timmy files.

  And that’s all I can share about my dad.

  The international secret agent.

  Because that’s how he’d want it.

  Which I understand.

  Because I have his genes.

  And now his attention.

  My mother wants to stay and sit with me

  and my father on the bench outside the dead

  author’s house.

  But I tell her to leave.

  For I am being pursued by assassins, and,

  doubtless, so is my father.

  “It’s dangerous enough as it is,” I tell her.

  “This is no place for civilians.”

  So she leaves and walks back inside the

  author’s house.

  And I sit down with my dad.

  “I won’t keep you long,” he says. “I know

  it’s a bit awkward. And your mom wasn’t

  thrilled with any of this anyway.”

  “The cats here stole my pants,” I reply.

  “Yes. I see that.”

  “Hold on to yours,” I warn him.

  “I will.”

  “Good. They are all remorseless criminals.”

  We both stare at the cats.

  “I guess I owe you an explanation for

  everything,” he says.

  “No need,” I tell him. “I understand. I’m a

  law-enforcement officer myself.”

  “Ah, yes. Your mom told me all about your

  many investigations. And the notes from your

  friend—”

  “Emilio. He’s my intern.”

  “Yes, Emilio.”

  We watch a six-toed cat pass. I hang on to

  my wallet.

  “Let me just say something, Tim—” He

  pauses. “Do you like ‘Tim’ or ‘Timmy’?”

  “Timmy.”

  “Let me just say something, Timmy.”

  “Okay. You talk. I’ll scan the bushes for

  assassins.”

  “It’s just that running a business down

  here in the Keys is hard. I wouldn’t expect you

  to understand any of this, but it’s a little hole-

  in-the-wall restaurant, you know? That’s what

  I own. And you have to be there about twenty

  hours a day. For real.”

  I smile, appreciating his cover story. A

  hole-in-the-wall restaurant—that’s a good one.

  “’Cause with a restaurant, if you’re not

  there, I’ll tell you, you really get robbed blind

  by your employees. The bartenders steal. The

  waitresses steal. Everyone steals.”

  “I understand,” I tell him. “Remember, I

  had my pants stolen.”

  He smiles.

  “Anyhow, Tim—Timmy—that stupid

  place takes up all my time, and it’s why I can’t

  come see you as often as I’d like or call as

  often, you know?”

  “I understand. It would be a great risk.”

  “Well, I don’t know about that.”

  “It would. It’d be dangerous.”

  He laughs. “You mean, your mom yelling

  at me for not coming around enough? Maybe.”

  We both know I’m talking about the crimi-

  nals that pursue him relentlessly. But they

  could be eavesdropping from the eaves.

  And thus I play along with my dad’s cover

  story.

  “I understand everything,” I assure him.

  “I dunno,” he says. “I think I have too

  many excuses. Anyhow, maybe I should just

  let you ask me something instead of me going

  on and on about everything.”

  I watch a group of tourists pass. And then

  turn back to my dad.

  “Have you heard about my work?” I ask.

  “Your schoolwork? Your mom tells me a

  little.”

  “Schoolwork? Pshaw. My detective work.

  You know, in your community.”

  He laughs.

  “Why are you laughing?”

  He stops.

  “Gee, Timmy, I don’t know much of any-

  thing. You know, I work all the time.”

  “I see. Well, the agency is the best of its

  kind. And it’s growing rapidly.”

  “Ah. I see.”

  We’re interrupted by a man with a large

  belly and a visor. “Excuse me, do you know

  where Hemingway’s studio is? The place where

  he wrote?”

  “I’ve only been here once,” says my dad.

  “But I think it’s in the back. Up the stairs.”

  “That was frightening,” I whisper to my

  father as the man lumbers off. “I thought it

  was an ambush.”

  “Nope,” says my dad. “He was just lost.”

  And half smiles.

  “I came here once when I was a young

  man myself,” says my dad. “Wanted to be

  Hemingway. Write novels, you know? Spy nov-

  els, mysteries. Never was any good. Nothing

  published or anything. Never tried, really. But

  anyhow, that’s all in the past.”

  I nod, amazed at the depths of his cover

  story.

  “Anyhow, to make this short, Timmy, I

  just want to say I’m sorry. I know I’m not the

  greatest dad. Not much of a dad at all, really.

  I mean, I know it’s no excuse, but my own

  dad barely spent any time with me at all, and

  I had you when I was so young, and I was

  scared and I didn’t know what I was doing

  and—”

  “Mom says that one time she had to pay

  for a private school for me,” I interrupt him,

  “and she asked you for money and you didn’t

  give her any.”

  “Really?”

  “Yes.”

  “Well, I probably just didn’t have it at the

  time. But if I had it, I would have sent it.”

  “Okay.”

  “I don’t even remember that, to be honest.”

  “I do,” I answer.

&nb
sp; My mother raps on the window of the

  Hemingway house and points at her watch.

  “She’s always interrupting,” I explain.

  “Yeah, well, that probably means we have

  to wrap things up,” says my dad.

  “Okay.”

  There is a long pause.

  “I’ll be better, Tim. Better dad. The whole

  bit.”

  “Yeah.”

  “I will.”

  “Okay.”

  “And I’m real proud of you.”

  “Okay.”

  We stand. Silent for a moment. Then we

  shake hands.

  “You be good,” he says.

  “Don’t let the cats steal your wallet,” I

  answer.

  “I’ve been thinking a lot about what that poem

  means,” says Emilio as he plays with Edward

  Higglebottom the Third back at the rental

  house. “The one in the conch shell.”

  “I haven’t,” I answer.

  “Why not?”

  “Because I don’t care.”

  “What are you talking about?”

  “I just want to go home,” I answer. “I’m

  tired of this place.”

  “Tired of it? What about all the notes?”

  “I don’t care. It’s hot here. And I want to

  sleep in my own bed again.”

  “Well, we can’t leave before solving the

  mystery.”

  “Emilio, there are some mysteries that

  just can’t be solved. It happens sometimes.”

  “But I want to solve it.”

  “Yes, well, you’re not going to, okay?”

  “But why not?”

  “Because it’s over. Your internship. The

  mystery. The whole thing.”

  Emilio puts the baby chicken back in his

  cardboard box.

  “And besides,” I add, “the trip’s almost

  done anyway.”

  He stares at his suitcase.

  “We’re leaving tomorrow?” he asks.

  “Tomorrow,” I answer.

  “Then I guess I should probably start

  packing.”

  He picks up a shirt and rolls it up like a

 

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