Crash
LET THE GAMES BEGIN…
First day of practice. I couldn’t wait to put the pads on. But first we had business with Webb.
Yesterday Mike said to me, “Do you believe we been in school this long and didn’t do anything to him yet?”
I nodded. “It’s unbelievable.”
“It’s a disgrace.”
“We gotta do something.”
“Before he starts thinking he’s safe.”
“Tomorrow.”
All last year we tormented Webb. He’s so dumb. He never figures out who’s doing it. He never gets mad at us. In fact he never gets mad at anybody. Day after day, his chippy chirpy perky self. What a moron.
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SHATTERED: STORIES OF CHILDREN AND WAR Edited by Jennifer Armstrong
MIDNIGHT PREDATOR, Amelia Atwater-Rhodes
To Carl Francis,
who has danced
on the scoreboard
1
MY NAME
My real name is John. John Coogan. But everybody calls me Crash, even my parents.
It started way back when I got my first football helmet for Christmas. I don’t really remember this happening, but they say that when my uncle Herm’s family came over to see our presents, as they were coming through the front door I got down into a four-point stance, growled, “Hut! Hut! Hut!” and charged ahead with my brand-new helmet. Seems I knocked my cousin Bridget clear back out the doorway and onto her butt into a foot of snow. They say she bawled bloody murder and refused to come into the house, so Uncle Herm finally had to drag his whole family away before they even had a chance to take their coats off.
Like I said, personally I don’t remember the whole thing, but looking back at what I do remember about myself, I’d have to say the story is probably true. As far as I can tell, I’ve always been crashing—into people, into things, you name it, with or without a helmet.
Actually, I lied a minute ago. Not everybody calls me Crash. There’s one person who doesn’t. It’s just one of a million things that have bugged me for years about this kid.
I can still remember the first time I saw him. The summer before first grade, seven years ago.
THEN
It was a sunny summer day. I was in the front yard digging a hole with my little red shovel. I heard something like whistling. I looked up. It was whistling. It was coming from a funny-looking dorky little runt walking up the sidewalk. Only he wasn’t just walking regular. He was walking like he owned the place, both hands in his pockets, sort of swaying lah-dee-dah with each step. Strolllllling. Strolling and gawking at the houses and whistling a happy little dorky tune like some Sneezy or Snoozy or whatever their names are.
And he wore a button, a big one. It covered about half his chest. Which wasn’t that hard since his chest was so scrawny.
So here he comes strolling, whistling, gawking, buttoning, dorking up the sidewalk, onto my sidewalk, my property, and all of a sudden I knew what I had to do, like there was a big announcement coming down from the sky: Don’t let him pass.
So I jump up from my hole and plant myself right in front of the kid. And what’s he do? He gives me this big grin and says, “Good morning. I’m your new neighbor. My name is Penn Webb. What’s yours?” And he sticks his hand out to shake.
I ignored his question and his hand. “Penn?” I said. “What kind of name is that?”
“I was named after the Penn Relays,” he said.
“Huh?” I said.
“It’s a famous track meet. When I was born, my parents let my great-grandfather name me, and that’s the name he picked. He won a race at the Penn Relays in the year 1919. Thirty thousand people cheered him on. He lives in North Dakota. I lived in North Dakota too until yesterday. Then I moved here to Pennsylvania with my mother and father. My mother had me when she was forty years old. I was a late baby.”
You’re gonna be a flat-nosed baby if you don’t shut up, I’m thinking. “What does your button say?” I asked him.
He stuck out his scrawny chest. “It says, ‘Hi, I’m a Flickertail.’”
“What’s a flickertail?”
“A flickertail is a squirrel. There are lots of them in North Dakota. That’s why it’s called the Flickertail State. What is Pennsylvania called?”
“The Poop State.”
He didn’t crack a smile, didn’t even know it was a joke. He got all frowny and thought about it and nodded and said, “Oh.” Then his motormouth took off again. “North Dakota is real flat. Where we lived, anyway. And there’s prairies. My dad says when the wind blows over the prairie, it looks wavy, like the ocean. I never saw a real ocean yet, but my dad says we’re going to see the Atlantic Ocean soon. My dad’s an artist. He makes birds out of glass and ceramics and wood and metal. He can make any kind of bird you can name, but he’s the best in the world at prairie chickens.”
I cut him off. “My father is starting a new business. He works seventy hours a week. Sometimes more.”
“My mother works at home, like my father. She makes greeting cards and buttons like this.”
“My mother works and goes to school. Both.”
“I like dogs, but I love turtles. Would you like to see my turtle?”
“No. I have a grandfather named Scooter. He was a cook in the U.S. Navy.”
“I’m an only child.”
“I’m starting first grade this year.”
“Me too,” he said, and for the second time he asked me my name.
“Mergatroid,” I said.
He didn’t even blink. He just stuck out his hand and said, “Nice to meet you, Mergatroid.”
Instead of my hand, I stuck out my shovel. He shook it. He laughed. He thought it was the funniest thing since Bugs Bunny.
For some reason, that laughing was the last straw. I plucked the silly button off his shirt, dumped it in the hole I was digging, and covered it over with dirt. I stomped and flattened the dirt with my foot.
The kid froze in midlaugh. His eyes took up his whole face. Then he turned and walked down the block. He wasn’t whistling now.
I figured that was the last time I’d ever see that hambone.
2
The next day I was out digging again. This time I brought my dump truck along. I shoveled dirt into the dump truck; then I drove the truck over to the flower bed and dumped dirt onto a purple pansy until I buried it.
In the meantime my little sister Abby was picking worms out of my shovelfuls of dirt. She was having worm races. It surprised me to see a girl not afraid to pick up worms. But she was only four then, so I figured she was too young to know better. I figured in a little while she would become a regular girl and scream if she ever touched anything slimy or crawly.
Anyway, as I was busy burying pansies I kept looking down the street. Maybe it was more than looking. Maybe I was hoping to see the new kid, Penn Webb, hoping to do something else to him. But I wasn’t seeing him, so after I buried the last pansy I hopped onto my bicycle and headed down the sidewalk.
I had no idea where he lived. I wasn’t supposed to cross streets at that age, but I did. Pretty soon the houses and the yards were smaller. I made a U-turn. I was heading back when I heard his voice: “Mergatroid!”
He was running toward me. He wore a new button. He seemed all happy to see me, which made no sense.
“My name’s not Mergatroid,” I told him.
He gawked at me. “No?”
“No. It’s Humphrey.”
He grinned. “Ah, you were trickin
g me, huh?”
“Yeah,” I said, “I’m a real tricker. But I’m not tricking you now. My name really is Humphrey.”
He nodded and snapped his hand out. “Okay, nice to meet you, Humphrey. I’m still Penn Webb.”
I stuck out my hand, but when he went to shake it, I snatched it away. I poked his forehead with my finger. “Ha-ha, tricked ya again.”
He laughed. “Want to see my turtle?”
“No,” I said. I pointed at the new button. I could tell it only had one word. “What’s it say?”
“Peace,” he said.
“Peace?” I snickered. “What kind of junk is that to say on a button?”
I pretended to reach for the button. His hand shot up to cover it. “Hah!” I laughed. “Tricked ya.” His hand went away. He stepped closer to me. Crazy as it sounds, I got the feeling that he was inviting me to snatch this second button if I wanted.
So I did. I plucked it off his shirt But there was no hole this time to dump it in. I thought of pinning it on myself, but what did I want with a button that said PEACE? So I gave it back to him.
“Where’s your house?” I said.
He pointed right behind him. “There.”
I couldn’t believe it. “Who’re you tricking?” I said. “That’s no house. That’s a garage.”
He looked at the place, looked at me. “No, I’m not tricking you. We live there. We moved in two days ago. Honest.”
I still couldn’t believe it. It was no bigger than a garage. In fact, I found out since then that it really was a garage once, until somebody changed it into the world’s dinkiest house.
An old man came out of the place. He waved at us, called, “Hello, boys,” and went around back.
“Your grandfather lives with you?” I said.
The kid giggled. “That’s my father.”
“Your father? That guy has white hair.”
“Sure. He’s fifty-one years old. He’s five years older than my mother. I was a late baby.”
“I know, I know.”
“I was a happy little surprise, too.”
“Huh?”
“I was. My mother and father thought they could never have any babies. And then all of a sudden, poof!”—he threw his hands in the air—“I came along. They called me their happy little surprise.”
I was ready to give him a two-finger surprise up his nose if he didn’t cut out all this baby doodle.
Seeing the white-haired old guy, father or whatever, made me remember something from the day before. “Who did you say you got your name from?”
“My great-grandfather. He named me after the Penn Relays. Not many children have a great-grandfather. My dad says I’m really lucky. Want to see my turtle now?”
“No,” I said. “I’m lucky, too.”
“Really? Do you have a great-grandfather?”
“No … I have a great-great-grandfather.”
His eyes rolled, his head wobbled. “Wow! You are lucky!”
“He’s a hundred and fifteen years old.”
His head almost wobbled off. “Yikes!” He staggered backward across his front yard, which was the size of a bathroom mat, and flopped onto his back. “One hundred and fifteen!”
I could tell this moron anything. “Okay,” I said, “I’ll see the turtle now.”
He jumped up and ran into the house. He came back with a turtle. The shell was yellow and brown.
“It’s a box turtle,” he said. He turned it over. “See, here’s his name.” THOMAS was carved into the bottom shell. “Want to hold him?”
He handed me the turtle, and I took off on my bike. “Hey!” he yelled. I steered with one hand and pedaled like a demon up the sidewalk. Then I quick-stopped, put the turtle on its back in the middle of the sidewalk, and called, “Ha-ha, tricked ya!” I took off. I stopped again as he was picking up the turtle. “My name’s not Humphrey, either!” I rode on.
By the time I got home, a question was really bugging me. I felt silly asking my four-year-old sister, but there was no one else around.
She was collecting those bugs that roll themselves up into little gray balls. She had them all lined up. She was being real quiet so the bugs would think it was okay to open up. As soon as one of them did, she touched it with the tip of her finger and it balled right up again and sent her into giggles.
“Do we have a great-grandfather?” I said.
She went, “Shhh!” and gave roe a dirty look. She whispered, “I don’t know. Ask Mommy.”
Well, it turned out that we didn’t have one, but I didn’t learn it from my mother. I was staying out of her way for a while. Because when she came outside that day you could hear her all over town: “Where are my PANSIES.?’”
3
Next time I heard him he was calling, “Hey, John! Hey, John!”
He was running up the street. I was busy peeling bark off a tree in the yard.
I glared at him. “Who says my name’s John?”
He came up to me, huffing, button going in and out. “Your sister. She said your nickname is Crash, but your real name is John Patrick Coogan.”
I didn’t know whether to be mad at him or her. “What were you doing talking to her?”
“Yesterday. I was looking for you. I saw her out front here. She didn’t know where you were.”
“I was out on business,” I said. He never seemed to turn off the goofy grin. It was starting to bug me more than the button. “You want to know my name,” I told him, “you check with me.”
“Okay,” he said, still grinning, “Can I call you Crash?”
Any other time, to any other person, I would have said yes. But even that felt like too much to give him, so I said, “No.”
He blinked. “No?”
“That’s what I said.”
He shrugged. “So what can I call you?”
“Call me horsemeat.”
He blinked some more, t was almost starting to enjoy this kid, like I was the cat and he was my mouse. He started to say something. I poked him in the chest. “You call me that and I’ll cut your hair off.” I held up the kitchen knife that I was peeling the tree with. I had him so bamboozled he didn’t know which way was up. I was practically choking trying not to laugh.
“So,” I said, “why were you looking for me?”
His old beaming face came back. “I wanted to ask you if you would like to come to dinner at my house.”
The only word I could think of was “Why?”
“Because you’re my first friend in Pennsylvania. We do that all the time in North Dakota, have our friends over for dinner. Don’t you do that here?”
“We do what we want,” I said. I was stalling for time. The last thing I needed was to have dinner with this family of hambones. And I didn’t like him calling me friend. On the other hand, I was kind of curious to get an inside look at the boss dorks and the garage that thought it was a house. But if I did go, I had to make him pay for it.
“Maybe I’ll come,” I said, “but only if you beat me to the draw.”
“Draw?” he said.
“Yeah. Water pistols. Wait here.”
I ran to my room. I got two water guns, loaded them at the bathroom sink, and brought them out. I gave him one. “Here’s yours. Stick it in your pocket like this. We stand five steps apart. At the count of three, draw and fire. Got it?”
He didn’t say anything for a long time. The grin was gone. He just stared at the green plastic gun in his hand. He wasn’t even holding it right. He was biting his lip. Finally he looked up at me. “I can’t.”
I gawked at him. “You can’t?”
He shook his head.
“Why not?”
He looked me dead in the eye. “I’m a Quaker.”
4
“A Quaker?” I screeched. “What’s a Quaker?” The only Quaker I had ever heard of was Quaker Oats cereal.
“It’s somebody who doesn’t believe in violence,” he said.
I told him, “Who says you have to
believe in it? You just do it.”
“I don’t fight in wars.”
I laughed. I waved my pistol in his face. “You hambone, this ain’t war, this is water guns.”
He held his out to me. “I don’t play with guns.”
I didn’t take it. Instead, I took a step back, aimed, pulled the trigger, and shot him right between the eyes. “Bull’s-eye!”
He didn’t move. The gun hung limp in his hand. Water trickled down his nose and around his mouth.
“Don’t you have water guns in North Dakota?” I asked him.
“Some people do,” he said. “Not me.”
“Well, you’re in Pennsylvania now, chief.” I aimed again and fired.
He still didn’t move. This was crazy. Whoever heard of a kid who didn’t shoot back? Then all of a sudden I got it. “Hah!” I sneered. “Now I know what you’re doing. You’re trying to trick me.” I backed up a couple of steps, went into a crouch, swung my gun arm up, straight out stiff, left hand clamping right wrist, like I saw on TV. “Well, it ain’t gonna work, sonny. Hasta la vista, hambone. Bam! Bam! Bam!” I fired three quick ones. He didn’t move, except to blink when water hit his eyes. I couldn’t believe anybody could be so dumb.
“Bam! Bam! Bam! Bam! Bam! Bam!”
I stepped to the side to get a better angle on the button.
“Bam! Bam! Bam!” Tracer jets of water smacked the button while he stood there drenched and monkey-faced and droopy. I was laughing so hard I thought I’d bust a gut.
I aimed again. “Bam!” The gun spluttered. Out of ammo. I laughed harder. I could hardly stand.
He held out his gun. His loaded weapon. Held it out to me.
I stopped laughing. I stared at him, at his gun. I swiped it from his hand.
“That ain’t the way it goes!” I yelled into his dripping face. “You’re s’posed to shoot back! You’re suppose to!” I turned the gun on my own face and pulled the trigger. “See?” I fired again. “Is that too hard for ya?”
I wound up and whipped his gun over the roof of our house and into the backyard. “Dummkopf.” I slammed my own gun to the ground. I stomped and stomped on it till it was green plastic splinters. I stormed up to the garage, over to the flower garden, out to the street, back to him.