Authors: Kwame Alexander
Do me a favor and stop complaining about trying to be excellent.
Whatever, you mumble.
What did you say?
Nothing. I need to use the bathroom.
Then go. And bring me a pillow from the guest room.
Why?
Because I need a pillow.
You're sleeping down here?
I am. Now, hurry up. We still have to go over our words.
Your
words, you mumble on your way out.
Coby
comes up
to you
at lunch
and asks
if you knew the twins
were back
at school.
Then
he asks
if you knew
one of 'em
was in the library
talking
to April.
are pit-bull mean
eighth grade tyrants
with beards.
They used to
play
soccer
with you
and Coby
till they got kicked
out of the league
for literally tackling
opponents
and then,
get this,
biting them.
The twins live
down the block
from Langston Hughes
Middle School of the Arts,
which is why they get to go here,
since the only art
they're interested in
is pugilism,
*
as evidenced by
the flaming-red boxing gloves
they sometimes sneak
into school
to punch
other kids with
(which is how they ended up
at the Alternative Behavior Center,
or the ABC, for the past year).
swings open
just as you and Coby arrive.
The twins grit hard.
Hey, PUNK,
Don says,
emphasizing
punk,
pushing
you to the ground and
stepping on
your backpack.
They stare Coby down,
like they're gonna do something.
He stares back.
Don't let me catch you with my girl,
Dean says
to you, laughing, then kicking your
bag again, before leaving,
and never saying a word to Coby,
because even though
Dean and Don are mean dogs,
always out for blood,
and prone to bite,
they only
bark
at Coby.
the library
April waves
from the back corner,
but before you can wave back,
Mr. MacDonald,
the librarian,
jumps in front of you,
holding
a hardcover book
in his colossal left hand,
a neon green bowling ball
in his right,
and sporting
a way-too-big 4XL tee
that reads:
Irony: The Opposite of Wrinkly
Here fellas, take a book.
Uh, no thanks, Mr. MacDonald. We just came in toâ
To join Nerds and Words? Excellent, Nick. We could use some boys in our book club.
Maybe another time. I don't really do books.
It's a quick readÂâtry it out this weekend.
Can't, Mr. Mac, we got a futsal
*
tournament.
A book brawl tournament?
Futsal.
Your foot's all permanent?
. . .
I heard about that thing in Ms. Hardwick's class. You know I'm the king of malapropisms.
Uh, o-kay.
What's up with the bowling ball, Mr. Mac?
Big game this weekend too. Got to get my match-play mojo on.
I don't even know what that means.
So, Coby, you want to join the book club?
Pass,
Coby says, laughing.
Maybe if you changed the name to Books and Babes I might join
.
Let us see what's in your dragonfly box and we'll join, you say, before
The Mac starts,
get this,
rapping:
The Mac drinks tea
in a dragonfly mug.
On the library floor
is a dragonfly rug.
The door is covered
with dragonfly pics,
'
cause Skip to the Mac
is dragonfly sick.
Sometimes I wear
a dragonfly hat.
Got dragonfly this
and dragonfly that.
Around my room
are dragonfly clocks.
But please don't touch
my dragonfly box.
'Cause if you do
I might get cross.
Respect the Mac,
Dragonfly Boss!
The Mac
is a corny-joke-cracking,
seven-foot
bowling fanatic
with a reddish mohawk
who wears funny T-shirts
and high-top Converse sneakers.
He used to be a rap producer,
but now
he only listens to
wack elevator music, because, he says,
hip-hop is dead.
When I ask him
who killed it,
he says:
Ringtones and objectification.
Which is reason #1
why he left the music business
at age twenty-nine,
to become,
get this,
a librarian?!
Reason #2 is
the brain surgery
he had
two years ago
that left him
with a scar
that runs across his head
from his left ear to his right.
But he's the coolest adult
in our school, and
to prove it, he's got
a Grammy Award
for best rap song
sitting right at checkout,
in plain view
for everyone to see
and touch.
Plus, he's won
Teacher of the Year
more times than Brazil
has won
the
World Cup.
(And he's not even a teacher.)
So when he gets all geeked
about his nerdy book club
or breaks into some random rap
in the middle of a conversation,
most people smile or clap,
because we're all just happy
The Mac's still alive.
Great discussion today, class.
I'm sure you all see why
Mark Twain is one
of our greatest literary
treasures,
Ms. Hardwick says.
With only five minutes left in class,
it's probable she's forgotten
the assignment
she gave you,
which means
you're off the hook.
Tomorrow, we will begin
another classic
of children's literature.
One of my favorites,
Tuck Everlasting.
And your laughter gushes
like an open fire hydrant
'cause you could have sworn
You heard an
F
,
Instead of
T
.
I see our comedian is back.
Would you like to share
what's so funny
with the rest of the class?
Uh, no thanks, I'm good.
Winey,
the know-it-all,
a.k.a. Winnifred,
the girl who beat you
in the elementary school spelling bee,
raises her hand:
Ms. Hardwick,
wasn't Nick supposed to
present a malapropism
to us today?
she whines.
ARGGH!
Thank you, Winnifred,
Ms. Hardwick interrupts.
Nick, here's your chance to be funny.
Were you able to find
a malapropism
in
Huckleberry Finn
?
No, you say,
handing her
the assignment.
I actually found two.
when Ms. Hardwick
reads your assignment
then runs
into the hallway
cachinnating
*
like she's about to pee
in her polyester.
Mom's asking
random questions
about girls and school,
Dad's talking
about some new,
weird word
he's found,
and you're eating
as fast as you can,
so you can finish
and get online
to play FIFA
with Coby.
But tonight is different.
the food's good, as usualâ
fettucine alfredo with jumbo shrimp,
corn on the cob,
garlic bread sticksâ
but,
get this,
no one's saying a word.
It's like church
during prayer.
Dead silence.
Crickets.
Something's not right.
Can I have two hundred dollars to take to the Dallas Cup? you ask.
That's absurd, Nicky,
Mom answers.
Coby's dad is giving him five hundred.
It's not for a while. We'll discuss is later,
she adds.
Dad doesn't say anything, which confirms
that something's up, 'cause he
ALWAYS. HAS. SOMETHING. TO. SAY.
Then it's all hush-hush again.
You clear the table,
Mom hugs you
longer than usual,
then you head upstairs
to cram
for your math test when
you hear Dad,
from the living room, say,
Nicholas, can you come in here for a minute?
Your mother and I need to talk with you,
and you pray
they didn't find out
about the lamp
you broke
while kicking
the ball
in your room.
When Mom says
she's decided to go back to work,
you're not too surprised,
'cause you know
how much she misses
being around horses
since Dad moved
the family
to the city
for his teaching job.
When she says
she's decided
to take a job
in Kentucky,
it jolts you,
'cause moving away
from your friends
and teammates
in the middle
of the school year
is vicious.
But when she says,
Nicky, your father and I
are separating,
it's like a bombshell
drops
right in the center
of your heart
and splatters
all across your life.
It does not take
a math genius
to understand that
when you subtract
a mother
from the equation
what remains
is negative.
After you finish
crying
and the sadness finds
a home
in what's left
of your heart,
you ask her
when she's leaving
you.
I'm not leaving
YOU, Nicky. I have to go
out next week,
meet with the racing team,
but I'll be back
every other weekend
until the Triple Crown,
and then I'm home
for the summer
and we'll figure out
how to fix all this.
How is she gonna
fix this shattered heart,
you wonder?
you can't sleep
your head aches
your stomach's a wreck
your soul's on fire
your parents are clueless
you fall asleep in class