No Other Story

Read No Other Story Online

Authors: Dr. Cuthbert Soup

NO OTHER STORY

Dr. Cuthbert Soup

illustrations by
Jeffrey Stewart Timmins

Contents

A Bit of Advice

Chapter 1

Some Timely Advice

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Advice on Winning

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Advice for an Enjoyable Night at the Opera

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Decorating Tips for the Holidays

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Some Unwritten Advice on Writing

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Advice on Giving Advice

Chapter 13

Advice for Nervous Fliers

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Advice for Motorists

Chapter 19

Advice on Succeeding in Hollywood

Chapter 20

About the Author

Footnotes

Also by Dr. Cuthbert Soup

For Sir Finley the Dimpled

Fight Illiteracy.
Give to your Local Liberry.

“It takes two to tango, but it takes four to tango with a giant squid.”

DR. CUTHBERT SOUP, ADVISOR TO THE ILL-ADVISED

A Bit of Advice

Though I have never been on the run from government agents, international superspies, or corporate villains, I can certainly identify with Ethan Cheeseman and his three smart, polite, attractive, and relatively odor-free children. You see, when I was growing up, my father was in the army, so we were constantly moving from town to town because he was a deserter.

Thankfully, those days are over; for me, but not for the Cheesemans, who are still on the run as we speak, and I don't envy them one bit. Well, except for the fact that they now have access to a fully operational time machine, and what could be more exciting than that? There are so many great times throughout history that one might wish to visit. Last Tuesday was a very nice day, for instance. And just imagine being able to go back in time and shake hands with Abraham Lincoln, or take a ride on a woolly mammoth, or, if the opportunity were to present itself, take a ride on Abraham Lincoln. (Not without asking first, as that would be rude.)

Of course, the Cheesemans have no immediate desire to ride on extinct mammals or, for that matter, extinct presidents. And last Tuesday, though the weather was quite agreeable, holds very little interest for them. They have one use and one use only for the time machine, and that is to save the life of Olivia Cheeseman, Ethan's lovely wife and mother to his children. They intend to do this by traveling back to the time before she was poisoned by the evilest of villains and preventing said villain from carrying out his heinous crime.

However, this is much easier said than done. Though the LVR-ZX has been proven to be quite capable of transporting humans along the Time Arc, there are still many problems to work out with this new technology. In short, perfecting time travel will take … well, time. After all, as the old saying goes, Rome wasn't built in France. (Which is a good thing, considering how much longer it would have taken, having to haul all those fancy statues over the French Alps.)

So before you go getting yourself all lathered up over the possibility of traveling back to ancient Egypt to watch them invent the calendar, or to ancient China to watch them invent spaghetti, or gunpowder, or a gun that shoots spaghetti against the wall to see if it sticks, I would strongly suggest that you first read this book as a cautionary tale of some of the horrible problems that might await you.

Chapter 1

You could see their reflections getting smaller as they moved quickly away from the shiny, metallic surface of the football-shaped LVR-ZX and across the seemingly endless field of dry grass, sparsely decorated with the occasional wildflower or aimlessly flitting butterfly.

The mood was light and joyous, for they were, to a person, quite happy to be rid of the year 1668 and back to being somewhere close to the present. The children were especially happy for two reasons:

1. After what seemed like a lifetime of being on the run, each day wondering if they might never see her alive again, they would finally have the chance to embrace their mother once more.

2. There's no time like the present.

Professor Boxley was perhaps slightly less happy than the rest of the group, but that was only due to the fact that his lungs felt like a balloon that had been bent, stretched,
and twisted into the shape of a poodle by a circus clown. The old man hadn't done any running in years, and he now found himself bent at the waist, clutching at and leaning on his bony kneecaps, in an effort to keep his red, puffy face from meeting the ground below.

“Hold on, everybody,” said Mr. Cheeseman, the first to notice the professor had fallen out. He jogged back and placed his hand on his former teacher's back. “Are you okay, Professor?”

Professor Boxley tottered briefly under the extra weight of Ethan's hand, then responded by holding up a single finger, as if to say, “I would love to answer that question once I regain my breath. Check back in a week or so.”

Ethan quickly removed his jacket and spread it out on the ground. By the time he had done so, his three children, Chip Krypton, Penny Nickelton, and Teddy Roosevelt, had run back to help. They took the wheezing senior citizen beneath his shaky arms and lowered him to a sitting position on the jacket.

You may be wondering why it is that the Cheeseman children all went by different last names; the answer is quite simple. Each time over the past two years that Pinky, the Cheesemans' psychic, hairless fox terrier, warned them of impending danger, they packed up everything they owned, moved to a new location, and, for added protection against evil villains, changed their names, first and last.

Ethan allowed his children to be as creative as they wanted when it came to choosing their new names. While
some parents might worry that encouraging a child's creativity could lead to them just making stuff up all the time—two plus two equals Benjamin Franklin, for instance—Ethan was of the mind that young imaginations should never be harnessed, and I couldn't agree more. After all, who would want to grow up in a world where two plus two always equals John Quincy Adams?

“I'm sorry,” said the professor, when he had finally gathered enough breath to do so. “I think the heat just got to me. I guess I'm not as young as I used to be.”

“You're not as old as you used to be, either,” said eight-year-old Teddy, the youngest and most outspoken of Ethan's children.

Penny glared at Teddy the way she always did when he spat out an insensitive remark. “Try something new, Teddy,” she said. “Like thinking before you speak. For once.”

As Teddy saw it, the worst thing about being the youngest member of a family was that everyone, it seemed, thought it entirely within their rights to boss him around. “What?” he protested. “I'm just saying that he's from fifteen years in the future, so, right now, he's a lot younger than he was before.”

“Makes sense to me,” added Gravy-Face Roy, Teddy's equally outspoken sock puppet. Gravy-Face Roy was actually nothing more than an old tube sock perched upon Teddy's left arm and decorated with two eyes and a nose made of greasy beef-gravy stains.

As you might imagine, those beefy splotches made
Gravy-Face Roy very attractive to Pinky, who smacked her lips whenever the loudmouth sock puppet came within smelling distance.

“I don't think it works that way,” said Penny. Out of habit, she went to toss her long auburn hair over her shoulder, only to be reminded that she had chopped most of it off, leaving it back in the seventeenth century. This had not been an easy thing for her to do, for the simple fact that her hair reminded her so much of her beloved mother; each day she washed it with a special shampoo made of wheat germ, honey, strawberry, coconut, apple pectin, pineapple, and Canadian bacon.

If you were to ask Mr. Cheeseman about the scientific benefits of such a concoction, he would most likely tell you that in order for food to be helpful to your hair, you must actually eat it. After all, carrots are good for your eyes, but not if you apply them directly. Likewise, fish is said to be brain food, but rubbing a mackerel on your head will only result in the loss of friends and possibly some unwanted attention from hungry seagulls.

“Just because the professor traveled back in time to rescue us doesn't mean his physical age changes,” Penny continued. “By your logic, while we were all back in 1668, we were hundreds of years younger than we are now, and that would be impossible.”

“I guess you're right,” Teddy relented. Gravy-Face Roy nodded in agreement. After all, who were they to argue with the brilliant Penny Nickelton, who had an IQ of 164 and an RQ of 2047?

What is an
RQ
, you ask? I would explain it, but it's something that can only be understood by people with an IQ of 160 or greater, and if you have an IQ this high, then you already know what an RQ is.

It was certainly no great secret where Penny got her smarts. Her mother had been a world-class mathematician, and her father was one of the greatest inventors the world has ever known. In fact, by the time Ethan had graduated from Southwestern North Dakota State University, the handsome, bespectacled genius had been credited with the following scientific breakthroughs:

• Fat-free lard.

• Sour cream and onion–flavored dental floss.

• Solar-powered musical pants.

• The Monkey Mobile.
a

Of course, Ethan's greatest work was done in the area of time travel and the development of the LVR, the world's first working time machine. Unfortunately, the Cheesemans had been forced to leave the LVR back in 1668 when it was badly damaged in a crash landing. As luck would have it, however, Professor Boxley was able to launch a rescue mission from fifteen years into the future with his own LVR-ZX, a machine patterned after the one designed by his former star student, Ethan Cheeseman.

“Okay,” said the professor, with a sharp exhale. “I think I'm good to go. As long as we slow the pace down a bit, if you don't mind.”

“Sorry about that,” said Chip. “We were just excited to see her again.” He smiled, and his patchy teenage mustache spread out across his upper lip, thinning it further so that it was every bit as full as a baby's eyebrow.

“Hey, Dad,” said Teddy, “after we save Mom, can we all go out for ice cream, like we used to?”

“You bet we can,” said Ethan.

As Chip and Ethan helped the professor to his feet, Teddy looked to the sky and saw something rather strange; something none of them had noticed before. Just moments ago, when they all stepped out of the LVR-ZX with no idea whether they had made it back to their own time or not, it was a very modern jet airplane rumbling across the sky that provided solid evidence that they had succeeded.

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