Beat the Band

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Authors: Don Calame

BOOK: Beat the Band
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places,
and incidents are either products of the author’s
imagination or, if real, are used fictitiously.

Copyright © 2010 by Don Calame
Cover illustration copyright © 2009 by iStockphoto

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced,
transmitted, or stored in an information retrieval system
in any form or by any means, graphic, electronic, or
mechanical, including photocopying, taping, and recording,
without prior written permission from the publisher.

First electronic edition 2010

The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

Calame, Don.
Beat the band / Don Calame. —1st U.S. ed.
p.   cm.
Sequel to: Swim the fly.
Summary: Paired with the infamous “Hot Dog” Helen for a
health class presentation on safe sex, tenth-grader Coop tries
to regain his “cool” by entering his musically challenged
rock group in the “Battle of the Bands” competition.
ISBN 978-0-7636-4633-2 (hardcover)
[1. Popularity—Fiction. 2. Rock groups—Fiction.
3. High schools—Fiction. 4. Schools—Fiction.
5. Humorous stories.] I. Title.
PZ7.C1241Be 2010
[Fic]—dc22 2010006607

ISBN 978-0-7636-5209-8 (electronic)

Candlewick Press
99 Dover Street
Somerville, Massachusetts 02144

visit us at
www.candlewick.com


THIS IS IT, DAWGS,”
I say. “From boys to men. Tenth grade is the year we tag all the bases. First, second, third, and then we
slide
into home.”

“I’d just be happy to step into the batter’s box again,” Sean says.

I shoot him a gimme-a-break look. “Don’t be so mopey, dude. Tianna was just a practice swing. Now you’re primed to aim for the fences.”

Me, Matt, and Sean shortcut across Dreyfus Park, our bikes kicking up the dust that settled over the summer as we head toward the beige brick building of Lower Rockville High that looms like a penitentiary. A penitentiary chock with hotties, to be sure, but a lockup for most of the daylight hours, nonetheless.

“I don’t know,” Sean says. “I don’t think I’m over her yet.”

“Of course you aren’t,” Matt consoles. “It’s only been a week since you split up.”

I laugh. “Are you kidding me? They were only going out for a month. A week is more than enough time to get over it. It’s standard formula: One day of angst for every week you were dating. Four weeks, four days. Over and out. Any more time is just a wank.”

Matt looks at me in disbelief. “Where do you get these things?”

“It’s common knowledge, dude. Google it.”

“What do I do if I see her in the hall?” Sean asks.

“What do you mean,
if
?” I say, pumping the pedals on my creaky mountain bike, feeling the strain in my legs as we split the goalposts and ride over the football field. “You
are
going to see her in the hall. She might even be in a bunch of your classes. Who gives a crap?”

“Just say hi,” Matt offers.

“No.”
I glare at Matt. “Wrong. Do not take advice from the Whipped One.” I turn to Sean. “You say nothing. She dumped you, so she no longer exists. Simple as that.”

“Ignore her?” Sean says. “I don’t know if I can do that.”

I sigh, exasperated. “Look, Sean. You’re a changed man. We all are. This past summer was epic. Look at all we accomplished. Our first party, yours and Matt’s first girlfriends, Matt kicking ass in the butterfly, seeing our first naked babe —”

Sean cringes. “
Please.
Do
not
bring that up ever again. I’m still having nightmares about Ms. Luntz threatening to suffocate me with her gargantuan gazongas unless I swim a thousand laps.”

“What I’m trying to say is, you’re no longer wet behind the ears. Tianna breaking up with you is the best thing that could have happened. I mean, seriously, why would you want to waste the best years of your life tied to just one babe? No offense, Matt.”

“Why would I be offended?” Matt says. “It’s not like me and Valerie are getting married.”

“No,” I say. “You’re just having her baby.”

Matt scowls. “You’re so full of it, Coop.”

“Sean-o? A little backup here. Matthew is, in fact, carrying Valerie’s baby, is he not?”

“Leave me out of it,” Sean says, the wind whipping his hair.

I raise my eyebrows at Matt, like “Need I say more?”

“Jealous much?” Matt says.

“Oh, yeah, without a doubt. Green as hell. Aren’t we, Sean? We’d love to have to ask permission anytime we want to do something. And be dragged to every chick flick that comes out. And have to drop everything whenever our ‘honeykins’ calls.”

Matt shakes his head. “Everything you just said is total bullshit. And you know it.”

I smirk. “Then why is your face getting red?”

“Because it isn’t.”

I glance at Sean. “Sean-o?”

Sean looks off in the distance. “I said, leave me out of it.”

Matt rolls his eyes. “Yeah, you guys have really matured this summer. It’s staggering.”

We hop the curb into the student parking lot and pedal toward the bike racks. The lot is already full. I don’t have my driver’s license yet — another thing I need to get started on this year — but everyone knows that if you want to nab a parking space you have to get to school at least twenty minutes early. We pass my sister Angela’s car, recognizable by the fact that it’s the only one in the lot with a car cover. It’s her sickness. One of many.

“Look, Matt,” I say. “You’re acting like we think it’s a
bad
thing. So, Valerie’s got a tight grip on your Mr. BoDangles. At least you’re getting some. Some of
what,
I’m not sure. But you seem comfortable with the trade-off. Personally,
I
wouldn’t be. And I’d be lying if I said Sean and I don’t miss you sometimes. But we get by. Don’t we, Sean?”

Sean says nothing. Jesus, I hope he’s not going to use this Tianna thing as an excuse to be such a soggy turd all year long.

The three of us coast up to the bike racks and leap off our bikes.

“All I’m saying is, we have an opportunity here.” I pull a key from the pocket of my jeans, unlock my bike lock, and unravel the chain from around the seat post. “Our summer goal was a success. We saw a live naked —”

“Hey!” Sean shouts, waving a yellow coil lock at me like a weapon. “Did I not just ask you never to bring that up again?”

I laugh. “Sorry. But remember what I told you at the beginning of the summer? About the natural order of things? Internet porn, live naked girl, and then the dirty deed? Well, we’re ready to take that next step.”

“Would you stop it with that stupid theory of yours?” Matt says. “You wouldn’t know the natural order of things if it crapped on your head.”

Sean snickers. I ignore him and give Matt a you-can’t-be-serious look. “Correct me if I’m wrong here, Matt. Maybe I shouldn’t be including you with me and Sean. Maybe you’ve already rounded all the bases. If you have, just say so.”

“If I did, I wouldn’t tell you,” Matt says, snapping his lock shut for emphasis.

“So,
no
. That’s cool. Maybe they’re more conservative up in Canada. Valerie probably wants to wait until you tie the knot or something. Tell me you’ve at least gotten to second, though?”

We start our trek past the soon-to-be-smelling-like-hell Dumpsters toward the back doors of the school.

“You know what?” Matt sighs. “The only people who talk about sex as much as you are the ones who haven’t even gotten up to bat yet.”

I slap my forehead. “Oh, my God. Not even second base? Jesus. What’s the point of letting Val cinch the choke chain so tight then, Mattie?”

“Valerie and I are doing just fine, thank you very much.”

“Well then?” I ask.

“It’s private.”

“It’s private,”
I mimic. “Dude, you don’t think she’s gabbing about it to all her galpals? That’s all babes do. They talk and talk and talk about
everything
.”

“Whatever,” Matt says. “Anyway, even if I was going to tell you — which I’m not — I have no idea what
your
definitions of the bases are. I’m sure they’re probably incredibly sick and twisted.”

I place my hand on my chest. “Hey, when it comes to the bases I happen to be a purist. First is Frenching. Second is fondling the floppers. Third is rummaging in the basement. Home run is all the way.”

“I thought third was oral,” Sean says.

“No, that’s choking up on the bat,” I say. “And then of course there’s the conference on the mound. The knuckleball. A doubleheader. Extra innings. A grand slam. And, of course, the triple play.” I waggle my eyebrows at my friends. “Which also happens to be in my plans for this year.”

“In your dreams.” Matt grabs the door and holds it open.

“All great things begin with a dream, Mattie,” I say as we enter the building, ready to start what promises to be an epic first semester.

“AND HERE WE GO,”
Mrs. Turris says, reaching her soft, pork bun hand into the blue shoebox that sits on her desk. I feel like I swallowed a still-buzzing bee as she pulls two slips of paper from the box.

I can’t believe we’re already being subjected to the humiliation lottery and it’s only third period on the first day back to school. Mrs. Turris says that this will be a “glorious and enriching opportunity” for us to work with one of our classmates for an
entire semester.
Each couple will get to research a specialized health topic, after which we will — as a pair of studied-up experts — present our findings to the class by “teaching” everyone what we’ve learned.

Not a ten-minute presentation. Not a twenty-minute demonstration. A
full class period
lesson with handouts, visual aids, questions and answers, and who the hell knows what else, the whole of which will make up 85 percent of our grade in Health.

It’s a big old diaper load if you ask me. Sounds like a way for our Health teacher to get out of doing her job. Make the helpless slaves do the dirty work.

When I brought this up to Mrs. Turris — in not so many words — she just laughed and said, “Cooper Redmond, you rascal, you’ve found me out.” Like it was all a big joke or something.

But she’s going forward with it anyway.

If this were one of those work-with-a-partner-for-one-week deals there’d be a lot less at stake. But we’re talking about being shackled to a person for
three solid months
— in and out of class. Depending on who you get, it could either be genius or a world of pain. If I’m lucky, I’ll get Matt or Sean. If I’m super lucky, I’ll be partnered up with one of the Phenomenal Four — Prudence Nash, Kelly West, Bronte Hastings, or Gina Lagotta. It’s rare you get four of the school’s hottest girls in one class, which I take as a solid omen for the year. Working that close with any one of them will give me ample opportunity to play some serious
babes
ball.

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