Dan Versus Nature (10 page)

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Authors: Don Calame

BOOK: Dan Versus Nature
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Hank turns to Charlie. “I really am very sorry. I honestly don’t recall . . . I mean, I think I would have remembered that . . . God . . .” He runs his hand through his hair. “I feel awful —”

“It’s OK, Mr. Langston,” Charlie says. “I’m sure you’ve had a lot of things on your mind lately, what with the wedding planning and the fun camping trip and all.”

Just then the conveyor belt on the baggage carousel groans to life. As Hank hauls our packs from the conveyor, Charlie digs around in his carry-on, finds a small brown dropper bottle, and surreptitiously hands it over to me.

“I’m going to the bathroom,” I announce as soon as I pocket the bottle. I hold the Baby-Real-A-Lot out to Hank. “Can you take Robbie?”

Hank grimaces. “Maybe Charlie would like a turn.”

Charlie holds up his hands. “I’m going to have to respectfully decline. I took my turn the very first week of school, before the filthy masses got their paws on it. And even then I wore rubber gloves the entire time. But now that thing is a festering petri dish teeming with untold quantities of bacteria. I’d sooner suck on a kitchen sponge.”

“Right.” Hank sighs. “OK. Give it to me.” He yanks the baby from me.

“Careful,” I say, glancing at my ID bracelet. “Abuse points count double.”

“I’m not abusing him,” Hank says. “However, if he poops his diaper again, I won’t be changing him. He’ll have to wait until you get back.”

“But that’ll raise my neglect score,” I say.

Hank cocks his head. “Well, then, you’d better make it quick.”

“Jeez,” I say, raising my eyebrows. “I sure hope you and Mom aren’t planning on having kids.”

If Hank isn’t questioning his parenting abilities now, just wait until I treat him to a lungful of Liquid Limburger.

On my way back from the bathroom, I stop by the newsstand to pick up some supplies for a future incursion: a mini-sleeve of sour-cream-and-onion Pringles, some Skittles, a bag of barbecue Fritos, some beef jerky, a pack of peanut butter cups, and a 3 Musketeers bar. The trembling old man behind the counter screws his face up and gags when my cheese-scented armpit stink hits him, but I pretend to be oblivious.

By the time I return to Hank and Charlie, the baggage claim area is nearly empty and they’ve taken up a perch on a bench by the door.

I plop my bag of goodies on the seat beside Hank, making sure not to stand too close — not yet.

“He started fussing again,” Hank says, leaning forward and handing Robbie over to me. “Didn’t soil his diaper, though. I checked. He probably just needs some rocking or burping.”

“Thanks,” I say. I glance at the blank screen on my ID bracelet and saucer my eyes. “Holy crap! Did you . . . Did you hit him? Or drop him or something?”

“No,” Hank says, shaking his head. “No way.”

“Why am I’m getting a ‘gross mistreatment’ warning?” I lie, tapping the empty bracelet display. “Apparently, I’ll be receiving a visit from child services.”

“Nothing happened,” Hank insists.

“Well,
something
happened,” I say, unwrapping the blanket to check Robbie for damages. As soon as the blanket’s removed, the doll’s left leg falls off, clattering to the floor. “Jesus Christ, Hank! You dismembered him!”

“I did nothing of the sort. I swear!” Hank looks over at Charlie for support. “We just sat here, right? Tell him.”

“Hank held the baby very gingerly, Dan,” Charlie says.

Hank looks up at me. “See?”

“At least whilst I was here,” Charlie says. “Of course, I did spend five minutes hacking the ‘Healthy Choices’ vending machine. They were pretty tricky with their codes but, as Benjamin Franklin once said, ‘Energy and persistence conquer all things.’” Charlie holds up a pack of apple chips and an organic pomegranate juice.

“I can’t believe this! I’m totally screwed. Not only am I going to fail Life Skills, but I’ll probably get detention for damaging him.” I snatch up the leg and try to fit it back into place. As I do, one of his arms drops off.

The three of us stare as the little baby limb rattles on the linoleum.

“OK,” Hank says, rubbing his face. “Obviously, the doll is defective.”

“He was fine when I took him home.” I glare at Hank. “Are you
sure
nothing happened? Maybe you bumped into something. Dropped him when you were putting him down.”

“I never put him down,” Hank says, exasperated. “I held him gently the entire time.”

“Sure, OK,” I say, my voice laced with suspicion. I bend over and snatch up the arm. “Although . . .” I gesture with the tiny appendage. “Now that I think about it, you were pretty annoyed when I asked you to look after him. I’m just saying.”

Hank blinks at me. “I’d never hurt your baby, Dan. Doll or otherwise. He must be damaged from all the students handling him.”

“Yeah, maybe.” I push the limb back into its socket, then wrap the blanket back around the baby and sit down next to Hank. “Though I doubt Ms. Drizzler will buy that excuse.”

I lean back and start rocking the baby in one arm. “So, any word from our escorts?” I scoot closer to Hank and rest my free arm on the bench back behind him.

“I tried calling the number I have, but —” Hank’s nose spasms. He coughs and shifts over a bit. “I just . . . got their voice mail. We should be OK, though. I confirmed everything before we left.” He coughs again, then “casually” looks over his shoulder at the teeming rain outside — away from my
eau de armpit.
“Probably just got held up by the weather.”

“Over a quarter of all car crashes are weather related,” Charlie informs us.

Hank nods. “All we can do is hope for the best.” He grabs his copy of
Outdoor Life
and opens it. “Let’s just relax and . . . enjoy the nice Muzak for a while.” He turns so that most of his back is to me.

After a couple of minutes, I manage to get Baby Robbie to sleep. I place the doll on the seat beside me, then pull out my dummy sketchbook and pencils from my bag. Might as well get some work done while we wait.

I turn to a clean page near the back and start in on some drawing, angling the sketchbook so that Hank can’t see my real sketches if he glances my way.

The next set of panels is going to be a kick-ass action sequence: Princess Erilin and Sir Stan leading the Royal Infantry into battle with the Night Goblin and his army of Hobgobblers.

This scene is key. Every graphic novel needs a few really spectacular eye-catching moments. If I can get the details right here, I think I have a real chance of getting this book published. And wouldn’t
that
be supremely impressive to an art school admissions board.

Not to mention to a certain gorgeous girl I know.

I glance over and smile at the slumbering Baby Robbie, swaddled in the tiny sweater Erin knitted. With yarn she held in her very own hands.

And once again, I get a serious pang of guilt. If Erin had any idea what we’d done to her child so far — what we
plan
to do to him — she’d never forgive me. Charlie had better be right when he said he can reprogram my ID bracelet to make it look like Baby Robbie was nothing but pampered the entire week.

I’m about to return to working on my sketch when Charlie clears his throat dramatically, like he’s got a five-pound hairball stuck in his windpipe.

Hank and I turn and stare at him. Charlie smiles apologetically. “Sorry. This canned air is murder on my
cilia.

Hank turns back to his magazine, but Charlie holds my gaze, giving me a loaded look.

“You don’t want to harm your
cilia,
” he says, sniffing loudly. “That could be quite unpleasant.”

I gulp and put my sketchbook back into my bag.

I take a deep breath. “Hank?”

“Hmm?” Hank glances up from his magazine.

“I was wondering . . .” I start. “Do you . . . do you know how to dance?”

“Dance?” He peers at me. “What do you mean?”

“Dance,” I repeat. “You know. Like, with a girl.”

He laughs. “Well, I wouldn’t say I’m
Saturday Night Fever
good, but —”

“I don’t know what that means,” I say.

“Before your time.” Hank shakes his head. “Anyway, I do know a step or two. Why?”

“Can you show me?” I ask.

His eyebrows shoot up. “Show you?”

I stare down at the ground. “I just . . . the thing is . . . there’s this dance at school. And there’s this girl I’d like to ask, only I’ve never slow-danced before. So I was wondering . . . Can you show me how to do it?”

“Sure thing, bud,” he says. “Your mom and I’ll give you a lesson when we get home. We’ll have you in school-dance form in no time.” He leans back and raises his magazine again, like the subject is closed.

“Yeah, the thing is,” I say, “the dance is the night we get back.” I swallow. “Is there any way we could do it, like, now?”

Hank slides his eyes toward me. “
Right
now?” He glances around at the near-empty baggage claim area.

I nod. “If it’s too much of a bother . . .”

“No,” Hank says, clearing his throat. “It’s just . . . Well . . .”

Charlie leans forward. “I wouldn’t mind getting a few pointers myself.”

Hank sighs heavily. “I, uh, I guess I can show you guys the basics.” He places his magazine down and stands. “All right, let me think here.” He pinches the bridge of his nose. “OK. So. You want to have very good posture. That’s key.” Hank straightens up and elongates his neck. “You’ll position yourself so you’re looking over the girl’s right shoulder. Then you want to get into hold. So the man’s left hand takes the woman’s right hand, palms facing each other.”

“Unless, of course it’s two men dancing,” Charlie corrects. “Or two women. We do live in the twenty-first century, Mr. Langston.”

“Right, well, in that case,” Hank says. “Whoever’s the
lead
dancer will use their left hand, while the non-lead dancer will use their right. Then the lead dancer’s right hand”— he curves his arm around his imaginary partner’s shoulder —“is placed on the non-lead dancer’s left shoulder blade. And the non-lead dancer puts her — or his — hand on the lead dancer’s right shoulder. Then you guide your partner in a simple box step in time to the music.” Hank starts dancing to the canned version of “Piano Man” playing over the airport speakers. “One-two-three, one-two-three, one-two-three, one-two-three.” He stops and lowers his hands. “Just like that.”

“I’m not really sure I get it,” I say, standing and stepping into his personal space, my gamy bouquet billowing around my body like a stink cloud. “Can we practice it together?”

“Oh, um . . .” Hank says, blinking hard and taking a step back, casually rubbing his nostrils with the tips of his fingers. “Well . . .”

“I’m more of a hands-on learner.” I take a step closer and hold up my arms like I’m ready to dance with him, exposing my putrid pits to his face.

“I don’t think, uh —” Hank retches a little. “I’m not sure that . . .”

“You don’t want to help me?” I say, dropping my arms.

“It’s not . . . th-that,” Hank stammers, hacking. “It’s just that . . . It’s . . . Did you, um . . . This morning . . . When you got up . . . Did you put on . . .?”

“Did I put on what?” I ask, the picture of innocence.

He rubs the back of his neck. “You know what? Never mind.”

“I get it,” I say dejectedly. “It’s too much of a hassle. No big deal. I just won’t go to the dance. She probably wouldn’t have said yes anyway.”

“Wait, Dan,” Hank says, his voice all nasal, like he’s mouth breathing. “It’s OK. We can do this.”

“You sure?” I ask, looking all bright-eyed and hopeful.

Hank nods. “Mmm-hmm. But, uh, let’s make it quick, OK? In case our escorts show up.” He grabs my arms and repositions my hands, all the while holding his breath. “You be the non-lead first. Then we can switch.” He turns his head away from me, breathing the air from another direction. “That feel OK?”

“It’s a little awkward,” I say. I step even closer to him. “There. That’s better.”

“OK. Good.” He gags and clears his throat like he’s just sucked in an insect.

“Are you all right?” I ask.

“Fine, fine,” Hank says. “So, just follow my lead. As I step, you do the reverse. Got it?”

“Yeah. I think so.”

“Good.” Hank’s brow is beading with sweat and his complexion is pale. “Let’s . . .” He swallows. “Let’s give it a try.”

Hank starts to move me backward, then sideways. I make a point to step on his feet. We stumble. I fall forward and press my cheese-tainted body up close to his.

“Don’t fight me,” Hank says, wheezing.

“Sorry,” I say, and raise my elbows high like chicken wings.

Hank suppresses a dry heave. “Just follow my lead.”

As he guides me forward, I take an exaggerated step and “accidentally” knee him in the balls.

“Ooof !”
Hank folds over and hacks.

“Oh, God,” I say. “Sorry-sorry-sorry. Are you OK?”

I lean over to help, planting my polluted underarm in his face.

“I’m fine,” Hank rasps. “Please. Just . . .” He staggers backward. “I think we . . . should stop.”

“I can do better,” I say, taking a step toward him. “I just need to practice.”

Hank holds up his hand to ward me off. “It’s not your dancing.” His whole body shudders. “Listen to me. I don’t . . . I don’t mean to offend you or . . . insult you in any way, but . . . we seriously need to talk about your . . . your body odor.”

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