Read Ishmael and the Hoops of Steel Online
Authors: Michael Gerard Bauer
But Prue didn't stop it. Near-geniuses learn fast. She had Razz's sideburns and she wasn't letting go till she got what she wanted.
âALL RIGHT! YOU WERE AWESOME! YOU WERE UNBELIEVABLE! YOU'VE GOT MORE MUSICAL TALENT IN YOUR LITTLE FINGER THAN THE REST OF THE BAND COMBINED! WE'RE NOT FIT TO BE ON THE SAME PLANET AS YOU, LET ALONE THE SAME STAGE! AND NOT ONLY THAT BUT YOU PLAYING SAX IS THE COOLEST AND THE HOTTEST THING I'VE EVER SEEN IN MY ENTIRE LIFE!'
Prue opened her hands. Razz slumped back panting and groaning. He had beads of sweat on his forehead.
âAwwwww, that is so sweeeeeeeeeet!' Prue squealed with a big smile. âAnd you're not just saying that?'
âPrue! What on earth are you doing?'
It was Mum. She was standing at the rumpus room door. Dad and Uncle Ray were peering in behind her.
âWhat does it look like?' Prue said as she sat straddled on Razz's chest. âI'm auditioning.'
Uncle Ray raised his eyebrows. âThis looks like my kind of band,' he drawled.
âYou wrote this?'
Uncle Ray was holding Razz's poem. Razz was nodding.
âAnd you weren't being tortured or force-fed any sort of mind-altering drug at the time? Amazing.'
âThanks! I reckon it's pretty rigid too. Now we just need some killer music â but like, nothing that's going to overpower the lyrics.'
âJust a stick beating on a rock, then.'
Razz looked doubtful. I don't think he quite âgot' Uncle Ray.
Writing the music for âHot or what!' ended up being a lot of fun. Dad and Uncle Ray did most of the work, of course, but Razz, Prue and I threw in a few ideas. Dad said we wanted it simple, fast, loud and targeted at the inner Neanderthal. An hour or so later when he played through the final version we were pretty sure we had a caveman hit.
After lunch, Ignatius and Melvin arrived. Our backing singers â Scobie, Bill and Theodore â were going to rehearse with us back at school. The first task was to teach Yippy the song. After his initial run-through with Dad on acoustic guitar, Uncle Ray described Mel as âthe love child of Johnny Rotten and Bruce Lee'. The big problem was that Yippy's musical timing was about as good as his volleyball timing. Dad said he
was âmore your intuitive artiste'. That basically meant he just sang when and how he felt like it.
On our first couple of run-throughs as a band, I doubt it would have been obvious to a casual listener that we were all in fact playing the same song. And I'm sure that most people would have just assumed that Melvin Yip was suffering from some rare musical form of Tourette's Syndrome. As for Ignatius, he seemed totally overwhelmed by the whole thing. Dad kept telling him to relax and forget everything he'd ever learnt about music, while Uncle Ray just growled, âIt's rock and roll, for god's sake, not Rachmaninoff!'
But then, on our third and fourth attempts, something happened. A few times, totally by accident, everything kind of clicked together, and for a few bars we found ourselves somehow all playing and singing the same thing at the same time. And it felt good. Really good. It was like we'd caught the same wave and it was driving us all along. Of course it didn't last long and we ended up being dumped head first into the musical sand, but the thrill of the ride stuck with us and we were keen for more.
After Dad did some extra work with Yippy on his timing and Uncle Ray got on guitar and ran through the music a few times with the rest of us, things really started to come together. I'm not saying we turned into the world's greatest band, but at least you could tell we
were
a band, not just a group of people standing around making noise at each other. By the end of the afternoon we'd managed to get through the song a few times with everyone in pretty good shape. We even played an extended version with Uncle Ray joining in on lead guitar, Dad sharing the vocals with Melvin, and Prue doing ad lib solos on both violin and sax. We really knew we were getting somewhere when even Ignatius threw in a couple of unscripted notes. Razz claimed we were the next super-group and hailed us the Dugongs of Steel.
I went to bed that night tired but excited. For the first time
I think I understood maybe just a little bit of what being in the Dugongs must have meant for my dad all those years ago and what it still meant for him now. I also started to think that maybe we could actually do it. That maybe the Hoops of Steel could play well enough to win the Battle of the Bands. And if we could do that, then maybe we could do something that at the beginning of the year seemed totally impossible. Maybe we could win the College Cup for Miss Tarango.
But there were still a lot of maybes to get through.
We had two more Hoops of Steel rehearsals in the music room after school with our three backing singers. Then after a busy and successful Arts Week, Open Day arrived.
The feature event was always the Battle of the Bands. It was held on a special stage in front of the main oval grandstand. I don't know about everybody else, but for me, a slight case of total and absolute terror had started to set in over the previous couple of days.
Now there was a little over an hour to go. We'd just finished a couple of unplugged run-throughs of the song, and Razz, Prue and I were waiting in one of the spare classrooms for the others to return with some food.
I checked on Razz. I couldn't tell if he was nervous or not. He was drumming away like a maniac on his knees while his legs jumped about like pistons. But that was Razz's ânormal'. Prue, on the other hand, didn't look quite her regular confident near-genius self. She was chewing on a nail and staring at the carpet. She seemed a little on edge.
âRAZZ, FOR GOD'S SAKE! CAN YOU SIT STILL AND STOP THAT THUMPING FOR JUST A
SECOND
!'
OK, she sounded a little on edge as well.
âWhat?' Razz said, yanking out an earplug. âWhat's up, Prudles? Not packing it, are you?'
âNo! Well ⦠yeah, maybe. Just a little.' Prue screwed up her mouth. âMaybe just a lot.'
âAwwwwwww. Come here. What little Prudie-Wudie needs is a great big cuddle and a kiss from Uncle Wazzie.'
Prue's face looked like it had been carved from stone â and by a not-very-happy chiseller.
âThen again, maybe not. Whatcha worried about, anyway?'
âWell, you know, just the usual things â playing in front of all those people after only a couple of rehearsals, being a total disaster, coming last, getting laughed off stage. I mean, we're not exactly your regular rock band, are we? We're a bit ⦠weird.'
âWeird? No way, Prudles. We've got Reverse Cool.'
âReverse Cool? What's that supposed to be?'
âAh,' Razz said, shaking his head and smiling warmly at Prue, âyoung kids today. You know nothing â but you're
gorgeous
!'
âRazz, if you want to keep your sideburns attached to your head, just get on with it.'
âWell, listen and learn. It's like this. You've got two types of cool â your traditional Classic Cool and your Reverse Cool. Most people know Classic Cool when they see it. That's your common everyday movie star, rock god, fashion model â¦
me â¦
kind of cool.'
Prue stuck her finger in her throat and pretended to throw up. Razz smiled and mumbled âGorgeous!' but carried on regardless.
âBut the old Reverse Cool is a bit trickier to recognise. To have Reverse Cool, some
thing
or some
one
has to be so uniquely
uncool
that they actually turn cool again.'
âThat's ridiculous,' Prue said.
Razz thought for a moment and then tried to explain.
âLook, imagine there's this island, right, and it's surrounded by water.'
Prue's mouth fell open. âWow, what an
unusual
island.'
âYes, it is,' Razz said, ignoring the sarcasm. âBecause all the cool people in the world live on this big beach on one side of
the island. Now, as it turns out, the closer you can get to that beach the cooler you are. The further off the beach you go, the less cool you are. Get it?'
Prue nodded at Razz like he was a dangerous mental patient.
âGood. So just recapping: if you're on the beach you're way cool. If you're wading in the water you're a bit cool. If you're a couple of kilometres out to sea you're pretty daggy. And if you're just barely visible on the horizon ⦠you belong to Creswell House.'
Razz stopped briefly to receive a round of applause from me and Prue.
âBut here's the thing. You know how the Earth is round?'
âWell, I read
something
about that on Wikipedia,' Prue said, âbut I wasn't sure how accurate it was.'
âYes, good one, Prudles. Anyway, what I'm saying is, the further you go away from Cool Island beach the more uncool you become,
BUT
eventually you reach the other side of the world and then you start getting
closer
to Cool Island, but from the
reverse
side.'
âAnd you've worked all this out by yourself?' Prue said.
âIt's 100 per cent Razz. I am the Guru of Cool!'
âSo, Mr Guru, you reckon the Hoops of Steel have Reverse Cool?'
âAbsolutely. Check it out. First we got Bill and young Ishmael here. They got your very subtle Corny Nice Guy Reverse Cool.'
I wasn't exactly sure if I'd been complimented or insulted.
âThen you've got Bunga. He's got Reverse Cool 'cause he doesn't even know there is a Cool Island beach and if he did, he wouldn't care.'
I agreed with that one. Theodore was a Cool Island entirely unto himself.
âAnd then of course we got our big guns. First up, Prindabel. Now the Prindabuster is your absolute cutting-edge Reverse Cool. He really pushes the envelope. Then we got Melvin, of
course. He's a clear case of Extreme Reverse Cool. Either that or he's clinically insane.'
Razz spread his arms wide.
âAnd finally there's the Scobemeister â the reigning and undisputed champeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeen of Reverse Cool. Scobes has Reverse Cool coming out of his uncool backside. He has so much Reverse Cool everyone can see it. That's why he's School Captain. Scobie has brought Reverse Cool to the masses.'
Prue watched Razz closely and waited for him to continue, but he just pushed in an earplug and started to get comfortable in his chair.
âYep, no doubt about it. The Hoops of Steel have got Reverse Cool to burn,' he said as he closed his eyes.
âYeah, well, great theory, Razz. I look forward to reading about it in more detail in all the scientific journals.'
Razz grinned but remained silent as his head began bobbing to a beat. Prue watched him for a few seconds with a crooked smile fading on her face. Then she picked up a magazine and started flicking through its pages. She didn't look as if she was enjoying it much. The further into the magazine she went, the faster, louder and harder her flicks became until I was sure the pages were going to start ripping off and flying across the room. They didn't. The whole magazine did. Right into Razz's chest.
âHelp! I'm under fire! Incoming!' Razz said, holding his hands in front of his face as the magazine tumbled to the floor. âHey, what did I do?'
Prue's eyes were little pinpricks of anger.
âWell, what about
me
, then?' she snapped. âYou talked about everyone else except me with your stupid theory. So what about
me
?'
Razz was a picture of innocence and confusion.
âWhat about you, what?'
âWhat about me and Reverse Cool?'
âYou and Reverse Cool?'
âStop repeating everything I say!'
âStop repeating everything you â¦'
Even Razz could hear the nuclear warhead ticking this time. âAh ⦠What exactly would you like to know?'
âHave I got any Reverse Cool, obviously!' Prue shouted, then added quickly, ânot that I even believe in it in the first place ⦠or I actually
care
about what you think ⦠but you know ⦠just for interest's sake ⦠If the stupid thing
was
true ⦠would I have any?'
Razz pulled on his earphone cable until it popped from his ear. Then he stared hard at my sister. She was wearing a T-shirt with a picture of the Beatles on it. It was the one from that old album cover with the four of them on the zebra crossing. Except Prue had photo-shopped it and now two of them were floating above the ground. One was higher up as if he'd left first. She had sewn little angel wings on their backs.
Razz wrinkled up his nose.
âYou? Reverse Cool?'
Prue folded her arms tightly across her chest and everything but her eyes said that she couldn't care less what Razz was going to say next.
âSorry,' Razz said, shaking his head slowly, âI thought you knew already. You're the Queen of Reverse Cool, Prudles.
You
make Reverse Cool hot.'
â
Really?
' Prue said, perhaps just a little more excitedly than she intended. âWell, that's â¦
interesting â¦
you know ⦠If there really was such a thing ⦠Anyway, um ⦠Hey, look at the time ⦠I guess I'd better get myself changed ⦠You know, for the big performance.'
Prue sprang from the desk she'd been sitting on and grabbed up a bag and a shiny black wig. She held them up.
âShowtime!' she said and skipped from the room.
Razz watched her go before pushing his earplug in, closing his eyes and settling back in his chair.
âMy work here is done,' he said.
There were six entries in the Battle of the Bands. Two from Creswell, two from Charlton and one each from Radley and Franklin. We were the last to perform, so our nerves had plenty of time to get well and truly jangled.