Read King of the Mutants Online
Authors: Samantha Verant
Tags: #middle grade, #fantasy, #action and adventure, #science fiction, #mutants
KING OF THE MUTANTS
Samantha Vérant
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The author makes no claims to, but instead acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the word marks mentioned in this work of fiction.
Copyright © 2014 by Samantha Vérant
KING OF THE MUTANTS by Samantha Vérant
All rights reserved. Published in the United States of America by Month9Books, LLC.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Published by Tantrum Books for Month9Books
Cover illustrated by Zachary Schoenbaum
Cover Copyright © 2014 Month9Books
To
every
child
, tween, teen, and
adult who has ever felt different or freakish, remember, the world would be an awfully boring place if everybody was ‘normal’.
I dedicate this book to you—the wonderful and unique you.
KING OF THE MUTANTS
Samantha Vérant
HOW TO EXPLAIN MYSELF
Most people call me a freak.
Or a mutant.
Or a monster.
But I think of myself as a rock star—totally tricked out and freaking unique. After all, norms pay big bucks just to see my act at the circus. And, seriously, how many kids do you know that have a cult following? How about posters and books and movies about their lives? Sound like a dream to some of you?
It isn’t. It’s time to set the record straight.
See, I never asked to become King of the Mutants.
What makes me so weird? I’ll get to that soon, but first a little warning: if you are faint of heart, can’t handle the unknown, or if you really hate clowns like I do, I wouldn’t turn another page because things are going to get very freakish.
And it’s the story of my life.
I was born with the name Maverick Mercury, and I’m unlike any other kid you’ve ever met.
HOW TO SAVE A BOY FROM BECOMING A PANCAKE
The day my life took a turn for the worse was the day I met Freddie Finch. It’s not that Freddie’s a bad guy. He’s pretty darn cool in his own Freddie way. It’s just that if Freddie hadn’t run away from home, we wouldn’t have been hiding behind Bobo’s cage. And if we hadn’t been hiding behind Bobo’s cage, we wouldn’t have overheard Grumbling and Yorgi’s conversation. And if we hadn’t heard that particular conversation, there’s a pretty good chance I wouldn’t have become King of the Mutants.
But I’m kind of getting ahead of myself. Let me start at the beginning.
It was mid-afternoon, nasty hot, and the circus was holed up in this Podunk town in Florida. Sweat poured off my body. My eyeballs were seared to my eyelids. My sneakers practically melted to the asphalt. It would have been cooler dancing inside the Devil’s mouth, and I prayed for rain.
Our “big show” started in two days, but it wasn’t big at all. The lamest of the lame, we didn’t even have musicians, just a crappy old record that always skipped during the opening procession. One of our two lions was blind; the other didn’t have teeth. Yorgi’s clowns were just plain diabolical. And don’t get me started on the Flying Forsinis. Seriously, trapeze artists weren’t supposed to be that accident-prone.
Grumbling’s Traveling Circus and Sideshow was a pathetic joke. A dog and pony show would have been more entertaining.
Thing was, even at the cruddiest of circuses, you worked eleven months straight regardless of weather, sickness, or even the lack of paying customers. A day off? Getting one of those was like winning the lottery. So on that scorcher of a day, I just had to suck it up and get back to my list of never ending chores in the menagerie—the tent where our limited collection of “exotic” animals hunkered down during the run of a show.
I stood knee deep in a mound of sawdust in the center practice ring. The strong scent of animal urine wafted up to my nose, the stench even more rancid because of the heat. Surrounding me on all sides—once bright blue, red, yellow, and green—the paint on the animals’ enclosures peeled off like sunburned skin. Inside the cages, shrieks, growls, and roars came at me from every direction.
My head felt like it was going to split open.
And then it went numb with dread.
A loud, hacking cough warned me of Burt’s looming approach. That would be Burt Grumbling, the boss man, the Grumbling in Grumbling’s. He limped into the menagerie, his lame foot scraping behind him because it couldn’t keep up with the rest of him. All the animals fell silent. Even they knew the consequences of irritating Burt. I held my breath and kept on sweeping, hoping he’d go away.
“Mutant,” Burt bellowed, “some of the midgets are under the weather. Stayed out all night partying in town. If you don’t pull ten times your weight today, you won’t get any dinner.” He hacked up another cough. “Look at me when I’m talking to you, you ignoramus. Show some respect.”
Luck just wasn’t on my side. I turned to face the satanic ringmaster of doom.
Pug-dog-ugly, Burt was as tall as he was wide and his face looked like it had been run over by a steamroller. He may not have been fast, but he was quick on the draw and always dressed for the kill. Skull-shaped, silver buttons decorated his knee-high, black leather boots. A two-foot long, spike-knuckled trench knife stuck out of a leather holster and attached to his flame-patterned riding britches. To top off this murderous look, he wore a sweat stained white tank that brought attention to his heavily inked arms.
An art gallery from my worst nightmares, every tattoo pictured an evil looking clown. The most messed up of them covered his entire left shoulder. Colored black, red, and orange, the clown’s mouth twisted into a vicious smirk.
Like Burt, the clown clenched a cigar between his jagged teeth.
Unlike Burt, blood dripped out of its mouth.
“Did you hear me, mutant?” Burt scraped closer. “Don’t just stand there looking like a mental midget when you have work to do.”
Wait a second. I wasn’t a First of May—a newbie to the show. Performers, even sideshow attractions like me, supposedly had rank. I crossed my arms over my chest. “What about those roustabouts? Don’t the new guys have to do the grunt work?”
“All the workers went out last night too. Everybody did.”
The tone in Burt’s voice indicated everybody meant everybody but me.
You’d think I’d be used to being an outcast at the circus, but I wasn’t. Even so, I had to hide my feelings. If Burt sensed a chink in your emotional armor, an ounce of insecurity, it got you more than trouble; it got you a beating. I pretended to wipe sweat from my brow. In reality, a giant alligator tear crept down my cheek.
“What’s wrong with you?” asked Burt. “You feeling under the weather?”
“It’s so hot out. I feel like I’m going to puke,” I said.
Burt slapped his thigh in laughter and snorted. “Awww, the poor little monster can’t handle the heat? You want to cool off, do ya? How about I turn you into bloodsicle treats and feed you to the lions?”
I hung my head lower and avoided his gaze.
Burt lifted up my chin, his meat-pulverizing grip tight. “Once you’re done cleaning out the animals’ cages, pick up the garbage and elephant crap off the midway. Then set up the stands in the Big Top. When you’re finished doing that, scrub them all down. If they’re not spic-and-span, even one piece of gum left under the seats, I’ll use that giant hammer from that Whack-A-Mole game to pound you into a pulp.”
“Can’t anybody help me out?” I pleaded in a lame attempt to get some sympathy. But, like trying to calm down our hyperactive chimpanzee, I knew it would be useless.
Burt’s bloodshot eyes smoldered with hate. He got right up in my face. If he wasn't still holding onto my chin, his rotten breath would have knocked me over. “You’re the human marvel, you figure it out on your own. Unless you have a death wish, slacking off isn’t an option.”
In his customary mode of pushing meanness to whole new levels, Burt punched me hard on the back of the arm before lumbering out of the tent.
Depression sunk in.
One day I hoped this place would become a nightmarish memory, but until I could gather up the courage to leave, I was stuck. Where on earth would a boy like me go? I wasn’t even accepted at the crappiest of circuses. The dreams I had of a better life were just like the pile of empty peanut shells scattered by my feet. Crushed.
One of the lions let out a pathetic roar—his reminder it was feeding time. Tough as it was, when you had eight messed up animals counting on you to take care of them, you had to put personal issues aside. I sighed, got back to my work, and everything went like clockwork until I heard it.
“Ohhhhh-argh-ahhhh.”
It came from behind Bobo’s enclosure.
Just great, I thought, somebody’s trying to pull one over on me again. The other performers’ idea of a good gag usually involved getting me in trouble with Burt. I crossed my arms over my chest, bracing myself for any attacks, and yelled, “Whichever one of you jokers is hiding, you better get out now! ’Cause if you don’t, my dog’s going to rip you to shreds. Either that, or I will.”
I expected one of our midgets to pop out, say “Hahaha, sucker, we got you good,” and kick me hard in the shins with a steel-toed boot. But nothing happened. Total silence. Curiosity got the best of me. I pointed toward the small opening in between the cage and the tent and whispered, “Snaggletooth, make yourself useful, go check it out.”
A mess of a mutt, Snaggletooth adopted me somewhere between Kansas and Nebraska. No matter what I did, I just couldn’t shake the beast. His brown and black hair matted down onto his body. His eyes were as yellow as Burt’s sallow skin. And his jagged teeth, what he had left of them, stuck out every which way—kind of like mine, except I have all my clackers. Needless to say, we made a good pair.