Authors: Daniel Pinkwater
Madge, Mary Margaret's fellow matadora, had round glasses and braces, and drooled when she talked, so she had to keep sucking spit between words.
Madge got cheese in her braces when we had our first sleepover treatâpizza pie. I had heard of pizza pie because of "That's Amore," the Dean Martin song, which was on the radio all the time, but I didn't actually know what it was. The song says that when the moon hits your eye like a big pizza pie, you're in love, which makes no sense. I always pictured the pizza pie as being something like a cream pie. It's round, but it does not resemble any pie I ever sawâit is not a dessert, it does not contain fruit, it does not have a top crust and a bottom crust. It's more like thin, crusty bread than pie, and it has tomatoes, and cheese! It's served hot. It tastes great! It is, without any doubt, the greatest food ever invented, and I predict it is going to be insanely popular.
"It comes from Italy, and our full-time live-in chef comes from Italy, so he knows how to make it," Mary Margaret said.
We had two pizza pies. One had mushrooms in addition to the cheese and tomato sauce, and one had little slices of spicy sausage. Best thing I ever ate.
The next sleepover treat was swimming in the Finklesteins' heated indoor and outdoor swimming pool. This pool is part inside the house, and there's a glass wall at one end, like a huge window, that comes down to within a couple of feet of the water, and the pool connects to another, bigger, part of the pool that's outdoors. There are underwater lights, and at night the whole thing glows. We had to wait a half-hour after our pizza before we could swim, and during this time we sat around the indoor part of the pool, wearing bathing suits supplied by the Finklesteins, and talked.
"Let's talk about who we don't like at school," Mary Margaret Finklestein said.
Here we go,
I thought. I was starting to feel very maladjustedâand proud of it. Mary Margaret, Meg, and Peggy counted off a bunch of kids they regarded as dopes, drips, and idiots. Madge, from the bullfighting school, did not know these kids because she didn't go to Harmonious Reality, but she agreed that they sounded like dopes, drips, and idiots. Giggle, giggle, squeal, titter. I was a guest, and had eaten Mary Margaret Finklestein's pizza pie, so I said nothing. The conversation turned to who they did likeâall of these were boys. They rated which boys at our school were the cutest, and who they would choose for a boyfriend. Plenty of giggling. This was getting intolerable.
So I said something. "I have a boyfriend," I said.
I knew that would get them. Well, I didn't know in advance, because I just said it, blurted it out. But telling these goofy, giggly, gossipy rich girls I had an actual boyfriend got their attention in a big way. First, none of them had reached the boyfriend stage yet, or even had talked to a boy in a nonidiotic way, and second, I was present as somebody's good deed and wasn't expected to even speak at this sleepover.
I had noticed during the pizza that, while not actually ignoring meâthey did smile at me pleasantlyâthe other girls did not address me directly, or seem to find anything wrong with the fact that I hadn't said a single word after hello. I was sure Mary Margaret Finklestein had been put up to inviting meâand my mother's hand was in thisâshe was probably friends with someone in the family, or maybe did psychiatry on them. I was there to help me get socialized. Thus, when I said I had a boyfriend, the effect was dynamic, because it was the first sentence I had spoken, and also because it was about something they were all interested in.
"You have a boyfriend?" Mary Margaret, Meg, Peggy, and Madge asked.
"Yep," I said.
"Really?"
"Yep."
"Who is he? What is he like?" they wanted to know. "Oh, look!" I said. "It's been a half-hour." And I dived into the pool.
I swam laps for a while. The other girls splashed around. And giggled and squealed.
When I got out of the water, Mary Margaret Finklestein asked me right away, "You don't really have a boyfriend, do you?"
"Sure do," I said.
"So, what's his name?"
"They call him ... Bruce Bunyip," I said. Now it was their turn to surprise me. They knew who he was! Anyway, Meg and Peggy did.
"Bruce Bunyip! Bruce Bunyip is your boyfriend?"
"Yep. He's my sweetie-pie," I said.
"Bruce Bunyip? Bruce Bunyip?" Meg and Peggy were all excited.
"Who is Bruce Bunyip?" Mary Margaret and Madge wanted to know.
"He's bad!" Meg and Peggy told them. "He's practically a juvenile delinquent!"
This was working out better than I could have hoped. "His father is Sholmos Bunyip. He was the head of International Mammon Studios, and the most powerful man in Hollywood. But then he turned into some kind of recluseâhe just sits in his room in his house, which is a replica of a Roman villa, and never comes out."
It turned out that Meg's and Peggy's fathers were big wheels in the movie business, like Mary Margaret's, so they knew stuff like this.
"And Bruce Bunyip runs wild. He goes to Brown-Sparrow Military Academy, but they have no control over him. He does whatever he wants."
"Why does Sholmos Bunyip sit in his room like a hermit?" Madge asked. "Did he go crazy or something?"
"Remember two or three years ago, I think it was, when we had that huge rainstorm?" Meg asked.
"Oh, when everything was soaking wet, and stuff was floating around?"
"Yes, and it rained so much that people's memories
were affected and nobody could remember what had happened in the last twenty-four hours."
"Oh, yes! I remember how wet it was after the rain, but I don't remember the rain," Mary Margaret said.
"Rightâthat happened to everybody," Peggy said. "Well, it was right after thatâSholmos Bunyip was never seen again, and that is when Bruce Bunyip went wild."
They were talking about the rainstorm that happened the night my probably insane friend Neddie Wentworthstein claimed he was going forth to do battle with the powers of darkness.
This was all pretty interesting. I wanted to know more. But the girls had reached their limit for intelligent conversation. I was going to have to question Neddie Wentworthsteinâand I would be on the lookout for Bruce Bunyip, my pretend boyfriend, around the Rolling Doughnut. The rest of the sleepover consisted of playing records, also ice cream sundaes, watching an awful movie that had not been released yet in the family's projection room, and I don't know what else, because I went to bed early and read the
Mad
comic I had brought with me.
The Hermione has a nice gardenâsort of formal, Spanish, with red tile walks, and hunks of lawn. There are some neatly trimmed shrubs, and lots of flowers. Mr. Mangabay takes care of it. There's a good view of it from our living room windows. I observed Neddie Wentworthstein in the garden, exercising his duck.
Neddie has a duck. Also a parakeet. The duck came as a little yellow duckling at Easter time, and Neddie raised it in his sunporch bedroom. Neddie had taught the duck to follow him around, which is no trickâducks do that naturally, follow their mothers, and Neddie was the only mother the duck had ever known. More impressive was that he had taught the duck to obey the commands "stay"
and "sit" and to come when called. He got the technique out of an article about training dogs in
Boys' Life
and adapted it to duck training. The duck's name is Lucifer.
I decided to go down and talk to him.
"Look! Lucifer can drop on command. Lucifer, down!" The duck flopped onto his belly.
"I'm going to teach him to attack," Neddie Wentworthstein said. "He can be a protection duck."
"I wanted to ask you, what happened that night?"
"To what night do you refer?" Neddie asked.
"You rememberâthe night you went off by yourself to do battle with the powers of darkness, something like that."
"Oh, yes, that night," Neddie said. "It was wet, I remember. The next day the whole town was drenched. Stuff was floating."
"Everybody remembers that," I said. "But what happened to you, and what did you do?"
"It's funny," Neddie said. "I can't for the life of me recall."
"You don't know what happened?"
"Well, I did know. I wrote it all down in a notebook, but I don't know where it is. I put it somewhere safe and then forgot where I put it. Maybe it will turn up sometime."
"That's it?"
"Afraid so. I do feel like something important happened, but it just slipped my mind. Melvin, the guard at my school, says this sort of thing is normal, speaking in his capacity as an actual shaman."
"Sometimes your choice of friends troubles me," I said. "Speaking of which, what do you know about a kid at your school by the name of Bruce Bunyip?"
"Bruce Bunyip! He's a barbarian, or maybe a savage. He's a monster. It took us about a year to get him to stop slugging people at random! And his father was the most feared and hated man in Hollywood before he suddenly went nutso and became some kind of hermit. Why do you want to know about him?"
"I ran into him at an odd hour at the Rolling Doughnut."
"He keeps odd hours. He just ups and leaves the school whenever he feels like it."
"I do that," I said.
"Yes, but you go to a goofy progressive school where you're expected to do as you please. We go to a military academy. We have about a hundred rules for every one at a school like yours. In Bruce's case it is a holdover from when everybody was scared of his father. Lately he has turned into a hipster. He goes down to the Hollywood Ranch Market at two in the morning in hope of running into Marlon Brando, the big actor. Marlon likes to get fruit in the middle of the night. Sometimes he and Bruce sit on the fender of a parked car and play bongo drums."
"Do you happen to know if he has a girlfriend?"
"Who? Marlon Brando?"
"No, Bruce."
"Are you kidding? He doesn't have any friends, period. Lucifer! Come out of there!" Lucifer had gotten under a bush. Neddie stuck his arm out to the side, then folded it smartly to his chest. "I'm teaching him hand signals," he said. The duck ignored him.