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Timmy Failure: The Cat Stole My Pants Page 2


  their hands dirty and having lousy manners.”

  “Timmy, Emilio is not a detective.”

  “You’re right. And now he’s not even an

  intern. Because I just decided to fire him.”

  “You can’t fire somebody you don’t actu-

  ally employ.”

  “Fine. Are we on an island?”

  “Yes.”

  “Then I’m voting him off the island.”

  “Good timing!” says Doorman Dave, pok-

  ing his head onto the porch.

  “What’s good timing?” I ask.

  “Voting someone off the island,” he

  answers. “Because today we’re all getting off

  the island.”

  “We’re going home!” I shout with joy.

  “Nope,” he answers. “We’re going fishing!”

  If you ever want to know what it’s like to go

  fishing on a boat for $200 a person, just do the

  following:

  1) Grab the sides of a toilet and throw up;

  and

  2) Set fire to $200.

  Because that is how I have been spending

  my day fishing with Doorman Dave.

  It is a waste of money so profound as to be

  almost criminally negligent.

  And if you’re wondering why I didn’t men-

  tion Emilio Empanada, that is because he’s

  not here.

  And why?

  Because as we were leaving our rented

  home, Emilio dramatically announced that he

  was getting “sniffly” and feared that if he went

  out on the boat, his cold would get worse.

  So he is at home reading.

  And as if that’s not offensive enough, con-

  sider this:

  He is reading a romance novel.

  And because Emilio Empanada couldn’t

  go fishing, that meant my mother couldn’t go

  fishing. Because someone had to take care of

  Doorman Dave’s nephew.

  And thus, an afternoon of maritime bond-

  ing with Doorman Dave ensued.

  Which, it must be said, was tragic from

  the outset.

  “Just grab the little worm with one hand

  and grab the hook with the other.”

  “Detectives do not touch worms, Dave.”

  And with that, he thrust the worm in front

  of my face. Where it could have easily inflicted

  a fatal wound.

  Which would have given the book you are

  holding a very abrupt ending.

  So I did what any detective with lightning-

  quick reflexes would do when confronted by a

  lethal foe.

  I tumbled backward over the side of the

  boat.

  “Happy?” I ask Doorman Dave as he pulls

  me back into the boat. “You’ve ruined my

  custom-made scarf. I suppose you will be mak-

  ing a call to Lazar’s of New York to order

  another?”

  “Your scarf will be fine.”

  “My scarf will not be fine,” I correct him.

  “And neither will I. For now hypothermia

  has set in. Please, if your goal is to end my

  once-promising life, say so now and cast me

  adrift upon the Gulf Stream.”

  Dave tries to dry me off with a beach towel.

  But it is useless.

  For I am dying.

  “Are you cold?” asks a grizzled voice from

  inside the bridge of the ship.

  I turn and see the captain.

  “Yes,” I reply. “I am dying.”

  “Then come in here for a while and warm

  up. I have a space heater. And maybe if you

  recover, I’ll let you steer the ship.”

  And with that, my nautical career begins.

  “I steered the ship the entire way back to port,”

  I tell Doorman Dave as we disembark.

  “Well, you steered for about a minute and

  then threw up on the captain.”

  “Yes, well, the pressures of running a ship

  are immense. I wouldn’t expect a recreational

  fisherman to understand.”

  “I see,” says Dave. “Well, the important

  thing is that we got to spend time together.”

  “I wouldn’t get used to that, Dave.”

  “No?”

  “No. Because for me, it’s career first.

  And as you’ve saddled me with a particularly

  unqualified intern, the week ahead will be

  especially trying.”

  Dave puts his hand on my shoulder as we

  begin the short walk home.

  “Be nice to Emilio. He likes you.”

  “He’s an employee, Dave. Or more like a

  former employee. I’m thinking about firing

  him.”

  Dave smiles.

  “What you do with your detective agency

  is up to you, Timmy.”

  “Yes, Dave. I know that.”

  “But you have to know a couple things

  about Emilio.”

  “Let me guess. He irons his socks.”

  “No,” answers Dave.

  “Eats pizza with a fork?” I ask.

  “No. Timmy, listen. It’s a little more seri-

  ous than that.”

  “More serious than eating pizza with a

  fork? This I have to hear.”

  “Well, first off,” says Dave, “he has no

  siblings.”

  “No siblings? I don’t have any siblings.

  And look how well I’ve turned out.”

  Dave rubs his chin.

  “Yes, Timmy, but there’s a bit more to it

  than that,” he says as we turn up the front

  walkway to our house.

  “Good, because so far, it sounds like a

  charmed life.”

  “Okay, let me start over,” says Doorman

  Dave.

  But there is no time for that.

  Because Abraham Lincoln is calling.

  I run up the front steps of our house and pick

  up the phone.

  “Hello?”

  “Timmy, it’s me, Rollo! Summer school is

  great! We have Mr. Jenkins! And he’s teaching

  American history! I can’t believe you’re not

  here. We’re even having a play, and guess who

  I get to be.”

  “How did you get this number?” I ask my

  best friend, Rollo Tookus.

  “You gave it to me,” he says.

  “For emergencies,” I reply. “Not for telling

  me about stupid school plays.”

  “All right, well, just guess who I’m gonna

  be.”

  “No.”

  “Abraham Lincoln!” he shouts. “I get to

  recite the Emancipation Proclamation!”

  “Good for you, Rollo. But I’m bored already.”

  “Bored? Theater is exciting!”

  “Maybe for you. But for me, steering a

  ship is exciting. Saving the lives of hundreds

  of people is exciting. All of which I just did.”

  “You mean like pretend?”

  “No, Rollo. For real. Thirty-foot waves.

  Perilous reefs. I’d tell you more, but I think I

  have scurvy.”

  “Scurvy? That’s from not getting enough

  vitamin C.”

  “Correct.”

  “Are there no stores where you are where

  you can get some orange juice? I thought Key

  West was a fancy vacation place.”

  “No, Rollo. Key West is the edge of a

  frontier. Things here are stark. Uncivilized.

&nb
sp; Lawless. You may never see me again.”

  “So you’re not gonna come to summer

  school when you get back?”

  “Summer school?!” I shout to Abraham

  Lincoln. “Summer school is for people without

  lives. I’m a sea captain. I save lives.”

  “Well, that’s odd, then.”

  “What’s odd?” I ask.

  And that’s when Abraham Lincoln deliv-

  ers the worst news since the Battle of Bull Run.

  “The teacher said your name in roll call.”

  “You did what?” I yell at my mother as I walk

  into the kitchen.

  “I thought you’d want to go to summer

  school. Your friends are all there. It could be

  fun.”

  I am so upset I am speechless.

  So I draw her a diagram.

  “Oh, here we go with the Mr. Dramatic

  stuff again,” says my mother.

  “Mr. Dramatic?” I fire back. “First off,

  how am I even supposed to take a class? I’m

  not even there.”

  “Timmy, you’re only missing a week of

  class. And I asked Rollo’s mom to e-mail me

  this week’s assignments.”

  “Homework? During summer vacation?

  You can’t do this! I have an upset stomach!

  Hypothermia! Scurvy!”

  She reaches into the refrigerator and

  pours me a glass of orange juice. “Drink this,”

  she says. “You’ll be fine.”

  So I choose the only sensible option

  remaining for a child facing summer school.

  And fake my own death.

  “‘Look into my eyes, Doris,’ said the man with

  the strong chin. ‘I will take you to places of the

  heart that you’ve never been.’

  ‘Oh, Rufus,’ she replied. ‘Take me. I am

  yours.’

  ‘No, Doris, you take me.’

  ‘No, Rufus, you take me.’

  Unable to decide who should take whom,

  Doris and Rufus ate a pizza.”

  I am lying in bed.

  And Emilio Empanada is reading me

  romance novels.

  For in an evil counterstroke, my mother

  used my fake death as an excuse to stick me

  in a room with the sniffly Emilio Empanada,

  lover of romance novels.

  And my sarcastic mother even made a

  sign.

  Emilio stops reading and sets the book

  down on his lap.

  “Isn’t it beautiful?” he asks. “The love

  between Doris and Rufus?”

  “It’s absurd,” I answer. “Rufus is a bag

  of useless platitudes. And Doris is not much

  better.”

  “I think you’re missing the subtle under-

  tones of this literature,” says Emilio. “But

  that’s okay. I can read you Love Is a Speckled

  Pony of Desire instead.”

  “No, thanks, Emilio. That sounds even

  worse. I’m only lying in bed because my

  mother made me.”

  “What about The Looming Milk Maiden of

  Love?” asks Emilio. “It has a good ending.”

  “I told you, Emilio. I don’t want to hear

  any more of your literature.”

  “How about if I just skip to the end?”

  “No.”

  But he flips to the end anyway.

  And when he gets there, a piece of paper

  flutters to the ground.

  And it is not about Doris or Rufus.

  “My life is in grave danger!” I shout to Emilio

  Empanada. “We must act!”

  So I jump out the window.

  And slide down the balcony support.

  And find my intern on the front porch.

  And we run.

  From palm tree to palm tree.

  Avoiding assassins.

  “But why would somebody threaten you?”

  Emilio asks me as we flee.

  “Because they know my reputation as a

  detective. And they don’t want me here.”

  “So what do we do?”

  “Survey the entire island. Find out what

  we’re up against.”

  “And how do we do that?” he asks, panting

  harder with each step.

  “We rent a seaplane. I’ll fly it. You just

  hang on.”

  “That seems dangerous,” says Emilio.

  “For normal people,” I tell him. “But I’m

  not normal people.”

  Emilio nods as he runs.

  “But do you even know how to fly a sea-

  plane?” he adds, almost breathless.

  “No. But I’ve captained a ship. And they’re

  identical tasks.”

  We come to a bizarre native tree and hide

  behind its strange tall roots.

  “We can shelter here,” I announce. “Give

  you a chance to catch your breath. You appear

  to be in no shape for detective work.”

  “I’m not,” he says.

  “What is this thing, anyway?” I ask, star-

  ing up at the unusual tree.

  “A kapok tree,” says Emilio.

  “How do you know that?”

  “That’s a demerit,” I inform Emilio. “Never

  attempt to show up your boss.”

  He makes an X in his notebook.

  “Especially when you are an unpaid

  intern,” I add.

  He makes two X’s in his notebook.

  “Speaking of working for you,” Emilio

  says, looking up from his notebook, “I think it

  would be bad to be maimed in my first week.

  So I vote we do something other than fly.”

  I glance at him.

  “Not that I’m afraid,” he adds.

  “Fear is a cruel master,” I inform Emilio

  Empanada. “Best to overcome it now, while

  you’re still an unpaid intern.”

  “I see,” says Emilio. “Well, maybe later.”

  “Fine. I shall be merciful and select

  another option. But next time we fly.”

  And leaping up from the shelter of the

  kapok tree, I lead him to the most strategic

  spot on the island.

  “How’d you know this was here?” asks Emilio.

  “I spotted it from the bow of my sailing

  vessel,” I answer. “When you were at home

  sniffling.”

  Emilio stares at the top of the lighthouse. “I

  bet from the top of that we can see everything!”

  “Yes,” I reply. “And if we hurry, we may

  even spot the person who wrote that note.

  They’re probably fleeing as we speak.”

  So we rush toward the lighthouse door.

  And are stopped by a potbellied man.

  “Five bucks for each of you,” says the

  man, his fingers steeped in a carton of greasy

  conch fritters.

  “Police business,” I announce. “We are in

  hot pursuit.”

  “Five bucks,” he says. “Each.”

  “But we don’t have any money,” adds

  Emilio.

  “Then I guess you can’t go in the light-

  house,” he says, popping another fritter in his

  mouth.

  “You’d prefer to have a felon escape our

  grasp?” I ask.

  “I’d prefer to not be fired for letting two

  kids get in without paying.”

  “That does it,” I announce. “I want your

  badge number.”

  “You want my what?”

&n
bsp; “Badge number,” I repeat. “The num-

  ber on your badge there. I will be reporting

  you to the authorities for hindering a police

  investigation.”

  “My badge just says ‘Larry,’” he answers.

  “So I guess my badge number is Larry.”

  I contemplate tackling him. Or stealing

  his conch fritters.

  When I am attacked by a bird of prey.

  “It’s not a bird of prey,” says Lighthouse Larry.

  “It’s a chicken.”

  “Chickens kill millions of people every

  year,” I inform him informatively.

  “Nope,” he says. “Chickens are harmless.”

  “Emilio, when we get back home, research

  chicken homicides. I want statistics.”

  I brush myself off and nobly stand.

  “Sir, you leave me no choice but to sue

  you in a court of law.”

  “You think a lawyer will take your case?”

  asks Lighthouse Larry.

  “Of course,” I answer, then turn to my

  unpaid intern. “Emilio, when we get home,

  look up all the attorneys in Key West that

  handle chicken attack cases. We are going to

  sue the pants off of Lighthouse Larry here.”

  “I don’t wear pants,” says Larry, citing a

  legal technicality. “I wear shorts.”

  Recognizing the strength of his argument,

  I offer to compromise.

  “In that case, sir, I offer to settle the mat-

  ter out of court for a reasonable sum. I’ll open

  the bidding at $63,000,000 dollars.”

  “That’s a very specific amount,” says

  Lighthouse Larry.

  “It’s the total cost of opening detective

  offices throughout Spain and India. I’m expand-

  ing my business rapidly.”

  “So you’re a detective?”

  “Yes. I am Failure. Timmy Failure. As if