Ye Intruders Beware… One-Eyed Willy… We Slip Out the Back, Jack… We Stop for Provisions… Jerk Alert… Saved by Brand… Up the Coast… The Lighthouse.
All the other guys gathered around. They were still wearing some of the pirate things, hats and scarves and stuff like that.
The doubloon was like a large round coin, with sort of a coat-of-arms stamped on it, and three irregular triangular holes cut into it, two near one edge, one near the opposite. There was also a cross stamped near the third hole, and Spanish words around the edge, and some notches on one side. I held it up to the light.
Chunk took it out of my hand and looked at it real close. “This says 1532. It that a year, or what?”
“It's your top score on Donkey Kong,” said Mouth.
Data ran his finger along the map's coastline, like he was into some really deep stuff. “Maybe that's how it used to look,” he said. “You know, before they put up all the Wendy's and McDonald's.”
“All the good stuff,” Chunk added. Some day he was gonna do the editorial rebuttal at the end of the 6 o'clock news, I bet.
Brand pointed to the Spanish words at the top of the map. “What's all this say?”
Mouth translated. “It says ‘Chunk's… father… screws… sheep…’”
Chunk hit him a good one, right in the kidneys. Mouth just gave his usual obnoxious cackle, though. Then he got on his straight face, and translated again, for real, this time:
“Ye intruders beware
Crushing death and grief,
Soaked with Blood,
Of the trespassing thief.”
We all looked at him like he was jackin' around again, rhymin' just to hear himself rhyme, but he raised his hand in the Boy Scout Pledge, which meant no lie.
Data got kind of BFD about the whole thing then. “That map's old news,” he said. “Everybody and his grandfather went after that treasure when our parents were our ages. Didn't you ever hear of that pirate guy? One-Eyed Willy?”
And Mouth sure wasn't gonna believe in anything Data didn't believe in. “Sounds like your basic, boring Saturday morning TV junk for teeny kids,” he said just too cool.
“Hey! One-Eyed Willy!” I said. I was tryin' to get some enthusiasm going. “He was the biggest pirate of his time. My dad told me all about him one night.”
“Yeah, Dad'll tell you anything to get you to go to sleep,” said Brand.
There was no point in dealing with Brand when he got like this, though. “He had millions in treasure,” I told 'em, “but the King sent ships after him. So Willy took his ship, called the Inferno, and ducked into this cave to hide. But the King's men sealed him up inside it with cannon fire.” It was clear as a picture to me.
“Your dad oughta write for the movies,” said Mouth.
“My dad doesn't lie,” I said, “and he told me that Willy and his bunch spent years hiding out down there, building these underground caves loaded with all kindsa booby traps to protect the treasure.”
“Right.”
“Sure.”
“Whatever you say, man.”
Then Chunk looked down to the place where I'd found the map, and next to it he found a framed yellow newspaper with a photo of an old, smiling man who looked sort of like Gabby Hayes in a miner's hat. Chunk read the headlines on top of the photograph. “‘Chester Copperpot Missing in Pursuit of Local Legend.’” And then under that, in smaller type, he read, “‘Reclusive Scavenger Claims “I have the key to One-Eyed Willy!”’”
Data doubted. “Nobody ever found nothing. Why do you think that map is sitting up here instead of in a safe-deposit box somewhere?”
Their doubts were like water down my back, though. “But… but what if… what if, you guys! What if this leads to One-Eyed Willy's stash?”
Then Brand stepped in, like a cold, rational fish. Like a wet blanket. Like an adult. “Take off all that junk, you guys. My mom's gonna come back soon.”
And then the door bell rang.
It was like time for study hall or somethin', with the hall monitors out in force. We all tore off our pirate clothes and raced down to see who was at the door and to show whoever it was that we were bein' nice, behaved kids.
It was the three guys in leisure suits. They were standin' behind the front screen door like big flies. The ugliest one kept practicing his golf swing. The closest one talked.
“Hello, guys. I'm Mr. Perkins. Troy's father.”
Perkins was one of the owners of the country club, and a bigger jerk has never existed in this galaxy, except maybe for his idiot son Troy.
Brand kept his cool, though. “My dad's not here, Mr. Perkins.”
“Well, then, is your mommy home?”
What a flake.
“No, sir,” said Brand, “she's out at the market buying Pampers for all us kids.”
Perkins laughed like someone had taught him how, then stopped like he forgot the way the rest of it went. “Well, you can give these papers to your father to read over… and sign. Somebody from my office will pick them up in the morning.”
Brand took the papers and closed the door in the guy's ugly face.
“What is all that stuff?” I asked. But I knew.
“It's Dad's business,” said Brand. He was real depressed now.
We sort of looked at all the legal forms, but they were too complicated to figure out. Then we looked out the window at the three insect-men as they walked away, and they seemed real simple to figure out. Scums with money.
I remember seeing this old movie on the tube, You Can't Take it With You, about this stuffy, tight banker who's about to foreclose on the good-hearted heroes, but they convince him with love and generosity in the end that it's better to be kind and fun than rich, so he doesn't foreclose on 'em, he plays the harmonica instead. Stuff like that only happens in the movies, though.
“If I found any treasure with that map,” I said, “I'd pay all Dad's bills and buy his mortgage, and then maybe he could get to sleep at night instead of sittin' up tryin' to figure out a way for us to stay here.”
“Yeah.”
“Me too.”
“Me three.”
Brand just grabbed me by the hair, though. “You can forget about any adventures, limp lungs. You go outside now and Mom'll ground my ass. And I got a date with Andy on Friday.”
“You're dreamin', dude,” said Mouth. “Besides; who's gonna drive you? Her parents? Then you gotta make it with her and her mother.”
“Eat it, Mouth,” Brand said, and walked back to his exercise area.
I pulled the map from inside my shirt, and the guys pushed in to check it out.
Another lightning bolt flashed outside. It looked like blue neon. The map brightened and dimmed.
It looked like my future.
So me and the guys powwowed and came up with an exceptional plan.
We waited until Brand was sitting in his straight-backed chair in the rec room, pulling his spring-coil chest exerciser across his chest. We drifted around behind him, and then, the second he finished the fifteenth rep of his third set and dropped his arms like a couple quivering lumps at his sides, we jumped into action.
Mouth held Brand's arms to his sides; me and Chunk grabbed the exerciser and wrapped it around his chest, arms, and the back of the chair; and Data clamped the two ends of the exerciser together in back. Brand was totally chained. It was totally cool.
“Hey! Wait… lemmee out!”
We were outta there, though.
We snuck through the backyard. Grandpa was sleeping in the hammock, probably dreamin' about Ziegfeld's Follies or somethin'.
“Careful, don't wake Grandpa!” I whispered.
“Shhh, yeah, don't wake him.”
“Yeah, shhh.”
Just as we rounded the corner of the house, though, Mouth shoved the hammock, and Grandpa woke up.
It's not that Mouth was a mean person, you gotta understand—he just had this basic urge to do whatever it was he shouldn't do. I think it was genetic or something.
Anyway, we split before Grandpa saw us, slipped out the back, Jack, and ran to the side of the house. Mouth let the air out of Brand's ten-speed while we climbed onto our dirt bikes.
I looked to make sure Mouth wasn't slashin' the tires or anything. “It took him 376 lawn jobs to pay for that,” I said. “It's his most favorite thing in the world.”
“Now it's his most flattest thing in the world.”
Suddenly we heard Brand screaming from inside the house. “Mikey, I'm gonna hit you so hard, when you wake up, your clothes are gonna be outta style.”
I didn't need any more encouragement. We shot down the driveway and were gone.
We rode toward the old coast road, which seemed like the best place to begin, according to the map. To get there we had to pass the edge of the business district, which meant two things. First we went by the museum.
Dad was up on the rooftop, nailing down a leaky shingle. “Hi, Dad!” I called out to him. He waved back and smiled. I sort of wanted to say good-bye to him, in case this hunt took me somewhere I couldn't get back from. I just had that feeling. You know?
The last place we passed on the way out of town was the Stop-‘N’-Snack. I zoomed on by it, the map spread open on my handlebars, headed for the coast and maybe dire straights. When I looked over my shoulder, though, I saw three bikes parked in front of the Stop-‘N’-Snack, and the guys walkin' inside.
I skid-stopped on the gravel. I held up the map. “Hey, guys—what about this? Huh?”
They just waved me over and kept on in. I guess old habits die hard.
So I turned around and joined them. Last one in, as usual. Data was buying a pack of baseball cards, and Mrs. Keester, the old lady who ran the place, was ringin' it up on a computer cash register. The thing was jammed or somethin', though, so she started pounding it with her hand. Data made her stop. He opened the little door at the back of the thing and began fiddling with the wires.
Mouth was standing at the magazine rack, lookin' kind of sly. While Mrs. Keester was busy with Data, Mouth slipped a copy of Playboy inside a copy of Omni and casually started reading, mostly around the middle of the magazine.
Chunk was over by the junk food, and just like Mouth, he was lookin' pretty cagey. Suddenly he tore open a Twinkie, slurped out the cream filling, then rewrapped the Twinkie and put it back on the shelf. It was really gross.
I walked up to him and waved the map in his face. “Hey, Chunk, c'mon—we were gonna look for rich stuff, we gotta do it now.”
“Hey, don't get nervous. We gotta get provisions, don't we? We're goin' on an expedition, aren't we?”
He had a point, I guess, even if I was too excited to eat. I went over to Data as Chunk went to work on a Ding-Dong.
Data was still messing with the cash register, and that got me a little down.
“Data, what if they make us move?” I said. “Where we gonna go?” I was startin' to get depressed again, to have second thoughts about our adventure. I mean, if we could get sidetracked by a two-byte computer, a skin mag, and a Hostess Ho-Ho, we weren't gonna get very far on any treasure hunt. “Data?” I said again.
“Don't bother him while he's working,” said Mrs. Keester.
I walked over to Mouth, to try to charge him up again. “Mouth, what if they start tearin' down our houses?”
The centerfold was the only thing charging him up, though. “Take it easy, dude—let your folks handle this. That's their job. Our job is to get through the weekend without destroying too many brain cells.”
I took a hit of Promotene Mist, I was feelin' that low. I picked up a copy of Mad off the rack, flipped to the back, and checked out the fold-in. I guessed it—as usual.
I happened to look down just then and noticed that all the way at the bottom of the stand was a section of dusty old tourist maps of Astoria. I pulled one out, sat down on the floor, and opened it. Then I took out the pirate map and opened it, and lay the two side by side.
And they were the same.
I mean, basically the same. The coastlines were identical, and a bunch of the cliffs were exact matches, even though some were different, probably because of earthquakes and tidal waves and stuff over the years. But the really important thing was that the place where the X was on the pirate map was at a place that looked exactly the same on the tourist map, and it was a place that I knew, knew exactly where it was.
“I know where this is,” I whispered.
This was too great to believe. We were in business again. I was totally stoked. I jumped up and ran over to Chunk, to tell him the good news. He was bent way over into the ice-cream freezer, though, licking the top layers of the Swensen's and then replacing the lids. That was his favorite thing, so he wasn't about to be interrupted.
So I ran to Data, who was still diddling the wires in the register. “Data,” I said. Just then the machine beeped and lit up, and Mrs. Keester pinched Data's cheek with a big smile, the way she does.
Suddenly Mouth's voice rang through the store. “Jerk alert!”
I looked over to the entrance, and Mouth wasn't kidding. Troy Perkins was coming in.
Like I said before, Troy wins Dork of the Year, hands down. And don't think it's because he's rich, because I know a lot of guys from Hillside that play it just as straight as anybody. But like I also said before, Troy's got a big handicap to begin with, just because his father is Mr. Perkins, who could use a few lessons in earthling behavior.
So, anyway, Troy strutted into the Stop-‘N’-Snack like he owned the place, which he probably did. He was wearing his cool-o tennis outfit, and his hair was styled, and so were his fingernails—what he called manicured. Get the picture?
But the thing is, he was walkin' in with Andy Carmichael and Stef Steinbrenner. Now Andy is the girl Brand was hopin' to take out Saturday night, and she was like so foxy, it was intense. She was wearin' her cheerleader's outfit now, but she was also wearin' Troy's letter sweater with his name sewn on the pocket. Dum-da-dum-dum.
Stef was Andy's best friend. She wasn't nearly as pretty as Andy, but she was tough enough. She lived in the Goon Docks, like us. Andy was from Hillside. Stef wore glasses. Andy wore contacts. Stef once punched out Lenny Dole. That was before high school, but the reputation stuck. She also had a rep about sex, like there was always some guy poppin' up sayin' he had a friend who did it with old Stef Steinbrenner. But you couldn't believe that kinda shit. Still, she did have a certain way she walked, and her brothers were always in trouble, and she hung out sometimes with Macy and those motorcycle guys, and she smoked and had a fake ID. Anyway, Stef and Andy were sort of opposites, but they whispered to each other all the time and went to the bathroom together, so I guess they had a lot in common too.
Anyway, Troy walked straight over to the magazine rack, grabbed the Playboy out of Mouth's hand, and started pagin' through it. Mouth glared at Troy like maybe he could kill him with his eyes, but Troy didn't drop, he just kept lookin' at the pictures. So finally Mouth backed off, without mouthin' off even once, like he couldn't be bothered to waste his breath on such a jerk. So instead he just picked up another magazine.
Stef came up behind Mouth. “You still smell like a plumber's son,” she said.
“You still smell like a fisherman's daughter,” he said back.
Which is what they both were. I think they sort of liked each other, though.
Andy walked over to them. Troy nudged her with this really feeb grin and held up the Playboy centerfold and said, “Can you measure up?”
Andy looked away, kind of embarrassed, like, of course, she would be, so then to make matters worse, Troy laughed, like you knew it wasn't a real laugh, he was just trying to make a point, but the point was his head.
I don't know, it really made me feel bad.
“You're a lot prettier than that, Andy,” I said. She was too. She didn't have those huge Annie Fannie boobs, but so what? You know what I mean?
Anyway, she smiled at me. Gave me this real flutter in the pit of my stomach, like when I had to recite The Rime of the Ancient Mariner on stage at the spring assembly. Like I wasn't sure I'd said the right thing, but there was no taking it back.
I don't know, I just haven't had much luck with women. I mean, I know I'm supposed to, but I don't know where to begin. Especially with anyone as pretty as Andy. Like, my braces alone are so ugly, it seems that most girls must be embarrassed just to look at me. Not to mention which it probably wouldn't be fair passing on my wimpy, sick genes to a kid, so I'm not gonna get married, so why bother dating and stuff in the first place, right?
Troy walked over to the freezer where Chunk was still in over his head lickin' ice cream—and he brought the freezer door down on Chunk's back, trapping him there.
Really rude.
“My mom's makin' a Goon Pizza tonight,” Troy yukked. “She's gonna need some frozen dough.”
“Why don't you leave him alone?” I shouted. The poor guy was floppin' his legs all over like a fish. I mean, he was obviously freakin' out.
Troy let him alone then. But he came over to me. “Did I hear you right?” he said. “Did I hear a Goony telling me what to do?”
I thought he was going to hit me. My chest got tight. I was about to crouch, but suddenly he grabbed my map off the floor. The old one.
“Hey, let go,” I shouted. “That's art you're messin' with.” I mean, if he wrecked it, my dad was gonna kill me—and I sure wasn't gonna tell him what it was really all about.
So he didn't know how important it really was, but he could see it was important to me. So he held it over my head—he was pretty much taller than me—grabbed a pack of tobacco from the counter, poured it onto the paper, and started rolling it like a cigarette.
“Just can't get rolling papers like these anymore,” he said.
I grabbed for it, but he knocked me down. Big tough guy. Then he took a butane lighter out of his pocket and lit the end of the rolled map. I couldn't believe it. He took a puff. The end of the map started burning!
I could hardly watch, and I had to put my hands over my eyes. The jerk was actually blowing smoke rings. Just then Mouth walked up and raised his eyebrows. “Ya know,” he said, real cool, “the way you're puffin' on that cigarette, it reminds me of somethin'.”
“Yeah? What's that?” said Troy.
“The time I French-kissed your mother,” said Mouth.
Troy freaked. I mean, you'd have thought he actually had a thing for his mother, the way he looked. Whatever it was, though, he dropped the map and went for Mouth. I stomped out the fire and grabbed the map. Unfortunately for Mouth, this time his feet weren't as fast as his voice box. Troy tackled him and started punching.
Mouth covered his face, but Troy was a lot bigger. I jumped onto Troy's back and got him in a headlock. But I was a lot smaller.
Data ran up and shouted “Smoke screen!” and held out his arm. A garden hose was sticking out from his sleeve, but instead of shooting smoke at us, it just kind of smoldered and burned him, so he ran over to the ice machine and buried his arm in the cubes.
Troy pulled me off with his left hand and cocked his right to smash my face in. Halfway to my nose, his fist was stopped short, though, and was held in midair by somebody else's.
Brand.
“Nobody hits my brother except me,” he said.
Troy got off me and stood up. He was scared of Brand, no doubt about it. He had this kind of sick grin bullies get when they're not gangin' up on someone. I'd love to have seen him sweat himself into a puddle.
“Can't wait until Monday,” he said. I could hear in his voice that he was so scared, he was talkin' through his nose. “Monday's when my dad kicks you all out in the street.” He stood back and did a golf swing, like he was supposed to be a pro or something. “While you Goonies are pilin' all your stuff into moving vans, I'll be teeing off on what used to be your front lawns.” Then he laughed and sounded like he was clearing snot, and he said to Andy, “Our court time starts in five minutes. I'll be waiting outside.” Then he walked out, real casual, sat down in his red Mustang convertible, and turned on the radio so loud, we could hear it all the way in the store.
Brand looked at Andy kind of angry hurt and jealous, and she looked back at him with a look I'd like her to have looked at me, and then Brand kind of melted, and then Andy shrugged like this was a bad time, and then Brand slumped like he was trying to be nonchalant, and then Andy turned and left.
I quickly unrolled the map. It was okay, only the edges were burned.
But Brand was really broiled. He grabbed the map and slapped my head.
“You know how I got loose?” he said. “Mom came home and unhooked me. She was totally pissed off, man, and so was I. And Rosalita was there with her brother, and she thought it was some kind of sexual torture device, thanks to Mouth. And then Mom told me that if I didn't find you and get you back in thirty minutes, we were both grounded. And then you know what happened? Somebody flattened my tires, so I had to steal Data's sister's bike to get over here—'cause I knew you bozos wouldn't get any farther than this on your great adventure.” Then he pinched my arm and shoved me ahead of him. “You just blew your whole life, pal.” He stuffed the map into his back pocket and looked at the other guys. “The rest of you guys too—you're all history. We don't need friends like you.”
Mouth put his arm around Brand's shoulder and started singing, real sincere. “Here's to good friends, tonight is kinda special, the beer we pour, must be something more, somehow…”
And all the time he was singing, he was pulling the map out of Brand's back pocket.
Brand shoved him away. “You don't have to drink to make friends, wimp.”
That was when Mouth showed us the map, with his back to Brand. We all made a run for it.
We were on our bikes before Brand realized what happened and were out of the parking lot before he got to the neighbor kid's bike, which was about three sizes too small for him, and no way he could catch us.
So we were outta there.
Mouth handed off the map to me at the next corner, but I didn't even have to look at it yet. I took us right to the coast highway and turned north. We were on our way.
Springsteen was blasting from Data's tape deck, and somehow, with that cloudy wind and those darkish fir trees all up the coast, it was just perfect discovery weather. Something was definitely happening.
One of the clouds on the horizon blew into a different shape so that it looked just like a pirate ship to me. I see pictures in clouds all the time. Mom says it's because I'm a dreamer, but they look so real, I don't see how other people don't see what I see. It's like jigsaw puzzles, I guess.
Anyway, the fact that this cloud was a pirate ship seemed like a pure sign, no two ways about it, so I knew my instincts were right, and, if I just kept following my nose, I'd get a noseful of something soon enough.
I checked the map after riding about twenty minutes and took the first turnoff beyond the old schoolhouse, leading up over Piedmont Ridge. In the distance we could see the edge of the Hillside Country Club. Mouth spat.
We went down the ridge and past the coast road to where we overlooked the ocean again, and the first thing I saw was these three rocks sticking up out of the water in a V. And I knew them from somewhere.
I stopped pedaling, and the guys stopped with me. “I know this place,” I whispered. “This is it.”
It was the beginning of the place on the old map that didn't show up on the tourist map. It was marked by those three rocks, and by this tall, natural pillar of rock that stuck straight up at the bottom of the hill that we were at the top of.
It was a steep hill with lots of jutting, jagged slabs pointing out all over and hardly a bike path down through it, nothing we would've taken if it hadn't been on the secret map.
But we took it now.
We walked our bikes, it was so steep. At the bottom it turned into a sort of gravel path that veered off in a funny direction just past the tall stone pillar. We got on our bikes and rode real slow.
The coast road was behind us now, and then I don't know where it was. We went through this place with mossy trees, and then there was this rickety old wooden bridge across a creek, so we walked our bikes over that, and then next thing, we were out of the woods and onto this rocky beach.
We kept going. Trees came right up to the beach at one point, and we were through 'em, down a hollow and up a hill where the trees thinned out again and left us with a clear view of the ocean right below us. And here's what we saw.
There was a small peninsula with waves smashing all around it. On the near side was a little cemetery with a bunch of crooked old falling-down gravestones. Beyond that, at the tip of the land, was a tall stone lighthouse, broken off at the top and bent over so it almost looked like it was a giant tombstone too.
And sitting between them was a square one-story building. Real run-down. It was made of wood, painted white about a hundred years ago, it looked like. It sat kind of crooked, too, like the gravestones, like maybe one end of it had started to sag into the ground. Its windows were twisted and dirty, and a broken red-and-green neon sign was sort of stuck on top like a big wind had planted it there by accident. It said LIGHTHOUSE LOUNGE.
There was an OPEN—CLOSED sign hanging in front of the front door, but it was flappin' around in the heavy wind, so sometimes it showed one side and sometimes the other.
The place looked pretty spooky, I gotta say. None of us said a word.
And then, swear to God, I saw a shadow pass by one of the windows inside.
I looked at the other guys, but nobody was talkin'.
I stared out over the sea. Those three rocks we'd passed before were sitting out there in the distance, way behind the lighthouse, and it made me think of something, but I didn't know what. But then I knew what.
I took out the doubloon. It had these three holes cut into it, so I held it up to my eye—the holes lined up exactly with the three rocks and the lighthouse. They were even shaped the same. Not only that, there was an X etched on the coin that seemed to sit right over the Lighthouse Lounge.
I passed the coin around, and everyone had a look.
I looked back at the map. It seemed to end right where we were, but it was hard to tell, because this crease ran through that part where it had been bent in on itself for a long time, before it had been framed.
I tried to straighten it, but it wouldn't straighten, and that's when I remembered how the doctor had had to break my arm back the other way from the way it was broken in order to straighten it. So I folded the map backward to undo the crease, and that's when I really saw what was what.
I saw it worked like a fold-in on the back cover of Mad.
And when I folded it in completely on itself, it formed an exact replica of the doubloon, with the holes marked at all the same places, and an X right by the third hole.
And when I put the doubloon down over the three signal rocks on the map, the X in the side of the coin exactly laid over the lighthouse.
I showed the guys. “We're here,” I said, pointing to where the little square wooden building was sinking into the sand. This is where the treasure's buried.”
I indicated the X on the map, and then, once more, pointed toward the lighthouse. “Right down there.”