10
Duncan plopped down next to Stew at their usual lunch table.
“You’re not dining with Friends of the Beaver today?”
“They’re called TARTS,” said Duncan. “And no, I am not. No direct invitation was extended. But Carly is still being cool.”
Jessie slammed her fry-filled cafeteria tray down on the table directly across from Duncan. “Well, did you tell Stew all about him?” she asked, clearly thrilled. She dipped several fries into a pool of ketchup then stuffed them into her mouth.
“No, I haven’t yet,” Duncan said. “Stew was making beaver cracks again.”
“Did you tell me about who?” he asked.
“Abugh da poofeh buwwy!” said Jess, chewing, fry bits falling out of her mouth.
“Um, one more time, please,” said Stew.
Jess swallowed, then cleared her throat. “About the perfect bully,” she said. “What are you, deaf ?”
“He really was perfect,” added Duncan. “In every possible way. Girth. Temper. Evident schadenfreude.”
“He’s German?” asked Stew.
“No, dumbass,” said Jess. “Schadenfreude: to derive satisfaction from the misfortunes of others. That’s our boy all right. So schadenfreudish. You should’ve seen this guy in gym, man. He’d only been playing soccer for three friggin’ minutes before Chambliss kicked him off the field. But he left a trail of misery in his wake, and he walked away laughing. It was awesome.” She crammed more fries into her mouth. “He hid Kurb righ innanads wif a baw!”
“Jess, stop talking with your mouth full,” said an irritated Stew. “It’s gross, and you make no sense.”
She gulped down the fries, guzzled chocolate milk, and licked ketchup from her chin. The she belched.
“Gross,” said Stew. “Pink-haired heifer.”
Jessie snickered. “I said he hit Kurt right in the ’nads with a ball!” she repeated. “A total laser that put old Himes down for the rest of class.”
“It was a solid kick,” said Duncan, nodding.
“No way that dude will be able to reproduce,” said Jess.
“Which is for the best,” said Duncan.
“So what’s this thug’s name?” Stew asked. “And why have we never heard of him?”
“Freddie,” said Jess. “Freddie Wambaugh. He’s new to Elm Forest. But he is most definitely not new to bullying. This kid’s had practice. Did we mention he’s the size of a house?”
“It’s true,” said Duncan.
“You’ll have to get the straight dope on Freddie from your mom,” Jess said.
“Right,” responded Duncan. “She has S through Z, so I assume Freddie is one of her students.”
“Stew,” said Jess, “this guy really was magical. The perfect thug for Duncan’s purposes. He’s more physically intimidating than ten Perry Hurleys.”
“How’s he compare to that Sloth dude?”
“Are you kidding me? Freddie eats a crunchy bowl of Sloths for breakfast every morning.” She leaned across the table to emphasize her point. “There is absolutely no comparison. Freddie is the best there’s ever been.”
“And he’s a new kid,” said Duncan. “So he has no attachment to anyone in school—none whatsoever. This is key. He’s the ideal candidate to terrorize me. Can you just imagine Carly’s reaction if Freddie were to, like, cram me in a locker? That’d be awesome.”
“Dude, she’d crawl in there and give you mouth-to-mouth, ” said Jessie. She and Duncan high-fived.
“How the hell are you going to get the universe’s preeminent bully to work with you?” asked Stew. “Seems tricky.”
“It does,” agreed Duncan.
“Everybody wants somethin’” said Jessie matter-of-factly. “I’ll bet Freddie is no different.”
“Except for Sloth,” said Duncan. “He wanted nothing.”
“Nothing we could give him,” countered Jessie. “That’s all. But a third-shift worker living alone in that cat-poop-box of an apartment probably wants something.”
“Fair point,” said Duncan. “So what do we think Freddie wants?”
“Hell if I know,” she said. “You’ve gotta ask.”
“You’re the one who has a way with people,” said Duncan. “You ask.”
“But I am not the one trying to score with Carly Garfield.” She wagged a finger. “And anyway, Freddie ain’t people. He’s scarier.” She grabbed another handful of fries.
From a far corner of the cafeteria they heard a male voice scream, then breaking glass, and then the clatter of multiple trays against the floor. Soon after they heard cackling—the same cackling they’d heard during gym class.
“Ooh, that’s our boy!”
Jessie stood and stared in the direction of the noises.
“Looks like he somehow took down half the boys’ golf team,” she said.
“It’s okay,” said Duncan. “They were expendable.”
“Kenny Miessler got ketchup—wait, no, it’s barbecue sauce—on his V-neck sweater.”
“Is nothing sacred to Freddie?” said Duncan, smiling.
He and Stew were standing, too. They watched Freddie saunter toward a circular table in the corner of the cafeteria where the Goth kids and German exchange students sat. Freddie stood over them for a moment, his tray clutched in his right hand. He bent low, getting in the face of a black-haired nose-ring boy named Clint Chesbro.
“Boo!” yelled Freddie in a thunderous voice.
Clint fell back into his food. He and his friends abandoned the table. Freddie sat down, alone.
“That guy is freakin’ scary,” said Stew.
“Uh-huh,” said Duncan. “We weren’t kidding. We don’t kid about important stuff like that.”
“Think Clint’s gonna go cast a level-four spell against Freddie?” asked Jessie.
“I don’t think even the darkest Goth magic works against someone like that,” said Stew. “Wow.”
“Impressive,” Duncan said. “I know.”
“So go over there and ask him to help you, dude,” said Stew. “Now’s your chance. He’s alone.”
“Well, I can’t just walk up to him in the cafeteria,” said Duncan. “It’s too public. He’d kill me with his spoon.”
“Normally when you avoid confrontation, Duncan, I think you’re wussing out,” said Jessie. “But here you have a valid point. You’ve only got one shot with Freddie. If he turns you down cold, it’s over. Period. Over. No more bully. And yeah, then he probably kills you with a blunt tool.”
“So when are you gonna ask him for help?” asked Stew.
“You have to catch him alone,” said Jessie. “This is imperative. Remember what a pushover Sloth was when no one was watching?”
“But Sloth really is a pushover,” said Duncan. “Remember the lesson you learned? Judging books by their fur? Or something like that.”
“Funny,” she said. “But I bet that if we’d gone to talk to Sloth in the Maple North cafeteria, he would’ve behaved differently. There would’ve been no polite conversation over curry, no shy admission of his nonthreateningness.”
“True,” said Duncan. “I can see that. So we approach Freddie when he’s alone.”
“There you go with the we again,” said Jessie. She’d finished her fries and had begun to lick ketchup from her fingers.
"C’mon,” said Duncan, looking at her skeptically. “I’ll do the talking—or at least I’ll try—but you can’t honestly expect me to approach him by myself. Seriously? That seems an unnecessary risk. Sure, he might be a bit more tame when he’s alone. But the operative word there is might. He could also rip my torso from my legs, like Cage in Mortal Kombat.”
“Freddie’s a big dude,” said Jessie, “but I don’t think he has a Mortal Kombat-style signature fatality. He might be working on it, though. So fine, we’ll go with you.”
Carly briskly walked past Duncan’s table. She looked at him, smiled, and waved with a quick twist of her wrist.
After she’d walked a few more feet, Stew slapped Duncan’s back. “That was touching. Honestly, man. As someone who’s known you for many years—someone who’s seen more than a few pathetic displays from you regarding that chick—to see her acknowledge you directly”—Stew pretended to wipe a tear from his cheek—“maybe not with actual speech, but with eye contact . . . well, it’s just really beautiful.” He sniffed mockingly.
Jess reached a hand across the table as if to console Stew. “Thank you,” said Duncan, playing along. “I couldn’t have come so far so fast without the support of my BFFs.” He teased his green beans with a plastic fork. “In a few days I won’t even get eye contact—not unless I can stir up a little more sympathy affection.”
“Then we need to make the move on Freddie soon,” said Jess.
“We don’t know anything about him yet,” said Duncan. “We’ve performed no research. No recon. We need to know his likes, his dislikes, his habits, his weakne—”
“He’s on the move!” said an excited Stew.
Freddie was walking toward an exit. He’d left his tray at the lunch table. A cafeteria monitor began to approach him, then clearly thought better of it. Freddie threw open a set of double doors and left the lunchroom.
“We should follow him,” said Duncan.
“We’ll never catch up,” said Jess. “And if we did, what would we do? The bell’s about to go off, kids will flood the hallway, and then there’s no talking to him. Because he really would rip you apart at the waist.”
“Right. So how do we corner him?”
“Outside,” she said. “Parking lot. After school. We’ll locate his locker before the end of the day, then tail him.”
“What if he takes the bus?” asked Duncan.
“Then today we take the bus.” She thought for a moment. “No, actually you take the bus, Duncan. Stew and I will follow in my car. We maintain contact via cell. When Freddie gets off, you get off.”
“What if the bus loses you?” asked Duncan.
“You think a school bus is going to try to shake me?”
“No, right, I guess not.”
“Don’t you have detention today, Jess?” asked Stew.
“Why, thank you, Stewart. Nice to know you’re monitoring my disciplinary obligations. Yes, I do have detention penciled into the planner today. But I’m gonna go ahead and miss it, I think.”
The bell rang. After lunch, Jessie quickly located Freddie ’s locker, then relayed its coordinates to Duncan and Stew. Classes came and went. Duncan exchanged pleasantries with Carly. She had the kindest smile, the most emotive eyes, the least insincere “How’re you feeling, Duncan?” he’d ever heard. It wasn’t quite the same as Friday’s outflow of compassion, but it was good. Immediately following eighth period, Duncan, Stew, and Jess met at a predetermined location near—but not too near—Freddie’s locker. Duncan felt like a small weapon-less hunter stalking some enormous six-headed dragon.
They followed Freddie outside, maintaining a safe distance, so it was unlikely they would be noticed by their target. Much to Duncan’s relief, Freddie walked past the row of buses and toward the student lot. He had a slow, ominous gait. Unhurried yet untiring, like the preternaturally evil killers in eighties slasher movies. The plodding pace actually made it difficult for them to follow Freddie sneakily. Stew and Jessie broke away from Duncan, circling around to the opposite side of the lot. They had decided not to approach Freddie as a group—“If he sees us come at him,” said Jessie, “he’s more likely to blow.”
When he reached the asphalt of the student lot, Freddie slowed further. He scanned the parking area, seemed to identify his car, then walked toward it. Stew and Jessie crept along the tree line that bordered the lot. Duncan had moved himself to within twenty feet of Freddie, close enough to feel—or to imagine feeling—an aura of pure mean. They were heading toward an old, partially rusted black Monte Carlo that appeared to have a person waiting at the wheel. Duncan sped up.
“Hey, um . . . hello!” he called tentatively. “Freddie? Hello? I was wondering if I could have just a quick second.”
Freddie turned slowly. His eyes were narrowed, his expression menacing. He balled his beefy hands into fists. Duncan stepped back to make sure he wasn’t standing within arm’s length. He’d lost sight of Stew and Jess.
“Oh, hi,” Duncan said. “Welcome to Elm Forest, Freddie. You’re new, right? I’m Duncan.” He nervously cleared his throat. “Duncan Boone. I’m a junior here. We’re in gym class together. Man, that Coach Chambliss sure is a bast—”
Turns out Duncan had underestimated the length of Freddie ’s arms.
In a swift, almost effortless motion, Freddie grabbed Duncan ’s shirt and flung him onto the trunk of the Monte Carlo. Duncan made a faint “ooooohh” sound as he twisted through the air, then landed with a thud. Freddie pinned him against the car with his left forearm—which felt like an anvil—and kept his right hand available for pummeling.
“No time to chat, dweeb.”