Read Sidekicks Online

Authors: Dan Danko,Tom Mason,Barry Gott

Sidekicks (3 page)

My eyes started to water. Earlobe Lad glared at me. My lids quivered. Earlobe Lad clenched his teeth. I squinted, doing my best to relieve the burning pain that shot through my eyeballs. After, oh, one minute, I finally cracked like a cheap vase.

Blink-blink.

“Gah!” Earlobe Lad shouted at me, clutching his ears. “You did that on purpose!”

“I have to blink.”

“Do you? Do you!?” he cried, standing from his sidekick chair, an accusing finger jabbing at my face.

“Calm down,” Spice Girl said in a hushed voice. “He didn’t do it on purpose.”

“You’re all against me,” Earlobe Lad said as he slumped in his chair and slid beneath the table, “because I have giant ears!” The final words fell out of his mouth wrapped in despair — the despair that went hand-in-hand with giant ears.

I guess, anyway. My ears are normal.

The three of us sat at the Sidekick Super Table of Meetingness. Spice Girl had short blond hair. Her outfit was entirely pink with a purple “Girl Power” patch stuck on the front. I could smell the scent of Chamomile wafting up from her.

“It’s good for headaches,” she whispered to me.

It’s usually about now — when Earlobe Lad is sobbing or Exact Change Kid is handing out two quarters, three dimes, two nickels, and ten pennies for a dollar, or I’m buffing the second coat of wax on the Pumpkinmobile — that I ask myself, “What was I thinking?”

I’ll tell you what I was thinking. Imagine being a hero. Imagine saving people and being on the cover of magazines and stuff. Like, what if people looked up to you and wanted to be like you because you were so cool. That’s what I was thinking. Smash evil and be popular. I had no idea I’d be doing laundry and listening to people whine all the time.

These
are the battles TV never tells you about.

“What’s with Elephant Boy?” Boom Boy asked as he entered the Clubhouse.

“I hate when you call me that,” Earlobe Lad whimpered from under the table. “And stop breathing so loud.”

Boom Boy had a cool power: he could blow up. The only problem was, if he blew up, he
really
blew up, so he could only do it once, if you know what I mean. His costume was pretty cool, too. Red and black Spandex. On his chest was a picture of himself blowing up.

“You guys ready for another boomtastic day of monitor duty? I get the front chair!” Boom Boy said, sniffing at Spice Girl.

“How do we know you even
have
the power to blow up?” Earlobe Lad whispered from under the table.

“What? What? Because if I couldn’t blow up, I’d call myself ‘I-Can’t-Blow-Up Boy,’” Boom Boy sneered. “Or, if I had a really stupid power, I’d call myself Earlobe Lad.”

“Makes sense to me,” Spice Girl commented.

“Yeah, but I mean, we’ve never actually
seen
you blow up,” Earlobe Lad whimpered. “No one has. You tell us you can blow up. Sometimes you even threaten that you’ll blow up, but no one’s ever actually
seen
you blow up.”

“Stop messing with me or I swear I’ll blow up,” Boom Boy threatened.

“See.”

“Okay! Okay! So that’s how it’s going to be, huh? Well, don’t blame me when they’re picking pieces of you off the ceiling,” Boom Boy called back.

“Won’t they be picking pieces of you off the ceiling, too?” Earlobe Lad pointed out.

“Yeah. But I’ll have the satisfaction of being right.”

Boom Boy stepped back from the table and balled his fists. His face grew redder and redder as he clenched his eyes.

“Maybe we should stop him,” Spice Girl whispered nervously.

“No way,” I responded. “I wanna see this.”

“But what if someone . . . gets hurt?” Spice Girl warned.

“Of course someone’s gonna get hurt! Boom Boy’s about to blow himself up!”

Earlobe Lad crept out from under the table in time to see Boom Boy’s face turn stop-sign red.

“Wow. He’s really going to do it this time,” Earlobe Lad whispered in a nearly inaudible voice.

“Wait!” Boom Boy said and opened his eyes. “I get it now. I get it. You
want
me to blow up don’t you? Yeah. ’Cause once I do, I’ll be gone and then there’ll be no more Boom Boy to push around.”

“But no one pushes you around,” Earlobe Lad murmured.

“And that’s how it better stay, because if they do, I swear I’ll blow myself up!”

“I think
I’m
going to blow up,” I said and smacked my palm against my forehead.

“You have that power, too?” Spice Girl asked.

Before I could answer, Boy-in-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy rolled into the Sidekick Super Clubhouse in his Giant Hamster Ball of Justice.

“Mmmph pah mm mm!” Boy-in-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy shouted from inside his protective ball, whose thick walls muffled his shouts like he had a sock in his mouth.

“What?” I yelled back.

“Ahh! You’re killing me!” Earlobe Lad moaned.

Boy-in-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy pointed wildly toward the door. “Mmm! Mmmph! Mmm!”

“I dunno,” Boom Boy said, scratching his chin. “I think he’s trying to tell us something.”

Boy-in-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy’s face flushed red. In a fit of frustration, he began beating his head against the inside of his Giant Hamster Ball of Justice.

“Oh! Oh! I know this!” Spice Girl enthused. “It’s Morse code! He’s trying to tell us something about cheese.”

Something was wrong and it was something more terrible than Boy-in-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy needing to use the bathroom. But before Boy-in the-Plastic-Bubble Boy could shout one more word of nonsense, a huge explosion shook the Sidekick Clubhouse and would have rattled the Sidekick Clubhouse windows — if we had some.

“Don’t look at me,” Boom Boy said as the echo died. He checked himself over to make sure his arms and legs were still attached.

Exact Change Kid ran out from the Sidekick Super Bunk Room. “What the heck was that? It knocked over all my change piles. I’ve got pennies mixed with dimes mixed with nickels! It’s madness!”

“Come on!” I shouted.

“Wait,” Exact Change Kid called out, shuffling four dimes, two nickels, and a penny in his hand. He had a crew cut, was thin, wore bottle-thick glasses, and was decked out in white Spandex with red boots. “Don’t you think we should have some rally cry before we run into battle?”

“How about, ‘Let’s go!’” I offered and turned to run.

“That’s not very catchy,” Spice Girl replied.

“Let’s vote on Speedy’s suggestion.” Exact Change Kid raised his hand. “All those against, raise your hands.”

Everybody but me raised their hands.

“Okay... that’s four against.”

“Look, I don’t care what our rally cry is! I’m just saying let’s go!”

“We just voted out ‘Let’s go,’ Speedy. Please don’t try to push your ideas on the rest of us,” Exact Change Kid whined.

“How about, ‘Sidekick Summons!’” Spice Girl cheered.

“I don’t know,” Exact Change Kid said. “It has a ring, certainly, but there’s just something...I don’t know . . .”

“Mmmph Mmpah?” Boy-in-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy offered.

“Could be. Could be,” Exact Change Kid replied, considering the suggestion.

“Look,” I interrupted impatiently, “you guys vote and I’ll check out the explosion. Someone may need help!”

I raced out of the room at 50 miles per hour and dodged left to avoid smacking into the wall.

“You should fill out the absentee ballot first!” Exact Change Kid called out after me, waving a blank form in the air.

I raced across the field and to the front of the League of Big Justice Headquarters of Big Justice. And then I saw it. I never thought this could happen. I never thought this would happen.

The League of Big Justice Headquarters of Big Justice was destroyed. This was what Boyin-the-Plastic-Bubble Boy was trying to tell us.

I raced inside. Rubble was everywhere.

“Pumpkin Pete? King Justice? Lady Bug?” I called out. “Captain Haggis? Librarian? Ms.

Mime? Is anybody here?”

Then I realized that if Ms. Mime were here, she wouldn’t answer anyway.

“I am, worm,” a voice growled behind me.

A man stepped out from the shadows of the rubble. I recognized him immediately from the League of Big Justice’s Big Justice Super Crime Files.

The Professor.

Dressed in a black cap and gown, wire-rimmed glasses, and holding a pointer stick, The Professor looked nothing like that guy from “Gilligan’s Island.” And I’m sure he was nowhere as smart.

Plus, he was evil.

“Pop quiz,” The Professor said. “What’s faster? The fastest man alive or a laser?”

“Actually, I’m faster than the Fastest Man Alive Man. In fact, he changed his name to —”

“Idiot! I was using the phrase as a noun-modifier, not a proper noun,” The Professor sighed.

I snickered. “Whoa! Hold on there, egghead. Save that grammar stuff for Spelling Beatrice.”

“Oh, shut up!” The Professor snarled. His pointer stick glowed red for a brief moment and in a flash, a laser shot from the tip.

I dove to the right and narrowly avoided becoming a melted slag heap. The Professor blasted again. I raced behind a wall of what used to be the League of Big Justice’s Super Kitchen.

This was bad. There was no way this guy could’ve taken out the entire League of Big Justice alone. Were the other bad guys still here? There’s no way I was ready for something this intense.

“Pop quiz,” The Professor called out from the other side of the wall. “What’s dressed in blue and yellow and will soon be quite a dead fellow?”

Dressed in blue and yellow? Duh
.

“That’s an easy one! Me!”

Me!?

I dove away as The Professor’s graduation cap flew through the wall, blasting it to pieces.

Now I knew why they called it a
mortar
board.

Think, Guy! Think! This is bad. He’s long-range. I’ve got no room to get speed. I can’t dodge him forever. Gotta lure him outside. But how?

“What do you want from me?” I yelled out from my cover.

“I want you to die.”

Well, at least he was honest.

“If you surrender now, I promise you a quick death,” The Professor called out as his mortarboard cap flew back into his hand like a boomerang.

A distraction? Then run outside?

I took a rock and tossed it from my hiding place. The Professor spun and, without a moment’s hesitation, blasted the rock into nothingness.

That’s it! I got it. And this’ll work, if he doesn’t kill me first.

I ran out from my cover and raced across the large hall, weaving in and out of rubble while dodging The Professor’s laser blasts. I finally dove for cover behind another shattered wall.

That’s when The Professor went for his mortarboard again. He flung it like a Frisbee. I watched it zip through the air directly at my shelter.

I had to time this perfectly.

At the last second, I mustered all my speed and raced from cover. One great thing about being the fastest person in the world is that it means everyone else in the world is slower than you. I snatched the mortarboard from mid-air, spun like Michael Jordan, and flung it back toward The Professor.

The Professor’s eyes widened like balloons. He raised his pointer stick and, in more instinct than thought, blasted his own mortarboard.

The explosion threw him against a far wall, where he slumped to the ground.

“School’s out,” I said, standing over his unconscious body.

Okay, so maybe that wasn’t so witty. But that’s why my nickname isn’t Pun Boy. And now that I think about it, I’m pretty darn happy about that.

I checked The Professor for something, anything, that could tell me what had happened here. Who or what could have taken out the League of Big Justice so quickly and easily? The thought sent a chill down my spine.

I checked his gown. That’s where I found it. The card.

BROTHERHOOD OF ROTTENNESS

THE PROFESSOR

Member since 1999

Wow. I don’t know where rottenness ranks between evil and bad, but I didn’t like the sound of that. I guessed they took out the League of Big Justice and left The Professor behind to deal with the sidekicks.

Took out the League of Big Justice? What was I up against? I’m just a sidekick, a rookie, a

“Sidekicks Strike!”

I spun around to see Exact Change Kid, Earlobe Lad, Spice Girl, Spelling Beatrice, and Boom Boy race into what was once the League of Big Justice Main Hall. I could hear Boy-in-thePlastic-Bubble Boy’s Giant Hamster Ball of Justice bang repeatedly against some rubble out in the hallway.

“Speedy! Speedy! Thank goodness!” Exact Change Kid called out as he ran up to me with dire urgency. “I just wanted you to know ‘Sidekicks Strike’ is not official yet, so don’t feel left out... hey,” he added, finally looking around. “Did we miss anything?”

“No,” I said. “This is just the beginning.”

Chapter Four

Punching Evi in the Face

“What do we know about the Brotherhood of Rottenness?” I asked the group.

“Well . . .” Spice Girl began. “We know they’re a brotherhood!” She clapped her hands together like she’d just won a prize on a game show.

“And rotten, don’t forget that,” Boom Boy added sarcastically.

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