Authors: Andy Griffiths
âSpeaking.'
âHi, Andy. Chris Robbins from Triple B FM here.'
My stomach drops. He must have found out I've been impersonating him! Marvin Bonwick must have rung him back to check if the call was legit! When he found out it was a trick he would have guessed it was me.
âWho is it?' says Danny.
I put my hand over the receiver. âIt's Chris Robbins! He must know! What do I do?'
âTalk to him,' says Danny. âHe can't prove anything.'
âAndy?' says Chris. âAre you still there?'
Yes,' I say. âI'm here.'
âThought we'd lost you for a minute.'
âJust a bit surprised,' I say. âWhat can I do for you?'
âWell,' says Chris, âI've just pulled your name out of the barrel to play Beat the Bomb â but if you'd rather not . . .'
âAre you kidding?' I shout. âOf course I want to!'
It's like a dream. What are the odds of something like this happening? A million to one? Nah â more like a squillion to one.
âWell, stand by,' says Chris. âWe're about to go to air. I'll just play a couple of ads and a station ID and then you're on. Oh, and by the way, Andy?'
âYes?'
âTurn your radio off. We will be transmitting on a ten-second delay and it can get a little confusing.'
Through the earpiece of the telephone I hear a jingle for Cheapies carpet-cleaning service. Talk about deja vu. If Danny wasn't right next to me I'd swear it was him playing another prank.
Then the Triple B station ID starts. Comets and meteorites again. âTriple B â taking you back to the sixties and seventies . . .'
Then Chris starts speaking.
âGood afternoon. Chris Robbins with you on Triple B, and to play Beat the Bomb this hour we have Andy Griffiths on the line. How are you doin', Andy?'
âPretty good.'
âGreat! What are you up to this afternoon?'
I wonder what he would say if I told him I was impersonating him and making prank Beat the Bomb phone calls. But I decide against it. I need the cash.
âNothing much, you know.'
âFantastic! Ready to play Beat the Bomb?'
âI sure am.'
âAll right â now, you know the rules, Andy?'
âYes,' I say, but he explains them anyway.
âOkay. Clock's ticking,' says Chris.
âTwenty dollars,' says the voice from outer space.
tick tick tick tick tick tick tick
I'd be happy with twenty. Maybe I should stop it right now. Those bombs can go off pretty fast sometimes.
âTwenty-five dollars.'
tick tick tick tick tick tick tick
âOne hundred and forty-eight dollars.'
I want to stop, but I can't. It's like I'm frozen. If I can just keep my nerve . . .
âTwo hundred and ninety dollars.'
tick tick tick tick tick tick tick
âFour hundred and sixty-six dollars.'
The ticking is deafening. Any minute now the bomb is going to explode and I'll be splattered all over the room. But still I can't speak.
âFive hundred and two dollars.'
I can't stand it anymore.
âStop!' I yell.
âAndy?'
âYes?'
âDo you know what you've just done?'
âYes,' I say in a dream.
âYou have just won five hundred and two dollars! What do you think about that?'
I can't speak.
Danny's jumping up and down.
âHow much?' he's saying. âHow much?!'
âFive hundred and two,' I say.
Danny hoots.
âHey, Andy,' says Chris. âWhat are you going to do with all that money?'
A vision of a pile of Mars bars as high as Mount Kosciusko fills my head. It merges into a tower of CDs and a stereo system loud enough to blow my ears off. And then it dissolves into a blinding vision of flashing lights and beeps and explosions as I imagine spending an entire weekend in Timezone. But then I think of Marvin. And his mum.
âI'm not sure,' I say. âMaybe I'll give it to a friend.'
Danny raises his eyebrows.
âWell, good on ya, Andy,' says Chris. âNow, if you can stay on the line while we confirm your details, we've got something special coming up. Do you like John Farnham, Andy?'
I can't stand him, but I'll say anything for five hundred and two bucks.
âLike
him? I
love
him!' I lie.
âWell, this is for you mate,' he says over the start of âYou're the Voice'. âThis is Triple B FM where â like Andy Griffiths â we make your dreams, and your friends' dreams, come true. Good on ya, Andy!'
âThanks, mate,' I say.
My head is spinning. I'm trying to work out if I'm the most fantastically lucky person or the biggest loser in the world. I mean, having to pretend I like John Farnham is bad enough, but having one of his songs dedicated to me is much, much worse.
âAre you going to give that money to me?' says Danny. He's practically drooling all over the carpet.
âNo,' I say. âWhat makes you think that?'
âYou said you were going to give it to a friend.'
âYes, but not you,' I say.
âThen who?'
âMarvin.'
His jaw drops.
You're kidding!'
âNo,' I say.
âAll of it?'
âNo, not all of it. After I pay Marvin what we owe him there will be two dollars left over. We can go halves in that if you like.'
âThanks, mate,' says Danny, staring at the carpet. You're a real pal.'
âDon't mention it,' I say. âWhat are friends for?'
ell, I finally did it.
I've been thinking about it for ages and I kept putting it off, but this morning I finally did it.
I got a tattoo.
It's a skull with two eagle wings curving up over the top. The skull has these evil green eyes and a sort of long, thin red moustache that arcs upwards next to the wings. And running across the bottom of the skull is a small ribbon-shaped banner. And inside the banner are the words BORN TO DIE.
Didn't cost much either. Normally, it would have cost $2.95, but I got it on special at
Target for ninety-five cents.
And the best thing about it is that it didn't even hurt.
I just removed the protective sheet and pressed the sticky side firmly onto my skin. Then I wet the top of it with a sponge, waited for thirty seconds and peeled off the backing.
Yeah, so it's not real â but it's so realistic you'd never know the difference. And the amazing thing is, it makes me feel different. Bigger. Tougher. Bolder. Nobody's going to want to kick sand in my face and steal my girlfriend when they see I've got such a wicked-looking tat. Not that I have a girlfriend right at the moment, but as soon as they see my tattoo I bet every girl in school will want to go out with me â even the teachers.
The packet says it will last for days â almost forever. It also says I'll be able to shock my friends and family. But it's not my friends and family I'm interested in shocking. It's my enemies: Steve Lik and Robert Leech.
Steve Lik lives at the bottom of the hill. He's a few years older than me, but we used to muck around a bit together on the weekends. Until he started hanging around with Robert Leech.
Robert Leech is a wiry-haired geek who lives over on the other side of the hill.
He's got a face like a rat, with a really thin pointy nose and beady brown eyes. He thinks he's really good because he rides a fifteen-speed racer and smokes rallies. He doesn't like me much. Well, to be truthful, he hates my guts. I don't know what I did to make him hate me so much. Being born I suppose. Robert Leech is just that sort of guy.
Lately, him and Lik have taken to waiting for me at the bottom of the hill outside Lik's place and they won't let me pass until I tell them the password. Today is no exception. I turn the corner into my street and they're both there, like they've been waiting for me. Leech is sitting in the middle of the footpath. He's got his jaws rigid and his lips tight as he blows a series of smoke rings. Lik is leaning against his letterbox with a yellow bucket in his hand. I could try crossing the road, but I know they'd just come after me. I pretend to ignore them.
âWell, well, well,' says Leech, in between smoke rings. âIf it isn't our old mate Andy.'
Lik smirks.
âDo you mind if I just go past?' I say, moving to step around him. But Leech's hand shoots out and grabs my ankle.
âNot so fast,' he says. âSay please.'
âPlease,' I say, looking straight ahead.
âSay “pretty please”,' he says. â“With sugar on top”.'
âPretty please with sugar on top,' I say.
âSay “pretty please with sugar on top, Sir!”'
I know from experience that this can go on for a long time. But today I don't have to put up with this crap, because I've got a tattoo. I casually roll up the sleeves of my windcheater. The tattoo is still there on my right forearm. The skull's eyes seem to be flashing.
âLook, I don't want any trouble,' I say. âJust let me past . . . or else.'
Leech laughs. âOr else what?' He is too busy blowing smoke rings to notice my tattoo. But I can see that Lik has seen it. He's already backing off.
âCome on, Leechy. That'll do.'
Leech stops laughing. âHuh?'
Lik steps across to him and whispers in his ear.
Leech jumps up from the footpath, his eyes fixed on my forearm. He takes a couple of steps backwards.
âCan I pass now?' I ask.
âYeah, of c-course,' says Leech. âWe were just kidding around. Just a bit of fun, you know.'
âFun? That's what you call fun?'
Leech and Lik are standing there frozen, like a couple of stunned rabbits. I'm not sure whether they're scared of the tattoo or just the way it makes me act, but I don't really care. I flex the muscles in my forearm â which is a hard thing to do really, because I don't have that many. But my skull doesn't mind. It ripples and seems to grin in response, like it's enjoying it. I guess I should be scared, but I feel strangely calm. Like I can do whatever the hell I want. Why not pull out all the stops and teach them a lesson they'll never forget?
Lik is still holding the yellow bucket.
âWhat's in the bucket?' I say.
âSlugs,' says Lik.
âHow come?' I ask, knowing full well that they get their jollies out of inventing new and horrible ways for slugs to die.
âUm, er, well, my dad asked me to. They've been eating his rose bushes.'
âDon't give me that crap,' I say. âLet 'em go.'
Lik looks at Leech. Leech nods. Lik tips the bucket, and about twenty fat grey slugs fall into the shrubbery.