The McGillicuddy Book of Personal Records

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Authors: Colleen Sydor

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BOOK: The McGillicuddy Book of Personal Records
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EPub edition copyright © August 2011
Copyright © 2010 Colleen Sydor

5 4 3 2 1

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Published by
Red Deer Press
A Fitzhenry & Whiteside Company
195 Allstate Parkway,
Markham, ON L3R 4T8
www.reddeerpress.com

Edited by Peter Carver
Text design by Tanya Montini
Cover design by Jacquie Morris & Delta Embree, Liverpool, Nova Scotia

Acknowledgments
We acknowledge with thanks the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Ontario Arts Council for their support of our publishing program. We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) for our publishing activities.

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Sydor, Colleen
The McGillicuddy book of personal records / Colleen Sydor.

ISBN 978-0-88995-434-2
eISBN 978-1-55244-288-3
I. Title.

PS8587.Y36M34 2010     jC813'.54     C2010-900197-4

Publisher Cataloging-in-Publication Data (U.S)
Sydor Colleen.

The McGillicuddy book of personal records / Colleen Sydor.

ISBN: 978-0-88995-434-2 (pbk.)
eISBN: 978-1-55244-288-3

1. Friendship – Fiction. 2. Courage – Fiction. I. Title.

[Fic] dc22     PZ7.S936Mb 2010

Do your work with mastery.

Like the moon, come out from behind the clouds!

Shine.

– Buddha

One must never let the fire go out in one's soul, but keep it burning.

– Vincent van Gogh

Hide it under a bushel?

No! I'm gonna let it shine.

– Author unknown

I would like to acknowledge and thank the following friends for their generous contributions to this book and for their collective wisdom: Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, Mahatama Gandhi, Emily Dickinson, Groucho Marx, William Shakespeare, the Dalai Lama, Mark Twain, Plato, William Blake, Charlie Chaplin, Charlie Brown, Buddha, Vincent van Gogh, e. e. cummings, Confucius, Robert Frost, & Connie Mack.

A million thanks, guys!

For Sue, who knew

CHAPTER ONE

It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog.
Charlie Chaplin

Big shots are only little shots who keep shooting.
Christopher Morley

Any minute, any day, some players may break a long-standing record. That's one of the fascinations about the game, the unexpected surprises.
Connie Mack, aka Cornelius McGillicuddy

Hotshots, every last one of 'em. He'd seen it all before—
kathunk, kathunk
—those dorks on television—
kathunk
—doing any number of humiliating things just to get their names into the
World Book of Records
. Lee switched the basketball to his left hand and continued bouncing without missing a beat—
kathunk
. The stunts involving nasal passages were the worst—guys who'd swallow one end of a long strand of spaghetti, for example, then hork hard enough to make it come shooting out a nostril—
kathunk, kathunk
—or snort chocolate milk up their noses, and squirt it out their tear ducts …

Joe Schmoe, of Hotshot High School, breaks the current world record for eyeball-squirting by shooting a stream of chocolate milk an incredible six feet, ten and five-eighths inches (209 centimeters). The event took place Friday afternoon in front of a packed gymnasium of cheering students and two World Book judges … blah blah blah blah.

Naa … Lee McGillicuddy liked to think he had a little more class than that. Besides, he'd tried the chocolate milk thing once and it'd only made him throw up. Just as well. What was the point of repeating what someone else had already done? And he didn't need his name officially written in some old book, as if the record didn't count unless the whole world was watching. No, it was enough for Lee just to make and break his own records. Least, that's what he told himself.

Lee 'bout jumped out of his jersey when a voice broke into his thoughts.

“Hi, Daddy.”


Jeez
, Rhonda,” said Lee, “how many times do I have to tell you not to sneak up …”

Rhonda interrupted him like she always did. “I've told you a
zillion
times not to call me that,” she said. “My name's Ron.”

“Yeah, and mine's Lee, but that doesn't stop you from calling me Daddy. And I've told
you
a zillion and
ten
times.”

He'd earned the nickname at school after taking on a growth spurt that left him a good six inches taller than the tallest kid in the class. Daddy. Short for Daddy Long Legs. And he definitely had them—long legs, that is. Lee had become used to the name ages ago, but he knew he'd never get used to Rhonda calling him that. Not only was Rhonda three years younger than Lee, but she was as short for her age as Lee was tall. It was just a little too creepy to have a pygmy ten-year-old following you around all the time calling you Daddy.

“Thought you quit the basketball team,” said Rhonda.

Lee knew her fingertips were fairly itching to grab the ball and make him chase her. He backed away a step or two. “You can't quit a team you've never been on,” said Lee. “You know very well I got cut the first day.”

It hadn't been his idea, by the way—trying out for the basketball team. He'd given in to everyone's hounding just to get them off his back. But he knew it would be a disaster. Just because a guy towers above everyone else on the court doesn't mean he'll be a natural at ker-plunking or splunking or whatever the heck they called it.
Slam-dunking
, that was it. And he'd tried telling them as much. But no. They'd forced him to prove his klutziness to an entire gym full of people instead.
Kathunk kathunk kathunk.

“So if you're not on the team, then why ya practicing?”

“I'm not practicing.”

“Yes, you are.”

“No, I'm not.”

“Yes, you are.”

“No, I'm n …” Lee stopped himself just in time to save his dignity. Rhonda waited for him to finish the sentence, then became impatient.

“What
are
you doing, then?”

He started to answer, then stopped again. Rhonda had a way of making him forget that he didn't owe her any explanations. Why was he always baring his soul to this kid?

“Oh, I get it,” said Rhonda, giving her nose an upward swipe with the heel of her hand. The habit had left a permanent pale crease above the tip of her nose. Lee liked to tease her about it when he was in a generous mood. Rhonda spoke up. “You're breaking another one of your dumb old records, aren't ya?”

Lee didn't answer. She was ruining his focus. Like she always did. And how the heck had she found him here, anyhow? He'd calculated that this abandoned garage lot was far enough away from school to avoid curious, smart-alecky onlookers. But that was Rhonda all over––she seemed to be able to sniff him out like a hound dog.

Lee continued to bounce the ball with a look of severe concentration so maybe she'd get the message and vamoose. No such luck.

“Going for the full twelve hours this time?”

Some records required only skill (or stupidity), and could be over in a few seconds. It didn't take long to swallow fifty live goldfish, for example. But others required time and mega patience, and those were his specialties. Most of Lee's records were limited to twelve hours, max. It was the longest stretch of time he could stay out of the house and not get hauled back home for dinner, or bed, or something equally lame. If he started at nine in the morning, and told his mother he was staying at a friend's place for lunch and supper, he could still make it home by nine in the evening—his curfew time. Last time he'd done the basketball challenge, he'd only lasted ten hours and thirteen minutes. He'd tried peeing while bouncing the ball at the same time, but it had ended badly, and his mother gave him heck for dribbling in the
bathroom
, of all places. (The
basketball
kind of dribbling, you understand.) This time he was prepared. He hadn't had anything to drink since yesterday afternoon and, if worse came to worst, there was always the bushes.

“Ignore me if you want,” said Rhonda, “but if you do, I won't go away.”

He knew she meant it. “I'm trying to break ten hours, thirteen,” he muttered. Then he looked her straight in the eye. “Bye
bye
, now!”

Rhonda ignored him. She stopped watching the basketball and turned her attention to a tattoo on her forearm—fake, of course. It was half peeled off so you couldn't even tell what it was anymore. The tattoo was one of six applied four weeks ago.

Made Lee wonder how often she bathed …

Rhonda “Ron” Ronaldson of Winnipeg, Manitoba, sets an
ALL-TIME PERSONAL RECORD
for the longest stretch of consecutive days without taking a bath—twelve weeks, six days, ten hours, and counting. Miss Ronaldson is also trying for a simultaneous record of how much mud one person can pack under her fingernails at one time …

Lee could suddenly feel Rhonda's eyes boring into him. “Why are you smirking to yourself?” she said, “What goes on in that pea-brain of yours?” Lee refused to reply, so she came up with a question he was more likely to answer. “Staying at Gertie's or Aggie's tonight?” she asked, picking at the last letter of what used to spell
Rebel
across her bicep (if you could call it that).

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