Read Don't Kiss Girls and Other Silly Stories Online
Authors: Pat Flynn
I leave before he comes up with any more crazy ideas.
By recess my wallet is still empty. Gavin and I have a meeting to discuss our strategy.
âLook, mate,' he says. âLet's just forget it. We made 60 bucks. If we try to get the rest we'll just make enemies, and that's not me, you know?'
âWhat are you talking about?' I say, pointing at our enemies, who are stufï¬ng their faces and playing handball like they don't have a care in the world. âThey owe us money. If they won, you reckon they'd let
us
off?'
He shrugs. âWhat are we gonna do? Hire a hit man?'
Right then Kane smacks a backhand winner from the King square. I get an idea. He's big and strong, and for some reason people listen to him when he talks. But will he do it? There's only one way to ï¬nd out.
âFifty bucks is all yours.' I hold it in front of his nose and he tries to take it, but I quickly pull it away. âAs soon as you get all the money that people owe us.'
He doesn't say anything for a bit. I'm pretty sure he's going to say no. All of a sudden he grins. âToo easy.'
I'm a bit surprised. âAre you sure?' I say suspiciously.
âNo worries. You'll have the cash by tomorrow.'
I raise my eyebrows. I'll believe it when I see it.
*
The next morning Kane tells me to meet him in the toilet. We sneak into a stall and lock the door.
âYou go
ï¬rst,'
I say.
He takes an envelope out of his pocket and hands it to me. I open it and pull out a huge wad of cash. I'm sure there'll be coloured paper or Monopoly money in the middle of the bundle, so I check it closely.
It's all there, $346 of real money. Yes!
âHow'd you do it?' I ask, amazed.
âPiece of cake. They just needed a bit of gentle persuasion.'
I hand over the
50
bucks and put more cash in my wallet than I've ever seen before. Ashleigh will soon be mine!
Later that
day, Mulligan comes up and thrusts out his hand.
âHey, Rossy. No hard feelings about yesterday?'
âNah,' I say, shaking it. âYou came good in the end.'
âYeah. I wanted to talk to you about that. I was wondering if I could give you another
50?'
I'm a bit confused. âUmm. What for?'
He gives me a funny look. âYou know, the investment. Kane said you'll be doubling our money in two weeks. He said you know a bloke who works at the track and that some of the races are rigged. That's how you knew Life's a Gamble was going to get disqualiï¬ed, he said.'
âKane said all that?'
âYeah.' Mulligan's nostrils start to
ï¬a
re. âIt's true, isn't it? 'Cause if it's not â¦' His
ï¬sts
bunch into two balls of knuckles.
âOf course it's true,' I say, quickly. âI know a bloke at the track named Joe. It's all rigged.'
âGood.'
He calms down. âWell, here you go.' He takes
50
bucks out of his pocket. âThat's 200
you owe me.'
âYeah. Great,' I mumble.
I
ï¬nd
Kane at the handball courts. As usual, he's the King. I work my way up to the Queen square so I can have a good discussion with him.
âKane, what the hell did you do?'
âHey, you didn't tell me
how
to get the money off 'em,' he says, chuckling. âYou just said get it, and I did.'
âHurry up and serve the ball,' yells the Dunce.
âShut up,' says Kane. âI'll serve when I'm ready.'
âYeah, shut up,' I agree.
âBut kids are expecting me to double their money in two weeks,' I say to Kane. âHow am I going to do that?'
He shrugs, serving a spinning delivery to the Dunce. âThat's
your
problem.'
âKane!'
He laughs. âI don't know what you're worried about, Rossy. You're rich. For a few weeks, anyway. That should give you time to get Ashleigh back and earn some more money.'
Get Ashleigh back. Earn money. That's what this is all about, isn't it?
The ball makes its way into my square and I hit a left-handed drop shot into the King square, catching Kane by surprise.
Yes! I'm King. If I can beat Kane, I can do anything.
âDouble bounce!' he yells.
âWas not!'
We stand there chest-to-chest until the usual thing happens when there's a disagreement in handball. Someone gets pushed out of the square and to the back of the line.
And because Kane has already burst through the puberty gate while I'm still waiting in the stall, that someone is me.
I swear that I'm going to get even with Kane, if it's the last thing I do.
But
ï¬rst
I'm going to buy two tickets to the monster truck show.
I'm sure Ash will love it.
The Caddy versus Psycho Man
âRossy! You can't wear that!'
This is how Kane greets me when I show up at his house on Saturday morning. He's got some nerve. He's dressed in a pink polo shirt, long shorts and socks up to his knees. And he tells me that
my
clothes are bad.
âWhat's wrong with this?' I ask, holding my arms out and looking down at my boardies and T-shirt. âThese are perfect for golf. There's heaps of sand and water there, you know.'
He chucks a spaz so I run home and borrow some golf clothes off Dad. Kane has lined me up a job caddying for some rich guy at the golf club, so I need to look the part, he reckons.
By the time I arrive back at the Steeles' they're all in the car waiting. Kane's dad is driving and his mum is in the front seat. They both play golf at the same time on the same course, but never together.
I'm in the back, wedged between Kane and Lacey. She gets a lesson from the golf pro on Saturdays and supposedly has heaps of talent. Although maybe if I charged $100 an hour, like her golf pro does, I'd say she had talent as well, just to keep her coming back.
Mrs Steele turns to us, a little visor peeking over her head. âWho are you caddying for today, Kane?'
âDr Graham.'
âOh, the gynaecologist. He seems very nice.'
I'm not exactly sure what a gynaecologist is, but in SOSE the other day Miss Mason said that âologist' means someone who's an expert in their
ï¬eld.
Maybe Dr Graham is an expert in guys?
âWho's Tony got?' Mrs Steele asks.
Kane grins. âDr Edwards.'
âThe psychiatrist?'
âYep.'
She looks at me. âWatch out. George Edwards is the most competitive man on earth.'
âA real stickler for the rules,' adds Mr Steele. âThat's why he never uses carts. He likes to play by tournament conditions, which is why he insists on a caddy, not only for him but for whoever he's playing with.'
âSo we don't get to drive those golf buggies around?' I ask.
âNo,' says Kane. âWe have to carry their clubs.'
âThat
's dumb.' I can't think of anything crazier than walking
around a golf course when you could be driving.
âI've heard that George only tips when he wins,' says Mrs Steele. âSo make sure he scores well, Tony.'
âI'll use my psychiatric powers,' I say. âHe'll get eighteen holes in one.'
Lacey giggles. I think she's starting to not hate me.
We arrive and Kane points out Dr Edwards. I walk up to him. âG'day, George. Heard a lot about you. My name's Tony but everyone calls me Rossy.'
He doesn't shake my outstretched hand.
âIf you must address me,' he says, âcall me Dr Edwards or sir.'
âUmm ⦠okay. G'day, sir.'
He raises his eyebrows. âHello, young man. Your
ï¬rst
job is to clean these balls.'
He hands me ten golf balls, all brand new. I'm not sure how to clean something that isn't dirty.
âPut them through the ball washer,' he says. âThey grip and spin better when they're washed. And make sure you dry them thoroughly.'
He walks off.
Kane's gone to
get Dr Graham a drink or something so I have
to
ï¬gu
re it out by myself. I can see wher
e the ball goes in but I'm not sure what
to do after that.
Lacey sees me looking at
the machine and comes over.
âYou turn the handle, like this.' She does it and a few seconds later the ball drops down, sparkling wet. âYou use this handtowel to dry it.'
âThanks, golf pro.'
She shakes her head at me. âHow'd you get so hopeless?'
âDunno. It comes naturally.'
I'm
halfway through cleaning the balls when an announcement comes over
the loudspeakers. âNow up on the
ï¬rst
tee, Dr Geor
ge Edwards and Dr Mark Graham.'
I
ï¬nish
the ball I'm on, put the rest in my pocket (he won't know the difference), and hurry over to the
ï¬rst
hole.
Dr Graham is stretching, touching his toes and then reaching up to the sky.
Dr Edwards is sitting on the bench with his eyes closed.
âBig night?' I ask him.
âNo.' He doesn't open his eyes. âI'm mentally rehearsing.'
âMentally what?'
âIt's where you visualise the entire round before you play. I've just hit a birdie on the eighteenth.'
âYeah? Kookaburra or crow?'
He looks up at me, eyes boring like drills into mine. âI believe golf is like life. The winners are those who prepare properly and take it seriously.'
That's so wrong, I think. I never study and always joke around, and look at me.
Dr Graham steps up and places his ball on a little red stick. He puts it back on and whacks the ball down the fairway. It goes long and straight.
He nods at Dr Edwards. âSo, George. What's the wager today?'
Dr Edwards
ï¬ddles
with his golf glove. âI'm feeling especially focused. Say, 100 a hole and
500
for the overall winner?'
Geez. Kane told me they bet big but I didn't think it would be this much.
Dr Graham taps his pocket, thinking. âWhy not? If I'm lucky, I might just make your wallet
shrink
.'
Kane laughs, although I don't know why.
I hand Dr Edwards a ball
and he steps up to the box.
He
does three practice swings, wiggles his hips and starts twisting his toes into the ground. He twists them so many times it's like he's trying to dig to China. All this takes a long time and I'm starting to feel a tickle in the back of my nose. The freshly mowed grass is really stirring up my hayfever. As he starts his backswing, I can't hold it in any longer.
âAhh-CHOOOOOOO!'
The ball hooks off to the left, heading straight for a group of old ladies.
âFour!' Dr Edwards yells.
I think he's making a cricket joke so I laugh, even though it's not that funny. I need to get back in his good books.
The ball lands on the roof of a golf
buggy and bounces over the fence, disappearing down a bitumen road.
âMore like a six,' I say, trying to add to the gag.
Dr Graham chuckles.
I'm glad someone appreciates it because Dr Edwards is just staring at me.
âOut of bounds,' says Dr Graham. âThat's a penalty shot, isn't it, George?'
Dr Edwards doesn't answer, but instead clicks his
ï¬ngers
at me and says, âAnother ball.'
I take a couple out of his bag and notice that they all have different numbers written on them. Maybe the doc is superstitious?
âSir, you can have a three, a
ï¬ve,
orâ' I swallow a laugh. â⦠a six.'
âJust throw me any damned ball!'
You don't have to be like that, I think. I throw him the six.
This time he whacks it straight down the fairway, past Dr Graham's ball.
âThat would have happened the
ï¬rs
t time,' he says, âif someone didn't ruin my concentration.'
He
ï¬ips
his club at me and starts striding
away.
I pick it up, put the woolly hat back over the club head, and hurry after him.
As we walk
down the fairway, Kane whispers to me, â
Fore
is what you yell in golf when someone might get hit.'
âFour? Why don't you yell
heads
?'
âYou just don't.'
Geez, this is a stupid game.
Before Dr Graham hits his next shot, Dr Edwards says loudly, âRemember to keep the head down, Mark.'
It must affect Dr Graham's concentration because he hits the ball along the ground like a cricket shot. It doesn't go very far.
Dr Edwards chuckles. âI think you might have killed a few worms, Mark. Don't worry, I'll show you how it's done.'
By the time I arrive at Dr Edwards' ball he's already clicking his
ï¬ngers.
âSix iron,' he says.
I quickly slide it out and hand it over, and after more of the usual practice swings, hip wriggles and toe twists, he hits the ball. It goes straight and high but lands well short of the green.
He looks confused. âHow did that happen? I hit it perfectly.' Then he looks down at his club. âYoung man, you gave me a nine iron, not a six!'
âWhoops.'
He throws the club at my feet. I
feel like telling him that if he didn't rush me
this wouldn't have happened. Really, it's his own
fault. But somehow I hold my tongue.
We wait for Dr Graham to hit his next shot. He smacks it onto the green.
âGreat shot!' says Kane. âWay to use the wind.'
âKane
knows a lot about wind,' I murmur to Dr Edwards,
trying to make him feel better. âEspecially the
hot variety.'
He ignores me.
When we get to Dr Edwards' ball, he says sharply, âGive me a wedge.'
âExcuse me?' Even though I'm an expert at giving them, I don't think a wedgie will help his game much.
âFrom the bag. A wedge.'
âOh.' He's talking about the golf club with the
W
on it, not his underpants going up his bum.
He lobs the ball onto the green, not far from the hole. Finally he starts looking a little bit happier.
I copy Kane by leaving the bag on the fair
way and follow Dr Edwards onto the green. He
takes the putter from me and says, âPick the ball
up and mark it.' Then he walks a long way behind
the hole and squats down. It looks like he's
practising going to the toilet in the bush.
I check my pants for something to mark the ball with. Dad likes to do the crossword at work and, sure enough, there's a pen in the right pocket.
Dr Graham's
ï¬rst
putt misses, but he taps the next one in.
âI do believe that's a bogey,' he says.
A bogey? Sounds like the stuff that comes out of my nose when I sneeze.
Dr Edwards
ï¬nishes
pacing the green and says to me, âPut the ball back.'
âOkay â¦' I was hoping he'd do that job.
âUmm. Where do you want me to put it, sir?'
He gives me a look. âWhere you marked it, of course.'
He starts looking around the green. âWhat did you use? A plastic marker? A coin?'
âA pen,' I say, holding the ball up so he can see my drawing of a smiley face. It's not bad at all, I reckon. I even put glasses on it.
âWhat have you done?' he hisses.
Dr Graham laughs.
âWell, you said mark it,' I say.
âI meant the green!' Dr Edwards turns to Kane.
âWhere did you
ï¬nd
this kid? The stupid
factory?'
I feel like throwing the ball at Dr Psycho-man, but
if I got him in the head he might not give
me a very good tip.
âNot marking the ball on the green,' says Dr Graham. âI believe that's a penalty stroke, isn't it, George?'
I put the ball down close to where I picked it up. Dr Edwards makes the putt.
âWay to go, sir,' I say, trying to be positive. âHole in seven.'
After that, things
start getting better for Dr Edwards. Three times in
a row he scores a par â which I
thought meant average but apparently in golf is pretty
good. Once he hit a great shot out of the
bunker with a sand wedge, which gave me an idea. When
I get home I'm going to put sand in Simon's
undies and give him a sand wedgie.
By the eighth hole
Dr Edwards is only one shot behind, but then he
yells âNo!' after he slices a ball into the thick r
ough, which is the golï¬ng name for the bushes.
We try to
ï¬nd
it. âYou look behind those big trees and I'll search in the long grass,' he says.
âNo worries.'
Once I'm behind the trees, I get another idea. Actually, the idea is bursting to get out of me. We've been on the course for nearly two hours and there hasn't been a toilet in sight. I had half a bottle of Coke to wake me up this morning and now it's begging to escape. I stand behind a tree and quickly unzip.
Ahhhh. That's better.
For some reason it reminds me of when I was a little boy and Dad taught me how to pee. He'd put a ping-pong ball in the toilet and I had to aim at it, kind of like I'm doing now.
Hang on. That's not a ping-pong
ball â it's Dr
Edwards' golf ball!
Just as I'm pulling up my zip he appears. âAny luck?' he asks.
âUmm. Yeah, butâ'
Dr Edwards suddenly sees the ball. âAh ha! Good work. I can't hit it out of here so I may as well move it.'
âI wouldn'tâ'
But he's already grabbed it and tossed it out onto the shorter grass near the fairway. Then he looks at me. âNo need to tell anyone about this. Understand?'
âMy lips are sealed.'
All of a
sudden he studies his palm like he's trying
to read his future. âGee, that's funny
. My hand's all wet.'