A Tale of Two Tails

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A Tale of Two Tails Page 7

by Henry Winkler


  “Which is why I had to bring him here,” Officer Quinn piped up. “I hated to do it, but your elongated dog racked up quite a list of complaints and almost caused bodily harm.”

  My dad shot Cheerio a disapproving look. Cheerio kind of cocked his head to the side, as if to say, “Don’t blame me, I couldn’t help it.”

  “I was there, Mr. Z,” Frankie said. “And it really wasn’t Hank’s fault. He was trying his hardest.”

  “And Cheerio didn’t even try to cooperate,” Ashley added.

  “Listen, kids. I know you’re concerned about your friend,” my dad said. “But this is between me and Hank.”

  That certainly zipped their lips. When my dad’s in one of his fact-finding moods, nothing can get in the way of what he needs to know.

  “Officer Quinn,” my dad said, turning to him. “I apologize for my son’s bad behavior and irresponsibility. But if you’ll let him and the dog go, I promise you that I’ll handle this matter at home.”

  “I won’t press charges,” Officer Quinn said, “if I see that they’re going to learn something from this.”

  “Oh, trust me, he’ll learn,” my dad said. “He’ll learn to love his bedroom, because that’s where he’s going to be until I decide it’s time for him to come out. And allow me to say, Hank, that decision will not be made anytime soon.”

  “If I could suggest another alternative,” Officer Quinn said. “We have a community service program that we find is very effective in dealing with young people in situations like this.” “Watch out, dude,” Frankie whispered. “I see some trash-picking-up duty in your future.”

  He laughed but I didn’t. He stopped immediately.

  “Sorry,” he said. “Inappropriate.”

  “As I was saying,” Officer Quinn went on. “There is a senior center on 85th between Broadway and Amsterdam. And I’m sure some of the seniors would be delighted to have a visit from an energetic young man such as yourself, Hank. You would put a smile on their face.”

  “Can Cheerio come, too?” I asked. “He relates well to older people.”

  “If you assure me that you can keep his behavior in check, that sounds like a good idea,” Officer Quinn said.

  “He needs community service, too. Maybe even more than you.”

  “I’ll have him at the senior center starting tomorrow,” my dad said.

  “And every afternoon for the next two weeks,” Office Quinn said.

  “That doesn’t include weekends, does it?” I asked.

  “It most certainly does.”

  My father turned to face me.

  “So, Hank,” he stated. “Just know that for the next fourteen days, you can breathe, eat, sleep, go to school, and do your community service with full commitment.”

  If you looked up “grounded” in the dictionary, you couldn’t find a more complete definition.

  And there you had it. My life, or lack thereof, by Hank Zipzer.

  CHAPTER 19

  NINE THINGS CHEERIO DID AT THE SENIOR CENTER THAT I WISH HE HADN’T (AND SO DID THEY!)

  1. He got his leash wrapped around Fern Bristol’s wheelchair and pulled her down the hall on a thrill ride. Her mouth was open but she was so scared nothing came out except her teeth.

  2. He knocked over Mr. Parkins’s and Mr. Adelman’s chess game and ate a rook. Actually, he ate two rooks but he was stopped before he could start on the queen.

  3. He joined in during their sing-along, howling away at “This Land is Your Land” until everyone stopped but Cheerio, who thought they had given him a solo.

  4. He stuck his snout in Mr. Davis’s trombone, and when Mr. Davis blew a high note, Cheerio’s long floppy ears shot straight up to the ceiling.

  5. He got into the kitchen and ate 183 cups of applesauce and four chocolate puddings, and burped for the rest of the afternoon. Mrs. Carew kept asking, “Are we in an orchard?”

  6. He snatched Mr. Hudnut’s straw hat and peed on it so much the straw got all soggy and I spent the next half hour airing it out with a hair dryer.

  7. He wouldn’t stop licking Mrs. Chow’s elbows because she uses a lotion that is scented with coconuts. She told him, “Beat it, pal. You’re barking up the wrong tree.”

  8. He got into the art supplies, and let’s just say, the art room at the senior center is now a red room.

  9. He tried to play with a goldfish in the aquarium and scared that poor fish so much, it jumped out of its tank and down Mrs. Witt’s blouse. It was never found again.

  CHAPTER 20

  ONE THING CHEERIO DID AT THE SENIOR CENTER THAT I’M GLAD HE DID

  1. He sat in every single person’s lap and brought a smile to each of their faces.

  CHAPTER 21

  Papa Pete always says that there’s a good side and a bad side to everything.

  On the good side, working at the senior center made me feel great. I never knew seniors could be so much fun.

  But on the bad side, working at the senior center took up every afternoon and all my free time. By the time I had dinner and finished my homework, there was not one second left to train Cheerio, which turned out not to matter because my dad forbid me to be in the mascot contest, anyway. He said that would teach me a life lesson in learning responsibility, although I personally don’t get how not doing something teaches you responsibility. Seems to me like the lesson is “don’t do things you really care about.” But then, I’ve never claimed to understand what goes on inside the mind of Stanley Zipzer.

  I waited a couple of days to see if he would change his mind, but when he didn’t, I couldn’t put it off anymore. On Tuesday, three days before the contest, I went up to Ms. Adolf after class and broke the sad news to her.

  “Ms. Adolf,” I began. I confess that my lower lip was trembling a little, which it does when I’m trying really hard not to cry. “I have to pull my dog Cheerio out of the mascot competition.”

  She was at her desk, busy locking up her top drawer with the grey key she wears around her grey neck. She barely looked up and didn’t seem to share any of my disappointment.

  “I think you’ve made the right decision, Henry,” she said. “You shouldn’t be wasting your time with that unruly dog, but rather applying yourself to the study of fractions.”

  At that moment, Nick McKelty was walking by on his way to recess, and of course, his big ears heard everything.

  “Don’t worry about it, Zipperbutt. That ugly mutt of yours would have come in last, anyway. He didn’t have a chance.”

  “Butt out, McKelty. This is between me and Ms. Adolf.”

  “I’m just saying that your dog is a loser, like you.”

  “That will be enough, Mr. McKelty,” Ms. Adolf scolded.

  “Fine, I was finished, anyway.” Then the jerk lumbered away, satisfied that his big mouth had done its job.

  I could feel my lower lip tremble big-time now, and my blood boil.

  “Excuse me, Ms. Adolf,” said a voice from behind me. I didn’t even have to turn around because I knew it was Frankie. “Ashley and I would like to enter a dog in the mascot competition.”

  “And what is your canine’s name?” she asked.

  “That would be Cheerio,” Frankie said.

  “What are you talking about?” I said to Frankie. “I just withdrew him.”

  “We heard,” Frankie said. “So Ashley and I would like to take over Team Cheerio, if that’s okay with you.”

  “Yeah . . . sure . . . but . . . wait a minute . . . you guys are . . . I mean . . . you left . . . and now you’re here . . . and wow, I’m confused.”

  “Katherine doesn’t need us,” Ashley told me. “She’s doing just fine. But you and Cheerio do.”

  “Besides,” Frankie said. “We can’t let McKelty get away with that attitude. Somebody’s got to shut him down. And we think Cheerio’s just the dog to do it.”

  Ms. Adolf was drumming her fingers impatiently on her desktop.

  “Will one of you please tell me . . . is this animal in or o
ut?” she said in a voice that sounded like she was remembering the last time she and Cheerio got tangled up. She was definitely not president of the Cheerio fan club.

  “He’s in,” all three of us said together.

  With that, I threw my arms around Frankie and Ashley, and as we headed out the door for recess, all I could think was how great it was to have friends like them.

  CHAPTER 22

  I was glad that Frankie and Ashley volunteered to train Cheerio, but there was one big problem, and it was my usual problem. Stanley Zipzer.

  “So, Hank,” my dad said at dinner as we were all trying to gag down my mom’s newest creation, a meatless medley of grains and legumes from Cameroon that were mashed together to make them look like crab cakes. We weren’t fooled, though. Those suckers were evil. I swear there was a dash of well-worn gym sock in there somewhere.

  I didn’t like the sound of my dad’s “So, Hank.” With him, nothing good ever follows “So, Hank.”

  “So, Hank,” he repeated, just for emphasis. “Mrs. Aguilar, the director of the senior center, called this afternoon.”

  “Oh, you mean Delores,” I said. “She’s really nice. She let me Xerox both my palms on the big machine in her office. And in color, no less.”

  “Let me remind you that you’re there to do community service, not to be fooling around copying your body parts.”

  “Just be grateful it was only his hands, Dad,” Emily-the-helpful piped up. “Once he tried to Xerox his butt on the machine in the attendance office, but Ms. Crock caught him just before he pushed the start button.”

  “Thanks for supplying that information, Emily,” I said. “I’ll be sure to tell Dad about the time you . . .”

  I stopped dead in my tracks. The truth was, I couldn’t think of a time that she had ever done anything wrong. Wow, what a boring life she leads.

  “So, Hank, back to the subject at hand,” my dad said. “Mrs. Aguilar asked if you could be there at three-thirty tomorrow, rather than four. It seems there’s a sing-along and she’d like you to make copies of the song sheets. I could bring Cheerio to meet you at three-thirty.”

  “I’m glad you brought this up, Dad,” I said as my mom came in carrying a platter of seconds of the phony crab cakes. I don’t know why she felt that was necessary, because no one finished the first helping.

  “I was thinking that Cheerio has done so well and really learned his lesson that he should be excused from any further community service,” I said.

  “Oh, Cheerio, I’m so proud of you,” my mom said, throwing him one of the crab cakes, which he caught like a Frisbee in midair. That dog will eat anything. Doesn’t he taste that hint of used gym sock at all?

  “I know what you’re thinking, Dad,” I continued before my father could say anything. “This is not me trying to talk my way out of anything. I still have lessons to learn, and I would like to do community service for both of us.”

  If you’re wondering if I had lost my marbles completely, I assure you I hadn’t. My goal was to get Cheerio free in the afternoons, so Frankie and Ashley could continue his training in the park. There were only a two days left before the competition, and Cheerio had a lot of catch-up to do. That reminded me that I had to call Mason to tell him he was back on the team. I told Frankie and Ashley that there was no way we could disappoint my little micro-buddy, and they agreed.

  “I think Hank has a good point,” my mom said. “From what I hear, Cheerio has brought a lot of joy to the seniors. They couldn’t stop talking about him when I was there yesterday.”

  My mom had come to pick us up the day before and brought soylami and soystrami sandwiches for the seniors. They actually liked them. I guess when you get older, your tongue stops working.

  “It was really mostly Hank’s fault to begin with,” Emily said, always happy to hurl an insult in my direction.

  For once, I didn’t defend myself and kept my mouth shut. Emily’s argument was actually helping my case.

  “I suppose I don’t have any objection to suspending Cheerio’s punishment,” my dad said. “But it’s a different story with you, young man.”

  “When you’re right, you’re right, Dad. And let me just say, you are righter than right.”

  Yay. I had what I wanted.

  I couldn’t wait to call Frankie and Ashley and tell them that Cheerio was cleared for training. I jumped up from the table, asked to be excused, and pushed my chair in, all in one quick motion.

  “Dad,” Emily whined. “He can’t leave yet. I was just about to show everyone Katherine’s new trick that is sure to win her the mascot contest.”

  “No offense, Em, but I have important things to do.”

  “Da-aa-aaad,” Emily whined.

  “Sit down, Hank,” my mom said. “We’re a family and your sister has something to share.”

  “That lizard does not live in my family tree,” I said.

  “Katherine is as much a part of our family as Cheerio is,” my mom said. “Just like Ralph was.”

  Oh, man. She had to go and bring up Ralph, my pet turtle when I was four who disappeared when I was taking him for a walk down Broadway. I’m pretty positive he’s living a happy life in the sewer. But I couldn’t argue with my mom when she played the Ralph card.

  I turned to face the ugly lizard.

  “Okay, Kathy. Show us what you got. But please, hurry up. I have an important phone call to make.”

  Part of the reason I didn’t want to see Katherine’s trick was that I suspected she had something really good up her sleeve and I didn’t want to get discouraged about Cheerio’s lack of progress.

  But nothing could have prepared me for what I saw.

  Emily took Katherine from around her neck, where she had been wearing her like a scarf, and put her on the dining room table. She held her hand above Katherine’s head, and Katherine followed her until her snout was facing the ceiling. Then Emily took a grape out of her pocket and balanced it on the tip of Katherine’s snout. When the grape was very steady, Emily took a baton out of her pocket. Well, it wasn’t a real baton, but one that she made out of a Q-tip and tin foil. She placed the baton on top of the grape.

  And if that wasn’t enough, that reptile started walking backward, balancing the grape and the baton on top of her snout.

  My mouth fell open so wide, I had to actually take my hand and push my lower jaw back up.

  I looked over at Cheerio, who was finishing the last bit of his second phony crab cake, and thought, You better enjoy that while it lasts, pal, because you really got your work cut out for you.

  CHAPTER 23

  For the next two days, I went to the senior center and did my community service, which, I have to say, was actually pretty fun. There is something about helping people and putting a smile on their faces that makes you feel really good, even if you are missing your dog’s most important two training sessions of his life.

  In the evening, Frankie, Ashley, and I met in our basement clubhouse to review Cheerio’s progress. Here is a summary of what they told me.

  FIVE THINGS CHEERIO ALMOST LEARNED

  1. He almost learned to roll over, but stopped midway on his back and insisted on waving all four of his feet to air them out.

  2. He almost learned to sit up on his hind legs, but kept falling over because his top part is longer than his bottom part.

  3. He almost learned to snatch a Frisbee out of the air, but every time he was about to catch it, he’d just sit down and lick his tail.

  4. He almost learned to walk with his head held high on a leash, but instead he grabbed the leash in his teeth and pulled Mason into the birdbath, at which time the training was over because Mason’s mom took him right home to change his clothes so he wouldn’t catch a cold. (You can only imagine the steam coming out of Mason’s mom’s ears.)

  5. Ashley made him a rhinestone crown that he almost learned to wear, but instead he shook it off his head, grabbed it in his mouth, ran to the bank of the Hudson, and flung it in the riv
er. (I have to say, I’m on Cheerio’s side on this one. Come on, he’s not a rhinestone kind of guy.)

  By the time the week was over, Cheerio was as ready as he was ever going to be for the competition, which . . . let’s face it . . . was not ready at all.

  CHAPTER 24

  On the day of the mascot competition, all of the kids at PS 87 gathered on the bleachers that lined the walls of the multipurpose room. Those who had entered a pet in the competition sat in a row of chairs on the stage that were placed on either side of the judges’ table.

  The judges included Ms. Adolf, who wore (you guessed it) a grey pantsuit. At least, I think it was a pantsuit. I couldn’t tell where the pants ended and the jacket started. Sitting next to her was her monster boxer, Randolf Bartholomew Irving Adolf. We all hoped that he had skipped breakfast, and the previous night’s dinner for that matter, too. (If you remember, the digestive rumblings that came out of that dog could curl your nose hairs and make your socks go up and down.) Randolf was wearing a starched white collar with a grey bowtie. I guess his favorite color had to be grey, too, if he was going to live in her house.

  The other judge was the kindergarten teacher, Mrs. McMurray. Frankie, Ashley, and I figured they picked her because when you’re a kindergarten teacher dealing with a roomful of five-year-olds, it’s like trying to control a basket full of puppies, anyway. She had really gotten herself into the spirit of the day. She was wearing a sweater with pink and red cats and dangling earrings that were fish—I think they were trout, but I’m not an expert on types of fish. And on her skirt, there was a fluffy white poodle with rhinestone eyes.

  “Now that’s my kind of skirt,” Ashley whispered to me as we led Cheerio to his chair on the stage. “I’m going to make one just like it, except I’ll desperately need to add more rhinestones.”

 

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