Marty Pants #1
The critics review Marty Pants
DEDICATION
To Mom and Dad—
Thanks for always supporting me.
CONTENTS
The Critics Review Marty Pants
Dedication
Chapter 0: Sneak Preview
Chapter 1: Let’s Talk about Me
Chapter 2: Scratching the Surface
Chapter 3: Give Me Space
Chapter 4: Life on Mars?
Chapter 5: Get Fuzzy
Chapter 6: Dark Side of the Roon
Chapter 7: Psych
Chapter 8: A Lot to Digest
Chapter 9: Gooooooals
Chapter 10: Manic Monday
Chapter 11: I’m a Believer
Chapter 12: Do Not Open
Chapter 13: What’s the Buzz
Chapter 14: Bushwhacked
Chapter 15: Letter Man
Chapter 16: Eyes Wide Open
Chapter 17: Words Is the Word
Chapter 18: Get Your Kicks
Chapter 19: Dreamweaver
Chapter 20: Testing 1, 2, 3
Chapter 21: De Tension of Detention
Chapter 22: Electric Sis
Chapter 23: Questionable
Chapter 24: Clothes Minded
Chapter 25: Drawing Conclusions
Chapter 26: Rude Badge of Courage
Chapter 27: Use Your Noodle
Chapter 28: Alien Infiltration
Chapter 29: Question Authority
Chapter 30: On the Edge
Chapter 31: Mural Dilemma
Chapter 32: What’s in Store
Chapter 33: Don’t Try This at Home
Chapter 34: Crash Test Dummy
Chapter 35: Twisted Sister
Chapter 36: Bad Finger
Chapter 37: The Contest
Chapter 38: Pop Goes the World
Chapter 39: Too Much Coffee, Man
Chapter 40: Escape Artist
Chapter 41: Something’s Missing
Chapter 42: The Walk
Chapter 43: Analie
Chapter 44: Opening Day
Chapter 45: 100% Proof
Chapter 46: Stuff Gets Real
Chapter 47: Set to Stun
Chapter 48: Annihilate Earth
Chapter 49: Likely Story
Chapter 50: Loose Ends
Chapter 51: Wrapped Up in a Bow
Chapter 52: That’s All, Folks
Acknowledgments
Excerpt from Marty Pants #2: Keep Your Paws Off!
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
CHAPTER 0
sneak preview
I burst through the front doors of the school with a vicious animal in my arms and a stolen document in my mouth. The contents of this document are earth shattering. Literally! I’m being chased by a large, angry . . .
You wouldn’t believe me if I told you, but I’m going to tell you anyway.
Where should I begin? I suppose the beginning is as good a place as any.
CHAPTER 1
let’s talk about me
I’ll start with the basics. My name is Marty Pants and I wear black. I heard somewhere that artists wear black.
I didn’t choose to be an artist. I was born that way.
I created my first work when I was just a baby, and my dad captured the moment on video. I was eating strained carrots and sneezed on the wall.
I know that doesn’t sound like much, but the splatter looked like a famous painting called The Scream. My dad posted the video online, and it got millions of views. People ate it up!
I tried to recapture my glory in kindergarten by chewing up crayons and sneezing on construction paper, but I got sick of that pretty quickly. All over the teacher.
My dad called it my Jackson Pollock phase.
My art has always been unappreciated at school. But yesterday, my teacher, Mr. McPhee, came right out and admitted I’m a true artist!
He wrote that on my homework.
The assignment was to comment on overpopulation and the effects it could have on our planet.
This was my paper.
McPhee said I was supposed to write two hundred words. I tried to explain a picture is worth a thousand words so I deserve extra credit, but he’s obviously not very good at math. And he certainly doesn’t understand art. Maybe I was lucky I didn’t hand in my first draft.
My dad told me someone who doesn’t understand art is a rube. Rube is now my favorite word. McPhee is a rube. He’s supreme king, lord, emperor, and prime minister of the rubes. He doesn’t understand anything creative, especially not a brilliant artist like me.
And like all good artists, I have an eye for detail. Make that an exceptional eye for detail. I’m always noticing things no one else seems to notice.
For instance, right now I notice something that I consider strange.
My cat is devouring my face.
CHAPTER 2
scratching the surface
Jerome and I are pals. So why did he suddenly decide to eat my face?
There’s another option. He thinks I’m cat food. I had a tuna sandwich earlier so I smell like his food. Also, I’m not moving, which is something else his food does.
I shift my body so Jerome will realize his error, but he’s obviously too embarrassed to admit when he’s wrong so he keeps on licking me. And cat tongues feel like sandpaper.
I don’t think Jerome has actually eaten an entire human before, but I wouldn’t put it past him. He’s tough and I’m the only person in the world he gets along with.
I can pick him up no problem, but if anyone else tries it, things don’t go well.
Just ask my dad.
The damage really wasn’t that bad, but that’s how my mom describes it. She overreacts to scratches.
She also went overboard when my sister stubbed her toe.
And the time I had a headache.
My dad, on the other hand, is pretty mellow about stuff. He’s not a big talker unless you mention old music.*
Somehow, he talked my mom into letting me keep Jerome. And that was a big deal because my mom’s overprotective.
In fact, if it were up to her, I’d still have training wheels on my bike.
Yes, I know that’s a pogo stick, but I’m no good at drawing bikes. They’re difficult, so I draw pogo sticks instead.
Speaking of difficult, here comes my sister.
CHAPTER 3
give me space
My sister’s name is Erica. Except when it’s
Erika
or Ericka
or Ericca
or Eriquahh.
She changes the spelling almost as often as she changes her mood. I usually just guess.
As soon as Erickka storms into the room, I can tell she’s gearing up to annoy me. But I won’t let her get to me. Not this time. No matter what she says.
“Marty,” my dad calls from the kitchen, “stop making out with that cat.”
“WHAT?!” I yell. “I’m not . . .”
“Kissing the cat is weird,” my sister says. “Is that how you practice for your girlfriend?”
“Analie is NOT my girlfriend!”
Errikah smiles. “Interesting. I never mentioned Analie.”
Gurk! She tricked me!
“I hope Analie likes guys who are covered in cat hair,” she adds.
I hope so, too, I think to myself.
“It’s my turn to watch TV,” Eriicca declares. “DAD! MARTY’S HOGGING THE TV!”
“Stop hogging the TV, Marty,” my dad says. “Why don’t you come here and we’ll talk about music?”
“But I’m watching alien movies!”
“Not anymore, space cadet,” Errrica says as she sits down and fli
cks through the channels.
Okay, that does it.
“EW!” screams Ericcah. “DAD! MARTY’S GROSSING ME OUT!”
“Stop grossing out your sister, Marty.”
I race into the kitchen to plead my case.
“DAD! Eriickaa just . . .”
“Marty, is that lipstick on your face?”
“What?”
“It’s red around your mouth.”
“That’s because Jerome was kissing, I mean, licking me!”
“If you want to wear lipstick, it’s fine with me, but maybe you shouldn’t be kissing the cat.”
Before I can respond, my mom walks in, fresh from her business trip.
“WHAT’S THIS? MARTY’S PUTTING LIPSTICK ON RATS?”
I take a deep breath.
Of all the sentences I never thought I’d say, that one’s pretty high on the list.
Here are more from that list:
“Use your inside voice, Marty,” my mom says. “Have you cleaned your room yet?”
“It’s SPOTLESS!” I assure her as I bolt upstairs to my room, which is exactly what I said it was: Spotless.*
Now I’m all wound up, so I plop into my quiet place, my beanbag. The beanbag of solitude. I come here to relax.
Ah, peace.
It’s not easy being misunderstood.
But my Zen is soon broken by a crinkling noise. I look around and see Jerome pulling a purple piece of paper out of my backpack.
I rescue it from his feline jaws and discover it’s a note.
CHAPTER 4
life on mars?
Wow.
There’s no mistaking what the note says, but is it legit or a prank? I’m very interesting, so of course an alien would want to observe me, right?
I need to get a second opinion. I’ll show the note to someone else. Someone I trust. Someone with a level head.
Not that kind of level head. I mean someone who’s smart and rational. And I know just the person. Parker.
Parker’s a buddy I can count on to give me serious advice in serious situations. Believe it or not, not everyone takes me seriously.
“Where are you off to, Marty?” my mom asks.
“Parker’s house because of mumble mumble mumble,” I mumble as I snap the door shut behind me.
It’s a warm Sunday afternoon, and I look up into the sky. Not an alien in sight. But when I look straight ahead, there’s danger!
I make a quick detour.
CHAPTER 5
get fuzzy
Peach Fuzz!
His real name is Salvador Ack, but he has a light, fuzzy mustache so I call him Peach Fuzz. Not to his face, of course. He’s a high school kid who pushes me around like it’s his hobby.
His other hobby is spitting.
It’s always bad news when I run into him, but due to what happened on my bike ride yesterday, I fear for my life!
I try not to move as I hide in the bushes. Partly because I don’t want Peach Fuzz to find and kill me, and partly because I now have something new to worry about.
Gurk! They say spiders are more afraid of us than we are of them. I have a complicated opinion on that. (Opinion: That’s a dirty, filthy lie!)
I can’t decide what to do. I guess it comes down to who’s going to kill me first, Peach Fuzz or the spider.
I try to calm myself down by imagining that the spider’s name is Shermy.
Shermy is a friendly name.
Somehow I’m not any calmer.
They say before you die, your life flashes before your eyes.
Nothing. I’ll take that as a good sign.
As I try to figure out what to do next, I stare at that amazing web and realize something.
Shermy’s an artist.
Maybe that’s why Shermy’s not attacking. Shermy can sense we have something in common and won’t bite a fellow artist.
I feel better. I’m starting to believe I’ll survive this ordeal after all.
Gurk! Peach Fuzz found me!
I’m dead.
CHAPTER 6
dark side of the roon
Wait, I know that whiny voice. It belongs to Roongrat Mitten. That means the coast is clear. I totally outsmarted Peach Fuzz!
Now I have to ditch Roongrat. He’s harmless but a little annoying. Roongrat’s a major know-it-all, and he also happens to be one of my closest friends. Why am I friends with someone who annoys me? I ask myself that question every day.
“Hiding? I’m not hiding,” I lie. “I’m just looking at this awesome spider web.” I point to it.
Roongrat puts his foot through it.
I stand up and give him my why-did-you-do-that-you-rube look.
Roongrat doesn’t seem to pick up on it, so I come right out and say, “Why did you do that, you rube?”
“Spiders need to keep making new webs,” Roongrat insists. “Or it all builds up inside them until their butts explode. It’s a fact. I did that bug a favor.”
He says things with such authority you almost believe him. Almost.
“My mom told me your birthday’s coming up,” he says, changing the subject. “What kind of cake are you getting?”
“I don’t know.” I DO know. Chocolate. I just don’t feel like telling him.
“Get chocolate. I like chocolate.”
Now I don’t want chocolate.
“Chocolate improves your brain motions,” he says. “It’s a fact. All the geniuses eat chocolate cake . . . Einstein, Sherlock Holmes, Oprah . . .”
Roongrat freezes in midsentence.
Maybe his “brain motions” didn’t get enough chocolate cake.
Then I notice he’s staring at something on his leg.
Roongrat goes from standing still to the opposite of standing still.
It’s entertaining, but I can’t help feeling sorry for him. The spider, I mean.
Roongrat falls backward, wriggles out of his pants, and runs off!
Someday they’ll invent a technology that allows you to unsee things. Until then, that image will remain burned into my retinas. I may even need therapy.
Good thing I’m heading to Parker’s.
CHAPTER 7
psych
Parker Fedora opens the door before I even knock.
“Hi, Marty!”
Incidentally, Parker is not my girlfriend. She’s just a friend I’ve known since preschool who happens to be a girl. I trust her instincts. She’s always giving me a fresh perspective on things.
“I just saw Roongrat in his underwear.”
“You what now?” Parker says.
“But that’s not why I’m here. I’m here to show you a note.”
“Oooh, you wrote me a note?”
“I didn’t write it,” I explain. “My cat found it in my backpack. It’s here somewhere.” I search my pockets, but suddenly the note is nowhere to be found.
“Maybe I lost it.”
“What did the note say?”
“It said an alien is . . .”
“Marty, why don’t you lie down first?”
This happens a lot. Parker wants to be a psychologist, and for some reason she likes to practice on me.
Parker sits in the chair while I lie on the couch.
She tells me I’m the best patient a psychologist could ever hope for.
“Thank you for the compliment,” I say.
“We’ll have to be quick, though, because my dad made a new rule: no boys over when he’s not home. Or else.”
“Or else what?”
“Or else he’ll use their skin and bones to make furniture.”
“Oh. He was speaking metaphorically, right?”
“I’m not sure. Anyway, let’s start.”
“But . . .”
“The clock is ticking, Marty. Tell me about the note.”
“It says an alien is observing me.”
“How exotic!” Parker says. “And this note totally exists, right?”
“Totally.”
“By any chance, h
ave you been watching movies about aliens lately?”
“Yes, but I don’t see what that has to do—”
“Remember when you watched all those zombie movies and thought the pigeons outside your house were zombies?”
“Your point being?”
“You went door-to-door with a bullhorn trying to evacuate the neighborhood.”
“Of course I did! No one listened to me, but the noise scared away the pigeons. And, in case you haven’t noticed, there are now exactly zero zombies in my neighborhood.”
“Point taken,” Parker admits. “Your parents were concerned about you, though.”
“You know parents. They worry about the wrong things.”
“True enough. And some kids teased you.”
“Most kids don’t notice the things I do.”
“That’s for sure. Have you told anyone else about this, um, note?”
“I came to you first, Parker.”
“Good thinking. My advice is have your fun, but don’t say anything to anyone else.”
“Why? It’s the most important thing that’s happened to me all week!”
“Think about it and I’m sure you’ll figure it out.”
I guess this is what psychologists do. Let you figure things out on your own.
Parker winks and says, “That will be five hundred dollars, please.”
“Put it on my tab,” I tell her as I get up to leave.
“One more thing,” Parker says as she walks me to the door. “Who supposedly wrote this note?”
“No idea,” I say.
Parker’s face goes white. “OH NO! My dad’s in the driveway! He’ll turn you into FURNITURE!”