A pril 10.
Jackson-Jones-Born-into-This-World Day. I was moving from nine to almost grown. Double digits. The Big 1–0. The Man (that’s me) is TEN.
My best friend, Reuben, was impressed. He’s nine and counting. One hundred and thirty-two days till he’s ten.
“What ya going to get for your birthday?” he asked. He sketched the star on Captain Nemo’s helmet. I was sprawled on his bed.
I shrugged, acting cool. Like saying, “Oh, is it my
birthday
?” Acting like I didn’t know Mama was rattling my favorite Red Velvetcake into the oven. HOPEFULLY wrapping a new basketball.
That’s what I wanted, a basketball.
The one I had was so old, it didn’t bounce anymore. Just sort of
thuck
ed.
Thuck. Thuck. Thuck.
Not
the way to dribble.
“What you need is a basketball,” said Reuben, honing in on my thoughts, “to replace that orange Frisbee you call a ball.” He pencil-shaded Nemo’s star a precise gray. “Remind me to ask for paints for my birthday,” he added, “so I can give Nemo some color.”
Captain Nemo Comics by Jackson Jones and Reuben Casey is our life’s work. I write. He draws. We’re the perfect team. We’ve taken Captain Nemo to Planet Huzarconi, which is ringed with deadly gases. He’s fought the six-headed Cerebral and the no-armed Flawt. And we’ve got about 293 Nemo adventures left to do. I figure Reuben and I will be the perfect team until we’re old, old men.
Reuben carefully drew a bubble from Captain Nemo’s mouth.
I dug into my pocket, unfolded a piece ofpaper, and read: “Begone, evil wizard, lest I smite you.”
Reuben printed
Begone
in the bubble. Stopped.
“Do people say ‘Begone’?”
“Of course not,” I said. “Begone’ is hero talk.”
Reuben said “Begone” to himself three times.
Did I say we were the perfect team? Excuse me, I meant to say
slightly less than
perfect. What holds us back from one hundred percent perfection is this: Reuben is soooo careful. And slow.
Mama says Reuben is the careful tortoise and I am the impatient hare in that story where the turtle wins the race and the rabbit looks like a fool.
That story makes no sense. I can beat Reuben at any race. But sometimes I slow down so he almost wins. When I tell this to Mama, she just says, “Maybe that rabbit’s so bent on winning, he can’t see there’s no race.” I think Mama’s explanation twists the story—but still makes no sense.
Reuben was still muttering “Begone” when the phone rang.
His grandma, Miz Lady, answered it.
“I’m not sure Jackson wants a tenth birthday,” she said, loud so I’d hear. “He’s acting mighty cool.”
I grinned. Miz Lady was acting cool herself. She knew inside I was balloons and basketballs.
“Your mama says your birthday is ready, Mister Cool.” She flapped her hands at me and Reuben. “I’ll be along as soon as I find your present.” She peered into a closet. “Now, where did I
put
it?”
“It’s under your bed,” Reuben whispered loudly.
“What?”
“UNDER YOUR BED.” Reuben let out the loudest whisper I’d ever heard. Miz Lady’s hearing is not too good. That’s why she hollers so much. She thinks other folks’ ears are just as bad.
I slouched out the door, moving slooooww. Letting some of Reuben’s turtle rub off on me. I wanted this birthday to last a looong time.
“Ten,” said Reuben, naturally walking slow. “All right.”
Walking slooowwly, I had lots of time to think. My first thought: Apartments are the perfect way to live. Reuben and Miz Lady are down the hall in Apartment 316. I knew that in 506 Juana Rivera was sneaking away from her kid sister, Gaby, and her tagalong brother, Ro. And Abraham was slinking out of 219 as his mother hollered, “Remember, sweetie, just a teensy piece of cake.” Even our mailman lived in Apartment 102 and sometimes delivered the mail right into my hand.
Everyone was coming to Apartment 302. Coming for my tenth birthday.
Except Mailbags Mosely, on account of
Michelle Betham
Peter Handke
Cynthia Eden
Patrick Horne
Steven R. Burke
Nicola May
Shana Galen
Andrew Lane
Peggy Dulle
Elin Hilderbrand