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NERDS: National Espionage, Rescue, and Defense Society
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Текст книги "NERDS: National Espionage, Rescue, and Defense Society"


Автор книги: Michael Buckley



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Текущая страница: 1 (всего у книги 13 страниц)

EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT

NERDS!

“Funny, clever, and thoroughly entertaining.”

–SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL

“This fun adventure is sure to attract followers, who

will look forward to the sequels…. Beavers’s

comic strip-style illustrations add further appeal.”

–BOOKLIST

“The inventive details, story, and made-up futuristic

technology will keep pages turning.”

—KIRKUS REVIEWS

“A charming and funny tale of

underdogs saving the day.”

—PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

“Deeply funny.”

—INSTRUCTOR MAGAZINE

“NERDS is a fun middle grade romp, with a great

multicultural cast…. [It] gives the geeks and

underdogs of the world a chance to shine, and that’s

something this current Braceface is glad to see.”

—KIDLITERATE BLOG

BY MICHAEL BUCKLEY

The Sisters Grimm

Book One: The Fairy-Tale Detectives

Book Two: The Unusual Suspects

Book Three: The Problem Child

Book Four: Once Upon a Crime

Book Five: Magic and Other Misdemeanors

Book Six: Tales from the Hood

Book Seven: The Everafter War

Book Eight: The Inside Story

Book Nine: The Council of Mirrors

A Very Grimm Guide

NERDS

Book One: National Espionage, Rescue, and Defense Society

Book Two: M Is for Mama’s Boy

Book Three: The Cheerleaders of Doom

Book Four: The Villain Virus

Book Five: Attack of the BULLIES

PUBLISHER’S NOTE: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition of this book as follows:

Buckley, Michael.

NERDS : National Espionage, Rescue, and Defense Society / by Michael Buckley.

p. cm. – (NERDS ; bk. 1)

Summary: While running a spy network from their elementary school,

five socially awkward misfits combine their talents and use cutting-edge

gadgetry to fight evil around the world.

ISBN 978-0-8109-4324-7

[1. Spies—Fiction. 2. Schools—Fiction. 3. Humorous stories.] I. Title. II. Title:

National Espionage, Rescue, and Defense Society.

PZ7.B882323Ne 2009

[Fic]—dc22

2009015484

Paperback ISBN 978-0-8109-8985-6

Text copyright © 2010 Michael Buckley

Illustrations copyright © 2010 Ethen Beavers

Book design by Chad W. Beckerman

Originally published in hardcover in 2009 by Amulet Books, an imprint of ABRAMS. This edition published in 2010. All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. Amulet Books and Amulet Paperbacks are registered trademarks of Harry N. Abrams, Inc.

115 West 18th Street

New York, NY 10011

www.abramsbooks.com

For dorks, dweebs,

geeks, spazzes,

waste cases, and

nerds everywhere.

Someday you too

will change the

world.

TOP SECRET!

THIS BOOK IS A NERDS CASE FILE. IT

CONTAINS HIGHLY SENSITIVE MATERIAL

AND WAS COMPILED FROM THE SWORN

TESTIMONIES OF EYEWITNESSES. IT ALSO

CONTAINS INFORMATION RETRIEVED FROM

INTERROGATIONS AND CONFESSIONS.

WHAT I’M TRYING TO SAY, KID, IS DON’T

LOSE IT! IF THE INFORMATION IN THIS BOOK

FELL INTO THE WRONG HANDS, IT WOULD

CAUSE A NATIONAL SECURITY CRISIS.

SO DO US ALL A FAVOR AND DON’T SHOW

THIS BOOK TO ANYONE.

HOW DO I HAVE ACCESS TO THIS

INFORMATION?

WELL, I USED TO BE A MEMBER OF NERDS—

BACK WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE. IT’S TRUE! MY

CODE NAME WAS BEANPOLE. WHAT ARE YOU

LAUGHING AT? BEANPOLE IS A GREAT SECRET

AGENT NAME. ANYWAY, NOW THAT I’M OLDER, MY

JOB IS TO DOCUMENT THE AGENTS AND THEIR

MISSIONS. NOW THAT I’VE TOLD

YOU ALL OF THIS, I’M SUPPOSED TO KILL

YOU, BUT YOU LOOK LIKE A GOOD ENOUGH

PERSON. BESIDES, THE TEAM THINKS YOU HAVE

POTENTIAL. IN FACT, THEY ARE CONSIDERING

YOU FOR A SPOT. BUT FIRST WE NEED TO MAKE

SURE YOU’RE UP TO THE CHALLENGE. READ THIS

BOOK FROM COVER TO COVER, AND IF AT THE

END YOU THINK YOU’VE GOT WHAT IT TAKES …

WELL, LET’S NOT GET AHEAD OF OURSELVES.

YOU’VE GOT TO READ IT FIRST.

VERIFY I.D.

TO ACCESS THE REST

OF THE BOOK, PLACE

YOUR THUMB ON

THE SENSOR FOR

FINGERPRINT MATCH.

ACCESS DENIED!

EITHER YOU ARE AN

IMPOSTOR OR YOU HAVE

A BOOGER ON YOUR THUMB.

PLEASE WASH YOUR HANDS

AND TRY AGAIN.

ACCESS GRANTED!

TRY NOT TO GET ANY MORE

BOOGERS ON IT, ’KAY?

Alexander Brand was a secret agent. He had saved the world on more than a dozen occasions. He had stopped three invasions of the United States by foreign powers. He had helped depose six dictators and four corrupt presidents. He had a bevy of skills that served him well, including: defusing land mines, driving tanks, parachuting into hostile territories, infiltrating terrorist compounds, wearing disguises, engaging in underwater hand-to-hand combat, and breaking codes. Plus, he looked awesome in a tuxedo. At one time, Brand was the United States’ most valuable spy. But that was before the accident.

“I heard about the accident,” General Savage said as he glanced over his desk at the white cane resting on Brand’s lap. The cane was an ugly thing to Savage—like a rattlesnake. It made him uncomfortable, and when he was uncomfortable Savage lost his temper. He slammed his hand down on his desk, and considering the size of his hand, it was a wonder the desk didn’t crack in two. The general was a mountain of muscles with a tree trunk-size neck and a face like a slab of concrete. He’d fought in fourteen wars. Rumor had it that he’d started ten of them himself just to stay in practice.

Brand nodded respectfully. He didn’t want to talk about the explosion that had injured his leg. He wasn’t the talking type. He could dismantle, clean, and rebuild an AK-47 in forty-two seconds, but share his feelings? Never tried it.

“Well, I have something that will put a smile on your face,” Savage said as he opened a drawer in his desk and pulled out an overstuffed manila folder with the words TOP SECRET printed on it in red. He passed it to the former spy and sat back in his chair with a knowing grin. “I was wondering if you are ready to get back to work.”

Agent Brand ran his hand across the folder’s crimson warning. The words “top secret” always sent a spark of excitement through him. He loved secrets. Codes, puzzles, mysteries—they seemed to run through his veins. Still, he resisted the temptation to open the folder. What was the point?

“Sir, I appreciate the offer. Nothing would make me happier than serving my country, but I’m not interested in a desk job. I won’t push papers, not even for Uncle Sam.” Brand set the folder on Savage’s desk and grasped his cane, ready to leave.

“Just take a look, agent,” the general said. “This isn’t a desk job.”

Brand opened the folder and scanned the top page. The man who had seen everything couldn’t believe his eyes.

“I thought these guys were a myth,” Brand whispered.

“That’s how we like to keep it. Even the president is in the dark.”

“You’re keeping this from the commander in chief?”

Savage wiped sweat from his forehead with his sleeve. “Their work is too important. We can’t let anyone distract them.”

“So you want me to join them?” Brand asked.

“Not exactly,” Savage said. “Turn the page.”

Brand did as he was instructed. The next page did not make him happy.

“They’re not spies. They’re—”

“They’re the world’s last, best hope, Agent Brand. When the best of the best can’t get it done, we send these guys. They have billions of dollars of technology at their fingertips, and the perfect cover. We can drop them pretty much anywhere and they go virtually undetected. You have no idea the debt the world owes them. The team is young, inexperienced, and now drifting without a rudder. Their last director died under mysterious circumstances. He jumped out a window.”

“Spy jobs are stressful, General. There’s nothing mysterious about that,” Brand said.

“I would agree, except the window overlooked the shark tank at the local aquarium,” Savage said.

“Hmmm,” the spy replied.

“And he had a bomb strapped to his chest and three knives in his back.”

“That does raise a few eyebrows,” Brand said. “Still, General, what you’re describing to me is a glorified baby-sitting job.”

Savage shook his head. “You’re not getting it, Brand. This is a chance to get our best team back under control. I’m sorry it’s not sports cars and exotic women, but it’s a way to get back into the game.”

Just then there was a knock at the general’s door. A nervous little man with short red hair and a face full of freckles poked his head into the room. “General, I’m sorry to interrupt—”

“This better be good, Casey! I told you not to bother me.”

“We have a crisis,” Casey said. “It’s Greenland.”

“Who is Greenland?”

“Greenland isn’t a who, sir. It’s a place.” Casey swallowed hard, as if afraid to correct his boss. “It’s the world’s largest island. It’s off the coast of North America, very close to—”

Savage pounded his hand on the desk once more. This time one of the legs broke, and the desk tilted so that the general’s work slid off. “I know where Greenland is! What about it?”

“It just slammed into Iceland,” Casey said.

“It what?” Agent Brand asked.

“It collided with Iceland,” Casey said.

“How does something like that happen?” Brand asked.

“W-we’re not sure, sir,” the assistant stammered.

“Scramble the team,” the general barked. “Someone is behind this! Giant islands don’t just move around by themselves.”

Casey nodded and dashed away.

“What do you say, Agent Brand? Can America count on its bravest secret agent again?” the general asked as he turned his attention to a globe of the Earth still teetering on the edge of his desk.

The spy nodded. “I’m in.”

The general smiled. “Good. Now, let’s talk about your cover.”

Jackson Jones peered through his binoculars at the horizon. He spotted his targets climbing the crest of an embankment not more than a quarter of a mile away. He smiled and turned to his partner and friend, Brett Bealer. “They’re coming.”

Brett nodded, then turned to signal to the rest of Jackson’s team. They scampered into position behind shrubberies, trees, and lampposts. They were practically invisible to the enemy.

Jackson’s team was eager, but their leader knew that surprising the enemy required patience. They would have one chance, and if they blew it, weeks of planning would be wasted.

Though he would never admit it to the others, Jackson found the enemy unnerving. They were grotesque with their drooling mouths and puffy eyes—barely human. Brett was convinced the enemy had been born misshapen, but the idea was far too unsettling for Jackson. He couldn’t imagine being born a … a … a nerd.

Unfortunately for Jackson, Nathan Hale Elementary had more than its fair share of nerds. In fact, his whole town of Arlington, Virginia, was one giant geektropolis. Perhaps there was something in the drinking water Arlington siphoned from the Potomac River, but there were dweebs, spazzes, goobers, gomers, goofballs, and freak-outs crawling out of every nook and cranny. Jackson sometimes felt as if he were drowning in an ocean of wheezing, math-loving, Velcro sneaker-wearing waste cases. Jackson’s high school-age brother, Chaz, felt the same way. He told Jackson the elementary school had always been overrun with misfits. Their father, who was also an alumnus of Nathan Hale, said the same. Jackson was smack-dab in the middle of Nerdville, USA.

Jackson heard the honking of someone blowing his nose and he knew the enemy had arrived. He peeked out from his hiding spot and saw them stumbling up the sidewalk toward the school. It was time for action.

“Attack!”

His signal sent the nerds scattering like frightened cattle. They bayed and bellowed and rushed about, knocking into one another.

“First wave!” Jackson cried, and his team removed drinking straws from their pockets. They loaded the straws with sticky-wet spitballs and aimed them at the panicked nerds. “Fire at will!”

A wave of spitwads blasted through the air, raining down on the geeks. One kid with exceptionally large buck teeth was „blinded when a dozen sloppy wads hit him in the face. He ran headfirst into a flagpole and knocked himself unconscious.

“Leave us alone!” a girl shouted in a wheezy voice as she was peppered with sticky ammunition.

Before the nerds could peel the gooey missiles off their faces and clothes, Jackson called for the second wave of attacks. The straws were tossed aside, and his team pounced on the misfits; administering purple nurples, blistering pink bellies, cruel charley horses, and nasty noogies. Ears were flicked. Wet willies were delivered. KICK ME signs were applied to unsuspecting backs.

Everything was going according to plan, but Jackson was determined not to get lazy. He called for the third and final wave, the part of the plan they called “the hammer.” They spun the geeks around, grabbed the backs of their underpants, and yanked toward the heavens. The elastic waistbands were then pulled over the victims’ heads. Atomic wedgies. The final, crushing blow.

The nerds flopped around on the ground like fish, trying unsuccessfully to stuff their underwear back into their pants. Jackson, Brett, and the others celebrated their success.

Now, to the casual observer, Jackson would appear to be a jerk, but in fact he was very popular. Very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very popular. His teachers described him as charming. He was captain of his PeeWee football team, and his coach said Jackson had the best passing arm, best kicking leg, and best touchdown dance he had seen in twenty-five years. Kids copied Jackson’s every move, hung on his every word. Even some of the teachers started to dress like him.

Yes, Jackson Jones was blessed, but little did he know that the cruel hand of fate was about to smack him in the face, and it would all start with a single word.

“Interesting.”

“Whaghh?” Jackson asked. He would have been clearer but he was sitting in his orthodontist’s office with a suction tube in his mouth. Dr. Gupta, who had said the word, was looking at his teeth.

Jackson knew it was never a good sign when a medical professional used the word “interesting.” It was one of those words you never wanted to hear a doctor say, like “rare,” “inoperable,” and “flesh-eating.”

“Very interesting,” the orthodontist chirped as he continued his examination.

“Whaghh?” Jackson cried.

Dr. Gupta was too excited to speak. In his twenty years as an orthodontist, he had heard many medical-phenomenon stories. The podiatrist in suite 4A had a patient with eight toes on each foot. His brother-in-law, an emergency-room doctor, claimed to have had a patient with a third eye. Even his dog’s veterinarian, Dr. Hanger, had a two-headed turtle under his care. Now Gupta had his own medical oddity. He crossed the room to a telephone, picked it up, and punched in a number. “Donna, can you bring the camera in here?”

A moment later a pale, sleepy woman entered the room. Dr. Gupta directed her to look into Jackson’s open mouth. Her drowsy eyelids popped open.

Dr. Gupta clapped his hands like a happy baby. “I know, right? No one will believe it if we don’t take some pictures.”

“Whhhaaaaaaggggghhhh?” Jackson cried, but again he was ignored.

Donna snapped pictures from various angles. The camera’s flash blinded Jackson, and by the time the blue and red spots disappeared from his vision, his patience was gone. He yanked the suction tube from his mouth. “What’s going on?”

Dr. Gupta smiled as he rubbed his hands together. “Well, Jackson, how do I explain this? It’s just … well, a normal person has twenty-eight teeth. Some have several more if they still have their wisdom teeth. You, however, have a lot more.”

“How many?”

Dr. Gupta smiled. “You have sixty-four teeth! In fact, you have four rows of them, two on the top and two on the bottom.”

“Is that unusual?” Jackson asked.

“Not if you’re a great white shark,” the doctor replied, handing Jackson a mirror so that he could take a look for himself.

Jackson studied his mouth closely. Besides remembering to brush, he had never given much thought to his teeth. He assumed everyone had as many as he did, though he recalled his father complaining just last week that the family was spending a fortune on dental floss. “So, what are you going to do about it? I can’t walk around with this many teeth.”

“Well, we’ll have to extract those extra choppers.”

“Extract?”

“Yeah. You know, yank them out. But there is good news. The tooth fairy is going to owe you a bundle.”

Gupta slapped his knee and burst into a giggling fit. After a while he wiped the happy tears from his cheeks. “Sorry, that’s an old orthodontist joke.”

“Is it going to hurt?” Jackson asked.

“Absolutely. But that’s not even your biggest problem. You’ve got summer teeth.”

“What are ‘summer teeth’?”

“Sum ’er going this way and sum ’er going that way,” Dr. Gupta said, chuckling. He wondered if perhaps a career in stand-up comedy had been his true calling.

Jackson, however, was not amused, and when Gupta spotted his scowl, the orthodontist got back to business. “Sorry. What I’m trying to say is your teeth are all over the place. A few of them are sideways. There’s one that’s upside-down! Don’t worry. It’s nothing a set of braces won’t fix.”

Jackson felt his heart stop. “Braces!” Nerds had braces.

Dr. Gupta smiled reassuringly. “A lot of patients worry that braces are going to ruin their lives, but I assure you that nothing will change, Jackson. Your friends are still going to like you. I doubt that anyone will notice at all.”

When Jackson looked back on that moment, he realized that was when a terrible truth was revealed to him: Adults are liars, horrible, soulless, black-hearted liars. The braces didn’t just ruin his life, they demolished it, then salted the land so nothing would ever grow there again! When Dr. Gupta was finished, Jackson was thirty-two teeth lighter but fourteen pounds of metal heavier. Each of his teeth was encased in a jagged steel cage that ripped at his gums. Worse, a metal halo that Gupta called “headgear” was attached to Jackson’s bicuspids, and protruded out of his mouth and encircled his head like Saturn’s rings.

It also turned out to be highly magnetic.

Jackson found that by the end of an average school day, his headgear had collected cuff links, belt buckles, hairpins, cafeteria trays, cell phones, and umbrellas. He once stepped too close to a school bus and became locked onto its bumper. He was helplessly dragged through a rainstorm as children were dropped off all over town. He nearly died the night his father decided to treat the family to dinner at the local hibachi restaurant.

But the most horrible side effect he suffered wasn’t the pain or the humiliation—it was the sudden end to his reign as king of Nathan Hale Elementary. His popularity vanished overnight. Friends turned their backs when he walked by. Teachers cowered in the lounge, hoping to avoid eye contact. The classroom hamster buried itself under a mound of sawdust and pretended he wasn’t there. Even his best friend turned on him.

“Nice braces, goober,” Brett said when Jackson tried to sit at their usual lunch table. “You look like you’ve been munching on a bicycle chain.” Their other friends laughed and refused to let Jackson sit down. They banished him to a table in the far corner of the cafeteria where even the custodian with the lazy eye wouldn’t go.

His brother, Chaz, was even crueler. He called Jackson “Braceface” and “Nerdatron.” (Chaz had a thing for robot humor.) He found particular amusement in Jackson’s headgear. At dinnertime, Chaz would bring a collection of household tools with him to see which would snap off the table and attach itself to Jackson’s face. In the night he snuck into Jackson’s room and strung party balloons to it. When he was suiting up for football practice, Chaz would hang his cleats from it. When Jackson complained to his father, his dad told him to suck it up. “A little ribbing is good for you. It will make you a man.”

As the winds of autumn arrived and leaves turned yellow, orange, and red, Jackson sensed the coming of football season and a change in his fortunes. Football was Jackson’s last hope for regaining some of his popularity. He was still the team’s star quarterback, even if he did have an Erector set circling his head. Sadly, on the first day of practice, Jackson discovered his headgear prevented him from putting on his helmet.

“You can’t play without a helmet, kid,” the coach said. “You’ll get brain damage.”

Getting booted off the football team was the last nail in the popularity coffin. Friendless, Jackson drifted through the halls flashing smiles that were never returned, raising his hand for high fives that never came, waiting by his locker for admirers who never showed up. It was as if the warm golden glow that had shined on Jackson his whole life had been turned off.

One day he found himself reminiscing at photos in the school’s trophy case—photos of his father leading the Tigers to victory, of his brother catching a touchdown pass. He found a photo of his own team, and saw himself proudly holding the winning trophy, the same trophy his father and brother had won. Sports were the glue that held his family together, especially since his mother died. The Jackson family had no patience for losers. They were winners on and off the field. Where did Jackson fit in now?

Just then, there was a terrific crash as the winning trophy was yanked through the display case glass by Jackson’s magnetic headgear. It took several teachers a half hour to pry it off his face.

The next day Jackson was banned from reminiscing.


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