class, the school and the world a favour and shut up! â
âYes, sir.â
Grimsweather shot the dense boy an evil glare. Dandyline grinned broadly in return, his jumbo buckteeth sliding outfrom under his top lip like a jump-jetâs hydraulic landing gear.
Grimsweather shook his head as though there was something loose in his brain, and slowly opened the huge leather-bound rollcall book. He took a deep breath and began reading. âDandyline.â
âYes, sir?â
Again he sighed. âIâm reading the roll, Dandyline, and unfortunately your name is first on it. So, if you are present â in body if not necessarily in mind â please answer âpresentâ. Got it? âPresentâ, Dandyline.â
âYes, sir.â
Grimsweather spoke very softly, very slowly, as though addressing a very young, very stupid child. ââPresentâ. When I call your name, you answer as follows â âPresentâ. Now. Letâs try it one more time. Dandyline.â
Dandyline grinned. âYes, sir?â
Grimsweatherâs eyes flared like someone had embedded illegal firecrackers in his skull and lit the fuses (also illegal â called murder).
And there was murder in those eyes as Grimsweather shouted, â Present! â
âWhere?â asked Dandyline eagerly.
âWhat?â snapped Grimsweather.
âWhereâs my present? Oh, I know â this is another of your April Foolâs jokes, isnât it, sir. Well, you wonât catch me a second time.â
Grimsweather looked ready to whip out a crossbow and get medieval on the entire class, but instead took three deep breaths like his shrink had taught him. âDandyline, youâre like a disease that nobody wants to catch a first time, let alone a second. Iâll assume you are here today, even if your brain is still in yesterday.â
Dandyline opened his mouth but his reply was chopped off dead by Grimsweatherâs vicious glower.
âNathan Grim-Reaper,â read Grimsweather from the rollcall book. âNathan Grim-Reaper? Where is Mr Grim-Reaper today? Anybody know?â
âHeâs busy with the April Foolâs DayCommittee, sir,â answered Dandyline. âHeâs the committee head this year.â
âDandyline,â hissed Grimsweather, âif I were you I wouldnât interrupt and I certainly wouldnât interrupt mentioning heads, or yours might roll.â
âYes, sir. Sorry, sir. Just saying, sir, that Nathan Grim-Reaper wonât be here today. Because, apart from being head of the committee, he also has to get his missing book back, sir, or his mother will murder him. Donât like his chances, sir.â
âDandyline, did I ask you?â said Grimsweather. âDo I look like the sort of idiot who would listen to a single stupid word you said?â
âNo, sir,â replied Dandyline brightly. âYou look like an entirely different idiot altogether, sir.â
â What! â shrieked Grimsweather. âWhat did you say, Dandyline? Youâre heading for a beheading unless you can explain that last comment, boy.â
âErr, nothing, sir. That is, what I meant to say was, well, like, you know, and that â¦â
âHave you ever made sense in your life, Dandyline, or is it against your religion?â
âNo, sir,â Dandyline replied, grinning. âMy religion is make-up, sir.â
âMake-up?â A nauseating vision of Dandyline preening in front of a mirror, painted up with lipstick and eye shadow and pineapples in his headdress sashayed into Grimsweatherâs head to the party beat of Caribbean kettledrums.
âMake-up?â gaped Grimsweather. âYou mean lipstick and eye shadow?â
Dandyline beamed. âI mean I make it up as I go along. Sir.â
Grimsweather gritted his teeth. âI hope you washed your neck, Dandyline, because itâs got a date with the
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