- Home
- Abby Hanlon
Dory Fantasmagory: Tiny Tough
Dory Fantasmagory: Tiny Tough Read online
For Margot
DIAL BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS
An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, New York
Copyright © 2019 by Abby Hanlon
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
Visit us online at penguinrandomhouse.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Hanlon, Abby, author, illustrator. | Title: Tiny tough / Abby Hanlon.
Description: New York : Dial Books for Young Readers, [2019] | Series: Dory Fantasmagory ; 5 | Summary: “Dory’s sure that her big sister’s friendship troubles have to do with pirates, but she’ll have to navigate those rocky waters without her imaginary first mate Mary, who’s found an exciting new pal of her own.”— Provided by publisher. | Identifiers: LCCN 2019008260 (print) | LCCN 2019011441 (ebook) | ISBN 9780525553991 (E-book) | ISBN 9780525553977 (hardback) | Subjects: | CYAC: Imagination—Fiction. | Imaginary playmates—Fiction. | Friendship—Fiction. | Brothers and sisters—Fiction. | Family life—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Readers / Chapter Books. | JUVENILE FICTION / Imagination & Play. | JUVENILE FICTION / Humorous Stories. | Classification: LCC PZ7.H196359 (ebook) | LCC PZ7.H196359 Dm 2015 (print) | DDC [E]—dc23 | LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019008260
Version_1
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Copyright
Introduction
Chapter 1: Such an Amazing Bath Toy
Chapter 2: Something to Do with Pirates
Chapter 3: Starletta
Chapter 4: Long Bones
Chapter 5: Sock Muscles
Chapter 6: Opposite Day
Chapter 7: The Sleepover
About the Author
TINY TOUGH
Dory’s pirate name and her walkie-talkie code name
Some Walkie-Talkie Lingo That May Come In Handy
Over = I’m done talking, now it’s your turn.
Roger that = I understand.
Do you copy? = Did you hear me?
Over and out = Conversation over.
10-4 = I got your message.
CHAPTER 1
Such an Amazing Bath Toy
My name is Dory, but everyone calls me Rascal. I have a big sister named Violet and a big brother named Luke. They get all the attention and I don’t get any! Except when they are busy after school. Then I get my mom all to myself. Because I’m never busy. Today my mom says we are going to the library. “Yay!” I say. “I can check out new books!”
“I love our afternoons together,” says my mom. “You’re my little partner.”
“So that means you like me the best, right?” I ask.
She winks at me and says, “Nope.”
At the library, I go straight to the big desk and ask the librarian, “You know that book about a family who eats breakfast in the shower and the mom wears a dress that’s made out of live chickens?”
“And the boy eats with his feet and then the lights go off and they think they’re dead but then their cat and dog turn on the electricity.”
“Rascal, are you making this up?” asks my mom.
“No! It’s a real book! And then they think they’re in heaven but they’re really in their living room? It’s so funny! Do you have that book?”
“I’m sorry, I don’t know that one,” says the librarian.
“But here’s a series you might like, it’s called Happy Little Farm.”
“That’s okay, thanks anyway,” says my mom. “Stop growling,” she whispers, and leads me away from the desk.
My mom finds some books she likes and reads out loud. After seven books she says, “Rascal, I’m going to the bathroom. I want you to read quietly while I’m gone, okay?”
“I can’t read.”
“Yes, you can,” she says. “I’ll be right back.”
A very short kid wearing a dinosaur tail starts talking to me. Her voice sounds like a frog. “Wead me it,” she says, pointing to her book.
“I’m a bad reader,” I whisper.
“I weally want you to wead it,” she says.
“Ask someone else,” I say.
“Wead it,” says the kid.
“I guess I could tell you a story instead . . .” I suggest.
“I want a scawy stowy,” she says.
“Well, that’s easy . . . once upon a time . . .” I whisper, “well, actually right now, there lives a robber named Mrs. Gobble Gracker.”
“Mrs. Wobba Wacka?”
“Yes . . . and she’s very sneaky . . . She lives in a cave and she is 507 years old and has a big black cape . . . and . . . and . . . she has really long fingernails and FANGS like this . . . And she’s been looking for me for a long time. I am in great danger! She wants to drag me off to her cave and pretend I’m her baby.”
“I want to be in gweat danger,” the kid says.
“Me too,” says another kid.
“Are you scared?” asks a third kid.
“Of course I’m scared! But I have a monster and a fairy godmother who help me fight Mrs. Gobble Gracker. My monster sleeps under my bed. Her name is Mary, she is my best friend. And my fairy godmother is named Mr. Nuggy and he can do magic. He lives in the trees and he has a big mustache, and once, a long time ago, he turned into a chicken. If I have an emergency, I can call him for help. I can call him from a banana.”
They have a lot of questions.
“SSHhhh!!! Be quiet, everybody! Mrs. Wobba Wacka woke up behind the couch!” says the girl with the dinosaur tail.
“What are you talking about? She sleeps in her cave!” I say. “And it’s far away.”
“She wants bweakfast!” she says.
“Quick, we gotta make it!” says another kid.
Then all the kids start making breakfast no matter what I say.
“If we don’t make it faster, she’ll throw bones at us,” says one kid.
“I just saw a flying bone!” says another kid. “She’s coming!”
“Oh no!” says a kid, diving into the couch.
“Well, you better have coffee,” I warn them. “Mrs. Gobble Gracker drinks a lot of coffee in the morning.”
“NO! She drinks sauce! Not coffee!” says a little boy.
“Bone sauce!” says the kid from inside the couch.
Then everyone hides from Mrs. Gobble Gracker.
Uh-oh. I see my mom coming back from the bathroom. I grab a book and pretend to read quietly.
“How’s it going?” asks my mom.
The kid pops out of the couch.
“Dory—say good-bye. We’re leaving,” says my mom.
“But I didn’t check out any books!” I say.
“I know, but I asked you to read quietly,” she says. “And instead you’ve made all these kids savages.”
“What’s a savage?” I ask. My mom doesn’t answer, she just walks quickly to the door. “Does it have something to do with pirates?” I ask her.
“I’m so sorry about the disruption,” says my mom to the librarian.
On the way home, my mom says, “Rascal, I was thinking, we
ll . . . you know how you outgrow things when you get older, like your shoes? Well, you might outgrow other things too, like . . . say . . . your Mrs. Gobble Gracker game, for example.”
“I’m not outgrowing them,” I say. “My shoes are shrinking.”
“No, they’re not,” says my mom.
“Yes, they are!” I say.
“No, they’re not,” says my mom.
“Yes, they are!”
“You know, I just thought of something,” says my mom, trying to change the subject. “What if we got you a new toy, something really special. Something that you might play with a lot, that might be even more fun than . . . your Mrs. Gobble Gracker game.”
“Like a bribe?” I ask.
“Wha—no— Rascal! I would never—”
“Okay, I know what I want.”
My mom looks happy. “What is it, honey?” she asks.
“TUBTOWN! I saw a picture of it in a magazine at Grandma’s house. It’s a town that sticks to the bathtub. It has suction cups that make it stick! It has an elevator! And a shower! And a fish and chips shop, and a lighthouse and a pool with a diving board and a little raft that the people can go in and float around the bathtub and—”
“Rascal, we already talked about this. That was a very old magazine. You know how Grandma doesn’t throw anything out . . . The company doesn’t make that toy anymore. I can’t buy it.”
“But that’s impossible! They would never stop making the best toy in the world!”
“Well, they did,” says my mom. “I already tried to buy it. It doesn’t exist anymore.”
“Does this have something to do with pirates?” I ask.
“Rascal—did you understand anything I just said?” asks my mom.
“When I get TubTown, I’m going to take a bath every single day. I’m going to smell clean as a dishwasher!”
“Rascal, can you be quiet now, I have to help Luke,” says my mom.
Then she says a bunch of math stuff to Luke. Luke gets mad.
“I already know how to solve it!” he says. “You’re interrupting me. I already did that step!”
“And I’m going to pretend that the little people in TubTown are all kids and they never grow up!”
“Luke, the answer can’t be 64,” says my mom. “That’s not right.”
“Yes it is!” says Luke.
“And they do backflips off the diving board,” I say. “And they go head first down the slide into the ocean and they play in the waves all day!”
“Think about it,” my mom says to Luke. “She can’t have more cupcakes than she started with. You need to subtract. Can you just listen for one second—”
Luke wails, “First I added—THEN I subtracted!”
Violet comes in the kitchen. “Mom, I need to talk to you.”
“Can you wait?” she asks Violet.
“No, I can’t! I got in a huge fight with Anna today. She made friendship bracelets and she didn’t make me one. But then I found one on my desk, and I thought she made it for me, so I put it on and she said that I stole it.”
“A stolen bracelet?” I say, astonished. “Is it pure gold?” I ask.
“It’s string. Be quiet, Rascal!” says Violet.
“Who’s the thief?” I ask.
“There’s no thief, Rascal,” says my mom.
“Anna said she put it on the wrong desk—since everyone in my class just switched desks, she got confused,” says Violet. “So, I told her she could have it back, but I couldn’t get the string untied. When I finally got the string untied I was in the bathroom, so I put it in my pocket. When I got back to the classroom, it wasn’t in my pocket! I told her I lost it, and she was really mad and didn’t believe me.”
“A lost treasure?” I ask. “Does this have something to do with pirates?”
“WHY ON EARTH DO YOU KEEP ASKING THAT?” yells my mom.
“Shush, Rascal!” says Violet.
“But I don’t understand why Anna wouldn’t make you a bracelet in the first place. She’s your best friend!” says my mom.
“She said I was being bossy. But she’s bossy too!” says Violet.
I grab a weapon.
“Put the broom down!” says my mom. “Come on, let’s move away from Rascal.” She leaves the kitchen with her arm around Violet.
“I can help you with your homework,” I tell Luke.
“Yeah, right,” he says.
“Just listen,” I say. “If you have 64 cupcakes and you have 6 bags of pancakes, but if you sit on one bag of pancakes and 4 toucans go to the bathroom on your backpack, then how many bags of pancakes would you—”
My mom rushes back into the kitchen with Violet trailing behind her. “Rascal, what happened? Luke! What did you do to her?”
“He flunjed me!” I cry.
“That’s not even a word,” says Luke. “She was teasing me about my math. And I barely touched her! She just fell.”
“He flunjed me really hard!” I cry.
“She’s just trying to get me in trouble!” says Luke.
“Rascal, are you okay?” asks my mom.
I’m about to make a bunch of sounds like I’m in pain, and cry that Luke broke my butt—even though it doesn’t really hurt that much. But then I notice that Violet’s face looks red and splotchy.
She looks sad.
And I feel bad for her.
“I can help you solve your problem, Violet! Because I’m a pirate! And I’m the toughest!” I tell her.
So I stand up. I brush off my butt. And then at the top of my lungs, I yell,
“Oh no,” says Violet. “Just when I thought my life couldn’t get any worse.”
CHAPTER 2
Something to Do with Pirates
“You know how I always walk into doorknobs?” I ask my mom the next morning.
“Uh-huh,” she says.
“Well, it happened again. And now I need an eye patch!” I say, holding my hand over my eye.
“Your eye is fine,” she says.
“How do you know? You didn’t even look at it!” I say.
“Because I can tell when you are up to something . . .” she says.
“But I need an injury so I can look like a pirate!” I tell her.
“I’m sure you’ll get hurt before the end of the day,” she says.
“Can you punch me in the face and give me a black eye?” I ask Luke.
“Sure!” he says.
“LUKE! NO!” yells my mom.
“I wasn’t really gonna do it,” he says. “I don’t think . . .”
After I don’t get punched in the face, I look all around the house for a pirate jacket. I find one in Luke’s closet.
“It’s called a suit,” says Luke.
“A pirate suit,” I say.
“Pirates wear long jackets with shiny buttons, but I don’t care, you can have it. I hate it,” says Luke.
And then I remember that bandana with bones on it that a dog left at our house once.
When I show my mom my pirate suit, she says, “I guess you can wear it to school. I mean, it’s kinda weird, but it does fit you perfectly . . .”
“Please! Please!” I beg.
“Well, you do match for a change, and it’s nice that it’s actually clean.” She asks my dad, “Honey, what do you think?”
“Fine, wear the suit, Rascal,” she says.
I have time to play before breakfast, so I grab a wooden spoon and wake up Mary.
But Mary says she’s not in the mood to duel. “But you always have to be in the mood for what I’M in the mood for,” I say, and drag her out from under the bed.
“I want to play cards,” she says.
“Fine, we can have a Go Fish duel,” I say, and grab the cards. “I’ll deal.”
But trouble starts right away. First, Mary bites me because she said I was cheating. (I was.)
Then Mary says I peeked at her cards. And so she tried to bite me. But she bit HER arm by mistake—she thought it was MY arm.
Then Mary gets mad at me because she says I stole her cards when she wasn’t looking. (I did.) This time she bites herself (yes, again) and tries to blame me for it.
I grab the stolen cards and run downstairs.
Luckily, breakfast is ready.
“I’m going to help you find the treasure today, and then Anna won’t be mad at you anymore!” I tell Violet.
“It’s not a treasure!” says Violet. “It’s a bracelet made out of string! And it doesn’t even matter. Stay out of my business!”
“But I’ve got pirate business,” I tell her.
“Aaaarrrrgghh! Give me toothpaste!!” I yell at Luke and Violet when we go to brush our teeth.
“You don’t sound anything like a pirate,” says Luke.
“Well then, how do I talk like a pirate?” I ask him. “What do pirates say anyway besides Aaaaarrrgh?”
“Well, you definitely asked the right people about pirates, ’cause we know,” says Violet. “Right, Luke?”
“Aye, aye, matey,” says Luke, with his mouth full of toothpaste.
“First of all, you have to talk in a gruff voice, move your hands around a lot, and talk really loud,” says Violet.
“Okay!” I say.
“So, you know when pirates have to warn each other about danger—like if someone is firing a cannon at them?”