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Freak the Mighty
by Rodman Philbrick
Originally published in 1993, this award-winning young adult novel
relates the unforgettable story of two boys a slow learner
too large for his age, and a tiny, crippled genius who forge
a unique friendship when they pair up to create one formidable human
force.
Chapter One: "The Unvanquished Truth"
I never had a brain until Freak came along and let me borrow his
for awhile, and that's the truth, the whole truth. The unvanquished
truth, is how Freak would say it, and for a long time it was him
who did the talking. Except I had a way of saying things with my
fists and my feet even before we became Freak the Mighty, slaying
dragons and fools and walking high above the world.
Called me Kicker for time - this was day care, the year Gram and
Grim took me over - and I had a thing about booting anyone who dared
to touch me. Because they were always trying to throw a hug on me,
like it was a medicine I needed.
Gram and Grim, bless their pointed little heads, they're my mother's
people, her parents, and they figured whoa! better put this little
critter with other little critters his own age, maybe it will improve
his temper.
Yeah, right! Instead, what happened, I invented games like kick-boxing
and kick-knees and kick-faces and kick-teachers, and kick-the-other-little-day-care-critters,
because I knew what a rotten lie that hug stuff was. Oh, I knew.
That's when I got my first look at Freak, that year of the phony
hugs. He didn't look so different back then, we were all of us pretty
small, right? But he wasn't in the playroom with us every day, just
now and then he'd show up. Looking sort of fierce, is how I remembered
him. Except later it was Freak himself who taught me that remembering
is a great invention of the mind, and if you try hard enough you
can remember anything, whether it really happened or not.
So maybe he really wasn't all that fierce in day care, except
I'm pretty sure he did hit a kid with his crutch once, whacked the
little brat pretty good. And for some reason little Kicker never
got around to kicking little Freak.
Maybe it was those crutches kept me from lashing out at him, man
those crutches were cool. I wanted a pair for myself. And when little
Freak showed up one day with these shiny braces strapped to his
crooked legs, metal tubes right up to his hips, why those were even
more cool than crutches.
"I'm a Robot Man," little Freak would go, making these weird robot
noises as he humped himself around the playground. Rrr...rrr...rrr...
like he had robot motors inside his legs, going rrr...rrr...rrrr,
and this look, like don't mess with me, man, maybe I got a laser
cannon hidden inside these leg braces, smoke a hole right through
you. No question, Freak was hooked on robots even back then, this
little guy two feet tall, and already he knew what he wanted.
Then for a long time I never saw Freak anymore, one day he just
never came back to day care, and the next thing I remembered I'm
like in the third grade or something and I catch a glimpse of this
yellow-haired kid scowling at me from one of those cripple vans.
Man, they were death-ray eyes, and I think, hey, that's him, the
robot boy, and it was like whoa! because I'd forgotten all about
him, day care was a blank place in my head, and nobody had called
me Kicker for a long time.
Mad Max they were calling me, or Max Factor, or this one butthead
in L.D. class called me Maxi pad, until I persuaded him otherwise.
Gram and Grim always called me Maxwell, though, which is supposed
to be my real name, and sometimes I hated that worst of all. Maxwell,
ugh.
Grim out in the kitchen one night, after supper whispering to
Gram had she noticed how much Maxwell was getting to look like Him?
Which is the way he always talked about my father, who had married
his dear departed daughter and produced, eek eek, Maxwell. Grim
never says my father's name, just Him, like his name is too scary
to say.
It's more than just the way Maxwell resembles him, Grim says that
night in the kitchen, the boy is like him, we'd better watch out,
you never know what he might do while we're sleeping. Like his father
did. And Gram right away shushes him and says don't ever say that,
because little pictures have big ears, which makes me run to the
mirror to see if it is my big ears made me look like Him.
What a butthead, huh?
Well, I was a butthead, because like I said, I never had a brain
until Freak moved down the street. The summer before eighth grade,
right? That's the summer I grew so fast that Grim said we'd best
let the boy go barefoot, he's exploding out of his shoes. That barefoot
summer when I fell down a lot, and the weirdo robot boy with his
white-yellow hair and his weird fierce eyes moved into the duplex
down the block with his beautiful-haired mom, the Fair Gwen of Air.
Only a falling-down goon would think that was her real name, right?
Like I said.

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