Welcome to Dweeb Club
eBook - ePub

Welcome to Dweeb Club

  1. 272 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Welcome to Dweeb Club

About this book

For fans of Gordon Korman comes a “funny and original” (Kirkus Reviews) middle grade adventure about a school club whose members stumble across video footage of themselves from five years in the future.

What if a school club changed your life forever?

In the second week of seventh grade, Jason Sloan signs up for the brand-new HAIR Club. He and his friends have no idea what it’s about, but since they’re the first to sign up they figure they’ll be in charge in no time. The club turns out to be super weird: using fancy new equipment donated by a mysterious benefactor, the members are supposed to monitor school security footage. Their first assignment: find out what is stealing the cafeteria’s croutons.

Instead of the expected dark cafeteria, the computers show the club members something else entirely: actual footage of themselves as high school seniors, five years in the future! What on earth could be happening? Is it some kind of time warp or alternate reality? Or is it just an unfunny prank? As they scramble to solve the mystery, they can’t help but notice something else—none of them like what they see five years from now. Is there any way to change the future—and their fates?

Figuring out who you are and who you want to become has never been funnier in this laugh-out-loud romp through the perils of middle school—and beyond.

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Information

Chapter 1

THE ORIGINS OF THE FLOUNDER Bay Upper School H.A.I.R. Club are shrouded in mystery. Or maybe cloaked in mystery. Or at least wearing a heavy cardigan of mystery. As the official club historian, I tried to figure it out, and you can decide whether I was at all successful. I do know one thing, though: None of us would have joined if Glamorous Steve hadn’t gotten there first. And if we hadn’t joined, our lives would have turned out very differently. I’m not just saying this for dramatic effect—it is a fact.
But let’s start at the beginning. A history should go in order, after all.

It was the second week of seventh grade. I was still finding my way around the building, which was way bigger and more crowded than elementary school, and mentally labeling kids I didn’t know (Vegan Lunch, Stork Legs, British Accent, et cetera). When I walked into school that morning, there were folding tables lining both sides of the main hall. The tables had posters hanging in front of them advertising various school clubs. Two or three upbeat kids who looked way too cheerful for that time of day sat behind each table.
All these upbeat kids were trying to get other, lower-beat kids to join their clubs, offering enticements like mini-muffins, and those rubber bracelets that really hurt if you shot them at people, and even tiny Frisbees with FBUS ULTIMATE FRISDEE (oops) printed on them.
It was my intention to walk right by these tables and keep going until I got to my locker. It was not my intention to sign up for a club that morning. I like to take my time making big decisions, and joining a school club was a big decision. Your choice of clubs could determine a whole new set of friends and also what kinds of labels would get slapped on you. It was way too early—in the day and the year—for me to be making a decision with these kinds of life-changing consequences.
But I didn’t make it to my locker. My friend Glamorous Steve was standing at the last table in the row, and he grabbed the strap of my backpack as I was hurrying past, causing me to lurch to a stop.
ā€œJason,ā€ he said. ā€œWait up.ā€
ā€œWhat?ā€
ā€œI’m going to sign up forā€ā€”he looked down at the sheet of paper that was the only thing on the tableā€”ā€œH.A.I.R. Club. You should too.ā€
No one, upbeat or not, was sitting behind the table. There were no posters. There was no swag. There was a sign-up sheet with a coffee ring on it and New This Year! See Ms. Grossman, Faculty Adviser, for Details! scrawled across the bottom in red pen. Ms. Grossman was my US History teacher, and even this early in the year, I was all too familiar with her red scrawls.
ā€œIs this a joke?ā€ I said. I glanced at the sheet with its un-filled-in blanks. There wasn’t even a crummy pencil next to it. ā€œThere’s no one signed up at all. And what is Hair Club, anyway?ā€
ā€œIt’s not Hair Club,ā€ said Steve. ā€œIt’s H.A.I.R. Club. It’s initials.ā€
ā€œSo what do the initials stand for?ā€
ā€œNo idea. Maybe ā€˜Hair And Its Relatives’?ā€
I could see why that might interest Steve. He had perfect hair and he put real effort into its upkeep. It did not, however, interest me and my normal-to-greasy, effort-free hair.
ā€œSo it is Hair Club,ā€ I said. ā€œAnd what’s a hair relative? Fingernails? Sorry. Not interested.ā€
I had turned to head for my locker when Steve put a hand on my shoulder.
ā€œHere’s the thing,ā€ he said. ā€œWhatever it stands for—and it might have nothing to do with hair—H.A.I.R. Club is brand-new. No one is signed up yet. We’d be the first members.ā€
I shrugged his hand off my shoulder. But I turned back to face him. ā€œSo?ā€
ā€œSo if we join now, as seventh graders, we’ll be club officers by the time we’re in, like, eighth grade.ā€
Now he had my attention.
ā€œIf we’re the first to sign up,ā€ I said, thinking out loud, ā€œwouldn’t we be club officers right away? It’s only fair.ā€
Steve was nodding at my brilliant logic. Or maybe at my willingness to go along with him. He handed me a pen. ā€œWe’d be in charge of a brand-new club. In seventh grade. Think about it,ā€ he said.
I was already signing my name.

A word about Glamorous Steve before we go on. Steve’s family had moved to Flounder Bay the summer before sixth grade. There are three kinds of new kids, as I’m sure you know. There’s the weird new kid, the bland new kid, and the glamorous new kid.
Steve, who was from California and had that perfect hair and a smile that pretty much made a cartoon twinkly ping whenever he flashed it, was as glamorous as it got in Flounder Bay. His glamour was upped by the fact that a hopelessly bland kid also named Steve had moved to town at the same time. So there was Steve and there was Glamorous Steve. And then, for most of us, there was just Glamorous Steve, the other kid having been forgotten. Or maybe he changed his name. Doesn’t matter. He won’t appear in this history again.
Glamorous Steve had a talent for doing even the geekiest things with such infectious enthusiasm that he made them not just acceptable but downright trendy. He was a long-distance runner. Boring, you say? Yes, indeed. Unless Glamorous Steve was moving effortlessly past you, his glorious hair streaming behind him. He collected stamps. Game over, you’re thinking. And ordinarily you’d be right. But he made it work. Somehow, he made it work.
So I knew I was safe signing up for anything Steve was a part of. In fact, even as Steve was writing his name below mine on the H.A.I.R. Club sign-up sheet, his glamour was rippling through the hallway and other kids were falling into line behind him. They didn’t care what he was signing up for—if Glamorous Steve was in, they wanted in too.
I should add that fully half of them balked when they got to the point of actually writing their names. After all, they had no idea what H.A.I.R. stood for. And they could see for themselves the empty table and its pathetic sign-up sheet. Even Steve’s glamour wasn’t enough for them to risk their reputations on what looked like the losingest club ever. I don’t blame them. And I’m glad only ten kids signed up.
Those others will never know what they missed.

Chapter 2

THE FIRST-EVER MEETING OF THE Flounder Bay Upper School H.A.I.R. Club took place on September 9, a Tuesday, at three o’clock in the afternoon. Eleven people were present, and I’m going to describe each of them briefly, since almost all of them have a major part in this history.

First, there was Ms. Grossman: history teacher and club adviser. She had a big vocabulary and a mean red pen and wasn’t afraid to use either.
Next, Jason Sloan: me—your narrator. I hate those scenes in books where the poor narrator tries to describe what they see in a mirror and point out their flaws to seem humble. I was extremely ordinary, kind of scrawny, often mistaken for a sixth grader when I was in seventh. Will that do?
ā€œGlamorousā€ Steve Hendricks: who has already been introduced. I don’t think he needs any more description.
Nikhil Singh: a friend of Steve’s from cross-country. I sat behind Nikhil in history, so I was familiar with the unusual angle at which his ears attached to his head. I also knew that he was easily irritated, based on his grouching about my ā€œtuneless hummingā€ during quizzes.
Harriet ā€œHoppyā€ Hopkins: daughter of the owners of Hopkins Hairnets, the second-biggest company in Flounder Bay. Hoppy was noticeable around school for her ultra-curly hair, which would have driven her hairnet-manufacturing ancestors up a wall, and her, um, commanding voice.
Andrew Vernicky: the tall redheaded boy from my science class whose laid-back attitude almost covered up how smart he was. He never raised his hand, but when he was called on, he was always right. He once corrected the teacher.
Sonia Patel: possibly the most agreeable person I’d ever encountered. Even her outfits were agreeable. She managed to color-coordinate her backpack and shoes with her clothes every day. Sonia had huge brown eyes and always wore a (matching) hairband in her dark brown hair.
Laura Andersen: the shy blond girl from my math class. I swear I’d met clams that were more outgoing than Laura was.
Vincent Chen: How do you describe your best friend since kindergarten? Vincent had messy black hair and a goofy smile. Good enough? He had joined all the school’s clubs on a dare from his older sister. Vincent never could resist a dare, something I myself occasionally took advantage of.

Two other kids whose names I never found out. Their descriptions aren’t important, for reasons I’ll get to later.
The interesting thing to note here is that all the club members were seventh graders. Coincidence? Not really.
At Flounder Bay Upper School, seventh through twelfth grades are in one building together because the town is too small to need separate ones. This meant that any kid who was older than seventh grade already knew about the school’s clubs and wouldn’t have bothered with that lone H.A.I.R. table at the end of the row. They knew what clubs they wanted to join, and they joined them.
In fact, Vincent could have gotten away with not signing up for H.A.I.R. Club, because his sister had no idea it existed. But Vincent has a strong code of honor. Plus, I made him.
Anyway, back to the first meeting…
Ms. Grossman started things off.
ā€œWelcome to H.A.I.R. Club,ā€ she said, trying to sound enthusiastic in the face of this small and skeptical-looking group. ā€œThis is the first year that Flounder Bay Upper School has offered H.A.I.R. Club, and I’m so glad you’ve decided to join!ā€ You could hear her tossing in that exclamation point with effort. ā€œI’m Ms. Grossman, as those of you who are my US History students know. And I am your club adviser. Which is awkward, because I have to admit that I have no idea what H.A.I.R. stands for.
ā€œHere’s the backstory,ā€ Ms. Grossman went on, taking a seat on the edge of the desk at the front of the room. ā€œThis past summer, a very successful entrepreneur who wishes to remain anonymous offered the services of his company to install a state-of-the-art security system here. He very generously donated this to the school with one stipulation.ā€
Ms. Grossman, I knew from being in her class, constantly used words like ā€œentrepreneurā€ and ā€œstipulationā€ without defining them. When someone asked what one of her words meant, she’d tell them to ā€œwrite it down and look it up—you’ll learn it better that way.ā€ I tended not to bother, which might explain the number of red corrections on my papers.
ā€œThat stipulation,ā€ Ms. Grossman continued, ā€œwas that we start a club here at school called H.A.I.R. Club, and that its members take charge of the security system.ā€
Now we were all sort of eyeing one another.
ā€œHa!ā€ barked Ms. Grossman. ā€œI see some questions on your faces. And maybe the first one is, who in their right mind would put a student club in charge of a brand-new state-of-the-art security system? The same thing occurred to me. But the donor was quite clear about it. Club members only will monitor the system.ā€ She raised a finger and added, ā€œWhich might be a good thing, because I don’t think any of the adults here could even begin to figure it out.ā€
One of the nameless kids raised his hand.
ā€œYes?ā€ said Ms. Grossman.
ā€œSo this club doesn’t have anything to do with hair?ā€ he asked.
ā€œNo, it doesn’t,ā€ Ms. Grossman said. ā€œH.A.I.R. must stand for something, but the donor never indicated what it was.ā€
The kid who’d asked the question stood up, along with the girl next to him.
ā€œWe thought H.A.I.R. spelled hair,ā€ the girl said as they headed for the door.
ā€œWell, it does, of course,ā€ said Ms. Grossman. ā€œAlthough in this caseā€”ā€
But they’d already opened the door. The girl practically dove into the hallway. The boy lingered long enough to look around and say quietly, ā€œā€Šā€˜Welcome to Dweeb Club’ is more like itā€ before he made his escape. I think I was the only one who heard him, since I was nearest the door.
Okay, so this new club involved security cameras and computer equipment. But that didn’t make it Dweeb Club just because some chucklehead said so. Did it? This wasn’t a roomful of dweebs. We had Glamorous Steve and… and…
Uh-oh. What had I gotten myself into?

Chapter 3

ā€œOKAY,ā€ SAID MS. GROSSMAN. ā€œI CAN certainly understand the confusion. Did anyone else think this was a hair club?ā€
ā€œI did,ā€ Hoppy said. ā€œSince my family’s in the hairnet business, I thought I’d join to do some opposition research. But state-of-the-art security sounds interesting.ā€
I looked at Steve. So did most of the other kids in the room. He was the main reason we were here, after all. He ran a hand carefully through his own hair as though asking it a question. A question like Is it okay if I join a club that isn’t devoted to you and y...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Chapter 1
  5. Chapter 2
  6. Chapter 3
  7. Chapter 4
  8. Chapter 5
  9. Chapter 6
  10. Chapter 7
  11. Chapter 8
  12. Chapter 9
  13. Chapter 10
  14. Chapter 11
  15. Chapter 12
  16. Chapter 13
  17. Chapter 14
  18. Chapter 15
  19. Chapter 16
  20. Chapter 17
  21. Chapter 18
  22. Chapter 19
  23. Chapter 20
  24. Chapter 21
  25. Chapter 22
  26. Chapter 23
  27. Chapter 24
  28. Chapter 25
  29. Chapter 26
  30. Chapter 27
  31. Chapter 28
  32. Chapter 29
  33. Chapter 30
  34. Chapter 31
  35. Chapter 32
  36. Chapter 33
  37. Chapter 34
  38. Chapter 35
  39. Chapter 36
  40. Chapter 37
  41. Chapter 38
  42. Chapter 39
  43. Chapter 40
  44. Chapter 41
  45. Chapter 42
  46. Chapter 43
  47. Chapter 44
  48. Chapter 45
  49. Chapter 46
  50. Chapter 47
  51. Chapter 48
  52. Chapter 49
  53. Chapter 50
  54. Chapter 51
  55. Chapter 52
  56. Chapter 53
  57. Chapter 54
  58. Chapter 55
  59. Chapter 56
  60. Chapter 57
  61. Chapter 58
  62. Chapter 59
  63. Chapter 60
  64. Acknowledgments
  65. About the Author
  66. Copyright