down
!" They started to chant: "Put it
down
, put it
down
, put it
down
!"
Repperton didn't like it. He didn't mind being the center of attention, but this
was the wrong sort of attention. His glance began to flicker around nervously,
first at Arnie, then at me, then at the others. A hank of hair fell across his
forehead, and he tossed it back.
When he looked my way again, I made a move as if to go for him. The knife
swiveled in my direction, and Arnie moved—he moved faster than I would
have believed. He brought the side of his right hand down in a half-assed but
effective karate chop. He hit Repperton's wrist hard and knocked the knife
out of his hand. It clattered onto the butt-littered hottop. Repperton bent and
grabbed for it. Arnie timed it with a deadly accuracy and when Repperton's
hand came all the wav to the asphalt, Arnie stamped on it. Hard. Repperton
screamed.
Don Vandenberg moved in then, quickly, hauled Arnie off, and threw him to
the ground. Hardly aware that I was going to do it, I stepped into the ring and
kicked Vandenberg in the ass just as hard as I could—I brought my foot up
rather than pistoning it out; I kicked him as if I were punting a football.
Vandenberg, a tall, thin guy who was either nineteen or twenty at that time,
began to scream and dance around holding his butt. He forgot all about
helping his Buddy; he ceased to be a factor in things. To me it's amazing that I
didn't paralyze him. I never kicked anyone or anything harder, and my friend,
it sho' did feel fine.
Just then an arm locked itself around my windpipe and there was a hand
between my legs. I realized what was going to happen just a second too late
to wholly prevent it. My balls were given a good, firm squeeze that sent sick
pain bellowing and raving up from my crotch and into my stomach and down
into my legs, unmanning them so that when the arm around my windpipe let
go. I simply collapsed in a puddle on the smoking-area tarmac.
"How did you like that, dickface?" a squarish guy with bad teeth asked me.
He was wearing small and rather delicate wire-frame glasses that looked
absurd on his wide, blocky face. This was Moochie Welch, another of
Buddy's friends.
Suddenly the circle of watchers began to melt away and I heard a man's
voice yelling, "Break it up! Break it up
right now
! You kids take a walk!
Take a walk, dammit!"
It was Mr Casey. Finally, Mr Casey.
Buddy Repperton snatched his switchblade off the pavement. He retracted
the blade and shoved the knife into the hip pocket of his jeans in one quick
motion. His hand was scraped and bleeding, and it looked as if it was going
to swell. The miserable sonofabitch, I hoped it would swell, until it looked
like one of those gloves Donald Duck wears in the funnypages.
Moochie Welch backed away from me, glanced toward the sound of Mr
Casey's voice, and touched the corner of his mouth delicately with his thumb.
"Later, dickface," he said.
Don Vandenberg was dancing more slowly now, but he was still rubbing the
affected part. Tears of pain were spilling down his face.
Then Arnie was beside me, getting an arm around me, helping me up. There
was a lot of dirt smeared across his shirt from where Vandenberg had thrown
him down. There were cigarette butts squashed into the knees of his jeans.
"You okay, Dennis? What'd he do to you?"
"Gave my balls a little squeeze. I'll be all right."
At least I hoped I would be. If you're a man and you've slammed your nuts a
good one at some point (and what man has not), you know. If you're a woman,
you don't—can't. The initial agony is only the start; it fades, to be replaced by
a dull, throbbing feeling of pressure that coils in the pit of the stomach. And
what that feeling says is
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |