Getting your nuts squeezed is not one of life's great thrills.
of kids deep down the way so many teachers are. The kids knew it, too.
Buddy and Don and Moochie knew it; it was in the sullen way they dropped
their eyes and shuffled their feet.
"Get lost," Mr Casey said briskly to the few remaining spectators. They
started to drift away. Moochie Welch decided to try and drift with them. "Not
you, Peter," Mr Casey said.
"Aw, Mr Casey, I ain't been doing nothing," Moochie said.
"Me neither," Don said. "How come you always pick on, us?"
Mr Casey came over to where I was still leaning on Arnie" for support. "Are
you all right, Dennis?"
I was finally beginning to get over it—I wouldn't have been if one of my
thighs hadn't partially blocked Welch's hand. I nodded.
Mr Casey walked back to where Buddy Repperton, Moochie Welch, and Don
Vandenberg stood in a shuffling, angry line. Don hadn't been joking; he had
been speaking for all of them. They really did feel picked on.
"This is cute, isn't it?" Mr Casey said finally. "Three on two. That the way
you like to do things, Buddy? Those odds don't seem stacked enough for
you."
Buddy looked up, threw Casey a smoldering, ugly glance, and then dropped
his eyes again. "They started it. Those guys."
"That's not true—"Arnie began.
"Shut up, cuntface," Buddy said. He started to add something, but before he
could get it out, Mr Casey grabbed him and threw him up against the back
wall of the shop. There was a tin sign there which read SMOKING HERE
ONLY. Mr Casey began to slam Buddy Repperton against that sign, and every
time he did it, the sign jangled, like dramatic punctuation. He handled
Repperton the way you or I might have handled a great big ragdoll. I guess he
had muscles somewhere, all right.
"You want to shut your big mouth," he said, and slammed Buddy against the
sign. "You want to
shut
your mouth or
clean up
your mouth. Because I don't
have to listen to that stuff coming from
you
, Buddy."
He let go of Repperton's shirt. It had pulled out of his jeans, showing his
white, untanned belly. He looked back at Arnie. "What were you saying?"
"I came past the smoking area on my way out to the bleachers to eat my
lunch," Arnie said. "Repperton was smoking with his friends there. He came
over and knocked my lunchbag out of my hand and then stepped on it. He
squashed it." He seemed about to say something more, struggled with it, and
swallowed it again. "That started the fight."
But I wasn't going to leave it at that. I'm no stoolie or tattletale, not under
ordinary circumstances, but Repperton had apparently decided that more than
a good beating was required to avenge himself for getting kicked out of
Darnell's. He could have punched a hole in Arnie's intestines, maybe killed
him.
"Mr Casey," I said.
He looked at me. Behind him, Buddy Repperton's green eyes flashed at me
balefully—a warning.
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