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The Old Neighborhood. Bill Hillmann
Читать онлайн.Название The Old Neighborhood
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781940430089
Автор произведения Bill Hillmann
Жанр Зарубежная классика
Издательство Ingram
Rich poked his head into the game room. “Hey... Sy, you gonna smoke?”
“Naw. I’m busy whippin’ this kid in pinball,” he replied without looking up.
“Alright,” Rich said, putting his hand through my hair and disappearing back down the dark hallway.
“Smoking,” I scowled. “That’s what gave my Da cancer.”
“Hey,” Sy paused and looked down at me. “Well, den I never want to hear about you smokin’. Got it punk?” He slapped me softly on the back of the head.
“I won’t, never.”
Two blondes strolled up to us and started hanging on Sy. One wore this tight, white tank-top. It was sliced up with scissors on the sides and struggled to restrain her giant pair of plump boobs. She had on a black spandex leotard with a blue stripe running down one leg and these huge hoop earrings. The other was chunky with a loose, nylon plaid shirt on that hung down to her knees. Sy flashed his glowing smirk. I took my turn. Sy teased the ladies as they drunkenly hung on his shirtsleeve. The chesty one twisted her index finger in an oily strand of his hair.
I focused on the pinball machine. I banged hard on the smooth, little buttons. The flippers popped the small, chrome ball and bounced it through the flickering neon lights. The ball incited the spring-loaded boppers to percolate red. When my last ball slipped past the flippers, I was up a few points on Sy. He batted the blonde’s hands away and stepped around to the front of the machine.
“Now, ladies, watch how a real man plays the game,” he said, glancing at them. “You gotta understand, I ain’t been beaten in two years runnin’. I’m the reigning champ of Fautches,” he said to the girls as he smoothed his hair back behind his shoulders.
He pulled the spring, let it go, and leaned over the machine. The little ball bounced and rattled. Sy squinted in a crazed focus as he banged the flipper buttons. With his first ball, he racked up some points, making the game even closer. He glanced at me as I bit my fingernails nervously.
The next ball slipped past him.
“Ahhhhh,” he exclaimed, and banged his fists against the thick glass. The girls chortled.
“It all comes down to this,” he said, glaring at me. “I ain’t losin’ to this punk kid, no damn way!”
The girls watched Sy pull back the spring on his last ball. His face scrunched excruciatingly tight, and he leaned in on the tilted glass plane. He released, and the shiny ball soared up the narrow channel. It dinged and popped and bumped the score even closer. I bounced up and down on my toes and clenched my fists at my lips.
The ball arced down the slow tilt of the plane, slashing through the colorful planets. Sy tapped the ball with the tip of a white flipper, and it arced up slowly like a pop-fly. Then, it came down, and he just barely nicked it. He let out another long groan, and the girls leaned in and smirked at his agonized face. He whiffed with the flipper, and the ball panged into the black vault.
“Damn it!!! This machine’s broke! I want a rematch!” Sy yelled, squeezing his hands around the machine and jolting it savagely.
“He beat you?” the girls sighed and clapped. “Who is this young, sexy little man?” The big-boobed one bent down to my height. Her flimsy shirt drooped, so her milky breasts poured out of her tight bra. “There’s a new champion in town isn’t there?”
I smiled up at her large, green eyes. She smelled like a whole lotta strong perfume.
“He’s so cute,” the other one chimed in, gliding her pudgy fingers through my hair.
“Aye, he’s all mine,” the one with the big jugs declared, smacking the other girl’s hand away. Then, she smooched her puffy, wet lips against my cheek. A thick film of lipstick clung to my skin.
“Get away from my little brother, ya skank!” Rich said as he and the rest ambled in through the back hall. “It’s showtime, baby brotha.” Rich’s eyes were bloodshot, and his breath smelled like a musty skunk. He hoisted me onto his shoulders.
Sy and the rest climbed on stage. Rich jogged with me out into the crowd, and by then, the room had completely filled. Sy slung Excalibur around his shoulder; it was a cherry red Stratocaster with white trim. He flicked one of the chrome strings with his pick and it roared. Sy stepped to the microphone.
“You scumfucks ready for this?” he screamed. He leaned out over the crowd and spit out a small, white glob that arced out into the mass of long-haired domes. The crowd spit back, and a barrage of half-crushed beer cans clanked onto the stage.
“We’re the Dead Rat Society,” he muttered. The music exploded from the speakers. There was more order in this roaring, racing sound. I had a clear view of everything as I sat perched on Rich’s shoulders. The front of the crowd immediately twisted into a torrent of thrashing arms and legs. The black punk jumped off the amp and into the pit. The spiral widened into the room. Sy rambled through cutting, indecipherable lyrics, and every few words, the whole crowd would shout a garbled phrase in unison with him.
Rich stayed back where it was calmer. The crowd began to sway. A big circle twisted in the mass of shadowed bodies. Then, another circle opened in the center of them like the eye of a tornado. This circle kicked their legs out savagely, following each other like a Comanche war dance. Their grins morphed into howling scowls.
After a few songs, the front door opened and several guys with pale white shaved heads stepped in. They all wore white t-shirts with red suspenders and had fierce, cold grimaces on their muscular faces. They glared at everyone who didn’t look away, until they did.
I’d seen skinheads around before, and I had a vague idea of what they were all about. They slid their way into the chaos, passing us with sly smirks spread across their faces and eyes lit up like they were about to pull a prank. They pushed to the edge of the slam-dance circle, and then they suddenly erupted with forearms, head-butts, and punches. I caught a flash of one of their maniacal faces as he slapped his fist into some tall kid. The kid’s long mop of hair exploded in a big swoosh like he’d stuck his finger in an outlet. By the time that song ended, most of the crowd had quieted. It was only the skinheads smashing each other. The kid bled profusely from his nose, and I strained my neck to see a couple girls help him to the bathroom in back. The black guy with the mohawk had stopped moshing. He leaned his back along the wall, nervously, with his arms folded over his chest. His eyes darted around the room.
“This’s our last one,” Sy said as sweat dripped off his brow and glistened in his light beard. “I want to thank you for being so fuckin’ polite.”
The crowd screamed. The drums rattled. One of the skinheads threw an empty whiskey pint that just missed Sy’s head and broke against the fake wood-paneled wall behind the stage. A couple fat-faced bouncers at the front door pushed into the crowd. Their bulging, neon-green shirts sliced through the darkly clad bodies as the room erupted into high-swung fists and beer sud-bursts. A girl screamed, but the roar swallowed it. The crowd surged backward. Rich staggered into the arcade with me clung to his head and took me down from his shoulders.
“Stay back. It’s OK,” Rich said, putting himself between me and the chaos. “Fuckin’ skinheads.”
Two of the bouncers broke through the crowd. They held one skinhead by both arms, and the fatter bouncer clasped him by the nape of his neck. They dragged him out the front door as he fought to break their grasp, and the rest of the skins giggled as they trailed behind.
“It wasn’t him. It was that fuckin’ nigger,” one yelled.
I glanced though the back door of the arcade and saw a black figure stumble down the dark back hallway.
The crowd unleashed an exalted cheer as the Dead Rat Society finished their set. The guys started to break down