His mother came
and took him by the hand; he turned and looked at her, and then the
two fell sobbing in each other's arms.... For all the rest, he had
been a quiet and studious boy, well thought of in the town. Jerry's
father was a dry goods mer chant, and the family was comfortably off
in a modest way. Jerry had a good mind, a prodigious memory for what
he read, all things in books came smoothly to him. He would finish
high school next year....
Jerry Alsop
passed on down the street.
Suddenly,
the Webber boy heard voices in the street. He turned his head and
looked, but even before he turned his head his car had told him, a
cold, dry tightening of his heart, an acrid dryness on his lips, a
cold, dry loathing in his blood, had told him who they were.
Four boys were coming down the street in
raffish guise; advancing scattered and disorderly, now scampering
sideways, chasing, tussling in lewd horseplay with each other,
smacking each other with wet towels across the buttocks (they had
just come from swimming in Jim Rheinhardt's cow pond in the Cove),
filling the quiet street with the intrusions of their raucous voices,
taking the sun and joy and singing from the day.
They
slammed yard gates and vaulted fences; they dodged round trees,
ducked warily behind telephone poles, chased each other back and
forth, gripped briefly, struggling strenuously, showed off to each
other, making raucous noises, uttering mirthless gibes. One chased an
other around a tree, was deftly tripped, fell sprawling to the roar
of their derision, rose red and angry in the face, trying mirthlessly
to smile, hurled his wet, wadded towel at the one who tripped him-
missed and was derided, picked his towel up, and to save his ugly
face and turn derision from him cried out--"Pee-e-nuts!"--loudly
passing Pennock's house.
The boy
surveyed them with cold loathing--this was wit!
They
filled that pleasant street with raucous gibes, and they took hope
and peace and brightness from the day. They were unwholesome
roisterers, they did not move ahead in comradeship, but scampered
lewdly, raggedly around, as raucous, hoarse, and mirthless as a gob
of phlegm; there was no warmth, no joy or hope or pleasantness in
them; they filled the pleasant street with brutal insolence. They
came from the west side of town, he knew them instinctively for what
they were- the creatures of a joyless insolence, the bearers of the
hated names.
Thus Sidney Purtle, a
tall, lean fellow, aged fifteen, and everything about him pale--pale
eyes, pale features, pale lank hair, pale eyebrows and a long, pale
nose, pale lips and mouth carved always in a pale and ugly sneer,
pale hands, pale hair upon his face, pale freckles, and a pale,
sneering, and envenomed soul: "Georgeous the Porgeous!" A
pale sneer, a palely sneering laugh; and as he spoke the words he
smacked outward with his wet and loathsome rag of towel. The boy
ducked it and arose.
Carl Hooton stood
surveying him--a brutal, stocky figure, brutal legs outspread,
red-skinned, red-handed, and red-eyed, red-eyebrowed, and an inch of
brutal brow beneath the flaming thatch of coarse red hair: "Well,
as I live and breathe," he sneered (the others smirked
appreciation of this flaming wit), "it's little Jocko the
Webber, ain't it?"
"Jockus
the Cockus," said Sid Purtle softly, horribly--and smacked the
wet towel briefly at the boy's bare leg.
"Jockus
the Cockus--hell!" said Carl Hooton with a sneer, and for a
moment more looked at the boy with brutal and derisory contempt.
"Son, you ain't nothin'," he went on
with heavy emphasis, now turning to address his fellows--"Why
that little monk-faced squirrel's--they ain't even dropped yet."
Loud appreciative laughter followed on this
sally; the boy stood there flushed, resentful, staring at them,
saying nothing. Sid Purtle moved closer to him, his pale eyes
narrowed ominously to slits.
"Is
that right, Monkus?" he said, with a hateful and confiding
quietness. A burble of unwholesome laughter played briefly in his
throat, but he summoned sober features, and said quietly, with men
acing demand: "Is that right, or not? Have they fallen yet?"
"Sid, Sid," whispered Harry Nast,
plucking at his companion's sleeve; a snicker of furtive mirth
crossed his rat-sharp features. "Let's find out how well he's
hung."
They laughed, and Sidney
Purtle said: "Are you hung well, Monkus?" Turning to his
comrades, he said gravely, "Shall we find out how much he's got,
boys?"
And suddenly alive with
eagerness and mirthful cruelty, they all pressed closer in around the
boy, with secret, unclean laughter, saying: "Yes, yes--come on,
let's do it! Let's find out how much he's got!"
"Young
Monkus," said Sid Purtle gravely, putting a restraining hand
upon his victim's arm, "much as it pains us all, we're goin' to
examine you.
"Let go of me!"
The boy wrenched free, turned, whirled, backed up against the tree;
the pack pressed closer, leering faces thrusting forward, pale,
hateful eyes smeared with the slime of all their foul and secret
jubilation. His breath was coming hoarsely, and he said: "I told
you to let go of me!"
"Young
Monkus," said Sid Purtle gravely, in a tone of quiet reproof,
wherein the dogs of an obscene and jeering mirth were faintly
howling--"Young Monkus, we're surprised at you! We had expected
you to behave like a little gentleman--to take your medicine like a
little man.... Boys!"
He turned,
addressing copemates in a tone of solemn admonition, grave surprise:
"It seems the little Monkus is trying to get hard with us. Do
you think we should take steps?"
"Yes,
yes," the others eagerly replied, and pressed still closer round
the tree.
And for a moment there was an
evil, jubilantly attentive silence as they looked at him, naught but
the dry, hard pounding of his heart, his quick, hard breathing, as
they looked at him. Then Victor Munson moved forward slowly, his
thick, short hand extended, the heavy volutes of his proud, swart
nostrils swelling with scorn. And his voice, low-toned and sneering,
cajoling with a hateful mockery, came closer to him coaxingly, and
said: "Come, Monkus! Come little Monkus! Lie down and take your
medicine, little Monk!... Here Jocko! Come Jocko! Here Jocko!
Come Jocko!--Come and get your peanuts--jock,
jock, jock!"
Then while they
joined in hateful laughter, Victor Munson moved forward again, the
swart, stub fingers, warted on the back, closed down upon the boy's
left arm; and suddenly he drew in his breath in blind, blank horror
and in bitter agony, he knew that he must die and never draw his
shameful breath in quietude and peace, or have a moment's hope of
heartful ease again; something blurred and darkened in blind eyes--he
wrenched free from the swart, stub fingers, and he struck.
The blind blow landed in the thick, swart neck
and sent it gurgling backwards. Sharp hatred crossed his vision now,
and so enlightened it; he licked his lips and tasted bitterness, and,
sobbing in his throat, he started towards the hated face. His arms
were pinioned from behind.
Sid Purtle
had him, the hateful voice was saying with a menacing and now really
baleful quietude: "Now, wait a minute! Wait a minute, boys!...
We were just play in' with him, weren't we, and he started to get
hard with us!...
Ain't that right?"
"That's right, Sid. That's the way it
was, all right!"
"We thought
he was a man, but he turns out to be just a little sore head, don't
he? We were just kiddin' him along, and he has to go and get sore
about it. You couldn't take it like a man, could you?" said
Sidney Purtle, quietly and ominously into the ear of his prisoner; at
the same time he shook the boy a little--"You're just a little
cry-baby, ain't you? You're just a coward, who has to hit a fellow
when he ain't lookin'?"
"You
turn loose of me," the captive panted, "I'll show you who's
the cry-baby! I'll show you if I have to hit him when he isn't
looking!"
"Is that so, son?"
said Victor Munson, breathing hard.
"Yes,
that's so, son!" the other answered bitterly.
"Who
says it's so, son?"
"I say
it's so, son!"
"Well, you
don't need to go gettin' on your head about it!"
"I'm
not the one who's getting on his head about it; you are!"
"Is that so?"
"Yes,
that's so!"
There was a pause of
labored breathing and contorted lips; the acrid taste of loathing and
the poisonous constrictions of brute fear, a sense of dizziness about
the head, a kind of hollow numbness in the stomach pit, knee sockets
gone a trifle watery; all of the gold of just a while ago gone now,
all of the singing and the green; no color now, a poisonous whiteness
in the very quality of light, a kind of poisonous intensity of focus
everywhere; the two antagonists' faces suddenly keen, eyes sharp with
eager cruelty, pack-appetites awakened, murder-sharp now, lusts
aware.
"You'd better not be
gettin' big about it," said Victor Munson slowly, breathing
heavily, "or somebody'll smack you down!"
"You
know anyone who's going to do it?"
"Maybe
I do and maybe I don't, I'm not sayin'. It's none of your business."
"It's none of your business either!"
"Maybe," said Victor Munson,
breathing swarthily, and edging for ward an inch or so--"Maybe
I'll make it some of my business!"
"You're
not the only one who can make it your business!"
"You
know of anyone who wants to make it anything?"
"Maybe
I do and maybe I don't."
"Do
you say that you do?"
"Maybe
I do and maybe I don't. I don't back down from saying it."
"Boys, boys," said Sidney Purtle,
quietly, mockingly. "You're gettin' hard with each other. You're
usin' harsh language to each other. The first thing you know you'll
be gettin' into trouble with each other about Christmas time,"
he jeered quietly.
"If he wants to
make anything out of it," said Victor Munson bitterly, "he
knows what he can do."
"You
know what you can do, too!"
"Boys,
boys," jeered Sidney Purtle softly.
"Fight!
Fight!" said Harry Nast, and snickered furtively. "When is
the big fight gonna begin?"
"Hell!"
said Carl Hooton coarsely, "they don't want to fight. They're
both so scared already they're ready to-----in their pants.
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