Read Rumble Fish Online

Authors: S. E. Hinton

Tags: #JUVENILE FICTION/General

Rumble Fish (7 page)

9

​My head hurt so bad the next day, I figured I might as well go to the clinic and see a doctor. The Motorcycle Boy had left right after he dropped me off, and the old man left about noon, so I had to go somewhere.

It was a free clinic—you didn't have to pay anything or even give your right name. It was crowded with old people and lots of whining kids and their mothers. I'd been there before, when the old man had a fit of D.T.'s. He didn't have them often, not as much as you'd think.

I got to see a doctor after an hour or so. He was just a kid. I can't believe he was a real doctor. I thought they had to go to school forever.

“I bumped my head,” I told him.

“I guess you did,” he said. He washed off the side of my head with this junk that smelled awful and burned like hell. Then he stuck a thermometer in my mouth and listened to my heart awhile. I couldn't see what good that was going to do me, but I just sat there and didn't give him any trouble. The doctors here were really nice. The ones that took care of my father had been really nice. I wished I'd known about this place the time I broke my ankle. I would have gone here instead of the hospital. I hate hospitals. I'd rather be in jail. I didn't have anything against doctors, though. It just seemed like a waste of time to go see them. I thought maybe I could get some pain pills, this time.

“You're running a slight fever,” he told me. “I want you to go over to the hospital and get some X rays. You ‘bumped your head' pretty hard.” He grinned at me like he knew I got it in a fight somewhere, like he had seen so much of the same thing he knew that lecturing me wouldn't do any good.

“Nope,” I said.

“Nope what?”

“I ain't goin' to the hospital. Just give me somethin' to make it quit hurtin'.”

And just as I said that, everything turned kind of gray and this ringing in my ears got so loud I couldn't hear and I had to grab onto the table to keep from falling off.

The doctor straightened me up and said, serious-like, “You are going to the hospital, kiddo.”

He left the room for a minute, to get some papers or something, and I got out of there pretty quick. I wasn't planning on any hospital stay. I'd been there before.

I swiped a bottle of aspirin out of a drugstore on the way home and took about seven of them. I felt a little better after that. I knew where I could get some downers that would fix me up fine, but the Motorcycle Boy classified downers as dope. I could always say I got them legit from a doctor, but I doubt that I could fool him. I didn't want to risk it. After last night I'd believe he could cut my throat without thinking about it.

I went by Steve's house on the way home. I knew where he lived even though I'd never gone there. His father had to be at work, though, and his mother was in the hospital, so I thought I'd be safe enough.

He saw me coming up the sidewalk, because he was holding the screen door open when I got up the steps.

“Good Lord!” I said when I saw him. “What happened to you?”

“I was supposed to be home at ten o'clock last night,” he said flatly. “I got in at six this morning.”

“Your father did that?” I couldn't believe it. I've come out of gang fights looking better than he did.

“Come on in,” he said.

I'd never been in his house before. It was real nice, with furniture and carpets and stuff sitting on shelves. It was nicer than Patty's house, but then, she had those little kids tearing up everything. I sat down on a sofa, hoping I wasn't messing anything up. You'd think it would have gotten sloppy, with his mother in the hospital for so long.

“Your father did that to you?” I asked again. I thought maybe I had missed something last night, that those two punks had worked him over. I didn't remember much about the morning, or going home. I think it might have been then that my memory went goofy on me.

“Don't tell anybody, huh?” he said. “I'm gonna say I got it last night, across the river.”

“Okay,” I said. It was hard for me to imagine anybody hitting Steve, anybody besides me, I mean. I had gone to a lot of trouble making sure nobody hit him. It made me mad. He was my friend. Nobody had any right beating him up like that. What difference did it make if he came home at ten or at six? He got home, didn't he? Why did people get upset about stupid stuff like that? I tried picturing my father beating me up, and couldn't do it. I couldn't even imagine him telling me when to be home.

“He didn't mean to hit me so much,” Steve said. But he was just repeating something he'd been told. “He's been worried about Mom. I didn't need to worry him, too. I just didn't think about that.”

It was like he had been brainwashed, repeating that stuff. I tried to figure out why Steve wasn't mad about getting knocked around like that. If somebody had done that to me—

“What really set him off,” Steve was saying, “was that orange junk all over my shirt. I guess that girl, that girl was wearing a lot of makeup, I guess. I don't remember her being orange.”

We sat there without saying anything for a long time. Finally Steve said, “What'd you come over for, Rusty-James?”

I opened my mouth, and closed it, trying to think of the best way to tell him.

“Steve, I think we'd better follow the Motorcycle Boy around for a while.”

He said, “Why?” I wasn't ready for that. I was ready to talk him into it.

“Well,” I said, “I just think we ought to.” I hadn't really thought of why myself. It just seemed like something that needed doing. “I think maybe we ought to watch him for a while, that's all.”

“Count me out,” Steve said.

“You gotta help me,” I said. I had been feeling funny all day. It had started the night before, when the Motorcycle Boy told me why I was scared to be by myself. It sort of felt like nothing was solid, like the street would tilt all of a sudden and throw me off. I knew that wasn't going to happen, but that's what it felt like. And since getting clobbered, everything even
looked
funny, like I was seeing things through distorted glass. I didn't like it. I didn't like it one bit. All my life, all I had to worry about was real things, things you could touch, or punch, or run away from. I had been scared before, but it was always something real to be scared of—not having any money, or some big kid looking to beat you up, or wondering if the Motorcycle Boy was gone for good. I didn't like this being scared of something and not knowing exactly what it was. I couldn't fight it if I didn't know what it was.

“I won't help you,” Steve said again.

“Just follow him around for a little bit,” I said. “He won't go across the river again. He just went last night because I asked him to. He'll stick around here. We won't get into any trouble again.”

“I have to go to school,” Steve said.

“So meet me after school.”

“You don't need me there.”

“Yeah, I do.”

“Ask B.J. or Smokey.”

I started to say, “They'd laugh at me,” but changed it to: “Oh, they don't know anything. I mean, they think the Motorcycle Boy's cool and everything, but they don't know him like me and you do.”

“You mean they don't know he's nuts.”

I jumped up, grabbed him by his shirt front and slammed him back against the wall.

“You don't ever say that!” I shouted at him. I knocked him back against the wall so he'd remember. “You hear me?”

“Yes,” he said. I let him go. Then all of a sudden I couldn't see, and the pain was like an awful noise in my head. I sort of fell against the wall, trying to get my breath and my vision.

When my eyes cleared up I saw Steve standing there, worried-looking. His lips were moving, but I couldn't hear anything. Then my hearing came back.

“…all right?” he asked.

If it had been anybody else I would have laughed, shrugged it off and left. But it was only Steve, and I had known him all my life and I was just too plain tired to put up a front. Maybe that was why Steve was my best friend instead of B.J. I didn't have to keep on being the toughest cat in the neighborhood for Steve.

I sat down and dropped my head onto my hands. For a second my throat swelled up on the inside and I had a sudden picture of Patty bouncing on down the street. That was what I felt like. Close to crying.

“Steve,” I said. “I never asked you for nothing. I never let anybody punch you around, and I never bummed money off you. I'm asking you now.”

“Don't,” he said. “ 'Cause I won't do it.”

I couldn't talk. If I tried to talk I'd be crying. I couldn't remember crying. You didn't cry if you were tough.

“Rusty-James,” Steve said. I didn't look up. He sounded like he felt sorry for me and I didn't want to see him feeling sorry for me, because if I did I would hit him, no matter what.

“I've tried to help you,” he said. “But I've got to think about myself some.”

I wondered what he was talking about.

“You're just like a ball in a pinball machine. Getting slammed back and forth; and you never think about anything, about where you're going or how you're going to get there. I got to think for myself, I can't keep on thinking for you, too.”

I didn't understand what he was talking about. Why did all the people I liked talk about such weird things? I did think about where I was going. I wanted to be like the Motorcycle Boy. I wanted to be tough like him, and stay calm and laughing when things got dangerous. I wanted to be the toughest street-fighter and the most respected hood on our side of the river. I had tried everything, even tried to learn to read good to be like him. Even though nothing had worked so far, that didn't mean nothing ever would. There wasn't anything wrong with wanting to be like the Motorcycle Boy. Even Steve admired him—

“You don't like the Motorcycle Boy, do you, Steve? Then why do you think he's cool?”

Steve looked surprised. “Well,” he said slowly, “he is the only person I have ever met who is like somebody out of a book. To look like that, and be good at everything, and all that.”

That struck me as funny. I laughed and got up to leave. I wasn't going to pester him anymore. Steve walked with me to the door.

“You better go to a doctor,” he said.

“I been.”

“You better let go of the Motorcycle Boy,” he said. “If you're around him very long you won't believe in anything.”

“I been around him all my life,” I told him. “And I believe everything.”

Steve sort of grinned at me. “You would.”

“ 'Bye,” I said.

“Rusty-James,” he said, really sincere, “I'm sorry.”

“Sure,” I said. That was the last time I saw ol' Steve.

10

I spent the rest of the day in Benny's. You could see most of the street from the front booth. If the Motorcycle Boy went by, I'd see him.

In the afternoon, after school was out, people came in. I didn't feel like playing pool, but I got a big audience when I started telling everybody about the wild night we had. It made me feel better to tell everything—about the party and movie and bars and pool games and almost-fights and just-missed chicks, and then the mugging and the way the Motorcycle Boy had rescued us. Maybe I told it a little better than it happened—a couple of people gave me looks like they didn't believe
everything
. But there was a lump on the side of my head half the size of a baseball, and when they saw Steve they'd believe it sure enough.

I liked telling things that happened to me. It took the scare out, like it was just an exciting movie I'd seen.

Patty came in. She hardly ever came to Benny's, usually just on her mother's day off. We had never gone there when we were going together because I didn't like other guys looking at her. See, the kind of girls who hung out at Benny's were tough chicks—pretty good girls, you know, but not exactly like I thought of Patty.

“You lookin' for me?” I asked her. It figured she'd want to make up with me. Well, I'd let her sweat it a little bit, like I had been doing.

“Nope,” she said coolly. She bought a Coke from Benny and sat down in a booth, looking around like she was looking for somebody. And it wasn't me.

Pretty soon Smokey Bennet came in and slid into the booth next to her. Both of them sat there like I was supposed to pin a medal on them. Everybody got quiet, expecting me to toss Smokey through the front window and slap Patty's teeth out. I admit I thought about it. I thought about quite a few things, watching the crummy pool game. Both guys shooting were so nervous they couldn't play worth anything.

“Smokey,” I said finally. “You want to step outside with me?”

“I ain't gonna fight you, Rusty-James.”

“What makes you think I want to fight? Just step outside a minute so we can talk.”

“It wouldn't be fair, now,” he said. “You ain't in any condition to fight.”

“I said I didn't want to fight. Talk—get it? Speak. Communicate.”

He looked at Patty, puzzled. But she was looking at me. She still loved me, I could tell. She'd never say so, any more than I'd tell her I still loved her. What a weird thing that was. It was all over, whether we wanted it to be or not.

“All right,” Smokey said. He followed me outside, and as the door closed behind us I could hear everybody yapping at once. And a couple of guys were standing on the booth seats, making sure they weren't going to miss anything.

We walked across the street and sat down on a stoop. Smokey lit a cigarette and offered me one. He was still a little tense, like he thought I was going to jump him any second. But he was calm, too, like he thought he could handle it if I did. I wondered why that didn't make me mad.

“Smokey,” I said. “Tell me somethin'. The other night, when we went to the lake with your cousin, and those girls were there—did you plan for it to get back to Patty? I mean, did you think this was what was goin' to happen? That Patty would break up with me and you'd move in and maybe take over while I was still done in from that knife fight?”

“Well,” he said, slowly, quiet-like, “I guess I did. I kind of thought about it.”

“That was real smart,” I said. “I wouldn't of been able to think of something like that.”

“I know,” he admitted. Then he said, “Rusty-James, if there was still gangs around here, I'd be president, not you.”

I couldn't believe that. I was the toughest guy in the neighborhood. Everybody knew that.

“You'd be second lieutenant or somethin'. See, you might make it a while on the Motorcycle Boy's rep, but you ain't got his brains. You have to be smart to run things.”

I just sighed. I wondered where my temper was. I had a mean temper. I just didn't seem to be able to find it anywhere.

“Nobody'd follow you into a gang fight,” he went on. “You'd get people killed. Nobody wants to get killed.”

“I guess that's true,” I said. Nothing was like I thought it was. I had always thought that one and one made two. If you were the toughest, you were the leader. I didn't understand why things had to get complicated.

“Do you really like Patty?” I asked.

“Yeah,” he said. “Even if she wasn't your chick I'd still like her.”

“Okay,” I said. He went back into Benny's. He was the number one tough cat now. If I wanted to keep my rep I'd have to fight him, whether I was in any shape to or not. He had been counting on that. Everything was changed.

I sat there awhile. B.J. Jackson came by, saw me, and sat down. I was glad to see him. He didn't know everything was changed. I could still talk to him like always. Once he went into Benny's, it would be Smokey he'd listen to. It would be Smokey that everybody would be listening to and watching. It was like this would be the last I could really talk to B.J.

“Guess what,” he says. “You know who we had for a substitute teacher today in history? Cassandra, the Motorcycle Boy's chick.”

“No kiddin'?” I asked. I guess she had been right, about not being hooked.

“Yeah. Man, we really gave her a hard time, too. You couldn't pay me a million dollars to be a sub. She was pretty good about it, though. I stayed after class and talked to her some. I says, ‘I'm surprised to see you again.' And she says, ‘Did you think I'd throw myself off the bridge, or O.D. on a roof or something?' And she told me to tell you something. She said, ‘Tell Rusty-James that life does go on, if you'll let it.' Do you know what she meant?”

“Nope,” I said. “She was always talkin' crazy. She was a real dingbat.”

“I always thought she had a lot of class,” B.J. said. He didn't know anything about women.

“You seen the Motorcycle Boy around?” I asked him.

“Yeah, he's in the pet store.”

“Pet store? What's he doin' in there?”

B.J. shrugged. “Lookin' at the fish, as far as I could tell. I heard he messed up a couple of guys across the river last night.”

“Yeah, he stomped these two creeps that jumped me an' Steve. Almost killed them.”

“I heard that. He better be careful, Rusty-James. You know that cop Patterson is just looking for an excuse to get him.”

“He's been after the both of us for years.”

“You know,” B.J. said, “Patterson has the rep of a good cop. I mean, the Motorcycle Boy is his only bad point. He's never gone out of his way to hassle the rest of us.”

“He beat me up once,” I said. “And got me thrown into Juvenile Hall for a weekend.” I figured Patterson was the only person in the world who thought I looked like the Motorcycle Boy. “Anyway, he's never done so much as say a word to the Motorcycle Boy. He'll never get anything on him.”

“Come on,” B.J. said. “Let's go get a Coke.”

“Naw,” I said.

He got up, and started across the street. “Come on, Rusty-James,” he said.

I shook my head, and watched him disappear into Benny's. I didn't care if I ever went in there again. And that was a real funny thought, because I never did.

I found the Motorcycle Boy at the pet store, just like B.J. said. He was up at the counter, looking at the fish. They were some new fish, not regular goldfish. I never saw fish like them before. One was purple, one was blue with long red fins and a red tail, one was solid red and one was bright yellow. They all had long fins and tails.

“Hey,” I said. “What's up?”

He didn't even look at me. I pretended to be interested in the fish. I mean, they were pretty and everything, as far as fish go.

“How come they each have a bowl to themselves?” I asked. “I never seen pet fish kept one to a bowl.”

“Rumble fish,” said the Motorcycle Boy. “They'd kill each other if they could.”

I looked at Mr. Dobson behind the counter. He was a nice old guy, a little nuts to keep trying to run the pet store, since all he had were some scroungy puppies and kittens and a parrot that he couldn't sell because we'd taught it all the bad words we knew. That parrot could come up with some interesting sentences. Mr. Dobson looked worried. I wondered how long the Motorcycle Boy had been in there, to scare Mr. Dobson that much.

“That's right, Rusty-James,” he told me. “Siamese fighting fish. They try to kill each other. If you leaned a mirror against the bowl they'd kill themselves fighting their own reflection.”

“That's really neat,” I said, even though I didn't think it was really neat.

“Wonder if they'd act that way in the river,” the Motorcycle Boy went on.

“Nice colors,” I said, trying to keep up the conversation. I had never seen the Motorcycle Boy look so hard at anything. I thought Mr. Dobson was going to call the cops if I didn't get him out of there.

“Yeah?” he said. “That makes me kind of sorry I can't see colors.”

It was the first time I'd ever heard him say he was sorry about anything.

“Hey,” I said. “Let's go boppin' around again tonight. I can get some more wine. We can get some chicks and have a really nice time, huh?”

He went deaf again and didn't hear me. That pet store gave me the creeps, with all those little animals waiting around to belong to somebody. But I stayed there anyway, fooling around until Mr. Dobson said he was closing up. The next day was Saturday, the closest thing to a busy day he ever had, so he closed up and just left the animals there. The Motorcycle Boy stood outside, watching Mr. Dobson close up, until the shades were pulled down over the windows and the door.

And when he finally left the place, I followed him the best I could, even though he didn't even see me anymore. It seemed like the only thing I had left to do.

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