Short Fiction Ray Bradbury (always you kirsty moseley TXT) š
- Author: Ray Bradbury
Book online Ā«Short Fiction Ray Bradbury (always you kirsty moseley TXT) šĀ». Author Ray Bradbury
āGet out there, you men, and bury that beast immediately.ā
I glare at the captain. Donāt talk that way about Shep.
The captain stares at my ankle.
āSorry, Halloway. I meant, bury that ādog,ā you men. Give him full honors. You were lucky, son, another second and those knife-teethād bored through your ankle-cuff metal.ā
I donāt know what he means. Iām wearing sneakers, sir.
āOh, yeah, so you are. Yeah. Well, Iām sorry, Halloway. I know how you must feel aboutā āShep. He was a fine dog.ā
I think about it a moment and my eyes fill up, wet.
Thereāll be a picnic and a hike; the captain says. Three hours now the boys have carried luggage from the metal house. The way they talk, thisāll be some picnic. Some seem afraid, but who worries about copperheads and water-moccasins and crawfish? Not me. No, sir. Not me.
Gus Bartz, sweating beside me on some apparatus, squints at me.
āWhatās eatinā you, Halloway?ā
I smile. Me? Nothing. Why?
āYou and that act with that Martian worm.ā
Whatāre you talking about? What worm?
The captain interrupts, nervously.
āBartz, lay off Halloway. The doctorāll explain why. Ask him.ā
Bartz goes away, scratching his head.
The captain pats my shoulder.
āYouāre our strong-arm man, Halloway. Youāve got muscles from working on the rocket engines. So keep alert today, eh, on your hike to look over the territory? Keep yourā āBB gunā āready.ā
Beavers, do you think, sir?
The captain swallows hard and blinks.
āUnhā āoh, beavers, yeah, beavers. Sure. Beavers! Maybe. Mountain lions and Indians, too, I hear. Never can tell. Be careful.ā
Mountain lions and Indians in New York in this day and age? Aw, sir.
āLet it go. Keep alert, anyhow. Smoke?ā
I donāt smoke, sir. A strong mind in a healthy body, you know the old rule.
āThe old rule. Oh, yes. The old rule. Only joking. I donāt want a smoke anyway. Like hell.ā
What was that last, sir?
āNothing, Halloway, carry on, carry on.ā
I help the others work, now. Are we taking the yellow streetcar to the edge of town, Gus?
āWeāre using propulsion belts, skimming low over the dead seas.ā
Howās that again, Gus?
āI said, weāre takinā the yellow streetcar to the end of the line, yeah.ā
Weāre ready. Everyoneās packed, spreading out. Weāre going in groups of four. Down Main Street past the pie factory, over the bridge, through the tunnel, past the circus grounds and weāll rendezvous, says the captain, at a place he points to on a queer, disjointed map.
Whoosh! Weāre off! I forgot to pay my fare.
āThatās okay, I paid it.ā
Thanks, captain. Weāre really traveling. The cypresses and the maples flash by. Kaawhoom! I wouldnāt admit this to anyone but you, sir, but momentarily, there, I didnāt see this streetcar. Suddenly we moved in empty space, nothing supporting us, and I didnāt see any car. But now I see it, sir.
The captain gazes at me as at a nine-day miracle.
āYou do, eh?ā
Yes, sir. I clutch upward. Hereās the strap. Iām holding it.
āYou look pretty funny sliding through the air with your hand up like that, Halloway.ā
Howās that, sir?
āHa, ha, ha!ā
Why are the others laughing at me, sir?
āNothing, son, nothing. Just happy, thatās all.ā
Ding Ding. Ding Ding. Canal Street and Washington. Ding Ding. Whoosh. This is real traveling. Funny, though, the captain and his men keep moving, changing seats, never stay seated. Itās a long streetcar. Iām way in back now. Theyāre up front.
By the large brown house on the next corner stands a popcorn wagon, yellow and red and blue. I can taste the popcorn in my mind. Itās been a long time since Iāve eaten someā āā ā¦ if I ask the captainās permission to stop and buy a bag, heāll refuse. Iāll just sneak off the car at the next stop. I can get back on the next car and catch up with the gang later.
How do you stop this car? My fingers fumble with my baseball outfit, doing something I donāt want to know about. The car is stopping! Whyās that. Popcorn is more important.
Iām off the car, walking. Hereās the popcorn machine with a man behind it, fussing with little silver metal knobs.
āāmurrā ālokkā ālocā ācorā āizā āā
Tony! Tony, bambino! What are you doing here?
āClick.ā
It canāt be, but it is. Tony, who died ten long years ago, when I was a freckled kid! Alive and selling popcorn again. Oh, Tony, itās good to see you. His black moustacheās so waxed, so shining, his dark hair like burnt oily shavings, his dark shining happy eyes, his smiling red cheeks! He shimmers in my eyes like in a cold rain. Tony! Let me shake your hand! Gimme a bag of popcorn, seƱor!
āClick-click-clickā āsput-clickā āreeeeeeeeeeeeeeā āā
The captain didnāt see you, Tony, you were hidden so well, only I saw you. Just a moment while I search for my nickel.
āReeeeeee.ā
Whew, Iām dizzy. Itās very hot. My heads spins like a leaf on a storm wind. Let me hold onto your wagon, Tony, quick, Iām shivering and Iāve got sharp needle head pains.ā āā ā¦
āReeeeeeee.ā
Iām running a temperature. I feel as if I have a torch hung flaming in my head.
Hotter. Pardon me for criticizing you, Tony, but I think its your popper turned up too high. Your face looks afraid, contorted, and your hands move so rapidly, why? Canāt you shut it off? Iām hot. Everything melts. My knees sag.
Warmer still. Heād better turn that thing off, I canāt take any more. I canāt find my nickel anyhow. Please, snap it off, Tony, Iām sick. My uniform glows orange. Iāll take fire!
Here, Iāll turn it off for you, Tony.
You hit me!
Stop hitting me, stop clicking those knobs! Itās hot, I tell you. Stop, or Iāllā ā
Tony. Where are you? Gone.
Where did that purple flame shoot from? That loud blast, what was it? The flame seemed to stream from my hand, out of my scout flashlight. Purple flameā āeating!
I smell a sharp bitter odor.
Like hamburger fried overlong.
I feel better now. Cool as winter. Butā ā
Like a fly buzzing in my ears, a voice comes, faint, far off,
āHalloway, damn it, Halloway, where are you?ā
Captain! Itās his voice, sizzling. I donāt see you, sir!
āHalloway, weāre on the
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