Violence. Speed. Momentum. Dr DisRespect (websites to read books for free TXT) đ
- Author: Dr DisRespect
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He got his mom to let us practice after the arcadeâs normal hours. I guess that was pretty cool, but I still wouldnât mop his damn floor. Instead he tutored me as I played Sub-Zero versus the computer, over and over again. I mastered the timing of Sub-Zeroâs every move, his ice blast and his sliding kickâI mean, honestly, he only had two special moves in the very first Mortal Kombat, so that part wasnât super hard. I gained patience in executing each block and punch and kick, learning not to overload the game with my incredible speed. And I perfected his glorious fatality, tearing the skull and the wriggly-squiggly spinal cord from one opponent after another.
Finally, after at least one hour of more or less pretty consistent practiceâŠ
âHoly shit!â I said. âI donât know about you, Sensei Billy, but Iâm really, really impressed with myself. Like, I am good on a cosmic level. Probably the best. Definitely better than you. I think Iâm ready for some prime-time competition.â
âNo!â he shouted. âYour skill is good, yes. Your speed is good, yes. But you still talk too much! And itâs not even cute in a âprecocious little childâ way! Itâs just annoying! Youâre not ready!â
âNah, Iâm totally ready.â
He sighed.
âWhatever.â
The next day after school I got to Pinball Pedroâs and went straight back to that sweaty corner of champions. His face grim, Sensei Billy put down a stack of prize tickets even bigger than the first oneâabsolutely huge, enough to buy one of those shoe-phones you got with a subscription to Sports Illustrated. A crowd gathered around, all my bros were thereâit felt like the whole arcade was watching, waiting to see the little ten-year-old get humiliated yet again.
But unlike last time, I didnât even sweat it. Unlike last time, I barely even cared. I knew I would dominate. And thatâs exactly what I did.
With Sub-Zero as my fighter, I tore through one so-called opponent after another: Liu Kangs, Sonya Blades, other Sub-Zeros, it didnât even matter. Iâd knock âem sky-high with an uppercut, get them with a slide move before they could even hit the ground, then attack again before they had a chance to recover. I was fucking relentless. And Iâd finish them off with spine rips that somehow felt more bloody, more violent, and more triumphant with every single fatality. With each kill a new ponytail went limp, another pudgy tummy quaked with fear, another grown man went crying back to his mommyâwhich was easy, because they all still lived with their parents.
And I? I grew a little taller with each win, my voice got a little deeper, my hair grew a little longer, my face became a little more chiseled. My stack of tickets grew bigger and bigger.
Finally it was over. Or at least that was what Sensei Billy thought.
âWell done, my young grasshopper,â he said. âYou now have more prize tickets than anyone in history. You can finally buy a Sanyo Personal Compact Disc Player. Your victory is complete.â
I smiled. And damn, I looked good.
âBut itâs not complete,â I said. âI still have one more opponent to destroy.â I pointed right at him. Just in case it still wasnât clear, I whispered the word âYou.â
âWhat!â he shouted. âYou dare challenge me in my own dojo?â
âItâs your motherâs.â
âNonetheless,â he said. âYou dare?!â
âYes,â I said. âIâm grateful for the training you gave me, especially once you stopped trying to make me mop the floor. But you and I both know there can only be one champion. We will fight not for prize tickets, and not even for honor, because I honestly donât think you have any.â
âFair.â
âNo, we will fight for⊠your switchblade comb.â
The crowd gasped. My old crew was basically shitting themselves. Razor Frank said something in Zhuang and I thought, âI really need to learn some Zhuang one of these days.â Even Sensei Billyâs mom was all fired upâshe started passing out free Cokes and Sunny D to everyone. She was sick of her sonâs lazy ass.
âFine,â Sensei Billy said. âYet again, you talk too much. This time, it will be your undoing.â
âNah,â I said. âBecause I understand something you never will. Winning isnât just about timing or speed or techniqueâŠâ
I put in a quarter to start a new game, scrolled past Sub-Zero, and chose my fighterâRaiden.
âItâs about being really, really good at talking shit.â
His eyes flashed in anger, and just like that, I was in the dudeâs head.
Round one of the best-out-of-three match began, and the action was more intense than anything I, or probably any elite warrior in the history of mankind, had experienced before. He chose Sub-Zero as his fighter, of course. And although it was a pretty badass move for me to select Raiden, that limited me to simple punches and kicks and blocks, because Sensei Billy and I both knew the tell to my special flying-torpedo move. If I even tried it, heâd just block me and beat my ass.
Plusâand I hate to admit thisâthe dude was fucking good. His reflexes, his tactics, his kinetics were all off the charts. Nothing seemed to rattle him. He was totally locked in. Pure focus, pure concentration. Pure silence.
And that was my in.
âAre you really gonna do that? Like, thatâs your actual move right now?â
He was right in the middle of a combo attackâactually pretty niceâbut out of the corner of my eye I saw him flinch.
âShit, so damn predictable!â I shouted. âLook, look, lookâI bet I know what youâre gonna do now, I can totally read your mind, youâre gonna do an ice blast⊠now!â
I mean, Sub-Zero only had two special moves, the slide and the ice blast, so it wasnât exactly brain surgeryâbut that didnât matter right now.
âYou did it!â I howled. âYOU DID IT! See, I knew you were gonna do it. I knew it! I can read your mind, dude!â
His hand slipped on the joystick, and I got in a combo attack of my own.
âI
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