Locomotive to the Past George Schultz (top 10 books to read TXT) đ
- Author: George Schultz
Book online «Locomotive to the Past George Schultz (top 10 books to read TXT) đ». Author George Schultz
âManny!â Heâd never heard her use that tone of voice before! Not that heâd ever been particularly adeptâat analyzing tones of voice (anyoneâs tone of voice)âin the past. Nor had he ever been the least bit concernedâabout such bothersome, get-in-the-way, things. âYou gotta see me! You simply gotta!â
âI donât gotta do anything! Now, haul your worthless ass . . . the hell on outta here!â
âIâd threaten you! Tell you⊠that I was gonna scream! Except that⊠coming from here . . . it probably wouldnât mean a thing! No reaction . . . whatsoever! Not coming from this goatâs nest! But, youâd still better let me in! Or Iâll make more goddam trouble for you⊠than youâd ever wanna fuckinâ know about! Now, let me the hell in!â
âFuck,â he mutteredâand cleared away from the door. âCâmon fucking in!â
She accepted his demure, ever-so-polite, invitationâand pushed her way into his dismal, foul-smelling, apartment.
âI see someone has already sprayed a valentine, for you! On your front door,â she notedâas she hurried to the old dark-green leatherette couch, in front of the four, street-side, windows.â
âYeah,â he snarled. âCanât get the shit off!. Not entirely anyway! Scrubbed on the fucking thing for⊠shit . . . for hours! Now what the hell do you want, Bimbo?â
âMoney, Manny! What else?â
âYeah. Stupid question! Well, I donât got any! And⊠even if I did . . . youâd be the last person, that Iâd throw some at! Last person⊠in the whole goddam world . . . that Iâd throw some money at! Now, get your dead ass⊠the hell on out of here!â
âYou canât throw me off, like this, Manny! Like some damn old shoe, or something!â
âYou wouldnât even make a halfway-decent old shoe. I told you: Weâre fucking through!â
âManny! I donât know where Jason is. I donât have any money! I need . . . I need a few bucks! Just a few! Thirty-five or forty! Thatâs all! And then, Iâll leave ya alone!â
âYeah. Until the next time⊠next time . . . you get a wild hair up your ass! How do you suppose⊠suppose youâre gonna manage? For food and shit? Your beer and cigarettes? How you gonna manage all that . . . for the rest, of the goddam month? How you gonna keep yourself in smokes . . . and in alcohol . . . till you get your Social Security check? Youâll be back for more! You bet your sweet ass . . . that youâll try and hit me up again! And again! And again and again and a-fucking-gain! Itâd be like me, actually throwing fucking money . . . throwing it, down the fucking rat-hole! Besides, I ainât got any goddam money!â
âLook, Manny.â Her voice had taken on an unmistakable pleading tone. A tear trickled down her right cheek. âI donât have anything âonâ you! Nothinâ I can blackmail you with! Iâm dependant . . . totally dependant . . . on you! And your good nature!â
âYeah,â he answered with a cynical smile. âMy fucking good nature! Well, Iâm askinâ ya⊠good natured-like, yâknow⊠to drag your soggy old ass the hell on outta here!â
âManny. I⊠look. I gave you a lot of good nights! I lot of good buggy rides! I was devoted to you! I really was! That ought to be worth something! Iâm in trouble . . . bad trouble⊠Manny! Iâm going to damn starve! Canât you throw me⊠just a few bucks? I promise I wonât buy . . . any smokes or beer! I need food, Manny! I really do! Food! Otherwise, Iâll freaking starve!â
âShit,â muttered her genial host. âFucking shit!â
He fumbled into his pocketâand pulled out six or eight crinkled currency notes. He spied two tens and a fiveâand, literally, threw them, at his beleaguered âguestâ!
âHere, goddam it! Here! Take fucking these! And haul that corrupt ass of yours⊠drag it, on out of here! And ya donât have to fucking limp! Not for my benefit, anyway!â
The money had landedâon the floor. Sheila hastened to, very quicklyâvery adeptlyâswoop down, and snatch up the bills! Then, she smiledâbroadlyâand, saying nothing further, she hurried from the apartment!
Manny closedâand lockedâthe still-defaced door. Then, he meandered over to the windowsâand looked down at the street.
He was most assuredly surprised, when he spied the womanâwith whom heâd been âentangledâ for years (and whom he was positive he knew like the proverbial book)âgetting into a late-model Buick!
The following Saturday nightâwhile the 7:00PM Mass was being celebrated, inside Sacred Heart Catholic Church, on Michigan Avenueâa forty-something woman was busily removing the license plates from a 1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee SUV. The vehicle had been locatedâsmack in the middle, of the churchâs immense parking lot. The purpose, of the remote location was simple: Being surrounded, by dozens of carsâthe chosen spot had offered the least-observable venue.
That same nightâwell after midnightâthat same woman was removing the plates, from a 1998 Buick! And replacing themâwith the recently-acquired tags from the SUV!
The Buick had been parkedânumerous timesâon a side street, around the corner, and about a half-block, from Sheila Rutkowskiâs dismal apartment!
FIFTEEN
This would be the, long-awaited, occasionâof Jason Rutkowskiâs first âreal, bona fide,â date! He would meet Valerie Krenwinkleâat 7:00PM! They would ârendezvousâ at that same, venerable, confectionary! From there, they would walk the four or five blocks to The Great Lakes Theater. The featureâwas reputed to be a âblockbusterâ: Youâll Never Get Richâstarring Rita Hayworth and Fred Astaire.
When the date had been ânegotiatedâ, Jason had figured that heâd âpick Valery upââpedestrian-styleâat her parentsâ home. But, instead, sheâd insisted that they get togetherâat the place where theyâd first met!
But, why? Our Heroâs self-imageâobviously, never the bestâtook a bit of a hit! Was she ashamed of him? Wouldnât, maybe, want to risk the very possible disapprovalâof her parents? Could that be it?
Susan had tried, valiantly, to buck him up: âNever try and figure out⊠what a woman is thinking. Any woman. Iâm a woman. And, half the time, even I donât know what
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