"Vukcevich-RugRats" - читать интересную книгу автора (Vukcevich Ray)RAY VUKCEVICH RUG RATS The three of us decided to bust out of the state orphanage way back in May to go looking for our Moms., Jack's our leader, and Nancy's his girl. I'm what you call the sidekick. Sometimes we can get a dude down on his luck to say he's our old man so we can eat in one of those places where they make you pray before they feed you. Nancy's got the right stuff for that, the way she bows her head and turns her soft brown eyes up to look at him, please mister, won't be no trouble. We split before they can ask too many questions because we're never going back to singing the praises and hooking rugs and listening to crabby old Mr. Sweet bellyache about how much harder the kids in India work, and don't tell me I won't find my Morn. Jack messes up my hair and says sure you will kid, didn't she give you the words? He means my pocket dictionary. He thinks all the words in the world are in the book my Morn pushed into my hands the day they took me away, and I don't tell him any different. We've been ducking and dodging for months now, and it's snowing and it's so anything. Mostly we huddle in doorways, me in the middle, Jack on the lookout and Nancy all girl snugly soft hugging in close. "Here comes one," Jack says and the two of them open like a flower and I get up robbing my eyes to make them redder, and Nancy whispers, "just be the little dickens," pinches my cheek, and Jack points me at the woman shopper walking fast looking neither left nor right, and I go off like a little boy heat seeking missile come up to her say hey lady you seen Santa Claus? This is the very moment she'll decide. Jack likes to say it depends on how deep down motherly she's feeling and whether she's had her charity fix yet today. No luck this time. She brushes me aside and as she passes she looks back over her shoulder, looks sad, looks bewildered, drills me with those righteous eye-beams, suddenly mad as hell and not ready to take it anymore, hisses, "Get a job." "But hey!" I yell. "I'm only ten years old!" I want to use the B word on her. I glance over at Nancy who would be so disappointed in me if I used the B word, but I really really want to. I'd cry if I thought it would work, but the woman is already banging on down the street like I might run up and catch her and make her look at me again. Besides, these days I don't cry for nothing. I kick at a rock that isn't there. I put my hands |
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