Rage

Rage by Richard Bachman Read Free Book Online

Book: Rage by Richard Bachman Read Free Book Online
Authors: Richard Bachman
Tags: Fiction, General
"
        "You big-mouth son of a bitch," Ted Jones said distinctly. George looked at him, wounded.
        There was an uncomfortable silence while I got up and pushed the little lever below the speaker from TALK-LISTEN to LISTEN.
        I went back and sat down again. I nodded at Ted. "I was thinking of it anyway," I lied. "You shouldn't take on so."
        Ted didn't say anything, but he offered me a strange little grin that made me think he might have been wondering about how I might taste.
        "Okay," I said to the class at large. "I may be crazy, but I'm not going to shoot anyone for discussing this thing with me. Believe it. Don't be afraid to shoot off your mouths. As long as we don't all talk at once." That didn't look as if it was going to be a problem. "To take the bull by the horns, is there anyone here who really thinks I'm going to just up and murder them?"
        A few of them looked uneasy, but nobody said anything.
        "Okay. Because I'm not. We're just going to sit around and bug the hell out of everybody. "
        "Yeah, you sure bugged the hell out of Mrs. Underwood," Ted said. He was still smiling his strange smile.
        "I had to. I know that's hard to understand, but… I had to. It came down to that. And Mr. Vance. But I want everyone here to take it easy. No one is going to shoot the place up, so you don't have to worry. "
        Carol Granger raised her hand timidly. I nodded at her. She was smart, smart as a whip. Class president, and a cinch to speak a piece as valedictorian in June "Our Responsibilities to the Black Race" or maybe "Hopes for the Future. " She was already signed up for one of those big-league women's colleges where people always wonder how many virgins there are. But I didn't hold it against her.
        "When can we go, Charlie?"
        I sighed and shrugged my shoulders. "We'll just have to wait and see what happens."
        "But my mother will be worried to death!"
        "Why?" Sylvia Ragan asked. "She knows where you are, doesn't she?"
        General laugh. Except for Ted Jones. He wasn't laughing, and I was going to have to watch that boy. He was still smiling his small, savage smile. He wanted badly to blow everything out of the water-obvious enough. But why? Insanity Prevention Merit Badge? Not enough. Adulation of the community in general-the boy who stood on the burning deck with his finger in the dike? It didn't seem his style. Handsome low profile was Ted's style. He was the only guy I knew who had quit the football team after three Saturdays of glory in his junior year. The guy who wrote sports for the local rag had called him the best running back Placerville High School had ever produced. But he had quit, suddenly and with no explanation. Amazing enough. What was more amazing was the fact that his popularity quotient hadn't lost a point. If anything, Ted became more the local BMOC than ever. Joe McKennedy, who had suffered through four years and one broken nose at left tackle, told me that the only thing Ted would say when the agonized coach demanded an explanation was that football seemed to be a pretty stupid game, and he (Ted) thought that he could find a better way to spend his time. You can see why I respected him, but I was damned if I knew why he wanted me in such a personal way. A little thought on the matter might have helped, but things were going awful fast.
        "Are you nuts?" Harmon Jackson asked suddenly.
        "I think I must be," I said. "Anyone who kills anyone else is nuts, in my book. "
        "Well, maybe you ought to give yourself up," Hannon said. "Get some help. A doctor. You know."
        "You mean like that Grace?" Sylvia asked. "My God, that creepster. I had to go see him after I threw an inkwell at old lady Green. All he did was look up my dress and try to get me to talk about my sex life."
        "Not that you've had any," Pat Fitzgerald said, and there was another laugh.
        "And not

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