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    I knew this was what we’d planned, but Jim’s sudden attack probably surprised me as much as George.

    I put the knife and bottle down fast.

    George, wheezing for air, didn’t struggle as Jim rolled him over and dropped onto his rump.

    I pulled up my shirt. I unwrapped the rope. By the time I was on my knees beside them, Jim had both George’s arms bent up behind him.

    ‘Guys!’ George gasped. ‘What’re you…?’

    ‘Shut up,’ Jim snapped. ‘We aren’t gonna hurt you.’

    I started tying George’s hands together.

    ‘Hey!’ he said. ‘Don’t! Don’t!’

    ‘Calm down,’ Jim told him.

    ‘Is… is this… some kinda ’nitiation?’

    ‘Sure,’ Jim said.

    ‘Is not!’ I said. ‘Why’d you wanta say that? He’ll think he’s… It’s no initiation George. You’re not joining something. We just wanted to be left alone, damn it, but you wouldn’t get the message. You’re not our friend. You’re a fat, grubby little pain in the ass!’

    George started blubbering.

    ‘And a Peeping Tom!’

    ‘Yeah!’ Jim joined in. ‘You been spying on my sister, you dirty pervert!’

    ‘Who else you been spying on?’

    ‘Nuh… nobody!’

    ‘I bet,’ Jim said.

    ‘Yeah,’ I said. ‘And you think you’re gonna go with us to Cyndi’s, you got another thing coming!’

    Jim climbed off him, grabbed him by the feet and shoved his legs up till his calves were mashed against the backs of his thighs. Done with the hands, I looped the rope around his ankles, pulled it taut, and tied his feet together.

    By the time I finished, George was bawling.

    ‘You’d better cut that out,’ Jim warned him. ‘Somebody might hear you.’

    ‘They might come for you,’ I added.

    ‘Puh… Please!’

    ‘I’d be very quiet, if I were you,’ Jim said.

    ‘From now on,’ I said, ‘you just stay away from us.’

    We stepped back. Jim turned off George’s lantern and picked up the wine bottle. He took two packs of Twinkies out of the sack. I twisted the cork off George’s knife and put the knife on the ground a couple of yards away from him. Then I picked up my flashlight and stuffed it into my pocket.

    ‘If you’re still here when we get back,’ I told him, ‘we’ll untie you.’

    ‘If we come back,’ Jim added.

    As we hurried out into the moonlight, George blurted things like ‘Please!’ and ‘Don’t leave me here!’ and ‘Come back!’ But he cut it out when we were about halfway up the slope.

    ‘Here,’ Jim said, and offered me a pack of Twinkies as we walked across the bridge.

    I shook my head. ‘I don’t want to eat his stuff. I mean, we double-crossed him.’

    Jim grinned. ‘Got him good, huh?’

    ‘Maybe we oughta go back down and let him go.’

    ‘Are you nuts? We’ve already wasted enough time. Besides, the little dork would probably still wanta come with us. He’ll think we were joking or something, and we’ll be right back where we started.’

    ‘Yeah, I guess so.’

    ‘Anyhow, he’ll probably get loose and be outa there in five minutes.’

    ‘I don’t know. I tied him pretty good.’

    ‘So maybe it’ll take him ten. Don’t go feeling sorry for him. He asked for it, he got it.’

    ‘Yeah. Maybe he’ll stay out of our face after this.’

    ‘And stay away from our windows. I ever catch him spying on Joan or Mom, he’ll think he got off easy tonight. I’ll cut off his dick and make him eat it.’

    ‘Oh, gross.’

    ‘Give him a Hostess weenie.’

    I elbowed Jim, and laughed.

    He made me hold the wine bottle while he unwrapped his Twinkies. ‘You don’t know what you’re missing,’ he said through a mooshy mouthful.

    Watching him, I could almost taste the things. Pretty soon, I said, ‘He owes us, you know.’

    ‘Huh?’

    ‘For all the crap he put us through.’

    ‘Damn right.’

    ‘Besides, he ate our potato chips.’

    ‘Sure did.’

    I took the other package from Jim, gave him the bottle back, tore off the cellophane and started eating. I was about halfway through my first Twinkie when Jim took a drink of the wine.

    He sighed. ‘Good stuff.’

    He passed the bottle to me. I had a couple of swallows. It made my mouth pucker. When it hit my stomach, it seemed to turn into fire. ‘Thlightly impertinent,’ I said.

    That got a big laugh out of Jim.

    We walked along, taking slugs of wine and bites of Twinkie, swinging the bottle out of sight every time a car approached from either the front or the rear. Once we got away from Jefferson, there were a lot fewer cars. By then, the Twinkies were gone and the bottle was almost half empty. I was feeling pretty great.

    ‘Let’s save the rest,’ Jim said.

    ‘What for?’

    ‘For us, stupid.’

    We yucked it up.

    After calming down, Jim said, ‘Hey, we don’t wanta get polluted.’

    ‘Speak for yourself.’

    ‘Where’s the cork?’ I gave it to him, and he squeezed it into the bottle’s neck. ‘We’ll save it for the return trip.’

    That sounded like a fine idea.

    He carried it the rest of the way to Cyndi’s house.

    Except for a lamp at the end of the driveway, Cyndi’s house was dark. Not even the porch light was on.

    ‘What gives?’ Jim asked.

    ‘I don’t know.’

    ‘This is her house, isn’t it?’

    ‘Sure.’

    We’d both been there before. Three times, we’d followed her home after school, first to find out where she lived, then later just because we liked to watch her walk, books clutched to her chest, hair golden in the sunlight, skirt swinging.

    ‘Sure looks like her house,’ Jim muttered.

    ‘That’s because it is.’

    ‘Maybe they’re around back.’

    So we hurried across the frontyard and made our way alongside the house. The windows there were dark. So were those in the rear, and those along the other side. I was shaking pretty badly the whole time, scared of getting caught, thrilled by our search for the girls. I could see why a guy like George might get a kick out of sneaking around like that. It was a real charge. But the charge died when we got to the street.

    ‘Well, shit,’ Jim said.

    ‘We must’ve gotten here too late.’

    ‘Thanks to George, the little shit.’

    ‘Damn it!’

    ‘This is the right house, right?’ Jim asked.

    ‘Of course it’s… hey! Maybe we’ve got the wrong night! Maybe it’s tomorrow night. All we did was guess, remember?’

    ‘Yeah! Bet it is tomorrow night.’

    ‘All right! So no big deal. We’ll come back.’

    We turned away from Cyndi’s house, and started walking. ‘Tomorrow,’ Jim said, ‘we won’t have to waste time fooling around with George. He won’t come anywhere near us from now on.’

    ‘Right. And we’ll get away earlier. Mom and Dad are going out. They won’t be getting home till really late.’