The mime died silently and fell across my lap, a #2 pencil
sticking out of his chest like a tiny wooden stake.
“Seriously,” I said, as I
tried to get him off of me. “You could just shoot through the cuffs.”
“You didn’t say to do that!” the Dame said as she .38’d
another mime in the chest.
“It was kinda implied!”
“Look,” said the Mountebank as he punched a mime in the
face, his brass knuckles making a sickening crunch. “We’re following your script,
as dumb as that seems now.”
“Well, you don’t have to be so literal!”
There was a pause, filled only with the sounds of the
Mountebank panting and the clatter of brass shell casings as the Dame reloaded.
A small pile of dead mimes surrounded my chair and I could only imagine how the
rest of the room looked, as I was still handcuffed to my chair and facing a
wall.
A red balloon with a slow leak sputtered by. A car honked
twice in the distance. I was getting a cramp in my foot.
“How many waves has that been?” the Dame asked.
“Four,” the Mountebank answered.
“There’ll be at least one more,” I said. “The mimes always
attack in prime numbers. And,” I continued. “If someone were to remove these
cuffs, I could help.”
“Look,” said the Dame, as she shoved the mime off my lap and
then sat down in his place. “Don’t get excited,” she added. “My feet hurt.” She
held up a yellow 3x5 card. “Step 1: Release Donna and have her call the mimes
and tell them where the Mountebank is. Step 2: Temporarily join forces to fight
off said mimes. Step 3: Escape in the confusion. Step 4: (optional) The
Mountebank swears revenge. Is that correct?”
“Yes.”
“And is there anywhere on this card where it says ‘Step X:
remove handcuffs from idiot?’”
“No.”
“Well, there you go.” The Dame sighed. “My trigger finger
hurts, too.”
“Maybe you should lighten the pull on your trigger,” the
Mountebank said. “My fingers used to hurt after a long day of shooting people,
but then-“
“Boss!” Donald said, presumably as he ran into the room. “I
had to fight my way past the mimes, but I got your Doritos and that duo-.”
The Dame fired once and a bag of Doritos flew by on my right
and a duodenum flew by on my left, both hitting the wall with a sickening
splat, echoed a split second later by Donald hitting the floor.
There was a moment of silence, interrupted by what could
have been bodily fluids leaking out.
“Sorry,” the Dame finally said. “Reflex.”
“It’s cool,” said the Mountebank. “I think you just winged
him.” I could hear the Mountebank’s slightly irregular footsteps, as he stepped
over bodies. “Ah, nope. Right in the head. Well,” continued, amiably enough. “If
this doesn’t work, I’m going to torture the crap out of both of you.”
“Fair enough,” said the Dame. “But we’re probably going to
be dead anyway.”
“Incoming,” I said. “I just heard the mime’s silent battle cry.”
The Dame turned and looked at me. “How?”
“Does it really matter?”
And then the mimes were upon us. I wish I had some sort of
thrilling narrative I could write about the battle, but seeing as how I was
still handcuffed to the chair, I couldn’t really see anything. And all I could
hear was the Mountebank’s occasional swearing counterpointed with the bark of
the Dame’s .38.
“Are we done?” the Dame finally asked.
“One sec.” I could hear the Mountebank’s footsteps recede. “Yep,”
he said, his voice distant. “All clear.”
“Great,” said the Dame. There was one more shot.
“Ow! What’d you do that for?” The Mountebank said.
“Well, we managed to not escape in the confusion, so I
figured I’d wing you and we could just walk out of here.”
“Sound plan,” agreed the Mountebank.
“Thanks.” There were two more shots and suddenly my hands
were free. I stood and turned.
The room was a mess, with dead mimes two and three deep, all
the way to the large warehouse door. The Mountebank was just outside the doors,
his hands on a thigh wound. I let the Dame lead me out, as I had no idea where
anything was.
“We should do this again sometime,” the Mountebank said, as
we passed.
I paused. “What? Have a fight with mimes?”
“I was actually referring to the torture bit earlier.” The Mountebank
held up his corkscrew. “Fun for kids of all ages.”
“I think not.”
“Ah, well. Revenge will be mine and all that.”
Two rights, a left, a staircase going down, and we were out
in the cool night air. Across the street, was the Iggy’s Buffet and my truck. I
glanced behind me. “You mean all of this went down fifty yards from our last
adventure?”
“Yep.”
I glanced over at the Dame. Her .38 was gone and her
oversize sunglasses were tucked into her pocket.
“Hey,” I said. “Thanks.”
“You’re welcome.”
“You still want to hide out?”
“Yeah.”
“Well, I’d be glad to help.”
The Dame stared at me for a moment. “Two conditions.”
“What’s that?”
“Zip your fly.”
“Sure thing,” I said as I zipped. “And the other.”
The Dame took a deep breath and stepped closer, leaning her
head on my shoulder. She looked up at me and for the first time, I noticed her
eyes were a very average brown. “I would kill for some pancakes.”
“I can make that happen.” I reached out and put my arm around
her shoulders and for one brief moment, everything was right with the world.
Then half-a-dozen helicopters painted in black and white
mime colors rose up from behind the Iggy’s Buffet. Mime’s with imaginary
machine guns at the doors. In a colossal puff of smoke, several hundred ninjas
appeared from the West, complete with shinobi katanas and mortars.
Simultaneously, dozen-odd clown cars screeched up from the East, disgorging a
veritable army of clowns, carrying weapons ranging from rubber chickens to
Stinger missiles.
“Oh come on!” I managed to say, right before everyone opened
fire.
Le Fin
1 comment:
Épique.
Post a Comment