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Village Squire, 1980-11, Page 16Rene were listening but they were oft at the edge of the clearing talking and laughing. It was humiliating and his father didn't help matters any with his habit of saying things right out as though he didn't give a damn what people thought. Billy cleared his throat. "Dad?" "Mmm?" "You know those two you missed. Are you a - bad shot?' "Me? Heck, not," his father laughed. "I was a crack shot in the army." "But!" Billy was incredulous. "You mean you missed them on purpose! On purpose ! " Harry sighed and pushed himself to his feet. "That's right," he said and started to walk back to the car. After a few steps he hesitated and looked back. "Hey. We're supposed to be enjoying ourselves. What say we hit the sandwiches before those two drugstore cowboys come back and round up all the good ones." "I'm not hungry - not really," Billy mumbled without looking up. Harry opened his mouth to speak, thought better of it, and turned away. "Suit yourself," he said. Billy knew the tone of voice and, as always, it sparked in him anger and resentment. Had it never occurred to the man that b,g. might be a disappointment? If it had been possible, Billy would have shot every bird in the forest and then, with a smile, dropped the bloody pile at his father's feet and said, "See. In case you didn't know, that's what a man does with a gun." But that, of course, would not happen. The most he could hope for was that Harry would at least have enough pride to say nothing to the others and save everyone from having to pretend it was a big joke. After they had finished their lunch, the men sat around recounting tales and drinking and smoking. The stories were mainly about things that had happened at the plant where they worked and usually began with one of them laughing and saying, "You remember the time . . Billy waited apart, impatient to return to the hunt. Tony recalled an old bachelor whose white hair had turned green from working in the copper dust for thirty years and who, when he finally drummed up the nerve to propose marriage to an old widow, had been rebuffed not because he shied away from putting water on his head but because she was afraid her kids would be born with green hair. This amused Rene immensely. When Tony added, "She was sixty, F'r Chrissakel" Rene, halfway through a swallow, choked on his beer and Harry had to thump him on the back until he recovered. Rene was a company cop, an enormous man who smiled a great deal and spoke little. According to Harry, as a kid Rene had been an awesome rushing defence - man who would have dumped the national league on its ear if times had been different and he hadn't chosen to take a regular job, sire nine children, and develop an awesome beer belly instead. Twenty years and a thousand bloody fights later, everyone was still shocked that this smiling bear of a man was the meanest drunk in the district - everyone "that ain't no way to treat a gun, boy." but his wife who had never seemed surprised. Even less a person of words than her husband, she gave the impression, Harry said, of someone who knew which side her bread was buttered on - even though the bread was black, the butter a month old, and the eating made her sick. Scandalized and rising to the bait whenever the subject came up, Billy's mother would snap, "There ought to be a law!" "There is," Harry would reply. "That's why he spends most Sunday mornings in the hoose-gow instead of at mass." His father's chuckle would be countered by his mother's abrupt removal of the dishes and her concluding judgment: "And those poor children! I think it's wicked! Just wicked!" Maybe it was wicked but Rene', for all his failings, was still the only one who had managed to flush out and bring down any game that morning. Billy could not dismiss such a hunter as an altogether God -forsaken bum. He watched the man snap open his fourth bottle of beer. Billy suspected that Rene' could have done it with his teeth if he'd had a mind to. Tony yawned and stretched. Rene closed his eyes and tilted his face towards the sun which had poked through the clouds during lunch. The sharp chill had gone with the overcast and a light haze softened the dark outline of the trees and shrubs beyond the clearing. Harry, who seemed to be looking at something in his lap, suddenly jerked his head upright and blinked against the sun's glare. "Okay with you if I go and see if I can't hunt up something?" Billy asked. "I'll stay near the car." Harry ran his fingers through his thinning hair - his habit whenever he had been dozing but didn't want it to look that way. "We'll all get moving in a few minutes," he said. "What's a rush, Har?" Tony said. He picked up his single shot 22 and held it out towards Billy. "Here, kid. Let's trade off. See what y' can do with a rifle." He pushed the weapon upon Billy while he looked down at Harry. "He's okay, Har. He'll be all right." It was agreed that Billy could go off by himself so long as he stayed within fifty feet of the derelict split rail fence that flanked the road. They would change partners for the afternoon and Harry would follow Billy along the line in a few minutes - twenty at most. During the discussion from which Billy felt excluded, Tony took a half dozen shotgun shells from the boy's jacket pocket and left a dozen or so 22 rounds in their stead. Billy squirmed against the intrusion but could see no way to actually refuse the trade. The rifle was a nondescript piece of junk. Compared with the lever action Winchester which Billy had so desperately coveted, and even with the 410 which had been the disappointing substitute, Tony's gun was an insult - not much more than a slingshot in disguise. The stock was sweat -stained and scarred and the barrel was blemished by patches of rust. Billy carried the gun by its web sling, dangling and brushing the ground at his side. "Hey, that ain't no way to treat a gun, boy." "Don't forget, Bill. No more than fifty feet." Billy lifted the gun without looking back and quickened his pace. Once past the bend in the road, he glanced over his shoulder to be sure they were out of sight and then broke into a run. He stopped only when he was confident he was well beyond the range of their voices. Fifty feet! What was he supposed to do? Measure it? Carry the gun this way. Don't do that. Wipe your nose. Billy threw the gun into the dirt. He could feel his tears building and his anger doubled at his inability to stop them. He reached down, seized a rock, and drove it with all his might into the forest. He held his breath and listened. There was a faint and distant 'chink' and then nothing. The woods were still. Billy brushed aside his tears with the sleeve of his jacket and picked up the rifle. He PG. 14 VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER 1980