Fall of Matilda. Evgeny Russ
meantime, Lame had already uncorked a bottle of vodka and poured in little glasses.
“For some reason, I do not want to drink,” Sledgehammer said and tipped little glass to his throat.
“And what is the reason of drink?” Fix asked.
“For commemorate your pistol Makarov,” Lame said, and laughed.
“It’s good that the pistol was left for dude,” said Sledgehammer, turning to Fix, “I gave you gun to you get rid of it, but not for your cakewalk two weeks with it.”
“It would be nice if the cops make a search in the store of a dude and find a gun,” Lame said, wrapping a cigar with marijuana.
“And will you going inform to cops or who will do it?” Sledgehammer asked, looking at Lame.
“You have the ace among the cops there, the cop whom you saved,” hinted Lama, lit a bush and took a deep dragged on.
“So, I didn’t understand, do you suggesting me to blow the whistle?” Sledgehammer asked.
Lame, coughed, he realized that he said too much. This conversation could be end badly for him. He had been selling drugs for a long time in the district and enjoyed authority, only because he was often seen in the company with Sledgehammer.
“No,” said Lame, clearing his throat with cough, “I mean that you shot Chub with Elephant, and did not touch the cop, although he saw you.”
“Well, he did not inform the cops about, as we agreed, but now he tosses information to me. When I shot the bastards, I did not know that they had a cop attached to a chair in another room. What? Did I have to kill the innocent, just because he’s a cop?” asked Sledgehammer.
Lame, trying to change the topic of the conversation continued, “So it was not without reason as he was tied to a chair and tortured. The money not found still. The TV said that all the criminals were killed while robbing the bank, and then garbage said that the two criminals managed to leave. So may be Chub and Elephant were these bastards, and they just have the money stashed away? And you killed them, and everyone knows about it. On the street, people say that you have money, and everyone knows that you have killed these freaks.”
“Knows everything, but can’t to prove it,” said Sledgehammer, “you’re not only lame, and you’re also stupid as all the nares. Look, if the Chub and Elephant had this money, they would be tortured in the police. And here just the opposite is obtained – they themselves tortured garbage and wanted to know something. So, who has this money? Somebody of garbage has this money.”
Fix got tired of listening to smart conversations, and sparkling his fixed tooth in smile, he said, “Sledgehammer, you can’t eat bacon, it’s pork.”
“I myself decide with what laws I should live,” replied Sledgehammer.
“Well, what did you decide about the dude? Will we throw him a couple of grenades tomorrow?”
“Couple? We have only a couple of them. One will enough,” said Sledgehammer, “by the way, where did you hide them?”
“I did not hide it anywhere, there are in the glove compartment,” Fix said.
“Well, it’s funny,” said Sledgehammer, “you bought a nice jeep, but you didn’t have enough money to buy a brain.”
“So what about the dude then?” asked Fix.
“I’ll talk to him myself tomorrow. If he does not agree, we will explode his store in the evening. For short,” continued Sledgehammer, turning to the Lame, “you’re walking around the district in the morning, looking for some VAZ vehicle without signaling, in the evening it may be necessary. And we will ride with Fix to dude. We’ll throw a grenade in the evening, when there will not be a dude. We will not blow up dude. Just a store. Understood? Yes?”
“I understand, Sledgehammer, you always discourse correctly,” Fix said and turned to Lame, “Well, you sit there, let’s pour it, you see, my wrist is swollen.”
“Yes, for hit the woman at her face your wrist is not swollen, but for pour vodka the wrist is swollen,” sarcastically said Lame, spilling the remains of the first bottle in little glasses.
“What the woman?” asked Sledgehammer.
“Well when we took vodka in the store, Fix hit a woman at her face,” said Lame.
“So she hit me, I did not want to beat her. Instinctively I gave her kick riposte, and she fell from her hooves,” said Fix for self-justify.
“Come on, let’s go into more detail,” Sledgehammer said.
Fix was not eager to talk and his silence was interrupted by Lame, “we stand next to the ticket office, in front of us is a sympathetic chick, Fix approaches her, takes her boobs by hands and says, ‘what a cool boobs! Let’s go with us to rest culturally’.”
Sledgehammer stops laughing for a second and asks, “so what then?”
“And then what? Then chick with a turn of her palm struck on the Fix’s beak. I thought the Fix’s fixed tooth will fly out,” answers Lame and continues to laugh.
Finished laughing, Sledgehammer lights a cigarette, makes two deep puffs, then with disgust kills the cigarette in ashtray. He silently looks at Fix at close-range, as if he sees him for the first time and asks, “Fix, and why are you not laughing? Everyone laughs, but you do not have fun?”
Fix wanted to say something, but Sledgehammer continued, “Probably you want people thinks in the district that my people are scumbags? Are you on the team, or are you on your own? So say then that you are an honest freier. Maybe you want people tell on the street that sledgehammer’s people live not according to the concepts?”
The silence reigned. Then Sledgehammer continued, “And if somebody will touch a tits of yours sister, and then he hits her on the face, will you like it? I will not surprise if tomorrow any freier move a blade to yours throat.”
“Well, I was wrong, let’s forget,” said Fix, and handed the second bottle of vodka to the Lame, “let’s, open it, and pour it into the glasses.
“It is enough for me,” said Sledgehammer. “Don’t sit behind the wheel drunk,” he said to Fix, “spend the night at the Lame’s home. Now I’ll go home. In the morning, come to me at 11 or 12 to Bald’s cafe. I’ll be there.”
“So let me call a taxi,” Lame suggested.
“No, I want to take a walk. I got breathed with your cigarettes. Well, good-bye,” said Sledgehammer and left.
Everyone knew that Sledgehammer rented an apartment on Schmidt Boulevard and was temporarily registered in it, but where Sledgehammer spends the nights, no one knew.
Friday
Matilda woke up due to a loud phone call. The sun shone brightly through the curtains. Matilda looked at her watch – it was 10am. She stretched and wanted another ten minutes to luxuriate in bed, but the loud sounds of the phone were against her wishes. Matilda got out of bed, put on her robe, and without hurrying went to the bathroom. She looked in the mirror for a long time, then sat down on the edge of the bathroom and cried. It did not last long, in a few seconds Matilda pulled herself together, washed herself and put herself in order. When she returned to the bedroom, the phone was silent. Matilda sat down to the dressing table and looking in the mirror began to think what she could do now in this situation. Matilda was already 26, but in the reflection of the mirror on Matilda looked a pretty young twenty-three-year-old blonde with a swollen upper lip. “Yes,” Matilda thought, “it’s hard to fix something here and three days will not have to leave the house.”
The meditation was interrupted by a loud phone call. Matilda picked up the phone, “hello.”
In response,