“Yea, Carolina! Yea!” shouted Father Willie Wright who was still shirtless and barefoot, pacing around the wrestlers.
Then while the puffing fat girl was shaking the upside-down choirboy against her plump dimpled belly some coins, keys, a comb and a package of prophylactics fell out of Francis’ pocket causing Carolina Moon to drop him abruptly on his head.
“Rubbers!” exclaimed Carolina in sweaty disbelief, her stiff lacquered hair stuck to her face. “Rubbers! Ora Lee, this chickenshit is carrying rubbers!”
“Pancho Villa, my rear end!” said Father Willie. “Booooo! Booooo!”
“A cundrum!” cried Carolina Moon. “This is what you think of us! I oughtta pull it over your head, you little prick!”
“Black Jack Pershing woulda whipped faggy Mexicans like Francis!” yelled Roscoe Rules from his exile in the darkness.
“I’ll never forget the first time I met Carolina Moon,” said Spencer Van Moot romantically as he limped back from the duck pond, smelling of vomit and rancid water, causing Carolina to scurry away from him.
“She was younger then and so lovely,” Spencer said with a liquid burp that scared everyone. “It was before your time, guys, and I was a younger buck and this gorgeous blonde girl with bazooms like volleyballs walks up to my radio car when we’re parked in the drive-in on La Brea, and she looks me right in the eyeball and says, ‘Gee, I thought I blew every cop in Wilshire.’ I just loved that girl from then on!”
Carolina smiled shyly and said, “Spence, honey you’re a doll. But why don’t you think about going home to your wife and kiddies now? You smell awful ripe.”
Spencer wrapped his blanket around him like a toga and downed a can of warm beer he found in the grass and belched perilously again. His pinky ring glittered and his little blond toothbrush moustache twitched as he breathed the night air and looked at the smog-filled night sky for the great star and yearned for his lost youth.
“Gud-damn, Spencer stinks,” Calvin Potts complained. “I think we better call the coroner.”
“It’s all right, Spencer. You look like Marcus Aurelius,” Baxter Slate grinned, raising his head surprisingly well from where he had dozed for over an hour. “You long for those days when we didn’t think we would fail. When we didn’t think we would die! When we were young.”
“I heard you, Slate,” a slurred gravel voice shouted from the darkness. “So don’t start that faggy talk. And don’t think you and Niles can sneak off and smoke pot. I’m watching you!”
“But who guards the guards, Roscoe?” Baxter yelled.
“Who said that?” Roscoe suddenly confused the voices.
“Juvenal,” Baxter Slate said.
“Who you calling a juvenile?” snapped Roscoe Rules.
“Now’s the time for drinking! Horace said that, Roscoe,” Baxter Slate yelled.
“Horace! Horace!” answered Roscoe. “Never catch a cop with a name like that. Some faggy friend a yours, huh?”
And with his bottle of bourbon three quarters gone Roscoe Rules decided to punch Baxter Slate’s faggy lights out once and for all. But he found his legs didn’t work and he fell heavily on his chest and panted quietly for a moment and went to sleep.
“Yeah I remember the good old days, Spencer,” said Carolina Moon who also felt nostalgic. “We was wild young kids then, Ora Lee and me. Remember how we used to say we did more to relieve policemen than the whole Los Angeles Police Relief Association?” she asked her slightly older roommate who had fallen fast asleep and was snoring noisily.
Carolina shrugged and said, “When they put that slogan ‘To Protect and To Serve’ on all police cars we had one made for our Pontiac saying, ‘To Protect and To Service.’ One time Ora Lee and me figured we sucked off more cops than the whole police wives’ association.”
“Impossible!” cried Harold Bloomguard.
“Well it’s true,” said Carolina. “We got seven thousand cops in this town, right? And I bet there ain’t five hundred whose wives belong to that group. Am I right, Spencer?”
“Right,” said Spencer starting to be offended by his own smelly toga.
“Most of em are ladies, ain’t they Spencer? Probably only blew one, two policemen?” Carolina asked.
“No more than that,” said Spencer Van Moot.
“My wife never even did one,” Father Willie Wright noted. “That’s my trouble.”
“See,” said Carolina to the assembly. “That means they couldn’t a did more than eight hundred at most. Christ, Ora Lee and me done more than that one summer when we were hanging around Seventy-seventh Station!”
“They do have a lot of guys working down there,” Spencer had to admit.
And it was finally conceded that the two girls had easily outfaced the entire police wives’ association. But just as the girls were thinking about pulling that train for a couple of their favorites Francis Tanaguchi came charging into their midst from the direction of the duck pond.
“Come see what I did!” giggled the choirboy prankster.
“Whaddaya mean? Whaddaya mean?” asked Whaddayamean Dean.
“Not now, not now,” said Spencer Van Moot, leering at Carolina Moon.
“Now! Now!” said Francis Tanaguchi, shaking all the drunken choirboys.
“What’s it all about? What’s it all about?” cried Whaddayamean Dean.
“Oh shit, oh shit,” said Calvin Potts as Whaddayamean Dean had them all talking double action.
Carolina Moon got up and stumbled after Francis. And all the choirboys, even Spermwhale Whalen, walked or crawled toward the duck pond where Roscoe Rules slept soundly on his back with a large white duck hanging out his fly.
“My word!” said Baxter Slate.
“How’d you manage that, Francis?” asked Sam Niles, impressed out of his ennui.
“Now that’s class!” mumbled Spermwhale Whalen gravely as he was finally able to stand up shakily like an enormous toddler.
“I just took some bread and sprinkled it from the water to Roscoe’s crotch,” giggled Francis Tanaguchi. “Then I unzipped his pants and dropped some inside!”
“He’d a caught you he’d a said it was a faggy thing to do,” Father Willie remarked.
“Boy that duck’s really working out on old Roscoe,” Carolina Moon said admiringly as the fat white body worked itself between Roscoe’s legs and the greedy head burrowed and ate.
“Roscoe was never one to duck a fuck, but to fuck a duck?” said Spencer Van Moot.
“Wake up, Roscoe, you cunt!” growled Spermwhale, throwing an empty beer can at Roscoe which startled the duck and made it flap and jump around.
“Don’t throw things! You might hit the duck!” said Harold Bloomguard.
“Hey!” Calvin Potts said. “That sucker can’t get his pecker outta Roscoe’s pants!”
“They got bills not peckers,” said Francis.
The choirboys watched in fascination as the duck thrashed and flapped and squawked with his head entangled in the fly of Roscoe’s jockey shorts. Suddenly the meanest choirboy who had always hated and feared the loathsome creatures, awakened to see one attacking his balls.
“YAAAAAA!” screamed Roscoe Rules, awakening Alexander Blaney who had been sleeping peacefully on the grass across the water.
Then there was pandemonium as the hopelessly drunk Roscoe Rules lurched to his feet and began running in circles, screaming and pulling at the duck who was panicked and quacking in rage and terror.
“Don’t hurt the duck!” yelled Harold Bloomguard as several choirboys rushed to aid the creature before Roscoe broke its neck as he ran shrieking and fell headlong into the pond.
“He’ll drown it!” Harold Bloomguard cried as Father Willie and Francis plunged into the water to rescue the bird.
Roscoe Rules pitched wildly in the slime and choked on filthy water and shouted for Spencer who didn’t want to get his eighty dollar shoes wet.
They grabbed Roscoe and dragged him and the duck onto shore just as the bird got a death grip on the sac containing Roscoe’s left testicle. Roscoe shrieked again and broke through the drunken ranks and ran bellowing toward the blankets where he had left his gun, wallet, and keys. He fell over the body of Ora Lee Tingle who woke up to blink sleepily at the dripping man standing six feet away with a fat white object swaying wildly between his legs. She said, “I don’t know who you are, honey but welcome to choir practice!”