Around us, buzzers and bells rang as less skillful players made their machines go tilt. His score climbed rapidly: 500, 900, 1,200.
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"His best is 42,000," Asher said.
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"Shut up!" Barry hissed. "I can't concentrate."
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But he was concentrating. The lights of the machine reflected off his glasses, giving him a powerful look, as if the colors were zooming out from his head, like Superman's X-ray vision.
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"Shit!" he cried, as the silver ball dropped into an alley.
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"Double shit," Asher said. "Piss."
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There was almost nothing as satisfying as hearing them curse. I had no desire to do it myself. My mother's speech was filled with euphemisms like heck, darn, and shoot. Naturally, she disapproved of indelicate language, which for her also included speaking Yiddish in the presence of non-Jews, something she considered rude and old-fashioned. On the other hand, nothing pleased her more than to hear a gentile use the word "goy" or Sammy Davis, Jr., say " schvartza ."
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Some older boys draped themselves around our machine and lit cigarettes. They had thin, sharp noses and stiff, oiled pompadours. They were what we called "rocks."
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"Who's the slit?" one of them asked.
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"His sister," Asher said.
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They glared at me. "This is no place for girls," the same boy said.
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I moved to the next machine and dropped my dime in.
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"Give me a drag," Barry said.
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"Yeah," Asher said. "I want to hotbox it."
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The older boys passed their cigarettes to them. Barry and Asher inhaled deeply and made the tips of the cigarettes glow bright red. The idea was to see how long an ember you could make.
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Afterward, they bought peppermint candies to sweeten their breath. I had been scared to go to Rudy's alone. When I returned home, it struck me that Barry and Asher might have been afraid, too. But together they acted like they could take over the whole world.
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Do you think the teachers at school were diplomatic about my brother's name change? They kept remarking on it, or forgetting it momentarily, so that the two names were strung together into a hor-
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