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Kelly and her friends. 30 Fast Workers

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Offline peccavi

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Kelly and her friends. 30 Fast Workers
« on: March 09, 2016, 08:53:14 PM »

30 Fast Workers

As the late Braveheart used to I have united several fights into one story broken by chapters

 
As I walked into ‘Fast Workers’ – a bar near the plant – I looked at my watch.  I was early for my chat with Michael Tippet, who'd asked to meet me after work that night.  Michael’s firm was doing our annual audit and he'd asked me to have a drink with him. I'd agreed.  I hoped it wasn’t a problem with the audit.  I got myself a drink – a light beer that I wanted to nurse till Michael arrived – and took it to a side table.
 
I’d suggested this bar.  It had a past but as I looked around I though, not for the first time, that Fast Workers was more past than present.  But then, that was typical of the area – slowly decaying industry.  There were too many empty buildings around it, buildings that when I was a child and went past them on the way to the plant when Mom took us kids to see Dad, had been full of workers earning reasonable money, full of cars in the parking lots, full of products being delivered or loaded onto trucks. But then, that was before America began to export jobs.  So I shook my head whenever I went that way.
 
It was typical of the area in another way too, or at least those businesses which were still going.  It was smart on the outside, well maintained and even had a bit of garden around it; the parking lot had a well-tended hedge separating it from the street. It tried – just like those other businesses – to pretend that all was going well.
 
It was clean and neat inside too.  Even the rest rooms were clean, which was always my standard for a good bar. There was a polished hardwood dance floor, though I didn’t see much dancing going on when we went there on weekdays, and a juke box that played anything from country to rock depending on who put the money in.  Despite all that though, the decor was dated – not quite run down but certainly out of style.  It was like walking back into the 1950s.
 
The name was a pun too.  Fast Workers served fast food – good wholesome fast food, not the garbage you got at McDonalds – and it served up the drinks fast too.  The place catered to factory workers who were either on a lunch break with limited time, or on their way home and usually anxious to get there.  A few of the guys from the plant drank there. That was why I went too – it was neutral turf. At least there we could pretend I wasn’t the boss and they weren’t the workers. I’d tried to make it more than make believe too, by inviting some of my beach buddies and a few people I’d met through the car clubs – most recently Max and Julie.
 
I’d only realised the pun in the name when I’d turned up one Saturday night in the fall of 2003. We’d worked a lot of overtime – we had a big order for a company in Atlanta and had to get it away quickly. We were trying to impress them, hoping to get some more orders. I’d been on the line, so I had my brother with me and even Dad, though he wasn’t a lot of use.  He’d gotten too stiff with arthritis to get into all the places we needed. Still, between us we’d gotten the job done.
 
One of the foremen had suggested a meal.  He wouldn’t get much at home, he said he was so late that his wife would have fed his dinner to the dog. I was between girlfriends at the time – it was a good eighteen months before I met Kelly – so I’d readily agreed.
 
That night the bar had been buzzing like I’d never seen it before. It wasn’t just that it was packed, though it certainly was that. The crowd had been excited.  They’d been talking politics.  I’d stumbled across a group of Democrats, almost a caucus, who were discussing the primary that was then on. I’d never found politics so exciting. I asked the barman why here, why Fast Workers.  He told me that the bar had always been a stronghold of ‘non machine’ Democrats, and that Fast Workers  was the name of one of John Gilbert’s last movies. He had to tell me too that John Gilbert had been a legend in Hollywood, one of the few actors who’d stood up to the studio system and the bosses like Mayer. Not that it had done Gilbert much good, but as the barman said, “he made the effort. We’re doing the same.”
 
So, later, when I’d met Julie and Max after Kelly started playing roller derby, it had seemed like an ideal place to invite them. A retro bar with a political message was just the place for them. But there was another reason to invite them and to keep on going myself - there were often fights.  After all, the customers were a wild mix of factory workers, truck drivers, even a few sailors and bikers.  There were more hyphenated Americans of every nationality than I’d ever met before in one place, and of course there were tensions that inevitably led to fights. 
 
By custom, the men fought outside in the parking lot.  Some of the fights were a little rough.  They’d sometimes wield cue sticks and even – rarely – throw broken bottles.  The women however, typically fought inside the bar.  The proprietors didn’t try to stop the fights – not unless things got really wild, anyway.  Catfights brought customers, even more than politics.  Some of the fights even involved politics. Not all of them though.  Many, maybe most, were about jealousy, rivalry, men, drink – all the usual reasons why women fought.  It was those reasons – pretty much all of them rolled together – that had caused a fight one night when we were there with Max and Julie.
 
1  OUT OF THE PAST
 
Julie had brought her friend Ashley along.  I knew Ashley from when I’d first met her along with Julie and Max at Wrigley stadium.  That night at Fast Workers, Ashley and Julie were dressed alike, just as they'd been at Wrigley, in checked blouses with a few of the top buttons undone, jeans that fitted almost too snugly on their ample butts and thighs, and sneakers. In deference to the cold, they both wore leatherette jackets.  Ashley's was chocolate and Julie's was navy. They looked great and with Kelly away in Seattle yet again, I looked forward to a bit of mild flirting. I needed to hone my romantic skills for Kelly.
 
Ashley wouldn't have a bar of it though. She wasn’t too pleased to see me again. Almost as soon as Max had introduced me, explaining how we'd met up again, Ashley returned to the fight. “You were there that day when those girls picked a fight with Jules and me!  Hell, they were your friends.” She stabbed her finger in the air. “Huh!  Some friends! Drunk…rowdy…they were spoiling the game.  That little redhead knew it too. She told them off but those two skinny blondes were too far gone to listen to any sense. You should have controlled them. No! Don't give me any excuses.  You should have.  Way before that, you should have cut off their booze.” Ashley shook her head, and then went on again, “I would have beaten that blonde bitch who got up my nose and shoved me. No, I wouldn’t have beaten her…I already had beaten her.  She was on her back where she belonged but then her friend pounded Jules in the gut and came after me.  You saw it.”  Her face darkened.  “You know I had that fight won.”
 
I nodded.  It was pretty clear Ashley wasn’t the forgive and forget type.  Then I blew it by replying, “I’m not so sure Wendy and Elena picked the fight though. The way I remember it, there was a bit of a verbal duel in the stands.”
 
She cut me off angrily. “Hey! They were spoiling the game for us! Like I said, even that other girl you were with…the little redhead…said so. Anyway, we won that verbal duel, as you call it, too. Those skanks were too drunk to think of an answer to us.
 
“That was the reason for the whole thing!” she went on.  “They were so drunk, they were stopping us from enjoying the ball game. Your redhead friend got the message and did her best to shut them up. That was something you should have done.” This time Ashley tossed her head.  Her brunette mane shimmered in the light. Her boobs jiggled slightly under her blouse. I looked at her more closely.  That blouse wouldn't have kept the February cold out.  While it was long sleeved, Ashley had a few of the top buttons undone and it was  so short at the front that it left her belly bare. She continued, “And so what if we were in their way when we left?  Like Julie said at the time, they could have walked around us.”
 
“Yes…and you could have moved.” I paused and added, “If you’d wanted to avoid the fight. But…” I let it hang there. I wanted to give her a bit of her own back.
 
“Why should I move for those drunken skanks?” Ashley snapped. She stabbed her finger toward me again
 
“As I said, you could have…if you wanted to avoid the fight, that is. Fess up, Ashley.  You wanted the fight just as much…or even more…than Wendy and Elena did. You blocked her path.  In fact, you stepped right into it.”
 
“Hey! Who started the fight? It wasn’t me!”
 
“A little push? All Wendy wanted to do was get you to move.” I said, tongue in cheek.  I knew better.  Wendy had been intent on fighting, as much as Ashley. “You pushed back and you kept pushing till Wendy almost fell. “
 
“She started it!” Ashley repeated. She took a step towards me.
 
“You set her up. You played her. You provoked her into taking a swing at you.” I added, placating her a little, “That’s nothing to be ashamed of.  You just showed how clever you were. But admit it, Ashley.  You’re no stranger to fighting in public. You followed the rule book…let the other person make the first move and then you could claim self defense when the cops arrived…if they’d arrived.”
 
Ashley wasn’t buying it.  “Get lost! She started the fight. She took it to me. If it was how you say it was, how come she belted me around for the first few seconds?”
 
I had to think that over for a moment.  Wendy had started the fight well.  She’d taken to Ashley for a few moments. “You were playing possum. You wanted to give the idea she was attacking you…unprovoked…that she’d completely surprised you. Oh you played her well. Then you attacked. She had no chance. You just outclassed her.”
 
“He’s right you know.  You did plan it.“ Max came back with some drinks. He chuckled. “Yeah, you planned it alright…just like you and Jules have done before, together and separately.” He chuckled again as she glared at him. “Don’t play the innocent with me. See Ashley…I know you.  You played that blonde, just like you’ve played others before and since. And yeah, she surprised you because she could fight”.
 
“Alright, alright, have it your way.” Ashley said sourly. ”I set it up. Yeah…ok.” She took a deep swig of her drink. “I wanted to fight the blonde bitch. She'd been bugging me.  Her drunken antics got right under my skin. Then she bumped me at the gate when we left. Yeah, I wanted to teach her a lesson. I thought she'd be easy pickings. Now are you satisfied?” She took another pull at her drink.
 
“And you were winning.” I tried to placate her a little again.
 
“Screw you!” Ashley rounded on me and repeated. “I wasn't winning! I’d won! had won! The bitch was on the ground when the other blonde butted in!”
 
I'd had about enough of this girl. “Yes she was.  You'd won, and if you'd left it at that Ashley, you'd have walked away with the win. But you had to crush your enemy. Elena only stepped in to stop you from stomping on her friend's belly when she was down.”
 
“And that was when it all went wrong for us.” Julie broke into the conversation. “Lighten up, babes. It was a fight and we lost.  It happens.” She grinned at Ashley.  “Not often of course.”
 
“Don't try to cheer me up, Julie Brandt!” Ashley tossed her head again and stalked off.
 
“That’s one angry woman.  What got into her?” I asked wonderingly.
 
“She broke up with her guy after that fight,” answered Julie.  “She blamed him for pushing her into it.” I nodded.  I'd thought as much at the time. “Still, it’s odd that she should turn on you like that. Back then, she was full of praise for how you helped her after the fight. “
 
I thought back. “All I did was help her put her windbreaker on.”
 
“She didn't expect any consideration. It was more than her guy or even you, Max,” she turned to her man, “would have done to girls we’d beaten.”
 
I changed the subject. “How are the plans for the car show going?” I asked Max.  We talked about cars for a while.
 
About five minutes later, I heard Ashley's raised voice again. I looked.  She was over near the bar, glaring at Hilary Devlin. I shook my head.  This did not look good.
 
Hilary was Queen Bee among the women who frequented Fast Workers. A union shop steward in a factory that made electric lights, she'd taken Julie under her wing, introducing her to everyone, making sure they all knew Julie was a Move On member.  I’d been surprised when I first met Hilary, at the way everyone deferred to her. The barman set me right. “Remember what Teddy Roosevelt said…'Walk softly and carry a big stick.' That's Hilary's motto.” He must have seen my surprise.  “Yeah, she looks and talks gentle enough, but wait till you see her big stick.” He chuckled.
 
I’d had to wait a little while before I did see it, but when I did, it had certainly been memorable.
 
Jennie Lindt had been quiet enough, if a hard drinking, hard cussing biker moll is ever quiet. I'd already learned this older woman had a mean streak, and some strong views too. She was a Tea Party supporter before there was a Tea Party, one of the misguided people who listen to the garbage that Fox News spews out. I prefer to read Pat Buchanan and the American Conservative. They have success behind them. Buchanan put Nixon's campaign together in 1968 and has spoken sense ever since.  He was even an advisor to presidents Ford, Reagan and Papa Bush.
 
But that night Jennie had been loud, all but yelling her viewpoint across the bar in an argument with another girl, and with her biker cronies cheering her on.
 
Hilary had asked both the arguing women – politely – to speak a little softer.
 
“What’s it to you sister…or should that be Comrade?” Jennie sneered. I took a closer look.  Jennie was older.  I guessed she’d be close to forty since I knew she had a teenage son. She was overweight too, maybe 160 pounds, with a belly and thick arms and legs. Still she looked formidable though – those thick arms and legs were mostly muscle.  She wore faded jeans and a biker jacket over a white t-shirt.  Her spiky short blonde hair was party covered by a scarf.
 
“Excuse me...please.” Hilary was trying to be the voice of reason.  “Can you keep it down?  We can’t hear ourselves talk.”  I looked more closely at her too.  She was about the same height as Jennie – both were about five foot six – but Hilary looked slender alongside the burly biker. Still Hilary was wiry.  She looked as if she worked out every day but that, others told me later, was just my middle class perception. Factory girls didn’t need to go to gyms.  Their jobs kept them fit.
 
“You can’t tell me what to do, Ms Shop Steward!” Jennie shot back.  “Why don’t you leave if you don’t like it?”
 
“You're being rude as well as loud,” said Hilary, “and you’ve been that way all night.” She walked over to the biker and added, “Please…keep it down.”
 
“I have? So what?  It’s a free country.  If you don’t like it then screw you.” She flipped Hilary the middle finger. “What are you, some kind of morality police?” She slapped a hand on Hilary’s shoulder.  “Back off, bitch!” She belched loudly.
 
Hilary’s hand snaked out quickly. Her slap struck Jennie’s face so hard Jennie rocked on her feet.
 
“Dickhead!” Jennie hissed, slapping back equally hard, but her shot was poorly timed. Hilary stepped back and the slap just kissed her cheek. Infuriated, Jennie stepped forward.  As Hilary continued to back away, Jennie’s steps became a headlong charge – a charge that came to a sudden halt when Hilary stepped to the side and drove her fist deep into Jennie’s paunch.
 
Jennie gagged and doubled over.  The older woman wasn’t done though. She swung her whole body around, crashing her head into Hilary’s side as the lighter woman tried to seize her enemy’s shoulders and drive her into the floor. Hilary backed off and Jennie stood upright.
 
The biker attacked again, her fists out ready to punch. Hilary bobbed down and to the side.  Jennie’s punches sped harmlessly by but left her dangerously outstretched. Hilary capitalized and her fists thudded, left then right, into Jennie’s gut. Jennie reeled back, her fists down to protect her. Hilary switched her target, slamming a fist into Jennie’s cheek. Jennie backed off hurriedly, her mouth opening and closing as she tried to suck air back into her battered lungs.
 
Jennie fended Hilary’s attacks off by kicking. Her rapid kicks missed but frustrated Hilary’s attack for a moment. Hilary found the answer however.  Quickly crouching, she scooped up Jennie’s leg in her arm and yanked it high. The blonde’s arms windmilled as she fought to keep her balance but she crashed into some tables. Her fall helped her, since it pushed some chairs into Hilary’s way.  Hilary nearly tripped herself. By the time she had recovered and pulled the chairs back out of her way, Jennie was upright and swinging punches.
 
But she was battered, her face red with bruises already forming.  Her jacket was torn, her stomach heaved with every breath and she lurched rather than stepped forward. Still she managed to hit Hilary hard, twice – once in the face, snapping her head to the side, and then to her stomach. Hilary, confined by the tables and chairs, could not dodge the blows. She had to retreat. Truly the tables and chairs had been a hindrance to both women.
 
Once Hilary got into the open space of the bar and able to move freely though, Hilary was all over her foe. She moved quickly, dancing around the lurching Jennie. Hilary scored repeated, unanswered light blows that infuriated Jennie even if they didn't do much immediate harm. They were softening up the overweight blonde even more.
 
Suddenly Hilary changed her tactics, and her fist slammed into Jennie's gut. A fountain of spit exploded from the blonde’s mouth along with all her breath as she doubled over with a sound like a burst balloon. Jennie lunged forward, trying to ram her shoulder into Hilary's midriff. Hilary, in clear command of the fight, stepped to her left and as Jennie blundered forward, she swung her knee up, hammering her foe's stomach yet again.
 
Jennie dropped to her knees groaning and Hilary stepped back, dusting her hands. “Don't bad mouth me again,” she said as she turned her back on the bikers.
 
That, it seemed, was exactly what Ashley was doing in the bar right then – bad mouthing Hilary. I shook my head and looked enquiringly at Max and Julie.
 
Julie returned the look.  “No.  She’s big enough to handle this herself…and anyway, Hilary’s calmed her down.”
 
Julie was right.  Ashley’s temper spike seemed to be over. She walked away from the bar and over to us. “Jules…that bitch..why is she so right and so wrong all at once?”
 
“What do you mean?”
 
“She just knows all the answers…blames NATFTA…don’t we all?  But while Hilary has all the information…she can even can quote stats, but,” Ashley shook her head, “she’s got no solutions. Whatever happens, we’re shafted. Abramoff gets a plea bargain…I bet he’ll keep all his money.  No one’s got an answer to that and anyway the NSA and probably the CIA listen to everything we say.  Hilary says the wiretaps are illegal and they are…but is that going to stop Bush and his cronies?  Like I said, we’re shafted. “
 
Ashley paused.  She took a swig of her drink and tossed her head back. Again her hair shimmered in the light. Even though Kelly was home that weekend, I considered a mild flirt with the buxom, curvy brunette.  Her size and shape were so close to my ideal woman, and she was a woman with a mind too. She went on, “Hilary doesn’t have an answer.  Whatever she does and says, she till has no answer!”
 
“Do you, Ash?” Julie asked.
 
“No, not yet…but I'm not a union organiser either.”  Ashley scowled. “But if I was? “She tossed her head meaningfully.
 
“Problem with you, Ash, is you're full of talk and no answers,” Max said.
 
“You got any answers?” Ashley hissed before turning on her heel. She stalked away again, muttering, and I lost sight of her in the crowd as I chatted to Max and a few guys about their next car club meet. I was going to show both my Packards and I needed to get someone to drive me from the meet site to pick up the second one.
 
It must have been ten minutes later when I saw Ashley again, dancing with one of the guys from the plant.  Tony was active in the union local. We didn’t encourage the union at Balfour – well-paid employees with good conditions and benefits didn’t need unions – but we didn't discourage them either. It was good for the guys to be reminded how other workers weren’t so well treated. Tony worked hard and well but it was in his interest to do so – he had a share in the firm’s profits that would grow with the time he worked for us.
 
Just then though, Tony was doing a very kind of work, and he was certainly living up to the name of the bar.  As I watched and the music changed to a slow country ballad, the dancers slowed.  Tony and Ashley kissed deeply and their hands groped each other's bodies.
 
Julie saw Max and I exchange glances. “Hey cut it out,” she said.  “She deserves some fun.   It’s been ages since she had a guy.”
 
“She’s gonna 'have' a guy tonight for sure, if she keeps this up.” Max chuckled.
 
The bracket ended.  Ashley steered Tony our way, her hand tightly wrapped around his waist.  “She's not letting him get away,” Max chuckled again.
 
“Stop it!” Julie hissed, grinning.
 
“Stop what?” Ashley came closer. “Max and Jules, meet Tony.”
 
“Max was being an ass,” Julie said by way of explanation. “Hi Tony.”
 
“Hi boss.” Tony smiled at me.
 
“You already know each other?” Ashley seemed surprised as well as more than a little annoyed. I’d noticed she’d not included me in her introduction.
 
“Yeah…, he's my boss at work.” Tony rolled his eyes, but not so Ashley would see.
 
“You’re not at work now! Let’s get a drink” Ashley all but dragged Tony away.
 
“I get the impression Ashley doesn’t like me anymore,“ I said.
 
“You showed her up,” replied Max.  “She didn’t like you telling it how it is…not about that fight ,anyway. She’s still sore about losing…not just the fight but her guy too.”
 
“She’s stupid,” declared Julie.  “She should be glad she got rid of that jerk.  He wound her up to fight and then when she lost, he dumped her. Asshole!”
 
Julie may have been right but so was Max.  Ashley was a very angry woman.
 
I saw Tony and Ashley next about fifteen minutes later.  They were in a booth. Ashley was sitting on Tony's lap and they were necking.  Ashley even had her hand inside Tony's shirt, so I was surprised when Tony fronted up at our table again a little later. I raised my eyebrows.
 
"Boss…that girl, she's coming on strong."
 
I smiled. "Hot stuff?"
 
"She's on fire!  I'm scorched."
 
"I'll buy you a drink to put the fire out. Excuse me, Max and Julie." I'd been wanting to sound Tony out about some work issues and this was a good chance to do so.
 
We made our way to the bar and ordered.  Like the name of the place suggested, the drinks came up fast.  Tony took a mouthful of his beer "Thanks Peter.  How do you know Ashley?" I told him. "Boss, I'm not surprised.  She's a firecracker and she'd go off just like one too." He shook his head. "Might be a good one-nighter for guys who want that sort of thing, but I wouldn’t want to have breakfast with her every morning."
 
I smiled.  "How did you escape?"
 
"Oh, it's not like that.  I could have told her to go but I didn’t. It was fun…up to a point anyway. No, Ashley had to go outside to answer her phone. It was too noisy even in the booth." He turned.  “Oh, hi Hilary! What's the gossip?"
 
"It's not what, Tony, so much as who,” said Hilary archly,  “and the who is you and that brunette who put the moves on you earlier. It's another reason altogether for calling this place 'Fast Workers'!"
 
Tony laughed.  "Well she's gone now, at least for a while.  She's outside on her phone." He pointed.  Both Hilary and I looked through the front windows.  Ashley was stalking up and down outside, holding her cell to her ear with one hand, waving the other hand around in the air. "She'll deck someone if she's not careful. I wonder what's got her worked up so much."
 
"It doesn’t take much.” Hilary smiled. "She and I have already had words once tonight."
 
Seeing I wasn't going to have the talk I wanted with Tony and not wanting them to go on about my friends' friend, I changed the subject. We made smalltralk for a few moments.
 
”Look!  She's gone.” Hilary pointed. It was true.  We couldn't see Ashley pacing to and fro.
 
“I wonder what stung her,” I said.  “She looked angry.”
 
“Maybe she was breaking up with someone,” Tony said.
 
I looked at him sharply.  “After what she and you were doing just now?”
 
He grinned.  “Can’t ride two horses at once, boss.“
 
Hilary shot him a look.  ”It’s bad manners to talk about somebody when they're not here,” she said.  She could be funny about a lot of things.  “Tony, let's have a quick dance.”
 
In hindsight it was all but inevitable that within a few moments – probably not even a minute – of Tony and Hilary getting on the dance floor, Ashley stormed back inside. She looked around the bar quickly, then headed for Tony and Hilary like a cruise missile. “Tony!”
 
Tony whirled around, surprised.  He'd had his back to the door and the music had masked any sound of Ashley’s approach. Before he could open his mouth, Ashley had her arms round him and was kissing him. She finally broke the kiss but held onto his waist. “Hun, I’m so sorry I was so long on the phone!” She all but pulled him away from a startled Hilary.
 
“What do you think you're doing?” Hilary said when she found her voice.
 
“Oh yeah…sorry Hilary…my manners.  Thanks for keeping Tony amused while I was gone. I'll have to buy you a drink later. But for now…Tony…” Ashley, her arm twined around his waist, drew Tony away.
 
I heard one of the girls near me say quietly, “I don't think anyone's ever treated Hilary like that! Serves her right.”
 
“Yeah, it’s about time the Queen Bee got put in her place,” her friend agreed. 
 
Clearly Hilary wasn't popular with everyone, a fact not lost on the union delegate.  She flashed a quick scowl at the speakers.  She stepped up, trying to push her way between Ashley and Tony. “We were dancing till you butted in…now butt out.”
 
“Yes you were.”  Ashley entwined herself even closer to Tony. “Now we are.  So long, Hilary.”
 
“You bitch!” Hilary, perhaps as concerned about her ‘alpha woman’ reputation as she was interested in Tony, seized Ashley's arm, swung her around and drove her knee up into the brunette's plumpish tummy. Ashley's mouth opened as a stream of air and spit erupted. A moment later, as the pain registered, Ashley groaned. She groaned more loudly still as Hilary's fists, left and right, slammed into her belly.
 
Ashley doubled over, moaning. She staggered back, just dodging Hilary's attempt to seize the collar of her jacket but not Hilary’s other hand, which grabbed some of her hair. Hilary yanked the reeling brunette both toward her and almost upright.  Again Ashley's mouth opened wide, spewing air and spit as Hilary's knee drove deep into the bigger girl's stomach. Ashley seemed to quiver. Her outstretched arm wavered for a second or so, till her hand latched onto Hilary's hair. She pulled the shop steward in close.  The two women struggled, each with a fistful of their foe's hair, Hilary punching with her free hand, Ashley slapping with hers.
 
Slowly Ashley recovered.  Hilary had trouble punching at such short range and she could only hit the bigger girl's sides. Ashley's groans told us the blows were painful though.  Continued, they would soften her up but for now they weren't making as much impression as were Ashley's own slaps, delivered with force and speed on Hilary's face and neck.
 
The two women staggered around the floor, each trying to trip the other up or stomp on the other's foot. Hilary almost succeeded.  Her foot snaked behind Ashley's and she shoved, but she didn't quite have the force behind her to push her foe down. Instead Ashley lurched backwards. Her free hand clutched Hilary's hair too. Then as Ashley recovered her balance and Hilary readied a hard punch that might have damaged her enemy, Ashley swung her body to the left, dragging Hilary with her. Ashley yanked hard and Hilary stumbled.  She lost her balance and crashed into some onlookers.
 
Ashley stood there, breathing heavily, seemingly glad of a few seconds recovery time after Hilary had pounded her so severely. In any case Hilary was up fast – faster than most girls would have been. She was on her feet and swinging before Ashley's red face had resumed its normal colour or her breathing steadied. Nevertheless the fight was more even now.  Though both were battered and worn, both moved well, ducking and weaving to avoid each other's blows. Perhaps only a third of the blows hit. Each that hit did some damage.  Their faces grew redder, they each groaned when a particularly nasty shot hit.
 
Then Ashley let forth a massive blow. Hilary had parried Ashley's left fist and countered with a right of her own that hit the bigger girl's side – it would have hit her belly if Ashley hadn’t moved just in time.  Still, Ashley emitted a louder groan as the pain registered.  However, Hilary's near success opened her up for Ashley's counter and Ashley's fist bored into her foe's stomach just below the sternum.  It almost lifted Hilary off her feet. The smaller girl staggered back, gasping, her face white. She spent the next minute or so dodging and fending off Ashley's attack. 
 
Ashley scored with a few more quick blows but none as damaging, and Hilary began to recover.  Again the two women moved around, less quickly than before. Despite their injuries, they closed steadily, their arms out for attack, and once more began to trade blows. Hilary ducked and avoided a few blows which, had they hit as Ashley intended, might have ended the fight then and there.
 
Hilary hit back with a few shrewd blows that got inside Ashley's defences and which, when they struck, made Ashley gasp. Hilary struck again.  That blow made Ashley stagger.  She stepped back to regroup. She wasn't moving freely, her face had several cuts and more red patches that would be bruises soon. Hilary, while battered, didn't seem as badly damaged, her bonus for her early success – a bonus on which she started to capitalize now.
 
She struck harder and she struck more often, preventing Ashley from recovering. Instead the bigger girl grunted and groaned and gave more ground with each blow that landed. Hilary wasn't trying for the killer blows, rather her patter of punches was like steady rain – it would make you as wet as a thunderstorm, but it just took a little longer.
 
Ashley didn’t seem to have any real answer.  She ducked and weaved and parried effectively.  Not all – not even most – of Hilary’s blows hit. But the bigger girl took hits all over her torso and those hits took their toll. Ashley was completely defensive – that is, until she kicked out and her surprising kick collected Hilary in the stomach.  It seemed to once again throw her backwards. Hilary staggered, her arms windmilling.
 
This time Ashley came forward rapidly and scored two quick and heavy punches, one to her foe’s face and the other to her stomach, before Hilary could regroup. Hilary parried another blow and then hit out. Ashley parried that in her turn.
 
And so the two women went back to trading blows. This time the contest was more even.  Both hit, both defended, and both took punishment. But after perhaps half a minute it seemed that Ashley's blows hit harder.  That became more obvious as Hilary began to defend more and hit less. Her defence was effective.  She parried or dodged still more of Ashley's slugging heavy blows.  Ashley looked around as if trying to find a place where she could shepherd Hilary where Hilary couldn’t dodge. But there were few spots – not near the dance floor anyway. Hilary broke away more than once, frustrating Ashley’s attack.
 
Then Ashley seemed to falter. She fired a left-handed punch and then sent her right to her right as if she expected to catch Hilary there, as if she’d anticipated Hilary dodging that way to avoid the first punch. It didn’t work.  Hilary had not dodged to Ashley’s right. The punch went nowhere, but it left Ashley strung out. Hilary had bobbed down and now returned fire with a left-right combo that smashed into the bigger girl’s rounded stomach. Ashley reeled backwards.
 
Hilary scented victory and surged forward. For a long moment it seemed to go all her way. She pressured a gasping, groaning, Ashley who could barely defend herself. Yes, Ashley’s defence was reasonably effective, she prevented most blows from coming through but she was gulping for air.  More importantly, she was retreating, toward the only place within a short distance where there were obstructions – a planter box and some tables and chairs that marked the edge of the dance floor. Hilary applied more pressure, closing on her foe.
 
Then, to my surprise, Ashley suddenly twisted, broke away from Hilary.  Moving more quickly than I had seen her move all night, she swung right around her foe, putting Hilary where a moment ago she herself had been – with the tables close at her back.
 
Ashley smiled coldly. She stepped forward, no longer was she defending, no longer was she gasping or groaning. Now she hammered the smaller girl with punches. Hilary defended but too many of Ashley’s blows broke through.  Ashley closed further and Hilary tried to clinch but Ashley brought her knee up straight into Hilary’s gut.
 
Hilary reeled back yet again but this time she had nowhere to go. She hit the table. Ashley punched at Hilary’s chest. Hilary defended, blocking the punch but she didn’t block the uppercut that followed it, which hit her chin and flung her backwards onto the table, knocking glasses, plates and silverware to the floor.
 
Hilary lay motionless on the table, groaning.
 
Ashley stepped close.  She grabbed Hilary's left leg in her right hand and pulled Hilary toward her.  Hilary's butt was half off the table, her feet just touching the floor. Ashley bent over her gasping, groaning enemy. “Some 'queen bee'”, she sneered and rammed her left fist deep into Hilary's stomach. Hilary convulsed. Ashley smirked, “Don’t you ever cross me again,” and rammed another punch into Hilary's gut.  Hilary screamed, then croaked when Ashley punched her a third time.
 
Ashley turned away. She was scratched and blood still oozed from cuts on her face even if most were covered by scab.  Her clothes were torn but none of that mattered to her. She had won the fight. And she was going to celebrate.
 
She walked up to Tony, flung her arms around him and kissed him hard on the lips.
 
He pushed her firmly away. “No Ashley, go away.   That was vicious. You didn’t need to punch Hilary on the table just then.  You'd already won. You just proved how brutal and cruel you are.”
 
Ashley's face whitened. She looked at Tony for a moment. Then she slapped his face hard. “What are you, some kind of wuss? I need a real man and I'm going to find one.” She turned on her heel and stalked out of the bar.
 
Max turned to me. “Ashley won’t find a real man if she carries on like that.”
 
“Give her a break!” Julie snapped at him indignantly. She turned on her heel and went after her friend.
 
That had been one big fight. I shook my head as I brought my mind back to the present.  I’d never gotten to practise my flirting skills with Ashley. Perhaps that was just as well. As Tony said, she was a scorcher and anyone who touched her was likely to get burned.
 
I was about to get another drink – there’s only so long you can nurse a beer – when I saw Michael Tippet walk in.  I got up. “Hey!” I greeted him.  “We’ll have our chat soon, but first want you to meet a few friends.” I steered him over to the bar. “Meet Max, Julie and Ashley. I met them at Wrigley last year.”  It would do Michael good to realise I didn’t just hang out with people from the H H Richardson Bar and the Union League Club but had friends from all walks of life. “Max and I share an interest in old cars,” I explained.  “He races them too. Julie plays roller derby in the same league as Kelly and Ashley is Julie’s friend.”
 
It didn’t go well. Michael was clearly agitated so, after a few more words, I took him to a quiet corner. “So, what’s this all about?”
 
“Well…the audit, in a way.  Wendy Griffiths will be part of our team next week.”
 
I almost knocked my drink over.
 
“Yeah.  I guess your Kelly will be sore when she hears about it.” Michael interrupted my comment – that Kelly, who loathed Wendy as a gold digging hustler, would be more than sore.  She'd be furious. “But you don't have to tell her. Not like me. Kim has just about kicked me out.”
 
“I can imagine.”
 
“Yeah, Kim is in one of her moods again. Or, rather, the mood got worse.” He paused and shook his head as if wondering whether to go on.
 
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Re: Kelly and her friends. 30 Fast Workers
« Reply #1 on: March 09, 2016, 08:55:05 PM »

 
2              ST LOUIS BLUES
 
After a few moments, Michael continued.  “I thought Kim and I were serious. I invited her to St Louis to meet my folks.”
 
That was getting serious.  I'd always thought a lot about it before introducing a girlfriend to my family, and I'd planned that meeting very carefully. It seemed Michael had done the same since he described how, a month or so ago, he'd taken a couple of days off work so he and Kim could make a long weekend of it.  They travelled down to St Louis on the Friday, taking in Springfield and the Lincoln museums there, so they could have a rest and a brush up before the dreaded dinner.
 
“It went well…really well. Mom had put a lot of effort into dinner and Kim was very appreciative.  She was respectful, almost deferential.  She talked well but not too much. Then after dinner she surprised me...she excused herself for a moment and came back with chocolates.  She'd made them herself. They were delicious.  I hadn’t known she did that. Later that night I told her and she smiled, cat like.  'There's lots you don't know about me.'
 
“Well my parents were…or thought they were…tactful. They put me in my old bedroom and Kim in my sister's.  Cathy left home ages ago.  She's married now with kids at school. Cathy's room was next to mine. So I was just nodding off to sleep when the door opened. There was Kim, finger to her lips.  She had nothing on under her bathrobe.“
 
Michael paused.  He almost blushed.  “I don't know if you've ever tried to make love silently.  It's not easy, not with Kim being as…well, as inventive as she is. After a while…quite a while…she crept back to her own bed.  About 2.00 am  I woke up again…someone was brushing my face. Yeah, it was Kim again. She had a little giggle about my parents…what they didn't know wouldn't hurt them…and after another struggle to keep quiet, she went back to bed again.
 
“Saturday morning she woke me up with breakfast…pancakes bacon and eggs  I was surprised. Kim’s never an early riser at home.  She likes to sleep in and doze till mid morning. But I was astonished to find she'd cooked it all herself.  My Mom told me Kim asked her where all the food was, and fixed breakfast for us all. Mom was impressed. She was more impressed still when she got Kim to tell her life story. Peter, I was worried. I thought this was where Kim was going to big note herself. God knows she does that enough. But she didn't. She let my parents drag her past out from her. She was all modesty.”
 
I shrugged, “Hmmph.  Kim doesn't tell anyone much of her past…pre-Chicago, that is.” I knew that for a fact.  I'd tried to get her to talk, but she wouldn't. Perhaps she had with Michael. One day I'd pump him for information.
 
“She's a bit of an oyster to outsiders. But she wowed my parents.
 
“And it got better.  We did the tourist things, even though it was late winter.  We went to Forest Park and did some of the indoor stuff there like the Museum the Science Center, where Kim got Mom and Dad to be kids for an hour. At the end Mom, breathless and exhausted, hugged and kissed Kim. ‘I haven’t so much fun in years,’ she told Kim.  ‘Thanks so much!’ 
 
Then we had a late lunch and went on to Laclède’s Landing. Kim seemed fascinated by the old streets, the architecture of the shop buildings, the old houses. She must have read up on the Landing.  She knew her way round and a lot of the history too.  All that afternoon, my parents warmed to her. All that afternoon she was full of respect for my parents, appreciative of what she was seeing and…yeah and in a way I'd never seen her…even humble.”
 
I raised my eyebrows. Humility wasn’t something I associated with Kim Curzon.
 
He saw my look.  “Yes, Peter I was surprised too. She's said it herself.  ‘I’ve got an Irish temper so watch out. I'm not fond of trailer trash either.’  But there wasn’t a trace of that attitude then. And I wondered, then,” he shook his head, “yeah then, whether her arrogance is some kind of armour…some kind of protection she wears when she’s with people like your Kelly.
 
“I’m not singling Kelly out,” he hastened to assure me.  “The theatre has many more people even pushier, who'd walk all over you if you're in their way. So Kim has had to push and shove and hustle too. That day back home I was seeing a different Kim. I knew she came from some smaller Midwest town.  Maybe this was the hometown girl…the real Kim.”
 
“Nah,” I chuckled, “someone probably beat the crap out of her again. That's the change in Ms Curzon. Perhaps she's learned that arrogance doesn't pay.  It took her a while.”
 
Michael's face changed and I thought I must have put my foot in it. “I'm sorry bud, I shouldn't have said that. But even you'd agree that when Kim loses a fight, she loses her 'Irish temper' too. She must be much easier to live with.” But I wondered where this was leading.
 
Michael must have sensed my confusion. “Yeah…but Peter, this isn't 'how I spent my weekend'. I've been giving you the background. I'm an accountant remember.  We’re thorough.”
 
“So are engineers.” I smiled encouragingly. “Go on, bud.”
 
“Cathy and her family came over for dinner. And Kim just wowed my nieces. When she wasn't helping Mom with dinner, she played with them. Once she got on all fours and scrambled around the floor pretending to be a bear. Later on, after dinner, she sat them on her knees and told them stories. The kids loved her. They insisted she come with them when they went to bed.  Mom gets them to sleep in her bed while the adults talk, then Cathy and Paul pick them up…still asleep, usually…and put them in their car to go home. Again Kim was respectful, demure and again she impressed everyone. As Cathy and Paul were going, Cathy whispered to me, 'She's a keeper bro.'  I thought so too.”
 
Michael looked back at me.  He must have noticed my surprise so I dissembled. “You 'thought'?” I left it open.
 
“Yes.  The next day was different.  It started well.  Again Kim helped my Mom cook breakfast and again she did well. She was a bundle of energy.  I didn't understand it. She'd been into my room on Saturday night…well, it seemed like half a dozen times.  She was insatiable.  At the end I was exhausted and just wanted to sleep in the next morning. 
 
“Kim and my parents would have none of that. They insisted on going bike riding at Forest Park.  Yes, I know we’d been there the day before but we’d been indoors.  St Louis is cold in February. But Kim said she loved the park and wanted to explore more. That was fun but even more tiring. We brought a change of clothes…after riding bikes for two hours we were hot and sweaty even in late winter. We showered at Cathy’s place in Clayton, much closer than my parents’ house. We drove to Clayton Station and caught the metro to Union Station.  Kim wanted to see how the old railway station had been rebuilt. Did you know it was the biggest in the world when it was built?” I shook my head.
 
He went on, “Yes, and it was the site of the famous Harry S Truman picture…you know, the one of him smiling at the wrong headline, ‘Dewey Defeats Truman’.  It was taken there.” He coughed. “Well yes, maybe I do push my hometown a bit but it’s a great building and Kim wanted to see it.  We took in a matinee of La Boheme. In the interval, Kim gushed her praise of the singers. They were 'great', ' right up there with the New York Met' and so on.
 
“I'd wanted to catch up with my old buddies, and yes, show off Kim too. I was proud of her…her abilities, her looks, her drive. So I was delighted when Vann Woodward, an old college friend, organised a barbeque for me and some of the old crowd. We had a quick drink or two at the Opera bar.  That was Kim's doing.  I'd have settled for a coffee. But then I was going to drive.
 
“We got back to the station and said our goodbyes to my parents.  We'd go back to their place after the barbeque and drove a few blocks. They too live in Clayton. We turned up at Vann and Lea's apartment around 6.30. They took us to another part of Forest Park with coin-operated burners, tables, chairs…all the stuff you need for a barbeque.  It was a few minutes’ walk. We carried food and plates. Kim chattered away.
 
“But there was a change in her tone. Her voice was a little different. I couldn't put my finger on it for a moment. But it clicked when Lea pumped her on how she and I had met.  We'd hung out together, mainly with you, Kelly and your friends, but the first time we spent time by ourselves was after a play. You, Kelly's brother Richard and his wife were there. He's a trustee, he’s often there.”
 
I nodded at the reminder of how deeply the Haldane family was entrenched in Chicago society. “His wife's from Boston. And just then in St Louis, Kim was mimicking Monica Haldane’s accent, her tone, all her speech patterns. Yes, Kim sounded exactly like a Boston Brahmin, as if she had ancestors on the Mayflower.
 
I smiled at the thought of Kim channelling Monica. I knew Kim had dated Richard Haldane years ago, before I'd met Kelly.
 
“For a few moments I thought this was a joke, that she was mocking the establishment, that she'd collapse in giggles like I'd seen her do before, and tell us of her humble past, how she scraped and stinted so she could get on the stage. I'd told my parents of her grit, how she waitressed, cleaned…all kinds of menial jobs, all so she could fulfill her ambition.  I was proud of her. After all, I'd done the same -though not as long and I hadn’t had as a hard a time of it when Arthur Andersens collapsed after Enron. Kim was a beacon, reminding me that I could press on and achieve my dream just like she had.
 
“But Pete…” Michael's voice changed.  It had an edge to it.  “It wasn't a joke. Kim was playing the grand lady for all it was worth, and she kept playing that role when other people turned up too. Samantha Keiler and I had dated in St Louis in our last year at college and for a while after. We’d met when she'd been in her final undergraduate year and I was in my final year of accounting.  It hadn’t lasted…we'd both been too busy straight after college. So we'd parted but stayed friends. Sam and her new partner had even hosted a farewell for me when I left St Louis to come here. They’re married now.  This was the first time I'd seen them since their wedding.”
 
Michael sighed.  He paused his story, went got another round of drinks and came back. Then he went on, “It wasn't just Kim's speech that had changed. It was her attitude too. St Louis, she said, was charming, quaint, the metro was a good start, but Chicago was a metropolis…the second city in the country, one of the great cities of the world.  It had famous architecture…'why even Union Station was a film star'…it  had the CTA.  The Chicago Symphony was world famous…well, she was right there, its performing arts were vibrant. 
 
“She made St Louis seem provincial, and that didn't go down well.  I went over to her…I wanted to stop her annoying my friends. She slipped her arm round my waist and squeezed me tight. Then she said, ‘Michael, you know what I'm talking about. You came to Chicago. You wanted the life that only a great city can give you. Yes, I'm so proud of you.’ She ran her fingers up and down my side. It made me tingle. “You could have come back here but no, you stuck it out. You drove cabs, you did all kinds of crappy jobs. Yes, you're not working for Big Accounting now, but even a moderate sized Chicago firm like Wordsworth Keats is about the same size as Coopers and Lybrand is here.'
 
Michael shook his head.  “Kim was making people furious.”
 
“How much had she drunk by then?” I asked.
 
“Too much.” Michael grimaced,  “I don't know exactly, but she was buzzed. Not drunk but not sober either. Yes, you know Kim.” He shook his head again. “She asked me to get her another drink. What would you have done…told her you thought she’d drunk enough, or got her one? I compromised.  I got her a very watery scotch. When I came back she kissed me warmly.  I smelt the booze on her breath. And she slipped her arm round my waist again. Peter, it was more than affection…she was claiming ownership.  But for a moment I relaxed.  Kim was praising the Opera, saying how much she'd enjoyed it, how good it was. And she coupled it and our own together, saying non-Americans have the wrong idea. All they hear about is the New York Met.
 
“Samantha, who'd been seething before, tried to pick up on this. 'Yes they call us the flyover states – as though there's nothing between the East and West Coast.'
 
“Kim replied, 'It's worse than that.  It’s as if there's only New York, Washington and…maybe…Boston on the east coast, and LA and San Francisco on the West. Bah!' She took a big swig of her drink. 'Cultural arrogance!  It's been around for a long time.  Remember The Great Gatsby…Daisy and her husband are portrayed as Mid Westerners…inherently crass.'
 
“Kim went on about films, how so many film noir were about San Francisco, sometimes they have to pretend, so that Public Enemy which is about Al Capone, Chicago's own mobster, doesn't mention Chicago at all. But some do...great classic films like Scarface, The Untouchables...and they’re  films about mobsters.  The Front Page, His Girl  Friday, Hitchcock’s North by Northwest and more modern ones too, romances like My Best Friend's Wedding, While you were Sleeping...there's so many.  But there's only one about St Louis…The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery…and while it’s a good film, it  just isn't in the same class. But,' Kim took another swig of her drink, “perhaps that's fitting.’
 
'” Are you saying we are not good enough?’ Samantha almost hissed.
 
“’Did I say such a thing?’ Kim replied.
 
“’No,’ Samantha seemed taken aback. ‘not in so many words.’”
 
“’I hope I have better manners.’ Kim's voice was silk smooth. She seemed to want to sum up the conversation and move to a new topic 'You here have history…yes I saw the Landing, the Mississippi…you've lots of good things. But it's not Chicago.  Why, even my own theatre company toured St Louis as a warm up to its Chicago season. Michael knew what he was doing when he came to Chi town.’
 
“Again Samantha bit.  ‘St Louis is a great city. You've said it already yourself. You'd never get bored here. There are always things to do.’
 
“She started to list them but Kim cut her off. ‘Oh yes, I am sure you can be happy and fulfilled in provincial America. And that's not at all bad. America needs people who are. You remind me of Churchill's comment on Clem Atlee, “A modest man with much to be modest about” I suppose you know who Atlee was? No? Oh dear.'
 
“Samantha reddened. ‘I think Winston said that about Clem Atlee before the 1945 British election, not after.’ It was clear she did know who Atlee was, and that he'd surprised as many people in winning that election so convincingly as Truman had surprised by beating Dewey in 1948. She turned back at Kim.  ‘Modest…well that's something you'll never be. Look at you!  An overdressed clothes rack.’ She looked at Kim's tailored skirt, her cream blouse with a touch of lace at the neck and bodice, her pearl necklace.
 
 “‘Overdressed? We came almost straight from the Opera! A girl's got to look good.' And they were both right.  Kim was overdressed for a barbeque, Samantha and the rest of the girls wore jeans and tops…designer jeans to be sure, but far more casual than Kim. But Kim was right too.  Like my Mom, she’d dressed up for the opera. Still, she could have brought another change of clothes in my car.
 
“Then Kim's Irish temper finally got the better of her. 'What do you wear to the Opera…assuming you’d even go, of course…the same sort of clothes you wear to the office? Yes I thought so. You'll never be chic, Samantha. You're as all-American as apple pie and Norman Rockwell.' Kim's voice was a sneer. 'Full of small town provincialism. Your problem – ' she looked straight at Samantha, ' – is that you're self-satisfied and complacent. I'm not.;
 
“’You stuck up little princess!’ Samantha just retained her temper.
 
“’Oh yeah…princess? Well, maybe so.  Princesses live in great cities, not St Louis.   Pity about your petty jealousy.  You could do something about it – ‘ Kim stepped towards Samantha, ‘…but no, you’re too stuck in a rut. Remember, the only difference between a rut and a grave is the depth. You’re second-rate minds.’
 
“’Which, as Stanley Baldwin…or was it Lord Robert Cecil?...remarked, is better than second rate characters,’ Samantha rejoined. ‘Oh you didn't know that? Second rate mind indeed.' She looked hard at a suddenly red faced Kim.”
 
I started.  Michael smiled. “Yes, I thought that might get you going.  She knows her history, that girl. And it got Kim going in another way. Kim knew she’d been outsmarted. “
 
I looked up. “You're going to tell me they fought? I hope you got some pictures. You know I love women fighting…and you know why.  The physical aggression, the ultimate continuation of rivalry, is only a part of it. It’s the power exchange. Two women, both determined to triumph but knowing only one can. One wins, one loses.”
 
Michael nodded, but made a face.  “It's a bit different when it's a woman you care for.  You don't want her hurt badly.”
 
“Spill the beans!  I want the details.”
 
“Well, yes…Kim just lost her temper and slapped out at Samantha but found her hand caught and twisted down.  Samantha kept hold of Kim’s arm, forcing Kim to bend forward, then seized Kim’s hair, jerking her upwards so Kim’s face looked up into the air. Kim struck out with her free arm, a punch aimed squarely at Samantha’s gut. Samantha sidestepped. She still held Kim’s hair and an arm and, crouching down jerked hard. She almost pulled Kim off her feet.
 
“Kim lurched sideways and punched. This time her blow connected, snapping Samantha’s face to the side. Kim yanked her held arm back.  She tried to free herself and step away but Samantha kept a firm hold on her hair. Samantha kept slapping hard, Kim tried to retaliate but Samantha’s grip on Kim’s hair and her size…she was a good three inches taller and perhaps twenty pounds heavier than Kim…meant she was able to yank Kim around. Kim hardly got a blow in.
 
“Realising that she was being knocked all over the place, Kim kicked out, striking Samantha’s shin. Samantha yelped and let go of Kim’s hair. Kim broke away and then attacked grimly with hard slaps which rained down on Samantha’s face. 
 
“Samantha returned in kind but though she was bigger and had a longer reach, she didn’t seem to be matching Kim’s ferocity. She grabbed Kim’s hair and yanked on it hoping to repeat her former success. Instead she found Kim grabbed her hair and yanked as well.  And Kim had the advantage…Samantha’s hair was longer and Kim managed to twist her hand deeper and get a better grip. That stabilised her. Samantha wasn’t able to pull then.  She had to turn with Kim. Still, when she did she managed to break Kim’s rhythm.  For a long minute the two girls traded slaps a little more evenly.  Kim made up for her smaller size and shorter reach with her greater viciousness.
 
“The girls stumbled around, each slapping hard at their enemy’s face. No, that's only half right. That's what Sam was doing, Kim was slapping too but she stabbed her fingers into Sam's armpit, the side of Sam's neck, Sam's stomach and her kidney region. Each of those stabs made Sam groan. Sure, Sam's slaps were hurting Kim too.  She gasped and groaned but it was Kim's nastiness that was working for her. Sam started to defend, that didn't work.  Kim kept on hitting her hard.
 
“Samantha paled.  She was being softened up and she knew it. She changed tactics. She pushed forward, using her weight. That surprised Kim.  She didn't realise her peril till Sam thrust her off the grass into a garden bed. Kim's heels sank into the softer ground and she stumbled back, half falling into a prickly hedge.
 
“Sam capitalised on that. Letting go of Kim's hair and slapped hard at Kim's face.  Her left hand made Kim's face spin to the side, just in time to be hit by Sam's right hand. Kim was tangled in the hedge. She seemed to want to grab onto a strong branch of it to steady herself and stand upright but she couldn't defend against Samantha's repeated blows, let alone attack.
 
“Finally Kim lurched forward, grabbed hold of Samantha's top and used it to pull herself up . She was a mess…torn skirt, ripped blouse, bleeding from all kinds of scratches and her hair still had a mass of twigs in it. She bent forward and shoved hard.  Her shoulder struck Sam's chest and pushed her back. Samantha retreated a pace or two but kept up the hard slaps. Kim ducked.  She crouched, then tackled Sam, her arms round Samantha's knees. If she'd been a bit heavier or had more traction, she'd have knocked Samantha over. As it was, Sam pounded Kim's back and ribs with slaps and punches. Kim bent further forward…she was almost on her knees…and shoved again. This time she head butted Samantha's stomach. Samantha wailed, teetered and then fell on her butt.
 
“Samantha rolled away and got up, quicker than Kim.  Jeans and sneakers are more suited to fighting than a long skirt and heels.  Kim…puffing and gasping...got up too. The two women glared at each other. They circled, each trying to find an opening.
 
“It seemed Samantha found one first.  She bounded forward and struck Kim whose heels slowed her. Samantha's slaps hit hard as the blonde danced around my girlfriend almost at will. Kim didn’t seem to be able to respond. Poor Kim was being slapped silly. She’d retreat but she couldn't move fast in her heels, and Samantha would still be slapping at her. She'd duck or weave and again her heels slowed her down, so Samantha would still be slapping at her. She parried and Samantha sidestepped, slapped at Kim's arms or shoulders or somewhere else. Kim's face was beet red.  She was gasping for air.
 
“Then Kim bobbed down.  Samantha's slap skidded off the top of Kim's head. Samantha stumbled forward. Kim's fist smashed into Samantha's gut.  Air and spit rushed out from Samantha's lungs. A moment later she groaned as the pain registered. 
 
“Kim stood up.  She was shaky on her feet.  She faltered but she sent another powerful blow to Sam's jaw. It made Sam reel back.  I couldn’t help cheering. Yes, Kim's attitude had caused the fight and yes, shed' been vicious…but then, what else is fighting about? She'd been pounded half senseless in that last minute or so, but now she was fighting back. Well…almost.“
 
Michael paused and sipped his drink. ”Kim needed a breather.  She needed time to regroup.  She'd been hit around too much. Samantha attacked again, though not as quickly and not as well, but she was attacking again. Kim defended better.  Only a few of Samantha's slaps hit. Still, those that did inflicted damage.
 
“Kim didn't seem able to score as well. Samantha was moving much faster. Samantha's confidence improved.  She closed on Kim who seemed exhausted…flt footed. Sam unleashed a hard left-right slap combo. Kim ducked slightly and the blows hit her head, but Kim's fist hammered Sam's stomach again.
 
“Then Kim stood up and let fly with her own left-right combo that pounded Sam's torso. Kim pressed her attack with several more punches, each of which got a gasp or a groan out of Sam, and made her retreat.  Yes, Kim had played her. She'd traded the painful slaps for a chance to get some punches in.
 
“Kim attacked slowly, still hampered by her heels but even more so by the punishment she'd taken. But now Sam was suffering too. She still moved more quickly than Kim but it seemed that didn't help her much.  Kim's slogging punches hit home more often and did more damage than Samantha's lighter slaps.
 
“Samantha seemed to realise this so she brought her fists up and began punching too. It didn’t have much effect.  Kim was just better at boxing.” Michael smiled wryly again. “She’s had plenty of practice.” He almost chuckled. “And it showed. Sure, Samantha began to hit and hit hard. Kim struggled for a moment. She hadn't expected this change but she adjusted to it. In one way, a punch is easier to avoid than a slap. A slap will do damage even if it misses its main target. But a punch…if it misses, it misses. Samantha didn't seem able to put her whole body behind her punches either, the way Kim does. You've seen Kim hit.  You know what I mean.”
 
I nodded.  I had seen the actress hit.  She truly punched well beyond her weight.
 
“Kim’s slugging punches worked when they hit…anyone could see they were taking their toll.  Samantha grunted and groaned when they connected, she gagged and stumbled a few times, but she was still more mobile.  She got out of Kim’s way more often than not.
 
“What I said about punches missing applied to Kim too.  And Sam capitalised on that a few times. Kim punched and Sam weaved out of harm’s way, leaving Kim extended, outstretched and not quite balanced…in short, open and vulnerable. Three times, when that happened, Sam darted in and scored with a couple of hard punches before Kim could regroup.  Twice Sam’s well-aimed left and right fists hit hard, once in Kim’s side and once in her chest. Both times, Kim staggered when the first fist hit, reeled when the second hit.  She whitened, groaned when the pain registered and staggered back a pace or two. Each time she rallied and returned fire though, warding off Samantha’s follow up attack, then immediately returned to trading punches.
 
“But the third time was different.” Michael shook his head again. His whole demeanour was low right then. “Kim was attacking.  She was breathing heavily but so was Sam.  Both were near the end of their endurance. They were each a lot slower than at the start of the fight. Sam was still faster than Kim though.  It wasn’t just the heels and sneakers any more.  Kim was battered.  Those slaps that drove her into the hedge had weakened her. I knew.  I’d seen her in fights.  I’d seen her act.  She was near collapse. But she was holding on by sheer willpower.  Gotta admire that.“
 
Michael paused and shook his head another time, then went on. “The third time, Kim tried to hit just like she’d hit Sam so often in the last few minutes.  Sam ducked to the side. Kim’s heavy blow connected with the air and she almost fell. Sam delivered a right-left double whammy into Kim’s gut. Now, you know,” Michael looked at me knowingly, his eyes downcast, “Kim can’t take much punishment there.”
 
I nodded.  I’d seen it before.  Kelly had told me too.  Kim’s belly was her Achilles’ heel.
 
“Spit and air rushed out of Kim’s mouth. The air was so cold, Kim’s face seemed wreathed in a cloud of vapour.  Then the pain hit.  Kim groaned, doubling up, almost falling to her knees. Sam could have ended the fight there, but I think she was too surprised to see Kim fold up like that. She tried to grab Kim’s hair. By some miracle Kim momentarily avoided Sam's grasp, but she wasn't fast enough. Sam tried again, got a hold on Kim's head and pulled her up.
 
“Kim croaked some horrible inhuman sound. I thought she was about to retch. But instead, when Sam hauled her upright, Kim punched back.  She hit Sam, who was utterly astonished, right on the chin.
 
“Sam’s head snapped back just as Kim swung her knee hard, striking Sam’s thigh. Sam groaned.  She stumbled back. Kim stepped back too.  Both girls looked too tired to fight on…but they did.  They slowly stumbled rather than stepped forward. Sam was dragging her leg.  She’d lost her advantage.
 
“They kept slugging it out, trading punches. Kim was just better.  More of her punches hit home and they hit harder. She mixed up her blows more.  Sam couldn’t defend against blows that seemed to hit every part of her body. Sam directed her punches, like she wanted to make each one count but in doing so, in being a bit slower and more deliberate, she gave Kim the chance to block more.
 
“Kim kept putting her weight into each blow. She shifted her barrage as Samantha weakened, hammering Samantha's middle. Sam began to defend.   She huddled up, protecting her battered stomach. She edged back. Again Kim switched her attack.  Now she hit Sam’s face and sides. Soon Sam was bleeding from a split lip, cuts to her cheek and temple. Sam’s retreat became a rout.  She stumbled back as fast as she could.  Kim just kept on hitting.
 
 “‘That’s enough Kim, you’ve beaten her. Stop it.’ I told her.
 
“’Has she,’ Kim sent another punch into Sam’s kidney region, ‘given in?’ She slugged at Sam’s cheek with a roundhouse punch that sent the taller girl staggering. ‘Is she begging for mercy?’  She aimed another blow at Sam’s stomach. It struck and seemed to almost lift Sam off her feet. ‘No, she isn’t.  She’s too stupid.’ Kim fired another punch that hit Sam’s chin. ‘After all, she’s a mere provincial.’ Samantha teetered for a moment then crumpled to the ground.
 
“Kim strutted…yes Peter, that’s the only word for it.   She was bruised, bleeding from cuts and scratches, her exquisite clothes were torn beyond repair…but she strutted.  She’d won. Her face shone with success. She put her arms round my neck. I unwrapped them. ‘Kim, we’re going back to my parents. Now.’ Others were seeing to Samantha. I walked over to them. I apologised to them and to my friends for the fight. I hustled Kim, pouting by that point, into my car. ‘You spoiled the night.’
 
“Kim looked up at me.  She pressed herself closer to me even as I held her, trying to get her into the car. Her eyes shone.  She ran her tongue over her lips. ’You're not seriously angry with me.’ It was a statement, not a question.
 
“Peter, I reddened. She squirmed against me. She thought…damn it, all women think…that we guys all think with our pricks. Well, I was about to show her I didn't. I held her, but not close, my hands on her waist, but keeping a few inches between us. I pushed her into the car. ‘Yes I am,’ I told her, ‘seriously angry. I was more than angry, Peter.  I was furious. And for the next few minutes, as I drove, I told her why…how she'd ruined the night and, for that matter, the weekend. I got around to how different she was with my parents and then asked, ‘Why can’t you behave?’
 
“And she started singing...those very words.”
 
I nodded. “Yes. It's a song from Kiss Me Kate.
 
“Peter, I was speechless…and then she went on the attack. 'It's true, what I said.  They are provincial! They’re self satisfied. They’re happy in St Louis…,successful, yes, living in a nice town.  St Louis is a great place and I'm glad you brought me here. But your friends are complacent. They’re big fish in a small pond…well, a fair sized lake to be honest. That’s what they want to be. It's not as if they’re doctors or teachers.  Size doesn’t matter to those professions. They’re accountants, lawyers. Look at your Chicago friend Malcolm.  He went to London for experience. Would anyone from a St Louis firm have that kind of experience? No! Because the firm wouldn't want that sort of experience. The partners would be worried their associate knew more than them.'
 
“Peter I started to protest. “Even if that's so you didn’t have to fight, you – ‘
 
“But she cut me off and changed tack. ‘Don't talk about it that way.  You wanted the fight.  You could have stopped me. You know that.  You could have grabbed me and pulled me back but you wanted me to fight. You get off on it, don't you?’”
 
“Well, Michael,” I spoke for the first time in a while. “She got you there.  You do, just like I do.”
 
“Well yes, “ Michael said, “But I wasn’t admitting that to her. Anyway, there's a time and place for fighting, and a party where I wanted Kim to meet and impress my old friends was neither the time nor the place. I told her the truth.  She shouldn’t have fought, that she'd humiliated me in front of my friends, that I'd wanted to show her off…yes, my so-talented, lovely actress girlfriend…and what had happened?  Peter, she'd ruined the weekend.
 
“We drove on in silence for a while, then she started again.  She put her hand on my shoulder.  'But Michael, you know I'm right.  You're better than those people.  You're more ambitious.  You want success.  You're not complacent.' Kim's voice was wavering.  It trembled. 'You're not and I'm not. That's why we went to Chicago.  Your parents aren't either.  That's why they encouraged you to go to Chicago. For some people, it doesn't matter.  Your sister -she's one of them. Nurses can be good nurses…excellent nurses…anywhere. But for some careers, like yours or like lawyers, to be in the big time you have to be in the big city…and you are.'
 
“I didn't reply. I wasn't going to take her bait.  I drove on in silence. We got to my parents’ place. She told them that she'd been in a fight…straight up, she confessed it. Well, if you can confess something defiantly. Then she asked if she could take a shower before we left. We had to drive back to Chicago. We’d been going to share the driving but I wasn't too keen on that. Not then.
 
“So…well…our trip back wasn't very pleasant. We hardly said a word the whole way…four and a half hours is a long time to be silent. Kim tried to talk, but each time she just defended herself. I wasn't interested in that…and I told her so. A couple of times she choked back sobs. I told her she was a good actress.
 
“Peter, if she'd apologised…just once…I'd have stopped and given her a hug, and probably more. It would have been all right. But as it was, well....I stopped at her place, got her bag out of the trunk and left her and it on the sidewalk. I didn't trust myself to go upstairs with her.
 
“And now Kim knows Wendy Griffiths is starting work with the firm. Kim is even more upset. She sent me back the key to my place I'd given her…in the mail. Peter, what am I going to do?”
 
I stood up.  “The first thing we’re going to do is go get another drink.  We need one. Then we’ll come back here and chat. I might call Kelly too.”
 
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Offline peccavi

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Re: Kelly and her friends. 30 Fast Workers
« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2016, 08:57:00 PM »

3 – COMMON CAUSE
 
We walked to the bar. Julie stopped me. “Just the man I want.” She stood in a ring of people. I nodded to Max as well as Hilary and Tony who seemed an item by then, and a couple of others. She introduced me to the rest whom I didn't know. “Peter Balfour here, is an example of what I mean. Meet a member of a family who owns a business. Peter and his father and brother own and operate Balfour and Sons.  They employ Tony here.” Tony nodded and waved sketchily.
 
“We need to make common cause with guys like him against the big corporations that have squeezed out small, family-run businesses. It's not your ‘Mom and Pop store’… it’s not even your small factory. It's Walmart and McDonalds, who pay wages you can't live on.”
 
 
 
“What are you saying?  We oughta ally ourselves with wannabe capitalists?” An African American woman answered with a question.  I looked at her. She looked a lot like Julie, apart from the skin colour – stocky, a little plumpish, but smaller, not quite as heavy and an inch or so shorter. Somehow she also looked fitter, her arm and leg muscles showed under her tightish clothes.
 
“Yes!” replied Julie.  “Right now, they’re just like us…dependent, wage workers, just like everyone except the one-percenter class.  It’s that tiny, ever-shrinking class that’s on top and everyone else is just expendable…disposable, without the independent of being self-employed or the protection of unions.  We…working class folks…need to get together with small and medium-sized businesses against Walmart…and NAFTA.”  She turned to me.
 
“You'll have Pat Buchanan and the sensible Republicans supporting you if you do,” I added.
 
The African American woman fixed her eyes on me.  “Not sure we’ve met. I’m Tamika.”  She went on, “ Excuse me for saying so, but you're clearly well off.  Looks like you've benefited from the Reagan Revolution…from NAFTA.  We haven't.”
 
“Oh I wouldn’t say that,” I argued.  “NAFTA’s been a disaster, even on national economic grounds.  The US Trade deficit with Mexico has blown out enormously.  It's not just jobs that have gone south.”
 
Tamika cut me off. “But you're working? Your business is making money?”
 
I nodded.
 
“Then you're not like us at all!”  She rounded on Julie.  “And nor are the wannabe capitalists…the managers, even the supervisors. Look at my ex friend Jenn Peccavi.  They made her a supervisor on the cannery line. Next  thing you know, she’s studying to 'improve herself’” The sneer in Tamika's  voice would have cracked marble.  “Now she's in a white collar job…a supervisor in accounts. Hell, she's even studying to be an accountant. She sold out. People like her always do!  They’re not like us at all and they don’t wanna be.  They want to be middle class.  She spat the term out like it was an insult – which to her, it clearly was.
 
Julie broke into her diatribe.  “Tamika, you and Zack got a home loan recently. Did you go see your local bank manager, or did you see some commission salesman? Banking used to be a job for life, and you could trust your bank manager, cuz he was going to be around for a long time.  They were middle class jobs, guys who worked their way up from tellers. Guys like us once. Not any longer. Now those folks are just as worried about their jobs as we are. Teachers, nurses, they’re all in unions now. If we got more service industries…white-collar workers…then we'd get somewhere. “
 
“Why bargain with the class enemy?” persisted Tamika.
 
“Because they're not class enemies!  And because it works! Look at FDR and how he got people employed in good jobs.”
 
“Crap! He just saved capitalism from itself…for a while, anyways. Propped up the system for a few more years.”
 
“Tamika, you're missing the point.  Peter here,” Julie pointed to me, “is a factory owner.  They make machine tools.  He's worried…he's said so…when jobs go to China or Mexico.  No factories here means nobody to buy machine tools.  Then he doesn’t have a market.  We gotta join forces with people like him. They support us!”
 
I tried to tone down the argument a little.  “The golden days were under Ike…high wages, high profits.  In those days, factory workers had good jobs, they could buy good homes, plan to send their kids to college.  When your local bank manager…like Julie said…started off as a teller. When we had bank managers. Then we really did have a big middle class…bank managers, skilled factory workers.  W e were all well off” I looked around.  The argument was attracting attention.  Michael stood quietly between Max and me.
 
“Crap!” repeated Tamika. “That didn't work for long, either!” Her voice rose, with an edge on it. She leaned forward in her chair.
 
“No,” Julie began again.  She too was louder. “The very rich fought back…Goldwater, then Reagan. We need to ally ourselves with people like him.” She pointed at me yet again.  I was starting to get uncomfortable.  Here in Fast Workers, I didn’t want to be known as ‘the boss’.
 
“Capitalists and their cronies,” spat Tamika.  “They won't help. The system needs to change.” She leaned forward , half sitting half standing, supporting herself with her hands on the arms of her chair. She glared at Julie, her face only a foot or so from the blonde.
 
“Yes it does,“ Julie went on. She tried to keep her voice lower. “And we need to persuade people like him, like bank managers, like nurses, to help us change it. Just like it was in the Depression.“
 
“Garbage!  The system has to collapse under its own contradictions.” Tamika was even louder.
 
“Stop the Marxist theory,” Julie snapped.  “The problem with you…you're so fixed, so dogmatic, so pure, that you'll never get anywhere” She was clearly angry.
 
“And you're nothing but a soft liberal!  You've sold out…just like Jenn, just like Max. Why else did you two buy out in Stokie?  So you can be all gentrified and make money! You're a lackey!”
 
“You can call me what you like, but don't insult my guy!” Julie got up and grabbed at Tamika's collar. She shook the black girl.
 
“You're just a bitch who likes to fight!” Tamika hissed.  Her arm flashed out, sweeping towards Julie.
 
“Damn right!” Julie replied, seizing Tamika's arm mid air and driving her other fist into Tamika's belly
 
Tamika groaned.  Even though she'd backed away slightly, the blow still hit hard. The girls moved into an open area, away from the tables and the dance floor. The rest of us followed.
 
The two fighters circled for a moment, then Tamika grabbed Julie's hair and yanked it hard – so hard she jerked Julie around so that the blonde's second punch, like the first aimed at her foe's gut, just kissed her side instead. Tamika returned fire with a stinging slap that hit Julie's face hard enough to snap her head to the side.  At the same moment, as if carefully planned, Tamika yanked Julie's hair again, even more forcefully.  The slap and the yank unbalanced Julie just enough for Tamika to swing her knee up and strike the blonde's curvy tummy – hard.
 
Air and spit whooshed from Julie's gut. She faltered, but she showed she was a fighter. She grabbed a fistful of Tamika's curly black hair and, stepping or stumbling back, yanked her foe along with her. Surprised, Tamika's slap hardly connected, just brushing Julie's face. Julie replied with another slap. Letting go of Tamika's hair, the blonde ducked down, driving her hand up toward Tamika' armpit. Tamika quickly let go of Julie's hair.
 
The two girls backed off stood facing each other. Tamika attacked again with light jabbing punches. Julie stood her ground, defending, dodging or brushing  the punches aside. I wondered why she wasn't attacking herself – then suddenly she was.
 
She sent an uppercut at Tamika's chin. It struck hard, rattling the African American who stumbled back, shaking her head. She looked dazed.  Again that blow was much quicker than I thought Julie could manage. The blonde followed that success with solid straight jabs.  The first few hit and hit hard, some in Tamika's chest and a couple on her face.  They knocked her back. All of them made Tamika groan.  Her face lost some colour as she realised she was being worked over. She broke away. Julie followed her, still slugging away, but Tamika began to defend better as the effect of the blow to her chin wore off.
 
Julie was still puffing.  She'd taken damage from that knee in her gut. She wasn't moving as fast as Tamika. Still, the hard jabs were hitting home.  Now it was Tamika who was defending, who was grunting, who was being slugged.
 
Tamika kicked hard again, hitting home deep in Julie's stomach. Again Julie’s attack faltered as air and spit rushed from her mouth. Tamika followed the kick with another, which hit again, doubling the blonde up. Although Julie tried to retreat, Tamika grabbed a fistful of hair; pulling her back closer to herself. Then Julie grabbed at Tamika's hair too.
 
The blonde dropped to one knee and yanked Tamika hard. The African American stumbled forward, straight into Julie’s rising head. It hammered Tamika's stomach. Tamika groaned.  Her arms flopped momentarily, enough for Julie to push up. With her hands clasped tightly around Tamika's waist, Julie rose, pushing one knee forward, then slowly got almost to her feet. Tamika struggled and kicked as, bent over Julie's shoulder, she was lifted off her feet. Her fists pounded Julie's back to no avail. Julie almost stood erect, then dropped Tamika to the floor.
 
If the floor had been tiled as it was near the bar, perhaps the fight would have ended there. But it was carpet – surprisingly thick carpet until one realised that it was probably padded as a fighting arena. As it was, Tamika gasped as she hit the floor but quickly rolled to her knees and stayed there, breathing heavily. She seemed to challenge Julie to rush in but the blonde didn’t.   Instead she moved around to her left while Tamika got to her feet.
 
Julie tried to punch again but Tamika dodged the blow and, hunkering down under Julie’s arms, swept forward as if to tackle Julie. Surprised, Julie stepped back only to realise that Tamika had other plans. The African American rose slightly, catching Julie in a bear hug. She began to squeeze the big blonde.
 
Julie tried slapping at her foe’s face and arms, she tried squirming and she tried hitting at her foe’s sides. Nothing worked. Each move Julie made only seemed to let Tamika tighten her grip. That is, until Julie swung her right hand parallel to the ground, making a knife edge and chopped hard at the left side of Tamika’s neck. Tamika yelped.  She lurched forward gagging, her grip loosened. Julie squirmed hard and Tamika’s grip loosened again. Julie’s breasts heaved as she gulped in air.
 
The African American tried to tighten her grip. Julie grabbed Tamika’s head and thrust it backwards, exposing her enemy’s neck.  Again Julie chopped at Tamika’s neck. Then the blonde brought both hands into play.  The tomahawk chops on both sides of Tamika’s neck made the African American gag, couch and stagger back, her arms slack at her sides. Julie had not only freed herself from the hold but seemed to have reversed the flow of the fight, something she proved when she plunged her fists, one after the other, into Tamika’s belly.
 
Tamika groaned.  She staggered back, stopping only when she half stepped, half fell into the crowd of onlookers. One of the guys felt her up for a moment, then pushed the still half-dazed African American back into what I was now sure was a fight space.  It only needed ropes to make it a formal ring.
 
Julie charged forward, confident of victory – too confident. Tamika capitalised on that by swinging her right arm up into Julie's chest in what was almost a clothesline, and Julie's momentum carried her straight into it. Now she staggered back, her arms flailing. But she regrouped and as a clearly tired and battered Tamika tried to renew her attack, Julie swung her hip into her foe's side. That checked Tamika's attack for just long enough for Julie to swing her knee up and ram it hard into Tamika's gut. Tamika, already suffering from Julie's belly blows, doubled up, gasping as air and spit gushed from her mouth.
 
The blonde dropped to a knee, grabbed Tamika's hair and yanked her bodily over her own shoulder. She grabbed hold of her foe's sides and slowly stood. Julie's face showed the effort it took her to hoist a struggling, kicking Tamika up and into the air. Tamika's fists pounded Julie's back but again to no avail. Julie hoisted her up high, then dropped her onto the floor.
 
Tamika flopped and lay still.
 
“You said I like fighting,” Julie’s voice was somewhere between a hiss and a gasp.  “I admitted it. So do you. The difference is, I’m better than you are!”
 
“Well done, babe!” Max congratulated her with a hug and kiss. Julie walked off to the bathrooms as some of Tamika's friends helped the battered African American up.
 
Michael rejoined me a few moments later. “I guess it's not only me who has an aggressive girlfriend.” He shook his head ruefully.
 


I thank my friends and helpers specially The Scribbler who edited it and Kimberlythesp who stars in it
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Offline TheScribbler

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Re: Kelly and her friends. 30 Fast Workers
« Reply #3 on: March 12, 2016, 01:22:50 PM »
Jenn, it's a pleasure to see this one posted.  I know it was a mammoth effort but the end result was well worth it.  Inspirational as always.

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Offline Michelle

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Re: Kelly and her friends. 30 Fast Workers
« Reply #4 on: March 13, 2016, 11:38:26 PM »
Another truly "special edition" in the continuing Kelly series...

Many thanks for sharing your wonderful work and I look forward to more!
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it" - George Santayana, 18th century Spanish philosopher

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