the War because these dregs, these nothings, these no ones,

these pieces we sent in to be felt up and torn up and have things

stuck in them hate the War. The peace boys laughed at me

when they found out I was hurt. It was funny, how some

bourgeois cunt couldn’t take it. They laughed and they spread

their legs and they fingered themselves. I w asn’t the one who

told them. I never told them. I couldn’t speak anym ore at all; I

was dumb or mute or however you say it, I didn’t have words

and I w ouldn’t say anything for any reason to anyone because I

was too hurt and too alone. I got out o f jail after four days and I

walked on the streets for some days and I said nothing to no

one until this nonviolence woman found me and made me say

what happened. She was a tough cookie in her ow n w ay which

was only half a pose. She cornered me and she w ouldn’t let me

go until I said what happened. Some words came out and then

all the ones I had but I didn’t know how to say things, like

speculum which I had never seen, so I tried to say what

happened thing by thing, describing because I didn’t know

what to call things, sometimes even with m y hands showing

her what I meant, and when it was over she seemed to

understand. The call girl got a jail sentence because the ju dge

said she had a history o f prostitution. The pacifists didn’t say

how she was noble to stand up against the War; or how she

was reformed or any other bullshit; they just all shivered and

shook when they found out she had been a call girl; and they

ju st let her go, quiet, back into hell; thirty days in hell for

trying to stop a nasty war; and the pacifists didn’t want to

claim her after that; and they didn’t help her after that; and they

didn’t want her in demonstrations after that. They let me drift,

a mute, in the streets, just a bourgeois piece o f shit who

couldn’t take it; except for the peace woman. She seemed to

understand everything and she seemed to believe me even

though I had never heard o f any such thing happening before

and it didn’t seem possible to me that it had happened at all.

She said it was very terrible to have such a thing happen. I had

to try to say each thing or show it with m y hands because I

couldn’t sum up anything or say anything in general or refer to

any common knowledge and I didn’t know what things were

or if they were important and I didn’t know if it was all right

that they did it to me or not because they did it to everyone

there, who were mostly whores except for one woman who

murdered her husband, and they were police and doctors and

so I thought maybe they were allowed to even though I

couldn’t stop bleeding but I was afraid to tell anyone, even

myself, and to m yself I kept saying I had m y period, even after

fifteen days. She called a newspaper reporter who said so

what? The newspaper reporter said it happens all the time

there that women are hurt just so bad or worse and remember

Вы читаете Mercy
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