The owners slapped their dogs across the muzzle and whirled them to face one
another. They immediately began to leap and strain at their masters' grips.
"Gentlemen, release your dogs."
The dogs did not bark. For some reason, that was what Harry noted the most. They
did not even growl. They were quick little engines of silence.
Their first lunge was a miss and they snapped air. But the second time they hit
head on with the impact of .45 slugs. Codger was knocked on his back and Muncher
dove for his throat. But the experienced dog popped up its head and grabbed
Muncher by the nose. Codger's teeth met through Muncher's flesh.
Bets were called from the bleachers.
The little man in the bowler was writing furiously.
Muncher, the challenger, was dragging Codger, the champion, around the pit,
trying to make the old dog let go of his nose. Finally, by shaking his head
violently and relinquishing a hunk of his muzzle, he succeeded.
Codger rolled to his feet and jumped Muncher. Muncher turned his head just out
of the path of Codger's jaws. The older dog's teeth snapped together like a
spring4oaded bear trap, saliva popped out of his mouth in a fine spray.
Muncher grabbed Codger by the right ear. The grip was strong and Codger was
shook like a used condom about to be fled and tossed. Muncher bit the champ's
ear completely off.
Harry felt sick. He thought he was going to throw up. He saw that Big George was
looking at him. "You think this is bad, motherfucker," George said, "this ain't
nothing but a cake walk. Wait fill I get you in that pit."
"You sure run hot and cold, don't you?" Harry said.
"Nothing personal," George said sharply and turned back to look at the fight in
the pit.
Nothing personal, Harry thought. God, what could be more personal? Just
yesterday, as they trained, jogged along together, a pickup loaded with gun
bearing crazies driving alongside of them, he had felt close to George. They had
shared many personal things these six months, and he knew that George liked him.
But when it came to the pit, George was a different man. The concept of
friendship became alien to him. When Harry had tried to talk to him about it
yesterday, he had said much the same thing. "Ain't nothing personal, Harry my
man, but when we get in that pit don't look to me for nothing besides pain,
cause I got plenty of that to give you, a lifetime of it, and I'll just keep it
coming."
Down in the pit Codger screamed. It could be described no other way. Muncher had
him on his back and was biting him on the belly. Codger was trying to double
forward and get hold of Muncher's head, but his tired jaws kept slipping off of
the sweaty neck fur. Blood was starting to pump out of Codger's belly.
"Bite him, boy," someone yelled from the bleachers, "tear his ass up son.
Harry noted that every man, woman and child was leaning forward in their seat,
straining for a view. Their faces full of lust, like lovers approaching vicious
climax. For a few moments they were in that pit and they were the dogs.
Vicarious thrills without the pain.
Codger's leg began to flap.
"Kill him! Kill him!" the crowd began to chant.
Codger had quit moving. Muncher was burrowing his muzzle deeper into the old
dog's guts. Preacher called for a pickup. Muncher's owner pried the dog's jaws
loose of Codger's guts. Muncher's muzzle looked as if it had been dipped in red
ink.
"This sonofabitch is still alive," Muncher's owner said to Codger.
Codger's owner walked over to the dog and said, "You little fucker!" He pulled a
Saturday Night Special from his coat pocket and shot Codger twice in the head.
Codger didn't even kick. He just evacuated his bowels right there.
Muncher came over and sniffed Codger's corpse, then, lifting his leg, he took a
leak on the dead dog's head. The stream of piss was bright red.