'##::::'##:::'#####:::'########: VIVA LA REVOLUCION! CERDO DEL CAPITALISTA!! ##:::: ##::'##.. ##:: ##.....:: =========================================== ##:::: ##:'##:::: ##: ##::::::: THE HELOTS OF ECSTASY PRESS RELEASE #456 !! #########: ##:::: ##: ######::: ZIEGO VUANTAR SHALL BE MUCH VICTORIOUS! !! ##.... ##: ##:::: ##: ##...:::: =========================================== ##:::: ##:. ##:: ##:: ##::::::: "The Bottle Rocket Gun -- A True Story" !! ##:::: ##::. #####::: ########: by -> Cap'n Sparky !! ..:::::..::::.....::::........:: 1/21/99 !! !!========================================================================!! When I was little, there were still plenty of toys made of metal. In fact, metal toys were common. We had metal Tonka trucks, and metal toy guns. Back then, many toy guns looked like real guns. There were all kinds of toy guns back then. It was the early 80s. That was the way it was. I had all kinds of toy guns. One of them would eventually come to be the bottle rocket gun. This toy gun was an old type of gun when I was young. This type was being phased out. It was a toy version of the old west rifles. It had a lever you would pump around the trigger. It would fill a resevoir with compressed air. When you pulled the trigger the air would rush through a sort of whistle and make a ricochet noise. It would also jump in your hands, simulating recoil. You'd pump the lever, pull the trigger and pretend you were a cowboy. The gun was metal, and it was painted metallic blue, not black. It was a simple design that would pretty much work for decades. The guns were popular in my neighborhood because you could fill up the end of the barrel with dirt and shoot a shotgun spray of filth at your friends. That's also probably why they stopped making them after decades of construction. That, and the fact that they were made of metal. You could really fuck another kid up with one of these things. That happened pretty often. Living in an inner city neighborhood, we'd often beat each other with metal toys. I had this U-Haul truck, must have been 4 or 5 pounds of cheap rusted metal. I could get my little-kid hand under the front axle and wield it as an effective and balanced weapon. After a few winters in my backyard, the thing was pure, jagged, rusty evil. I did hurt one kid pretty bad with it once. One day my cool, second-hand, rusty metal cowboy gun broke. Dirt or small rocks probably got into the whistle. My brother took it apart, and as a result we had this long tube with a rifle stock. Where the air resevoir and trigger assembly used to be there was a large rectangular hole. My brother was like MacGyver on crack, only MacGyver wasn't on T.V. yet. He made a flamethrower out of a rubber hot water bottle. No shit. It was a rubber hot water bottle with a length of tube attached, and on the tube was a handle with a spoon coated with pitch. You'd put the bottle under your arm, light the pitch on the spoon and you'd push down on the bottle with your arm with all of your might. A nasty and flammable liquid would spew out the tube. It would get ignited by the pitch-fire-spoon and you could coat your friends with deadly fire. He abandoned it because it was too dangerous. The flame could ride up the flammable goop and burn the water bottle and the user. This was the kind of person he was. He was like 9 or 10 at the time. I must have been about 5. He immediately found a use for the broken cowboy gun. He sawed off most of the barrel and fit a heavy lead pipe to the end, and taped it all up in an urban camouflage pattern. You could slide a bottle rocket in the lead tube at the front and the fuse would stick out perfectly through the rectangular gap where the trigger used to be. Basically, you could aim a bottle rocket with a modicum of accuracy. Unlike the flamethrower, this weapon was actually used in combat on two occasions. My brother and two of his friends built a fort out of cardboard boxes on Freedly Street. Actually, 'street' is too kind of a description, it was nothing more than a wide alley. You could only fit a tiny car down the street, and then only if you really had to. It was the kind of place junkies would go in the middle of the night to shoot up. It was a convenient location to build a fort. He and his friends, Stan and Greg, built this wonderland of a fort. It was huge, and everything was reinforced with wood. The windows had wooden shutters on tracks. You could raise and lower the shutters easily for defense. It was a nifty hangout. On each of the shutters was a drawing of a circular face, wild hair, and a tongue sticking out. The character's name was Fortease, and his job was to torment potential attackers who couldn't get at the defenders inside. Then the bad guys came. They built a fort maybe twenty, thirty feet away. It was of the crudest possible construction. They roughly cut a hole in a box for entry, and spaced crude windows on the other three sides. The windows were simply cardboard flaps left hanging from the wall. They drew a crude hand with a middle finger on the flap facing my brother and his friends. It was a declaration of war. There were four kids on the opposing side. My brother and his two friends were outnumbered, they had no choice but to wait. The assault began quickly. The enemy forces relentlessly bombarded Fort Fortease with alley apples. I should mention that an alley apple is not a tasty fruit, it is a half of a brick. They were plentiful in my neighborhood due to the fact we had many collapsing and collapsed buildings. They made great toys and they had surprisingly good balance for throwing. If you could peg someone with one of them you could do some serious damage. We threw them at each other all the time. The roof of my brother's fort strained with the abuse. Half-brick after half-brick hit home. The ceiling began to sag with the weight, but the wooden supports held up. Then, all was quiet. The clacking of the bricks on the roof stopped. My brother tentatively peeked out through one of the windows. He saw another child's hand jutting from the enemy structure, its middle finger raised in defiance. My brother picked up the bottle rocket gun and asked Stan for ammunition. Stan obliged and crouched, ready with a pack of matches. My brother loaded the big gun and set it on a forked branch for maximum accuracy. He aimed carefully for the square window, for the beady, learing eyes of the neighborhood kids within. "Now! Light it!" he yelled to Stan. Stan lit the match with careful grace and the missile sizzled and sparked down the barrel. The shot was true. Dead on. It flew through the crude hole in the wall and a few seconds later the enemy base puffed a bit, and a white flash came from inside. There was nothing more than a low, quiet sound: a soft thud. Whisps of smoke rose. The enemy children scrambled out, covering their ears and screaming as they ran. They destroyed their haven in the process. The battle was a victory. The bottle rocket gun, a leap in inner city neighborhood technology over the classic alley apple, had won the day! The next trash day came, and the trashmen removed the enemy fort. Eventually, Fort Fortease would suffer the same fate. There was no need fort anymore. They didn't need to defend Freedly Street. No one would fuck with their base again. The bottle rocket gun was retired. It would only ever see one more use, in my hands. Across the street and around the corner from me is Memphis Street. It's not a huge street, but I wasn't allowed to cross it. In retrospect, my parents enforced that rule because that street was the dividing line between our neighborhood and Kensington, a real hell hole. On the other side of Memphis Street lurked this kid, who I called Perdue due to the uncanny resemblance he bore to the old Perdue chicken man. It's sad, in a way. He was a small child that looked precisely like and old man. Further, in a twist of perverted fate, his parents would dress him up in really nice clothes. This little Perdue bastard looked like he walked out of a GQ, Jr. Issue or something. He was a snotty bastard too. So anyhow, neither Perdue nor I were allowed to cross this street. It was the border of our domains. There were no ready alley apples nearby, so our battles were mostly crude psychological warfare. We'd curse at each other, and I'd ask him if he had an chickens to sell. I was 7 years old. I had my two friends, Chuckie, who was a little younger than me, and Jimmy, who might have been a month or two older. Jimmy had a heart condition. He had a hole in his heart. He was always afraid that someone would punch him really hard in the chest and kill him. Chuckie had little control over his bowels. He would shit himself every once in awhile. People used to tease him for it. They would say things like, "Chuckie, Chuckie with the pants so yucky!" It was sad, but he was my friend. Fortunately, Perdue and his gang didn't know that Chuckie would poop himself. They had no real ammunition except the fact that I wore glasses. The three of us were in front of the corner store. We had run out of money for video games, and we had bought a couple of 10 cent comics. They were so cheap because it was a scam. To save on the cost of sending unsold comics back to the company that printed them, distributors were supposed to tear off half the cover and send it back. They were supposed to destroy the rest of the issue. They never did, and they sold the comics really cheap to local stores which would sell them really cheap to kids. I had a big red Darth Vader light saber, the old kind. It would emit off a deep, low whistle when you'd swing it. Jimmy had a big stick of wood. My big plastic light saber, although it hit like a whiffle-ball bat, was no real match against his club. I didn't mind because with the light saber I was Darth Vader. That made me cooler than Jimmy because he had a stick. That's what the mental processes of a 7 year old child are like. I figured Perdue wouldn't give me too much trouble. My cousin had recently beat him up. My cousin was like a year or two older, and he lived in Jersey. That meant he could cross whatever streets he wanted to because his Mom and Dad didn't know which places were good and bad. Besides, he grew up in a much worse neighborhood when he was younger. He was ultra-cool and above the rules of our own parents and babysitters. Perdue didn't know when to quit though. He sauntered over to our corner, but he was across the street so he couldn't really do anything. He started yelling insults at us. I replied in kind. It got pretty heavy. The three of us yelled at the three of them. I suddenly knew that Jimmy had a bottle rocket in his waistband, and I suddenly remembered the past glories of the bottle rocket gun. Struck with inspiration, a plan quickly formed in my mind. I told Chuckie to keep yelling at them. I ran home and tore down the basement steps like a banshee, my babysitter was only mildly surprised. I always came in running down the basement and running out with toys. It was no big deal. Besides, she was cool. Once a group of kids chased me home and she splattered them with boiling water as they taunted me from my own sidewalk. I found the bottle rocket gun in the toy box under the steps, the place where old toys went to die. I felt its weight in my hands. I was elated. I found a pack of matches and we went running back. Along the way I loaded the bottle rocket gun. I aimed it carefully, I didn't have a wooden crutch like my brother had... The last thing Perdue said before Jimmy lit the fuse was, "What're ya gonna do, shoot us with a toy gun?" The launch seemed to take forever, I was afraid my aim would fail, a million doubts flew through my head. Finally, the projectile cleared the barrel and sputtered along, blowing out sparks in its wake. It hit the white screen door behind them and bounced off. It sputtered in circles on the ground like a wounded bird. Perdue and company immediately turned tail and fled, screaming. The rocket exploded, leaving a black sooty starburst on the door. Within seconds, an inhabitant of the house, an older teenage girl, was at the door yelling at us. We ran, basking in the glow of victory. Perdue was forgotten within days. He had lost his nerve. He knew that we had won the arms race. He just couldn't compete. The bottle rocket gun was never fired again. My brother dismantled it when he was in high-school. He carried the lead pipe half in his schoolbag in case he was ever jumped by kids from Daniel Boone High, who he shared the trolley with on the way home from school. The bottle rocket gun is no more than a fond memory these days. !!========================================================================!! !! (c) !LA HOE REVOLUCION PRESS! #456, WRITTEN BY: CAP'N SPARKY - 1/21/99 !!