feet away, a shotgun across his thighs.
âWell,â Timmy said. âTruth is, I ran into a little hiccup.â
Burton crossed his arms, squared his shoulders and hips. âSomething you couldnât handle?â he asked, his voice hard with disapproval.
âIâm waiting to see,â Timmy said.
âWaiting to see if you can handle it?â
âWell, yeah,â Timmy said with a wide, open smile. âActually, itâs kind of funny you put it that way.â
When the big man stepped back toward the window, the movement was so casual, so relaxed, that neither Oestra nor Burton recognized what was happening. Timmyâs thick fingers grabbed the back of the leather chair, pulling back and down fast and hard. Oestra twisted trying to keep from falling and also bring the shotgun to bear at the same time, managing neither. He spilled to the floor, Timmyâs knee coming down hard on his neck. Oestraâs muffled roar was equal parts outrage and pain. Timmy reached down and ripped the manâs right ear off, then punched down twice, three times, four. Burton ran for the back bedroom. There wasnât much time.
Unable to use it with Timmy on his neck, Oestra dropped the shotgun and twisted, trying to get his arms and legs under himself, trying to get the leverage to push Timmy back. Timmy reached down and hooked his finger into the gunmanâs left eye, bracing the head with his knee and turning his wrist until he felt the eyeball pop. Oestraâs screams were wilder now, panic and pain taking over. Timmy let the pressure up, scooted to the left, and picked up the abandoned shotgun. He fired once into Oestraâs head and the man stopped screaming.
Timmy trotted across the room, shotgun in one hand. Burton boiled out of the bedroom, pistols in either fist and teeth bared like a dogâs. The front window shattered. Timmy ducked through the brick archway into the kitchen, shifted his grip on the shotgun, and swung it hard and low, leading with the elbow like a cricket player at the bat as Burton roared in after him. The sound of the connection was like a piece of raw steak being dropped on concrete. Burtonâs feet flew out from under him, but the momentum of his rush carried him stumbling into the space beyond. Timmy lowered the shotgun toward the manâs head, but Burton whirled, dropping his own guns and grabbing the shotgunâs barrel. The smell of burning skin was instantaneous. Timmy tried to pull back, but Burton kicked out. His right foot hit Timmyâs knee like heâd kicked a fire hydrant, but Timmy still stumbled. The shotgun roared again, and the refrigerator sprouted pocks of twisted metal and plastic. Burton twisted, pulling himself in close. Too close for the shotgunâs long barrel. He hammered his elbow into Timmyâs ribs twice and felt something give the third time. Timmy dropped the shotgun, and then they were both down on the floor.
They grappled, caught in each otherâs arms, each man shifting for the position that would destroy the other in a parody of intimate love. The fingers of Burtonâs left hand worked their way under Timmyâs chin, digging at his neck, pushing into the hard cartilage of his throat. Timmy choked, gagged, pulled back the centimeter that was all Burton needed. He pulled his right arm up into the gap, braced himself, twisted, and now Timmyâs arm and head were locked. Burton gasped out a chuckle.
âYou just fucked the wrong asshole,â he hissed as Timmy bucked and struggled. âYour little cripple boyfriend? Iâm gonna burn him down for days. Iâm gonna find everyone you ever loved and kill them all slow.â
Timmy grunted and pushed back, but the effort only made Burtonâs lock on him tighter.
âYou thought you could take me, you dumbfuck piece of shit?â Burton spat into Timmyâs ear. âYou thought you were tougher than me ? I owned your momma, boy.