“My ear hurts like hell, and I don’t even know what she did to the side of my face, but I’m alive.”
“Good.”
Sophia bolted, and there were only two ways to go – through me, or past Brian.
Well, I think it’s pretty obvious which way she’d pick.
She chose the easy road, dashing toward me, and I lunged for her, aiming to grab her, slow her down enough for Brian to step in.
Except she was faster than I’d anticipated, proving her position on the track team wasn’t just for show, and even my last-ditch effort at grabbing her wrist fell short.
The leopard can run at up to 58 kilometers per hour. This black panther is outta here.
Brian and I gave chase, and were stopped when the guy from the front counter emerged and stepped partway between us and Sophia.
Seriously, dude. Not helping.
“What’s this?” he looked between us. Behind him, Sophia turned to face us, assessed the situation and then backed up a few steps with the old man’s back was turned to her.
“She attacked me,” I said.
To be fair, usually the person running away isn’t the attacker, unless they took something.
“Looks that way, sure, but the girl said it was justified, that you stole something from her on the bus.
Seriously, dude?
Asked me to stay at the counter and turn up the volume on my show while she got it back.”
And here I thought you weren’t the trusting type – turns out you’re straight up gullible, and also quite irresponsible.