head. He disappeared.
âYouâll be okay, Sonny,â said Doll. âJust be cool, whatever happens.â
The monster fluttered as the men surrounded the table, half a dozen of them in jeans and work shirts. He thought of the bigmouth bozos at the smoker.
One of them said, âWhereâd he go, Dolly?â
âHe was late for church,â she said sweetly.
âReal funny. Take her.â
Doll stepped away from the table. One of the men reached out for her. Sonny slapped his arm away.
âStay out of this, Tonto.â Another armreached out for Doll.
Sonny chopped it down and shoved the man back with a forearm to his chest. Sonny blocked the way as Doll slipped into the crowd.
âOkay, young gentleman, thatâs enough, itâs over.â Hands on his shoulders. He glimpsed a dark face behind him.
Sonny pivoted and nailed it with a left, a short crisp hook to the side of a bearded black chin.
As the man crumpled, Sonny saw the badge hanging on a chain around his neck. A cop!
Clubs slammed against his legs and shoulders, one crashed against the back of his head. He went down under a swarm of bodies. It was like football, yeah, just like football, Jake, nobody walks over me, sure, take it till your time comes.
Time out.
4
H E NEVER BLACKED out. He swam through tunnels of darkness and pools of light. He was jerked to his feet, half carried up stairs, dumped into a small room that stank of sweat and smoke. He gagged. A light flashed into his eyes. A paramedic said, âHeâll be okay.â
âRedskins are tough.â Police officers filled the room.
âLook what they did to Custer.â
âLook what he did to Brooks.â The cops laughed and surrounded him. Half a dozen hands patted over his body, up his legs. Sonny reached for his wallet. His back pocket was torn and empty. The belt loop was torn too. Did the cops have the wallet? Doll?
âWhatâs your name, Tonto?â
He concentrated on slowing his breathing. His eyesight was blurred by sweat, but he could see that the room had no windows. It was bare except for a table and two chairs and a longmirror on the wall opposite the door. Too many bodies blocked the way out.
Voices battered him.
âResisting arrest.â
âStriking a police officer.â
âYou are in deep, Geronimo.â
White and black faces hovered in front of him.
âWant to go to jail?â
âScalp you at both ends in jail.â
Sonnyâs hands curled into fists. Be cool, he told himself, ride it out. But the monster was in his chest.
âSo whatâs your name, where you from?â
The copâs face bobbed into range. A straight right, then the hook. He began to raise his fists. Whatâs the difference between jail and being sent back to the Res?
The door banged open.
A cold, hard voice blew in. âYoung gentleman, donât even think about lifting your hands.â
Cops scrambled out of the way. A chunky black man swaggered in. He was holding a frosty can of soda to a bearded jaw.
âPut your hands in your pockets, young gentleman, before you mess up your life for good.â
Sonny opened his hands and dropped them.
âLeave me alone with this fool.â
âSergeant Brooks, this kidâsâ¦â
âPathetic. Leave.â He flipped the soda can to one of the cops and waited until they all filed out of the room. He kicked the door shut with his heel. âYou are pathetic. Fifteen minutes off the bus and you bought the total New York experience. Saw the whole thing. You let yourself get picked up by two hustlers who ripped off your backpack and wallet. Then you fouled up a drug bust. Must be some kind of a record.â
Sonny studied Brooks. He didnât look deranged. He didnât look much of anything. He wasnât particularly tall or heavily muscled. The beginnings of a potbelly pushed out the front of his polo shirt. I could take him out, thought