THE SECOND DAY . . .
 
(Saturday, June 13, morning)
 
CÉCE:
 
My mother, Carmella Vaccuccia, is insane. Would you name your daughter Céce, especially when you know it means chickpea? You say it like chee-chee. Like Vaccuccia isn’t bad enough. It means little cow.
Carmella just has to go to Costco, because everybody needs sixty-two thousand rolls of toilet paper and four assemble-it-yourself closets to store them, all to save a nickel and a half, even though the closets never come out right because they cheat you on the screws.
I tell her, “Carmella, I have a bad feeling about this one, I swear.”
“Babe, we’re not gonna crash, I swear.”
We borrow Vic’s car, more rust than ride. On the way back from Costco this ninety-six-degree morning, the Vic-mobile’s air conditioner craps out. Ma swerves to avoid hitting a sign that says AVOID SWERVING. The tire blows, and she plows the wall.
I look at her with slitted eyes.
She winks at me. “You don’t have it.”
“I do.”
“It isn’t even real, sister.”
“It is.”
ESP. Grumpy had it—my grandfather. The gift skipped over Ma, so I bear the curse doubly, I’m sure of it. For example, my neighbor’s cat Lola? Thing was looking at me weird one day, and I thought to myself, That cat is gonna die, and it did, squashed by a Prius in silent mode. Swear to God. It was like a year and a half later when chica became wheel grease, but still.
We pull out the toilet paper, Ma’s smashed beer, everything covered in hand soap and Heinz, to get to the jack and the slippery spare. Ma’s like me with the big rack, bent over the tire to show her cleavage to the world. This little chump in a Benz convertible yells out the window, “Yo baby, you got some junk in that trunk,” which around here means you have a big ass. He could be talking to either of us. Trucks are about to cream us because there’s no shoulder for a loser to swap her loser tire. Ma’s laughing. “Babe?”
“Yes, crazy lady?”
“Life is gorgeous.” That smile. Her pimp gold caps. She, like, dated this dentist once, I don’t even want to know. The woman is a mental.
We bring the car back to Vic. “Cannot tell you how sorry I am about the baked ketchup stink,” Ma says.
Vic shrugs. “Don’t sweat it.”
“It’s a potent scent, Vic.”
“Potent is good.”
“I’m gonna get the crashed part fixed, babe.”
“Nah, leave it,” Vic says. “Adds character. Anybody up for some Wiffle ball?”
“Always,” Anthony says. He’s working with us now at the Too. He grabs the bat and heads for the alley.
Peeking out of his back pocket is a picture of the American flag and that damned army brochure he’s been thumbing the past few weeks. The recruiter called the house the other day and left a message for him. I deleted it.
I can hear them out there, Ant and Vic, talking about it between pitches. “Should I do it?” Anthony says.
“Family is the most important thing,” Vic says, never mind Vic has no family except us. He leaves out the I know what I know and You need to do this. Because Anthony doesn’t need to do this, and everybody knows this except Anthony. Vic’s a vet. He did two tours in Vietnam.
“So, you’re saying I shouldn’t do it, then?” Ant says.
“Whatever you do, it’s the right decision,” Vic says.
“That’s not helping me much,” Ant says.
“It isn’t meant to.” Vic throws a moon ball, and Anthony creams it.
He better not do it. Great harm will befall him. I will be the perpetrator. I swear.
 
Lunch shift is hell. The restaurant is seven thousand degrees because like Vic’s so-called car, his dive joint isn’t hospitable to working air-conditioning. Plus there’s my lip. I burned it on a slice and it looks like the herp. Here I am walking up to the giant table with all the cutie-pies from the fastpitch league. “For your dressing, you want French, Russian, or creamy ranch?”
The guys are wincing as they try not to look at my mouth.
I suck my lip to hide it and head back to the kitchen to hang my order ticket. I nod to this dude waiting for his take-out. “Howya doin’, Derek?”
“Super, Céce,” he says, but his eyes say, Except I just completely lost my appetite at the sight of that pus-leaking bubble on your lip.
 
Lunch shift ends, and I’m sitting with my butt in the ice machine as I turn my crummy SAT II bio workbook upside down to read the answer I got wrong.
Anthony hangs his apron as he swings out the back door.
“Where you going?” I say.
“Buy running shoes.”
Running shoes? What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Shoes you run in.”
 
An hour and a half later, we’re gearing up for dinner shift. Ant runs into the kitchen, tying his apron. “I ship out in two weeks,” he says. Like he won the mega on a quick pick.
“Thought you were going out to buy running shoes?” I say.
“I did,” Ant says.
“As you swung by the recruiting station?”
“After.”
“My one and only brother slips out between lunch and dinner shifts and signs an army contract? How is this possible?
“Two weeks.” Ma nods. She smiles and winks, which means inside she’s weeping. “No college, huh, babe?”
“When I get back.”
Except he’s not coming back. I feel it. He’s going to die over there.
He got into a good school too, was supposed to start this fall, nice financial aid package because 1.a., we’re broke, and 2.b., Anthony was an all-state quarterback.
Ant nods to Vic. “What do you think, Vic?”
Vic pats Anthony’s shoulder. “Proud of you,” he sighs. He gets back to mumbling over one of his stupid crosswords. “Prescient.”
My girl Marcy is ready to slide out of her crappy polyester waitress skirt as she drools over Anthony. “Army uniforms are hot,” she says.
I go out of my way to get her a job here, knowing full well she’s the suckiest waitress alive after getting fired from two other places, and she pays me back by macking on my brother, in front of me, no less? She was voted eleventh-prettiest in our grade in a Facebook poll, never lets anybody forget it, uses tanning spray daily because she has this idea that orange skin will maintain her ranking. The sucky waitress thing isn’t her fault, though. Her left arm is messed up from this, like, freak childhood accident. She has enough nuts and bolts in her elbow to open up a Lowe’s. You kind of need two arms to be a rock star waitress, so we all cut her a ton of slack. Poor Marcy. She always wears long sleeves. She’s like my only friend who’s my age. One’s enough. I can barely stand myself at this age.
Ant nods to me. “Howya doin’, kid?”
“I hate you.”
My brother is leaving me alone with crazy Carmella to go get his ass shot off in the desert. I need dessert. Cheesecake. Now. I sneak into the walk-in fridge and hunker behind the Parmesan wheel and scarf a slice.
The door opens, and this guy comes in, kind of tall, clean cut, definitely nice-looking, but there’s something wrong with him. He strikes me as both wounded and perhaps a little dangerous. His eyes. He’s got a dark sparkle working there. He sees me behind the Parmesan wheel, and he freezes. I freeze too, cheesecake two inches from my blistered mouth.
“Sorry,” he says. He drops his eyes and backs up.
“Foh whah?” I say, a plug of cheesecake in my mouth.
“Just need some grated for the takeout.” Eyes on the floor.
I scoop some Parmesan into a to-go cup and hand it to him. “New delivery guy?”
He nods, but he won’t look at me. “Hoping to get promoted to dishwasher.”
“But don’t delivery guys make more money than dishwashers ?”
“I believe so,” he says.
Wha? “Céce,” I say.
“I know,” he says. “Tony told me.”
“You got a name?”
“Yep.” Like five seconds pass. “Sorry about that. Mack.” I nod. “Mack, I don’t have herpes.”
“How’s that?” His eyes flick to my mouth and then away.
“It’s a burn blister.”
“I see,” he says.
“Pizza.”
He nods, head down, eyes to the side. “I’m real sorry for your pain.” He looks into my eyes for a sliver of a second and then his eyes go back to the floor and he backs out like a vampire stalking in rewind.
Burn blister. Dude wasn’t even looking anywhere near my lip. I’m an idiot.
 
We’re in the bathroom. I’m all about the Blistex and Marcy is doing her bit to keep the eyeliner companies afloat. “See the new delivery guy?” I say.
“He’s weird.”
“He won’t look at you.”
“He won’t look at me,” Marcy says. “And what’s up with the way he talks? You ask him a question, and there’s this pause before he answers. I was like, ‘’Scuse me, but do you know what time it is?’ And you know what my hero says? ‘Yep.’ ”
“You ask him for the time when we have a clock on every wall?”
“I was trying to get him to sleep with me, Céce, duh. So I ask for clarification, speaking big and slow for the lip reader crowd: ‘What, time, is, it?’ And he pulls this cheap loser watch from his pocket—a watch, like who wears watches anymore?”
“He wasn’t wearing it, you just said.”
“And he’s looking at the watch, and it’s like ‘Well,’ pause, ‘it’s about twenty-seven minutes past four. Or, no, wait,’ pause, ‘it’s twenty-two past five.’ ”
“He’s shy.”
“He’s slow. Either that or he’s huffing rubber cement.”
“He totally looks like Matt Dillon from The Outsiders.”
“I know,” Marcy says. “It’s criminal, his gorgeousness.
Thank God he’s stupid. If he was hunky and smart? I’d never have a chance.”
“Who says you have one now?”
“He’s the type to screw anything, trust me. Total player.”
“Here’s what I know about him,” Ma says from the stall.
“He’s a nice guy.” She comes out smiling, but you can tell she’s been bawling.
I. Am going. To kill. Anthony.
“How can you tell he’s nice when he’s only working here for like thirty seconds, Mama V.?” Marcy says. “For all we know, he could be dealing meth to kindergartners, and the delivery boy thing is his cover job.”
Ma rests her arm over Marcy’s shoulders and kisses the Marce-arella’s fake tan forehead. “He’s nice because Anthony says he’s nice.”
 
We wrap dinner shift, and we’re cleaning up the kitchen. Ma wants to talk with Anthony at the bar. “Mack?” Ant says, spinning a pizza. “Do me a solid, walk my sis home?”
I roll my eyes. “I’m fine.”
Mack is all about polishing the sink nobody is ever going to see way behind the dishwasher there. Freddy, our stoner dishwasher, did what he always does: Freaked and disappeared just when the rush hit. Mack jumped in and doubled on delivery, and he rocked it. He takes off his apron and waits at the door, holding it open for me, looking down at his sneakers.
Marcy struts by, swinging her falsies. Mack doesn’t look. Marcy makes her fingers into an L behind his back and mouths Looooser.
002
 
“You live around here?”
“Yep,” he says.
“I see. Where?”
“Downhill.”
“I see. How do you like Vic’s Too, as opposed to the now defunct Vic’s?”
“I like it,” he says.
“Good. Good.”
Defunk prob’ly doesn’t mean what I think it means, right? Deodorized?”
“Huh?”
“Nothin’. Sorry.”
“For what?”
He shrugs.
“My mother thinks you’re a really hard worker.”
No reaction.
“She was singing your praises to Vic.”
He gulps, eyeing the cracks in the sidewalk. “Nice laugh your mom has.”
“She’s a wack job. What school you go to?”
He frowns. “I dropped.”
“Dropped out?”
He nods.
“Oh.” I trip on a sidewalk crack.
He catches my arm and keeps me on my feet. Even now he won’t look at me.
“Thanks,” I say.
“Yep.” He takes his hands away fast. His hands are strong.
The hot breeze blows back the trees, and overhead is this minor miracle. A bright light arcs across the sky, but really slowly. I point it out through the glare of the streetlights. “Slowest shooter ever.”
“It’s a satellite,” the boy says. “Tony told me.” He’s tracking it. His eyes are big and dark brown in the streetlights.
“You believe my brother?” I say. “Signing up like that?”
“Your brother’s a really good dude.”
“I’m gonna murder him. You have kind of an accent.”
“Texas.”
“Just a little bit. It’s nice, I mean. Sorry.” I put my hand on his arm the way I always do to people when I want to fake sincerity, except with this Mack, I find I am sincere: I do like his accent, and I am sorry if I in any way hurt his feelings, as I suspect they’ve been hurt enough. Yes, he’s wounded, definitely.
He flinches at my touch, not violently, but like when you collect sparks crossing the carpet to pick up the empty beer can your loser mother left in the middle of the floor. I take my hand away from Mack’s arm. This guy thinks I’m a freak. I suck my lip to hide my pustule.
Dog. Pit bull. Running at us.
I freeze.
“He’s all right,” Mack says.
I make a noise somewhere between a screech and a moan and hide behind Mack.
Mack goes “Tst!” and the dog stops and cocks its head. “Wait,” he says, makes his voice deeper to do it, says it quietly. “Sit.”
The dog sits.
Mack flicks his hand, and the dog trots off, wagging its tail.
I’m still shaking. “How’d you do that?”
“He didn’t mean anything but to say hello.”
“But how’d you make him stop?”
“His ears were back easy, and his eyes were soft.”
“Huh?”
“Nothin’.”
“Thanks.”
He shrugs, studies his sneakers.
“Wow,” I say.
“Nah,” he says.
We walk, and after a bit, I don’t feel the need to fill the quiet. I keep sneaking peeks at him. First peek: nice face to frame those intense eyes, nose on the big side. Second peek: nice hair, thick, keeps it short. Third peek: good shape, skinny. Long legs.
I can’t help but wonder what it would feel like to hold this boy’s hand.
No. Friend material. Not even. Why would he want anything to do with me? He’s totally hot, could get somebody much better looking than me. Still, he can’t even look at me? Gotta be the lip.
We approach the rotting, double-mortgaged vinyl-sider that is my abode. The Vic-mobile is parked by the dead hydrant in front of our house. I smell the hand soap and ketchup wafting out of the smashed trunk a half block away. Ma and Vic are out on the porch. Vic slurps coffee over a crossword and Ma sips her cheap beer. Carmella salutes us with her tallboy. “C’mon in, Mack. I won’t mind if you sip half a cup of beer. Just don’t tell your mother.”
Mack waits at the curb. “Better get going,” he says.
“I have cornbread in the kitchen,” Ma says. “You’ll love it.”
“Totally burned,” I whisper to him. “She has this idea that starting up a cornbread business is going to get her out of insane credit card debt. We’re in the trial stages.”
“Yeah, nah, I gotta go.” He heads downhill.
Smack me, why don’t you? I spin to Ma and Vic. “What’s wrong with that kid?”
“He’s perfect,” Ma says.
“Ten letters, second is e, to make a net or network,” Vic mumbles over his puzzle.
“Reticulate,” I say.
“Atta girl.” Vic licks his pencil and scribbles it in.
I downloaded this vocabulary-builder thing for the gifted and talented test. You take it over the summer. Two parts, multiple choice and essay. I’m no genius, but when I’m not working I’m home studying, and I have a ninetythree average, so I have a shot at the multiple choice. But the essay scares me. You have to tell them about your gifts and talents and goals. My only goal so far is not to end up like my mother: never married, twice knocked up and ditched, alcoholic with crippling bunions because at forty she’s been waiting tables at Vic’s Too since she was my age. The only gift I have is ESP, but I can’t write about that because people put you in the psycho slot if you think that kind of thing is real. If you kill the G and T, you can transfer to a rock star high school. That would get me into a decent college and after that a half-decent suburb, which one I don’t care, as long as it’s far away from here, preferably something with off-street parking and mature shrubbery that screens out the stinking world. I grab a sleeve of Oreos and go upstairs to study. I have to find a gift or talent between now and that stupid test.
That Mack dude is gifted. I feel it in my gut. My ESP drives me insane.
 
(Saturday, June 13, late night)
MACK:
 
I stole looks. First was her hair, long and loopy and pulled back. Second, she has the prettiest face, open-like and uplooking. Third time I looked she was studying that satellite and I saw her eyes, deep brown, almost black. She has these little scars on her chin. I like that. When a lady isn’t perfect, she’s a lot more perfect, I believe.
I bet when you hold hands with a girl that cool you wonder if it’s possible you’re going to levitate like one of them monks I saw on a TV commercial once, which don’t you wish that was real?
I head downhill and cut along the highway, and of course they’re at it again. The dog fighters. At the end of the alley. They got it going on in the back of a van with the seats ripped out. I see through the back doors left open. Men drinking forties and throwing cash and jawing into their phones. And the dogs.
It’s not loud at all. Pits don’t bark much. They duck and twist like Galveston lightning till they clamp on at each other’s throat. They try to roll each other, but neither dog goes over. They sway. Imagine slow dancing with a bear trap locked on to you. The men kick the dogs and stick them to make them madder. The dogs stay frozen like that, bound by their teeth.
I’m running at that van, tell you what, let them pop me. I reach into my pocket like I’m heavy with a pistol. My other hand is up like it’s badged. “Yo, freeze.”
The van jerks out of its idle and squeals away. They kick the loser dog out the back doors as they go. She’s gasping in a puddle of old rain and mosquitoes and grease runoff from a leak in the Dumpster.
I stroke the dog’s muzzle. Her tongue hangs long in fast panting. Her head is heavy in my arms. Her front left leg is cut. Pouch under her jaw too. Her eyes are rolled back. If she dies, I’ll bury her in the park where nobody can mess with her. Up in the hills, where if you slit your eyes it’s like you aren’t even in the city.
I don’t understand violence. I don’t understand why it’s got to be. And why does it have to be in me? I get so mad sometimes I could cut the world at the neck. A baby in a tenement cries out and cries on.
I pinch a sheet hanging from a fire escape and make a sling of it and scoop the dog. She’s forty pounds, just where they want them for fighting. The small ones are the fastest. I see a lot of old scars. Going to be hard to rehab her, get her so she doesn’t try to fight other dogs.
Here I am huffing and puffing along the highway overlook with this dog in a bloody sheet sling. Yet another truck crashed on the blind bend of the on-ramp just ahead, honking, fumes, feels like August instead of June. Gluey. I don’t do real good in the humidity. Nobody does, but me less than most. I get a little hair-trigger.
This dude guns up the exit ramp in a Mercedes convertible, new, black pearl. He swings hard into the gas station and near about clips my dog, not to mention me.
I don’t say a thing, but I must be giving him the eyes, because after he sizes me up as trash, he flips me off, slow style, like what are you gonna do about it? He does a double take on the bloody sling and the dog, frowns, revs to the gas pump. MD plates.
I’m wrapped in blood, and he leaves me? This man should not be a doctor. This man should not be.
Everything gets real quiet, like you mute the TV, see? Then there’s the hiss of radio static. It comes on so bright and loud, I’m deaf and fighting blindness.
I follow this doctor. Nice clothes. Phone to his ear. He’s jawing all loud and proud like rich folks do. But I don’t hear what he’s saying. I don’t hear a thing but the hissing now. I’m grinding my teeth to keep from roaring out. The street shakes.
The doc does a double take on me, and I see in his eyes that he knows I’m going to cut him. I look down. My knife is in my hand. Dog is dangling under my arm, whimpering. I run my lock-blade tip over the doc’s sparkly black paint job. I start at the back quarter panel, head toward the driver’s-side door, toward him.
The Mercedes guns away without gassing up.
The radio static takes a while to fade. I walk a little, but my legs are weak. Have to sit. Practically fall to the curb. I’m empty. I think about what I almost did, and I want to be anybody else so bad. Being anger’s slave is nowhere to be. I don’t know. That static. If it was a real thing, like a piece of cancer, I would cut it out myself.
The dog trembles on me. Have to get her inside. That’s the thing about dogs: They take your mind off everything. My legs are still shaking. I can’t carry this girl home. And no way a cabbie will let me put a bloody dog into his Chevy. I don’t have a phone. Somebody ripped the receiver off the pay phone, and I have no quarters anyway, and nobody to call. Except maybe Tony. You ever need me, I’m there for you, day or night, he said to me once. But most folks just say that.
I don’t know how long it is before this dude pulls over. “You all right?”
“Fuck away from me, man.” Dudes that pull over try to mess with me sometimes.
“I bring peace, friend,” he says. “God’s blessings.”
“You better drive on, friend.” I side-eye him.
He’s staring real hard into my eyes, and I guess I look as messed-up as I feel, because he says, “Get in the car, and I’ll take you to the hospital.”
“Leave. Me. Be. Last time.”
“The dog. What happened? Did it get hit?” He’s got the Jesus sticker on his bumper and the cross hanging from the mirror.
“Just let me use your phone, man.” I close my eyes. “Please.”
I can’t even get myself up from sitting on the curb, and he has to get out of the car to hand it to me. I pull the piece of takeout bag Tony wrote his number on from my wallet. I keep it next to this old picture of my mom. Her face is kind of worn off, but you can see what she was like, that she was the goodness.
“Tone?”
“Mack?”
“Sorry to wake you, man.”
“Nah, man, I’m—I was awake anyway. What’s up, buddy?”
 
Tony comes with Vic’s car. His hair is all flat on one side of his head and standing up off the other. He had to be out cold after working that double today, on his feet fourteen hours. He studies the dog, then me. “Mack, it’s gonna be okay, buddy. I promise.” Puts his hand on my shoulder. Then he makes to scoop the dog.
She gets growly, and that snaps me out of feeling sorry for myself. “I got her.” I scoop her and sit in the front seat. Tony runs the belt out for me to take it. I strap me and my pittie girl in, and Tony drives us to where I live.
 
Our spot is in the basement. Old man is out at the bar. Left two radios going. One has the ballgame loud. The other is on soft with old-style music.
I turn them both off.
Near-empty quart of Boone’s Farm side-lies on the couch. I make to hide it.
“Mack,” Tony says, “forget the bottle. Let’s take care of the dog.”
I grab towels and peroxide, cool water jug from the fridge. Tony carries that stuff. My strength is back mostly, and I carry the dog. We head for the roof. I have the keys to the service elevator. The old man is the janitor of this big old tenement. Most of the tenants in here are veterans and folks in rehab and sad nice folks like that. The kind who don’t mind if you bring in a sick dog, even if it’s against the rules of having no pets.
Elevator clunks Tony and me and my pit bull girl up twelve flights. She’s panting crazy. I check her paws—sweating. Means she’s terrified.
We walk the fire stairs the last flight, to the roof. Tony takes a second to study the view. You can see the park from up here, in the slots between where the line-dried sheets jig. The pigeons scatter and resettle. “They let you pet their heads with your thumb sometimes,” I say.
“No, they let you pet their heads.”
“Yo, Tony, man. Thank you, man.”
“Thank you, brother.”
“For what?”
“For this night. It’s a gift.”
“How do you mean?”
He doesn’t say. He helps me get the dog inside the hutch—or that’s what I call it. It’s the housing for the elevators, to protect the engines that drive the cables. It’s cinderblock and of a fair size, maybe as big as a two-room apartment. The engines are in the back, and there’s a small janitor’s workshop in the front. I like to hunker here. Sleep here sometimes too, especially after the old man comes in from a mean drunk. I like the hum and whir of the elevator cables.
I built a pen of chicken wire scraps I found in a construction site. Okay, I pinched them. But I had to, because I didn’t have money, and I needed the wire, so that made it all right. It says you can do that in the Bible. I fenced the whole roof five feet high with it. I recuperate my dogs here. “When this one is good again, I’ll ask my dog-walking customers if they know anybody looking for a nice pit bull. If she lives,” I tell Tony.
“She’ll live, buddy. With you taking care of her, I’m sure of it.”
“She’d be a good dog, you know? For your moms maybe, while you’re away.”
“My moms, huh?” His eyebrows go up and he smiles. “You like her, right?”
“She’s real nice.”
“No, I mean do you like her like her?”
“Your moms?”
“Céce, bud. Yeah, I can tell: You’re crushin’ on her.”
“What? Nah. Not that I don’t like her. I like her, but not like I like her like her.”
“Why not?” Tone says.
“I could never disrespect you like that.”
“You’re funny, man. Anyway, Céce’s terrified of dogs.”
“I kind of saw that.” I tell him about the dog who came up to us on the way home. “But I could fix her fear, you know? This dog here would be real good for her.”
“Then I guess you’d better try to get her to take the dog, right?” Tony pulls his phone and holds it out to me. “Call her.”
“It’s two fifteen in the morning—wait, ten after three.”
“I guarantee you she’s awake, pretending she’s studying while she’s watching Polar Express.” Tony starts to call, but I clap his phone shut.
“Look, man, she’s got to look a hell of a lot prettier than she is now before I’m ready to make that call.”
“My sister or the dog?”
“What? No no, your sister, man. I mean your dogmy dog. This here dog’s got to look as pretty as your sister is what I’m saying.”
“So you do think she’s pretty.”
“I’ll shut up.”
“Don’t. It’s fun watching you twist.”
“I need to rehab her first, Tone, my Boo here.”
“Boo?”
“What I name all my dogs, boy or girl. Tony man, sorry, man, I swear: When the dog’s all mended and trained, then I’ll reach out to Céce. You can’t rush these things.”
“Of course you can,” he says. “That’s the best way, bud. Crash hard and fast. Nothing like it.” He sighs and helps me wash my Boo. We brush her down with a peroxide towel and lay her out on a clean blanket. I get into the pen with her. Tony sits against the far wall. The moon is on him when the clouds aren’t dunking it. “Man, she’s tough-lookin’ though, huh?” Tony says. “That big pit bull head? Massive.”
“My favorite kind.”
“Seriously?”
“I love pits the most. They’re true. Don’t listen to what everybody says, that they like to attack folks. You’ve got more of a chance of a golden retriever turning on you.”
Right.”
“Serious. Pits are bred not to bite their handlers, especially in the heat of battle. If you torture them and bring out the fight in them, they’ll be dog-aggressive, sure, but even so, most always they stay human-kind. You’ve got to go a long way into evil to turn a pit against people. They forgive easy as rain falls.”
“I heard they cry like people. Like they tear up.”
“No dogs cry tears. A pit bull’s jaw doesn’t lock either. Tell you what, though?”
“Tell me what.”
“I seen pitties so sad and soulful. You see this girl’s eyes, big and wondering? She feels real deep. You know what this girl wants, the only thing? To give and get love. Right, girl? Right Boo?”
“She’s cocking her head there, huh? She likes that name.”
“Best thing about pits is they take in the fun. They’re the clown of the dog world. They have a ton of energy, which is why you need to exercise them a bunch and train them strict, and I do too. I include training free when I walk them.”
“How much you charge?”
“Buck an hour.”
“We need to get you a business manager,” he says.
“That’s all folks around here can afford. You string six dogs at once, you do all right. Sometimes the walk lasts two hours too, because I’m having so much fun I lose track of time.”
Tony nods. “I’ve never seen you like this.”
“Like what?” I hate when I let my softness show. Soft gets you killed.
“I think you need to let me help you pay for this dog training class. Just let me finish. As an investment, I’m talking. You’ll rock the class, start your own business, and have a house-no-mortgage by the time you’re forty.”
“And what would be your end in all that?”
“The fun of seeing the good guy win one.”
“The good guy, huh?” I can’t figure out what he sees in me. He knows I been locked up. Being around him, I almost feel like what he’s saying is true. That maybe I could be somebody. “Tony, man, I’m sorry for taking up your night like this, jawing your ear off.”
“Stop saying sorry. I’m gonna run down to the bodega and grab us some sodas.”
“I have Sprites in that little cube fridge behind you there.”
Tony cracks us a pair.
“Yo Tone, I’d appreciate you not telling anybody about, like, what happened tonight.”
“What, that you almost got yourself killed running into a dogfight to save a chewed-up pit bull?”
“I just don’t like people knowing stuff about me, you know?”
He stares at me, and after a bit he nods. “All right, kid. I won’t say anything.” He’s looking out the window and laughing quiet.
“What’s funny?”
He shrugs, and we’re quiet for a while, and my mind drifts back to that doctor. The knife in my hand. Mercedes gunning out of there. So close, though. Rewind the night back a little more, to Céce. No. She’s too good to be in my dreams. Her, her mother, Tony: all too good. I can’t imagine Tony overseas. I won’t. They put a knife in his hand? He’s not made to use it. He’s made to lay knives down.
My Boo girl rests her big boxy head in my lap. She’s looking up at me, and I know what she’s saying. The language of dogs is quiet. Tell you what, if there weren’t any dogs on this planet, I would check out right now.
I follow Tony’s eyes out the hutch window. The sky is a mist with the stars trying to poke through, like a razor rash on God’s gray face.