“Thanks for going with me yesterday,” he said.
“You’re welcome,” she replied. “I’m glad I went.”
“I’ll see you tomorrow then.”
She opened her door and got out. Then she stooped down and looked back into the car. Her smile held him like the charm of a hypnotist.
“Good night,” she said. “Or is it good morning?”
“I don’t know,” he replied.
A block away from Katherine, Sam picked up the mike and held it in his lap for a moment as he drove north on Sixth Avenue.
“1-David-4 in service,” he said robotically.
“1-David-4,” came the immediate acknowledgment.
Sam continued with the log-in. “One man. 3297.”
“Stand by for a call, David-4.”
Sam replaced the mike, pulled a ballpoint pen from his pocket, and clicked out the writing tip. He realized he was not ready for work. His briefcase with the clipboard inside was still in the backseat. He looked for scratch paper to write down the address Radio was about to give him, but
“A citizen reports a man down at Occidental and
Main
,” Radio said. “Will you check it out before you head up to your district?”
There was no need to write anything down. He keyed the mike without lifting it from its holder on the dash. “Received,” he said abruptly, leaning toward the mike a little as if that were all the attention it deserved.
He drove downhill on
Marion Street
and turned south on
First Avenue
. The call was out of his district, out of the
Main
and pulled the car off the street and onto the sidewalk at Occidental. There was a park on the north side of
Main
. The south side had been closed off to cars to form a walking street. It was supposed to look like old
Which man down? He could see at least half a dozen from where he parked. He chose to walk down the brick street. He was not interested enough to ask a precise location from Radio, but he guessed an early-arriving business owner had called. He stopped first at a bank entrance and roused an old man who was cuddled in front of the doorway like a child who had fallen from his bed without waking. He woke relatively easily with a few nudges from the flashlight and a repetition of “hey.” The old man sat up and looked without surprise at his waker.
“Time to get up. Move on down to the park.”
The man nodded but did not move immediately.
“Down to the park. You can’t stay here any longer.”
If
The old man got up from the sidewalk and stood weaving back and forth.
“Don’t come here tomorrow, then everything will be all right.”
The man understood that. He understood tomorrow. Although he might not remember it, he understood the idea. With a friendly grin he staggered down the street. It was early in the month; the supply of alcohol was plentiful; there was reason yet for all to be friends.
Sam walked down the pedestrian street, roused two more sleepers out of doorways, and sent them down the sidewalk to the next block. After walking both sidewalks on either side of Occidental between
Main
and
Jackson
, he got back into his car and looked into the park where he had sent his three sleepers. They had joined one another on one of the benches and were the only ones up and about so early. One of them, the first he had roused, waved to him like a friend passing by. He was not a friend nor was he yet passing, but the gesture helped conceal the bottle placed discreetly on the bench between them. Although it was not against the law to be drunk in public, it was against the law to drink. The bottle must have slipped by his less than thorough examination. Even so
He picked up the mike to clear the call and held it in his hand while another car ran a check on a license plate. As he waited for the air to clear, he scratched out the entry on his log sheet—the type of call, location, code number, resolution. The resolution sat on the bench in the park. When he was a rookie, those hopeless men on the bench had disgusted him so much that he had volunteered to work high-crime areas to get away from them. He had youthful certainty then that he could never be on that bench. Although he still could not imagine himself there, he no longer thought himself quite so far removed.
There was an urgent tapping on his window, and he jerked away from the noise. Instinctively he placed his right hand on his gun. A grizzled, intent little man gestured fiercely for him to roll his window down. He did.
“He’s right over there.” The odor of alcohol followed the voice.
“Who’s over there?”
“Hurry up, he’s leaving,” the man said, peering through the window of the police car down the sidewalk toward the next block.
There was a man leaving—in some hurry, too. The little man tried to open the back door of the police car, but it was locked.
“What did he do?”
“He robbed me, the bastard. You’re going to let him get away.”
Sam got out of the car quickly and frisked the man. He was wearing a flannel shirt and corduroy pants but no shoes. On this street there was often little difference between victims and suspects. He led the man around to the other side of the car and put him in the front seat, then skipped back to the driver’s side and took off down the street.
“Did he hit you?” he asked, trying to make the answers simple.
“He would have.”
“What did he take?”
“There he is. We got the bastard. There he is.” The little man beside him pointed with gleeful anticipation at the suspect who had given up running and had turned to face the oncoming police.
“Does he have a gun?”
“Maybe he does. Maybe he doesn’t. I don’t know.”
“Stay in the car,”
“Turn around,”
“Look, mister, I ain’t—”
“Hands on the wall,”
The suspect turned resignedly toward the wall and leaned against it with a practiced motion. Until then
“Give ‘em back, you bastard,” he shouted at the cornered suspect and began kicking and pulling the other man’s legs.
The bastard, his hands still against the wall as instructed, looked back at
“What the hell are you doing?”
“Okay, that’s enough.”
When the little man still did not stop,
“He stole my shoes,” he said.
“I didn’t steal anything from him,” the other responded. He was relieved that
“What did he trade?”
“I gave him half a bottle.”
“Is that true?”
“I guess so, but I let him have mine for nothing when I got some.”
The other man, who was a picture of brown—brown coat, brown pants, now brown shoes, shrugged indifferently. “You didn’t have no wine,” he said.
Another police car came down the alley to offer backup if it were needed.
“What’s your name?” he asked the shrunken man.
“
“Well,
“There wasn’t nothing left of them. Soles all falling off. He took mine when I was sleeping.”
“They’ve got shoes down at detox. I can call for the wagon and have them give you a lift.”
“That’s where I got them. They won’t give me more shoes. I ain’t going back there again.”
Sam wrote down the name of the man in brown in his notebook with exaggerated precision and sent him down the alley. Then he looked at
“Why don’t you get in the car, Henry. We’ll see if we can find you another pair of shoes.” Who else was included in the “we,”
“You ain’t taking me to detox. I know my rights. They told me I didn’t have to go there if I didn’t want to.”
That was it. He was not going to waste time with a fool just to get him a pair of shoes.
“Do what you want then. Only head down that way.” He pointed down the alley where he should have pointed first, then started walking back to the car.
“You won’t take me to detox, will ya?”