I stared out the passenger window, watching the night flash by. Sherm had given me a lot to think about, and the more I thought, the crazier the whole thing seemed. I wasn’t a bank robber. I wasn’t like the idiots on America’s Most Wanted. I was just a poor white trash schmuck, trying to feed his wife and kid, give them what they deserved rather than what they had.
But I was dying.
“Seems like an awful lot,” I sighed. “How the hell am I going to pull this off all by myself?”
“You’re not.” Sherm grinned. “I’m gonna help you.”
“Bullshit.”
“Straight up, Tommy. You said it yourself. No way you can pull this shit off by yourself.”
“I’m in too,” John promised.
“Fuck that.” I spat. “No way I’m letting either of you guys get involved in this shit. I need you guys to look out for Michelle and T. J. after— after I’m gone.”
“That’s why I want to help,” John argued. “You can’t do it by yourself, Tommy. Sherm said so. If we help you, then there’s a better chance it goes right. Which makes things better for them.”
“No way, John! No fucking way. End of argument.”
“Tommy, I love Michelle and T. J. as much as you do. I was best man at your fucking wedding. I was there when T. J. was born. I want to help them, and the best way to do that is to help you.”
“Forget it!”
“Fuck that.”
“He’s right, John,” Sherm said. “You know what you’re looking at if you get caught? First time offender, you’re looking at forty-one to fifty-one months. We’re talking a haul of more than ten thousand dollars easily; so add one more offense. We stole it, so add two more. Use a weapon or even fucking display one? Add a bunch more. You could end up in there for half your life, and unlike Tommy, that’s a lot of fucking time.”
“I don’t care.” He stuck his lip out stubbornly. “I want in on it.”
“Pull over, now,” I demanded.
“Why?”
“Because I’m gonna bitch-slap the living shit out of you, that’s why.”
He slowed down, gripped the wheel tightly, and looked at me.
Slowly, deliberately, he said, “If you don’t let me help, I’ll tell Michelle.”
I opened my mouth but he cut me off.
“I mean it, Tommy. You’re my friend. I need to do this. And if you don’t let me, I swear to fucking God I’ll tell her everything. The cancer. The robbery. Everything.”
I looked into his eyes and saw that he meant it.
“Please?”
“Okay.” I sighed, exhausted. “All right, you’re in. But Sherm, I still don’t understand why you want to help.”
“Hey, man,” he flashed his teeth, “we’re boys. Besides, I believe we can actually pull this shit off, and I’m bored in this town. Hanover fucking sucks, yo. This will be the first fun thing I’ve done since I left Portland.”
“You’re fucking crazy.”
“Like a fox, man. Crazy like a motherfucking fox.”
John parked at the lake and we stared out at the water in silence. The moon reflected off the rippling waves. Somewhere in the darkness, a whippoorwill cried out. John popped out Ice-T and slipped in Ice Cube’s War and Peace disc instead. I suddenly felt very old, and very tired, and I wondered if I should plan my funeral in advance, or leave that detail to Michelle after I was gone.
One thing was for sure. If we pulled this off, she wouldn’t have to worry about paying for it.
“So where do we get the guns?” I asked. “We don’t have time for the seven-day waiting period and the background check.”
“I know a guy,” Sherm leaned forward. “He lives in York, down on South Queen Street. One for me, one for you— should cost us about two hundred even. Let me hit him on the cell and see if he’s around.”
“What about me?” John frowned. “Don’t I get a gun?”
“No,” Sherm told him. “You’re driving the getaway car.”
“Cool! Now that’s what I’m talking about.”
“Two hundred bucks? Sherm, all I’ve got is this last paycheck and I just deposited it this afternoon.”
“So? You got an ATM card, right?”
“Yeah, but we needed that money for bills. What the hell am I gonna tell Michelle if she finds out I spent it?”
“Dude, think about it. In less than a week, you’ll have all the money you need to pay the bills. All the money you fucking need . . .”
He flipped open his cell phone and made a call. John ate his slice of pizza and I smoked. Ice Cube’s “Until We Rich” played softly, the lyrics matching the echoes of what Sherm had said.
Finally, Sherm snapped his cell phone shut and poked John in the back of the head.
“Let’s go, boys. We’re taking a trip to York. He’s got what we need.”
* * *
Halfway to York, as we stopped at an ATM machine, I felt the world closing in on me. I coughed blood, spat it out, and grimaced at the rawness in my throat. It felt like somebody had sandpapered my insides.
While Sherm and John waited impatiently in the car, I fumbled my wallet out of my pocket. My fingers didn’t seem to work properly. They felt thick and swollen. I fished out the card and slid it into the slot. The machine asked me for my pin number and it took me two tries to get it right.
I entered the amount for withdrawal. Two hundred dollars.
It asked me if that was the correct amount. I pressed YES.
It asked me to please wait while it dispensed my cash.
As the bills, all twenties, rolled out of the machine, I knew there was no turning back. I’d lied to my wife about the cancer, and now I was going behind her back like this with the money, draining our account. Sure, in the long run, I was doing it for her and T. J., but it was still fucked up. And now, on top of everything else, we were going to go buy guns with the cash. Just like real-life gangsters.
I put the money in my wallet and crammed the wallet into my back pocket. It felt heavy, like it was made out of lead.
No turning back now, I thought.
The enormity of it all hit me then, and for the next few minutes, I forgot all about the fact that I was dying.
I looked up at the moon, pale and cold and lifeless, and saw my face in its reflection.
“No turning back now . . .” the moon whispered.
I got back into the car and slammed the door. It sounded like a gunshot, and John and Sherm both jumped. A gunshot— or a closing coffin lid.
Sherm fired up a bowl and passed it up to me. I inhaled, trying not to choke— and trying to ignore the bad feeling in my gut. A feeling that had nothing to do with cancer.
So what’s this guy’s name again?” I asked Sherm as we drove into the city.
“Wallace.”
“Is that his first name or his last name?”
Sherm shrugged. “I don’t know. Never asked the dude. I just know him as Wallace. That’s what everyone in his crew calls him.”
We rolled down West Market Street, past crumbling brownstones and crack houses, abandoned factories and burned-out apartments, tattoo parlors and seedy bars. York is a small city, but it has the crime rate of a big metropolitan area. If you look on a map, it sits right in the middle of things, an hour or less from Baltimore and Harrisburg, and within a few hours’ drive of Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Pittsburgh, and New York. This makes it ideal for drug gangs, mostly crews from New York City and North Philly, but some from as far away as Chicago and Detroit. Back in the day, the Greek Mafia had controlled most of York’s crime, but those days are gone— old and feeble like the men who made them, men who were now serving life terms upstate. Their children had turned their backs on a life of organized crime, and the families died out, replaced by the gangbangers.
John turned onto South Queen Street. A drunken Hispanic woman lurched in front of the car and he swerved to avoid her. She shot him the finger, shrieked something in Spanish, and stumbled on. He sank down in the seat, turning off the Cypress Hill disc we’d been jamming to.
“Sherm,” he whispered, “we’re the only white people down here.”
“Chill, John. You don’t fuck with nobody and nobody will fuck with you.”
“What’s the big deal, John?” I asked. “You’ve been to downtown York plenty of times.”
“Yeah, but not late at night like this. We could get carjacked or something. Mugged. It’s kind of scary, isn’t it?”
Sherm snorted. “No way in hell somebody is gonna jack you for this piece of shit.”
We stopped at another traffic light. The car stereos around us competed for supremacy, melding into one solid bass line. On the corner, some kids played in a puddle, long after they should have been in bed. Rough-looking women, possibly their mothers, leaned into car windows, flashing cleavage and haggling over the cost of blow jobs. I missed Michelle and T. J. and I wanted to be home with them, not driving around in the ghetto, looking for guns. I felt tired— and sick. There was blood in my throat and the taste was nauseating.
John looked back at Sherm. “What’s the address again?”
“Forty-two. Two-story brick up here on the right. But he doesn’t do business in his crib. We’re supposed to meet him in the alley out back.”
“How come?” I asked.
“He’s got kids and shit, man. He doesn’t mix business and home life.”
“Oh, a drug dealer with principles . . .”
“Yo, how often do you smoke weed, Tommy?”
I shrugged. “I don’t know. Once or twice a week maybe. Tonight. Whenever you bring it around, I guess.”
“That’s right. And where the fuck do you think I get it from? You think I just pick it up at the grocery store?”
“Okay, point taken.”
“Hey,” John piped up, “since you got cancer, now you can smoke all the weed you want, right? I think it’s legal if you got cancer. Isn’t it supposed to help keep you from throwing up and shit?”
“Shut up, Carpet Dick!” Sherm and I said at the same time.
John parked the car under a broken streetlight and we got out. Crack vials and shattered glass crunched under our feet. I kicked a dirty diaper out of the way. The graffiti on the house next to us said PROSPER C. JOHNSON & THA’ GANGSTA DISCIPLES and 630 ROOSEVELT CRU and NSB RULZ, and wished that someone named Donny B. would rest in peace. The air smelled like spoiled milk. Somebody hollered something unintelligible. In the distance, a baby screamed, and was answered by the mournful wail of a police siren. A feral cat glared at us from behind a trash can.
Sherm pointed a finger at John. “Now listen up. You keep quiet, Carpet Dick. I mean it! These guys don’t fucking play.”
John gave him a two-fisted thumbs-up sign, then grabbed his nut sack when Sherm turned away. Rolling my eyes, I motioned for him to follow us.
We stepped off the curb and crossed the street. Halfway across, the light changed to green and the traffic surged toward us from both directions. John froze like a deer caught in headlights as the cars bore down upon him. A horn blared, then another, as somebody shook their fist through the driver’s side window.
“Get out the road you stupid motherfucking wigger!”
He started to raise his middle finger but I ran back, grabbed his wrist, and dragged his ass across.
“This is Sherm’s play. Don’t fuck it up. Just keep quiet and don’t do or say anything, okay?”
He nodded.
We followed along behind Sherm and approached the alley. Two black guys, both a few years younger than us, guarded the entrance like it was a pirate’s cave.
“Be cool,” I reminded John.
“Like ice.”
Sherm held his hands out to the two guys and grinned.
“What up, Markus? Yo, Kelvin, how they hanging?”
They shrugged.
“What up, Sherm? Who your friends? They five-oh?”
Sherm laughed. “No dog, this is Tommy and John, my boys from out in Hanover. They’re cool. They got some business with the man and shit. He knows we’re coming. I hit him on the cell earlier.”
“Yeah,” Kelvin nodded. “He said you was coming by. Didn’t think you’d have company though. You usually flying solo.”
“Not tonight. These guys are the ones buying. I’m just making the introductions and shit.”
“Hi.” John offered his hand, and was answered with noncommittal stares.
Sherm lit up a cigarette. “So— is Wallace around?”
“He in the house watching TV with his baby girl,” Markus responded. “I’ll let him know you’re here.”
He sidled off and into the house. Kelvin motioned for us to follow him into the alley. It was dark between the buildings, and it took a moment for my eyes to adjust. I lit up a cigarette and the darkness seemed to surround the flame, engulfing it, trying to extinguish the glow. The alley smelled like stale piss and rotten garbage, and there was something sticky beneath my feet, clutching at my sneakers like glue. I didn’t want to imagine what it was, and I tried not to look down. As we walked, John tried to make small talk with Kelvin, but Kelvin just ignored him.
A door slammed and then the light at the end of the alley was blocked as two more figures entered: Markus, and a guy that I assumed must be Wallace. He was huge; at least six-three and probably two hundred and fifty pounds, all of it hard, chiseled muscle. His shaved head gleamed in the darkness and a gold hoop earring hung from each ear. He carried a cardboard box under one bulging arm. Silently, he appraised us.
“You check them?” he asked Kelvin, pointing to John and me.
“Not yet.”
“Well what the fuck are you doing, nigga? Don’t just stand there! Pat them down!”
“It’s cool, Wallace. They with Sherm. He vouched for them and shit. Sherm wouldn’t flip on us.”
“I don’t give a damn if they with the Pope. Check their shit now!”
Rough hands patted us down.
“Hey—” John started to protest but a warning glance from Sherm shut him up.
Markus stepped back. “They’re clean.”
“You five-oh?” Wallace asked me, inches from my face.
“No, I’m not a cop. I— I work in the foundry, out in Hanover. I make molds. Well, I did anyway.”
He grinned, then chuckled, and began to laugh, loud and hearty. After a moment, Markus and Kelvin laughed along with him, joined finally by Sherm, then John, who decided to go with the flow. Personally, I didn’t get the joke.
Wallace wiped his eyes. “The foundry, huh? Man, that shit will kill a nigga. I couldn’t work a job like that. Know what I’m saying?”
“I wouldn’t either,” I said, “but I gotta feed my wife and kid.”
His hard face softened.
“Word. I know what you mean, dog. I’m in the same exact situation. You got to take care of your kids. They all that’s important. What’s your name, man?”
“Tommy.”
“A’ight, Tommy. You cool, I can tell. Irish, like your boy Sherm here, right?”
I nodded.
He turned to Markus and Kelvin. “Irish is the white niggaz. They were slaves too. The white man called them indentured servants, but it was the same shit. If you’d have stayed in school, you’d know that. Ya’ll want to talk about a revolution? The motherfucking Irish was off the hook. Still are, with that Republican Army and shit.”
I said nothing. Wallace relaxed.
“Sherm says you’re looking to buy some handguns.”
I shuffled my feet, hesitating. Now that it came down to it, I didn’t want to say it out loud. It seemed like another act of finality.
“Yeah, I need two. They’re for—”
“No”— he held up a hand—“don’t tell me what they’re for, dog! The less I know, the better. That way I can’t flip on you, and it don’t come back to me.”
I nodded.
“Those are nice shoes,” John said to Markus. “I need a pair like that. Where’d you get them?”
“Ganked them from a white boy down at the mall,” Markus replied. “He looked a lot like you. Hell, coulda’ been your brother.”
“Oh . . . I don’t have a brother.”
“Shut up, John . . .” Sherm warned.
Wallace opened the shoe box. Two pistols lay inside.
“These here are Smith & Wesson .357s. You can load a .38 special or .357 magnum round in them. Depending on what you’re using them for, I’d go with the magnum round. Shoot a guy in the back of the head with that, and the motherfucker’s spine will come out his nose and shit. Ain’t no safety on these; they’re revolvers, so don’t shoot your dick off if you’re sagging. They’ve got an exposed hammer, so you can thumb it back for a real easy shot. Two hundred. Cash up front. No checks or credit cards accepted.”
“What about ammunition?” I asked.
He grinned. “I look like Walmart to you, dog? Any store like that will have ammo. Ain’t you got hunting stores out there in Hanover— all them crazy redneck motherfuckers running around shooting at deer and rabbits and shit?”
“Squeal like a pig, boy,” Kelvin drawled.
“Yeah, we do. We’ve got all kinds of places to buy ammo. I’m just a little low on cash right now, is all.”
“Come on, Wallace,” Sherm urged, “hook us up, man. All the business I’ve given you, why you want to do us like that? Shit, I’ve practically paid for your last year’s rent!”
He grinned, considered it, then shrugged. “A’ight, but only because you’re a good customer, Sherm, and because I like your boy Tommy here. Those are six-shooters. They’re fully loaded. You all can keep what’s in ’em. You need more than that, though, it’ll cost you extra.”
“No, twelve rounds should be all right,” I said. “Hopefully, we won’t have to fire them at all.”
“These are just insurance,” Sherm explained.
“Whatever, dog. Like I said, I don’t want to know. Less I know the better. Just make damn sure you understand the drill. You didn’t get them from me and I never heard of any of you. The serial numbers have been filed down, and I wiped the prints off before I put them in the box. They all yours now.”
I handed him the money and he handed me the box. For one crazy instant, I wanted to reach out and snatch the money back from him, tell him that I’d changed my mind and it was all just a terrible mistake. But I didn’t. Instead, I accepted the box. It was heavier than I’d thought it would be.
Wallace counted the money, folded it, and stuffed the wad into his pocket.
“Pleasure doing business with you.”
“A’ight, Wallace, we out.” Sherm rapped fists with him and turned to leave. “I’ll catch you next week, yo.”
“Later, Holmes.”
He turned to me, presented his fist, and I rapped it.
“You’re okay, Tommy. For real. It was cool doing business with you. Come on back again sometime and we’ll chill. Maybe play some chess and shit. You play chess?”
“Yeah— a little. Learned it when I spent a weekend in County for unpaid speeding tickets.”
“There ya go. Jailhouse chess— the same thing I play. We cool then. Later, dog.”
“Thanks.”
I trailed along behind Sherm. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw John stop. Saw him turn to the three of them. Saw him smile. Saw his hand wave slowly. Saw his mouth open and say . . .
“Later my niggaz. Peace out.”
I froze, cringing at what I’d just heard.
Wincing, Sherm whipped around. Still smiling, John turned toward us, saw the horrified expression on our faces, and stopped.
“What? What are you guys looking at? What did I do wrong?”
“Say what?” Markus spat. His face was ashen. “What the fuck did you just say?”
Wallace took a step forward. “Somebody please tell me that this stupid motherfucker did not just drop the N-bomb.”
“You’re damn straight he did,” Kelvin growled. He reached inside his baggy pants pocket, and I saw him clench something. I knew what it was before he pulled it out. Without thinking, I ripped the lid off the box and reached inside.
“Hold up!” Sherm stepped between us, hands outstretched. “Just hold up a fucking minute. Let’s not do something stupid, ya’ll.”
“Stupid? STUPID?” Wallace pulled a gun of his own. “You hear what that racist piece of shit said? How’d you like it if we called you a honky or a wigger? Get your skinny Irish ass out of the way, Sherm!”
John was terrified. “I’m s-sorry, you guys! I didn’t think it was a big deal. You call each other that all the time on the radio. I was just being friendly.”
“Oh what, so now you Eminem, you punk-ass bitch?” Kelvin stalked toward him, pistol in hand. I don’t know what kind it was, but it was big, bigger than the one I was holding.
“Wallace”— Sherm placed his hand on the man’s chest—“he’s retarded, man. Slow. He don’t know what he’s saying. He’s got like a fourth-grade reading level and shit. Let’s just let it drop, okay? You and me are cool, and you seen for yourself that Tommy is cool, right? Do you really think we’d bring a fucking Klansman around?”
Seething, Wallace glanced from Markus and Kelvin, pointing their guns at John and me, and then to me, pointing my gun at Kelvin. He looked down at Sherm’s hand, and Sherm pulled it away. Slowly, his scowl vanished and Wallace actually grinned.