Read Warrior Angel Online

Authors: Robert Lipsyte

Warrior Angel (10 page)

BOOK: Warrior Angel
5.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“In the morning,” said the nurse. “We'll ask Dr. Raphael—”

“Four words. You can watch me send them from the computer in the nurse's station.”

When the nurse shook his head, Starkey said, “Be just one minute and then I'll take my pills.”

The nurse rattled the cup. “Let's go—busy night.”

“I send four words and then I take the pills. Otherwise you spend half the night setting up the IV.” He tried to sound firm without making it sound like a direct challenge.

The nurse glared at him. Starkey bit his lip so he wouldn't laugh. You call that intimidation, whale belly? This Angel stood up to Cobra's homies.

Starkey dropped his eyes, peeked from a corner. More than two dozen keys hung from one big ring looped carelessly over the nurse's walkie-talkie antenna. Looked like house keys, car keys, patient room keys, drug box keys. Man should be fired. But not until I borrow a few of those keys.

“So?” Another cup to rattle.

“Four little words and we both have a good night.”

When the nurse sighed, Starkey knew he had it. Night staff are either very good or very bad, and this one is in a league of his own. Won't last long.

Long enough for me to get my stuff and elope.

But first,
Pick up the stones
, four little words to save Sonny and complete the Mission.

S
ONNY FOUND MOST
of the stones in the dry creek beds deep in the Reservation. Centuries of rushing water had rubbed them round and smooth. A Running Brave must be able to close both hands over each of the stones he carries on his solo climb up Stonebird. One hundred pounds of stones in a heavy-duty backpack.

He filled three canteens with water and began the climb.

The early going was easy, the trail wide and gently sloped. After three days he was still sore from the fight. His hips and shoulders complained each time he twisted to take a stone from the pack, then bent to place it alongside the trail.

Each stone left behind represented another useless burden cast off on the climb to manhood.

Arrogance. Meanness. Selfishness.

A Running Brave, on a mission for the
Nation, cannot be slowed by angers and foolishness and childish fears.

As he moved up the mountain, the weight of the backpack lightened. By the time the trail became narrow and steep, the backpack was half empty, stones strung out behind him like pearls on a string. He kept his mind empty as he climbed, concentrating on the path, on the stones, on keeping his mouth closed and breathing through his nose. He drank often but sparingly.

He reached the peak just before twilight, exhausted from the climb, from the fight, from the last few weeks. He found a tall rock still warm from the sun and sat against it.

The Res looked different from the last time he'd been here, a year ago. Scattered among the shacks and trailers were new suburban-style homes, a few big ones with white columns on the front porches. Gambling money.

And looming over all, the Hiawatha Hotel and Casino. When he had fought The Wall here last year to win the title, the roof wasn't finished on the first building. Now there were three huge hotel buildings, surrounded by
thousands of cars and buses.

The sun slipped behind a distant mountain, leaving an orange smear. He heard animals scurrying in the rocks below him. A young man chosen to be a Running Brave spends the night alone with the snakes and wolves and bears and mountain lions, and with the scariest creatures of all, the dark shapes that lurk in the corners of his mind.

On the way down, if he was ready to accept the honor, he would pick up his stones, symbolic of a willingness to assume his heavy new responsibilities as a warrior-diplomat for the Nation. A man of his people. It had been Jake's dream that he carry on that tradition.

It had always seemed like such crap.

But not to Starkey. Poor Starkey, looking for something to hold on to while his devils chased him. In his mind the Running Braves became the Warrior Angels for him. All from Marty's book. Took me so long to figure that out. Am I stupid or am I not paying attention to other people's feelings? To my own?

I've got to take control of my life. Keep the monster and the dark shadow at the end of my jab. It doesn't always have to be one or the
other, the anger or the murk. And I don't always have to be running away.

Got to get in shape, win the title back.

Got to help Starkey.

Got to come through for him the way he kept coming through for me. Even after they busted him, he reached out to me.

Pick up the stones
.

Start from the beginning. This time do it right.

I'll visit him when I go back.

Sonny looked at the sky, so near and black and starry it seemed unreal, an animated video sky. How long since he had seen stars? He'd seen no stars in Harlem or Vegas.

He imagined his body a tepee crowded with dancers around a cookfire. Where did that come from? Good feeling.

He wished he had someone to share that with. He thought of Alfred and Lena. He thought of Starkey.

 

The bus from New York went right to the front door of the Hiawatha Hotel and Casino. Starkey was first off, hurrying to the high-speed outside elevator that zoomed up to the
observation tower. He spotted Jake's junkyard right away. The description in The Book made it easy. It was just below the highest mountain on the Reservation. Stonebird.

He mingled with the casino crowd until dark, then made his way around the parking lots, over fences, through fields until he reached the junkyard. The ancient Cadillac was exactly where The Book said it would be. It stank from mildew and cats. Starkey climbed into the rotted-out backseat. Young Sonny had once hidden here and drawn pictures.

Starkey thought the stink and the excitement would keep him awake all night, but he fell asleep immediately.

Ally was in the racing dream, although it didn't look like her. She was carrying the green flag.

“Pedal-to-the-metal time,” she said. “You ready?”

Starkey and Sonny gave her the thumbs-up. Ally raised the flag.

They floored the clutches and feathered the accelerators, a quarter inch deeper with each light pump until the pedals were down and the engines were howling. When the muscles in Ally's forearm tensed, Starkey began to let the
clutch up. By the time the flag was down, he was in gear. The crowd was screaming.

Clean start. Sonny bucked ahead as they passed Ally, which was expected. His Ford had awesome pickup. But they were door to door by the time the headlights found the bales. They looked at each other and nodded at the same time. Go for it!

Starkey didn't know who had first called it the Edge, but racers had been daring it since the quarry opened. That's all the Edge was, the rim of the town's limestone quarry, a huge dark hole in the ground a hundred feet deep.

Racing the Edge was simple. The winner was the car that stopped closer to the Edge. The driver who chickened out, and stopped first, lost. But if you went too far, you shot over the rim and died in a fiery crash below.

They drove around the bales and headed for the rim of the quarry, black nothingness a football field ahead. They were still door to door. Sonny and Starkey looked at each other. Neither of them wanted to lose this one. Sonny yelled something Starkey couldn't hear over the engine.

Ally stepped in front of Starkey's car.

He swerved around her. Now he was
headed into Sonny's car. He tried to shout a warning, but his tongue was stuck to the roof of his mouth.

The rim was coming up fast. If he braked, he'd lose the race—if he didn't, he'd ram into Sonny and drive him over the Edge.

Starkey woke up sweating. The dream had made it clear. There was only one way to complete the Mission.

He worked the razor blade out of the binding of The Book. The blade was still very sharp. Just touching it with his thumb drew blood.

 

At dawn Sonny began to move back down the mountain, picking up his stones. He was stiff and sore, but he felt good. He had the answer he had come for.

The answer was that there was no answer. You just have to keep finding your way. Let other people help you. Help other people.

The monster and the dark shadow will always be lurking out there. Starkey's Voices will always be waiting in ambush. All we can do is never give up, keep punching, move on, and watch for signs.

Got to tell Starkey that.

The pack grew heavier as he trudged down
Stonebird. He staggered to the trail head under the hundred-pound weight, slipped it off, rested, then dragged the pack of rocks to the yard of Jake's old house. He would pile the rocks in a ceremonial mound on Jake's grave. The old man would like that.

He was not surprised to find a sign waiting for him on top of Jake's mailbox. It was a marked-up, dog-eared copy of
The Tomahawk Kid
. The book's binding was ripped open.

Another sign. Starkey's backpack rested against the junkyard's open gate. The laptop was in the pack. That's a bad sign, thought Sonny. The Warrior Angel wouldn't leave his laptop unless he doesn't need it anymore.

“Starkey?”

The sound bounced off the old hulks. Sonny began to run, weaving among the wrecked cars. He sensed danger. The hair prickled on the back of his neck and his senses were Running Brave sharp. He smelled the rotting rubber tires and heard the rust flaking off the sagging carcasses. As he ran deeper into the junkyard, he began to wonder if he was the hunter or the prey.

“Starkey?”

 

Sign. A dirty, sweat-stained red baseball cap was perched on the roof of a Cadillac. He remembered that old corpse.

He heard Starkey before he saw him, breathing hard in the backseat.

“I used to hide in this one.”

“It was in The Book,” said Starkey. He was curled up.

“Come on out.”

“Why?”

“We need to talk.”

Sonny peered into the car. Starkey was folded into a corner of the backseat, his bony knees jammed up against his chest. His long thin face was very pale, his long dark hair tangled and damp. He held something between the thumb and forefinger of his right hand.

“They're coming to get me.”

“Moscondaga is a sovereign nation, Starkey—not even U.S. Marshals can come on this land without permission.”

Starkey's laugh was an ugly snort. “You don't get it, Sonny. The Legion is out there.”

Dogs barked at the wind in the trees. Sonny worked his head and shoulders into the back. “I'm here, man. Dare them to get past me.”

“Too many.” Starkey raised his hand. There was a razor blade between his fingers. He pressed it against the side of his throat. Near the jugular vein, thought Sonny. He had already cut himself. A single thread of blood trickled down his throat.

“We can take 'em. Running Braves and Warrior Angels.”

“There are no Warrior Angels.”

“Gotta be. I know there are Running Braves.”

“Too late. Can't let 'em get me.”

“We got backup, Starkey. We got Alfred and Marty and Johnson. Dr. Gould. Even that slick-ass Hubbard can help us. All on our side, all down with the Warrior Angel.”

“Not enough. I got to do this, Sonny. The battle's over.” The calm in Starkey's voice was chilling. He's decided, realized Sonny, to kill himself. Keep talking.

“Battle's not over, Starkey, just started.” Sonny forced himself to breathe, to swallow down the fear. “Can't quit now.”

Starkey drew another line of blood down his throat. “I got to do this before they take me.”

Sonny was close enough to grab Starkey's
razor hand, but he wasn't sure he'd be fast enough to stop him from making that one fatal cut. Starkey had begun another line of blood, a little deeper this time.

Try something else. “One thing I don't get, Starkey. You had to come all the way up here to kill yourself?”

Starkey's voice cracked. “I came up to kill you, Sonny. You don't know how bad it is when the Voices tell you what to do and you can't stop it.”

“But you didn't kill me. You're fighting them right now.” Sonny touched Starkey's knee. It was vibrating. “We can fight them together. We got to keep going. Hang on. It's not like a boxing match, twelve rounds or less. This shit goes on and on forever. It's life.”

This time it sounded like a laugh coming through Starkey's nose.

“Sonny made a speech.”

“All I got. Come on, let's get out of this hole.”

“So the shrinks can put me in another one?” It sounded like a real question to Sonny. And Starkey was listening for the answer.

“Whatever it takes.”

“Zap my brains?”

“I'll be with you all the way.”

“Why?” He lowered the razor to stare at Sonny. His eyes jiggled in their red-rimmed sockets.

“You saved me, man. My turn now.”

“I let you down.” He started to lift the razor back to his throat. “I didn't complete the Mission.”

Sonny fired the jab, open handed, and wrapped his fingers around Starkey's. He felt the bite of the razor. But he had it.

“Warrior Angel came to save me and you did. You ever think what you saved me for?”

“What?” Starkey didn't struggle.

“You saved me so I could save you. That's how you complete the Mission.” Sonny reached in with his right hand and gripped Starkey's wrist before he opened his left hand and plucked out the razor. He threw it out the window. “Let's go, little brother.”

Starkey began to cry as Sonny pulled him out into the sunlight.

About the Author

Robert Lipsyte
is an award-winning sportswriter for
The New York Times,
and was the Emmy-winning host of the public-affairs show
The Eleventh Hour.
He is the author of a number of acclaimed titles for young readers, including
THE CONTENDER, THE BRAVE, THE CHIEF, ONE FAT SUMMER
, and
WARRIOR ANGEL
. He is the recipient of the Margaret A. Edwards Award honoring lifetime contribution in writing for young adults. Robert Lipsyte lives in New York.

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

BOOK: Warrior Angel
5.03Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Where Have You Been? by Wendy James
Prospero's Half-Life by Trevor Zaple
Cat Scratched! by Joy, Dara
Flight by Alyssa Rose Ivy
An Acceptable Time by Madeleine L'Engle