“You got no call to fuck with Dorothy, he ain’t broke no law.”
The cop pointed an aggressive finger at the boy. “You want me to frisk you for dope, you just keep talking that way.”
The boy lowered his eyes.
“He’s right, though,” Steve said. “Dorothy isn’t breaking any laws.”
The cop came over to Steve. Don’t hit him, whatever you do, don’t touch him. Remember Tip Hendricks. “You blind?” the cop said.
“What do you mean?”
The other cop said: “Hey, Lenny, who gives a shit. Let’s go.” He seemed uncomfortable.
Lenny ignored him and spoke to Steve. “Can’t you see? You’re the only white face in the picture. You don’t belong here.”
“But I’ve just witnessed a crime.”
The cop stood close to Steve, too close for comfort. “You want a trip downtown?” he said. “Or do you want to get the fuck out of here, now?”
Steve did not want a trip downtown. It was so easy for them to plant a little dope in his pockets, or beat him up and say he had resisted arrest. Steve was at law school: if he were convicted of a crime he could never practice. He wished he had not taken this stand. It was not worth throwing away his entire career just because a patrolman bullied a transvestite.
But it was wrong. Now two people were being bullied, Dorothy and Steve. It was the cop who was breaking the law. Steve could not bring himself to walk away.
But he adopted a conciliatory tone of voice. “I don’t want to make trouble, Lenny,” he said. “Why don’t you let Dorothy go, and I’ll forget that I saw you assault him.”
“You threatening me, fuckhead?”
A punch to the stomach and a left-and-right to the head. One for the money, two for the show. The cop would go down like a horse with a broken leg.
“Just making a friendly suggestion.” This cop seemed to want trouble. Steve could not see how the confrontation could be defused. He wished Dorothy would walk quietly away now, while Lenny’s back was turned; but the transvestite stood there, watching, with one hand gently rubbing his bruised stomach, enjoying the cop’s fury.
Then luck intervened. The patrol car’s radio came to life. Both cops froze, listening. Steve could not make out the jumble of words and number codes, but Lenny’s partner said: “Officer in trouble. We’re out of here.”
Lenny hesitated, still glaring at Steve, but Steve thought he saw a hint of relief in the cop’s eyes. Maybe he, too, had been rescued from a bad situation. But there was only malice in his tone. “Remember me,” he said to Steve. “’Cause I’ll remember you.” With that he jumped into the vehicle and slammed the door, and the car tore away.
The kids clapped and jeered.
“Whew,” Steve said gratefully. “That was scary.”
It was also dumb. You know how it could have gone. You know what you’re like.
At that moment his cousin Ricky came along. “What happened?” Ricky asked, looking at the disappearing patrol car.
Dorothy came over and put his hands on Steve’s shoulders. “My hero,” he said coquettishly. “John Wayne.”
Steve was embarrassed. “Hey, c’mon.”
“Any time you want a walk on the wild side, John Wayne, you come to me. I’ll let you in free.”
“Thanks all the same.…”
“I’d kiss you, but I can see you’re bashful, so I’ll just say good-bye.” He waggled red-tipped fingers and turned away. “Bye, Dorothy.”
Ricky and Steve went in the opposite direction. Ricky said: “I see you’ve already made friends in the neighborhood.”
Steve laughed, mainly with relief. “I almost got in bad trouble,” he said. “A dumb-ass cop started beating up on that guy in the skirt, and I was fool enough to tell him to stop.”
Ricky was startled. “You’re lucky you’re here.”
“I know it.”
They reached Ricky’s house and went in. The place smelled of cheese, or maybe it was stale milk. There was graffiti on the green-painted walls. They edged around the bicycles chained up
Arabella Abbing
Christopher Bartlett
Jerusha Jones
Iris Johansen
John Mortimer
JP Woosey
H.M. Bailey
George Vecsey
Gaile Parkin
M. Robinson