Michael Thomas - Man Gone Down

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On the eve of his thirty-fifth birthday, the unnamed black narrator of
finds himself broke, estranged from his white wife and three children, and living in the bedroom of a friend’s six-year-old child. He has four days to come up with the money to keep the kids in school and make a down payment on an apartment for them in which to live. As we slip between his childhood in inner city Boston and present-day New York City, we learn of a life marked by abuse, abandonment, raging alcoholism, and the best and worst intentions of a supposedly integrated America. This is a story of the American Dream gone awry, about what it’s like to feel preprogrammed to fail in life and the urge to escape that sentence.

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“Yeah.”

They picked me up — one by the neck, the other two by each leg — lifted me over their heads and began the bum’s rush. The music continued, as did Diana, who was down to a terry cloth G-string. It was stuffed with bills. She was upside down, clinging to the steel pole in the center stage. Shake was walking hand in hand with the Egyptian princess toward the back. Gavin was engaged in a tug-of-war with the bartender over a can of smuggled beer.

They opened the door with my head and walked me down the street, toward the alley, still in the air. When we reached Shake’s car, they threw me into the swirl of wind and snow. I tried to right myself — catlike — but I landed headfirst on the windshield. Both cracked. Inside, Brian was having a bad trip. He was writhing in the back seat, covered in puke. It took a while for the sound of my impact to reach him. When he finally did hear, he looked up at me through the glass. A look of messianic terror spread across his face. Later, much later, he would tell me that I had appeared like some demon moth on the windshield — splattered — but now he pointed and screamed. It was muted to me outside the car, in the loud wind.

I slid off the hood, found my feet, and walked toward the bouncers. They were almost at the door. I called to them.

“Excuse me!”

The sneaky one turned. He shook his head and pointed back down the street.

“Excuse me,” I continued toward them. “I left my coat inside.”

They ignored me and went in. The hooker came out of the neighboring club with another guy — big, white, going to fat, and strangely sweaty. The snow had taken hold on the ground. He slipped a little and she caught him. Then they both saw me. He snickered.

“Season’s greetings, sucker.”

She slapped his arm as if to shame him. I kept heading to the Eye. They intercepted me in the street, ten yards from the door.

“Sss — baby, they fucked you up!”

She cringed as though she’d never seen blood before. He craned his neck, making his jowls collect against each other. He squinted and shook his head.

“Chief, you’d better get that taken care of.”

“Fuck you.” I stepped to them, closing the distance to an arm’s length. I saw my blood on the snow.

“Whoa, chief,” he leaned away. “You don’t know who you’re fucking with.”

When I hit him in the stomach, he gagged and crumpled. When I hit him in the head, he made no sound, not even his big body landing on the street. She screamed. It must have been all the snow muffling everything that kept most of the sound from me because even the collective roars of the V-8s in the Ford LTDs seemed quiet. Metro cops, the worst. I don’t think they turned on the sirens, but the rollers were flashing and their red and blue tainted the new snow. The high beams were flashing, too. They spotlit the fat man, who had made it to his knees. The hooker, now a good samaritan, was pointing at me, screaming, “Him! Him!” The cops got out of their cars, grasping their sticks. Their radios squawked and beeped and spat fuzzy nonsense. The door of the Eye remained closed. And like my mother had taught me, as it had been taught to her, I kept my head down. I walked toward the door with my head down, and so the blood from my brow dripped in front of me, and like a carrot on a stick led me on.

When I picture the Charles Street Jail, the image in my mind is always wrong. I see the bridge. If you look at it from the south, from the drugstore when you come out after buying cigarettes, or from one of the paths you can run on along the river, you see the train stop on the big metal and concrete bridge — the Red Line bound for Quincy, bound for Alewife. It obscures the hospital — Mass General — across the street. And Buzzy’s Roast Beef is below it, where you can park on the sidewalk and get a late-night sandwich when you’re high. I can’t see the jail — the outside, anyway — it’s set back, off the main drag. I don’t remember if you can see it from anywhere.

Pinky had one of those faces pocked by years of junk and old acne scars. He was jaundiced — yellow eyeballs, yellow skin, and dirty, nicotine-gray hair. He made me think of a twisted old belt. He was shirtless, struggling on the toilet across from me. He’d been watching me. He had blue eyes. They were huge and unblinking as though he’d been on speed forever.

“Harder and harder to pinch one off.”

“Fuck, man,” barked someone I couldn’t see but who sounded very evil. “You been eatin’ poison?”

Pinky still stared at me.

“Ray’s shit don’t stink — you know, little brother.”

He stood, flushed, and slid his camouflage pants up. “I’ll get back to that later.” He zipped, doing a little jump at the end as though he’d torqued himself off the ground. “Rough night, little brother?”

“Tchh!” Ray sucked his teeth hard and walked into my view. He was old, too, but not nearly as worn as Pinky. He was squat, bald, and light skinned. He had washed-out hazel eyes, a hippolike nose, and an enormous gap between his upper bicuspids. He stuck his tongue through it and snapped off a louder “Tchh!”

He was above me, and I realized that I was on the floor, leaning against the cinder-block wall. It was cold, but it felt strangely soothing. I thought some ribs might be broken. He bent at the waist, looked me over, and turned away to Pinky.

“Fucked that nigger up right. Fucked him up good.”

Pinky shuffled over. “Cops do that to you?”

I nodded.

“You’re a good-lookin’ kid under all that mess.” He crunched up his face and hissed as though he was in pain. Everything but his eyes collapsed. I went to touch my head and saw my hand as it went past my eyes. The top segment of my ring finger was pointing the wrong way. It started to hurt. I touched my forehead. It felt like one scab.

“You’re a good-lookin’ kid,” he repeated. “You’ll do all right.” He shuffled over to Ray, who was now leaning against the bars. Ray lit a cigarette and offered one to Pinky, who took the smoke but refused the light. He looked across the hall at the blank, white cinder-block wall. He stared at it for a moment, then turned for a light. “Mornin’ soon.” He turned to me and exhaled. I wanted a cigarette. “Hang in there, kid — you’ll be okay.”

I kept looking around the cell — the bars, the toilet, the cinder blocks, Pinky and Ray. It wasn’t my first time in a tank, but that didn’t seem to matter. And I remembered my missing coat and wondered whether Gavin or Shake had gotten it. And then I remembered having worn a sweater, a black wool one — like a sailor’s — but it was gone. What I had left was my thermal shirt. It was bloody and nearly torn off. I went back to the bars and then the toilet and the wall and the men, scanning the scene again and again. And I tried to spin it — turn it over in my mind. Then for an instant I thought that the otherness of the objects and the men was a good thing, and that I hadn’t become inured. I shook that notion off and I kept on trying to spin it, flip the image over and over in my head, but it still kept coming up wrong.

Ray snapped his tongue through his teeth again. “Don’t bother talkin’ to him. He ain’t goin’ nowhere — shit — you just trying to butter him up and roll him over.” He pinched the cigarette and pointed it at me, then at the wall and perhaps the world outside.

“Headstrong niggers these days don’t know shit. He ain’t goin’ nowhere.” He took another deep drag. I watched him blow it out through his big nostrils.

“What, nigger, you want something?”

There was a bench next to me attached to the wall. I used it to press myself up, and I managed to sit on it. Ray shook his head and threw his butt in my direction.

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