It wasn’t until he reached Kearney Street that he looked around, and when he did, he saw a San Francisco Chronicle headline screaming at him from inside a beat-up newspaper rack.
Rex stopped cold.
GALILEO STUDENT BRUTALLY MURDERED
16-Year-Old’s Arm Torn Off, Still Missing
Those words called to Rex, but not as much as the picture that accompanied them. A small school photo of a smiling Oscar Woody.
Oscar Woody was dead ? His arm … torn off ?
An older couple walked by. Rex ignored them. Dream-recollections flooded his thoughts, crystallizing the visions of smashing Oscar’s face, throwing him to the ground, stepping on his chest, grabbing his arm and yanking until there was a muffled cracking sound and the arm gave way.
Rex felt his dick stiffen a little in his pants.
My dream … I did this. I MADE him die .
Rex’s pulse hammered through his body. His face felt hot. He grabbed the newspaper rack and pulled. The locked door just rattled. He dug in his pockets, but he had no change. He had no money at all. He turned in a near panic, eyes scanning for the ever-present bums. He didn’t have to look far. An old man with a dirty beard and even dirtier clothes sat on his knees in front of the concrete steps that led into Portsmouth Square park. Head down low, hands cupped together and held at chest level, the kneeling bum waited for suckers to walk by.
Rex sprinted to the man.
“Give me your change,” Rex said. “Give it to me now.”
The bum ignored him.
“I said give me your change!” Rex reached back his right foot and kicked. His sneaker landed in the bum’s ribs. The old man cried out. What a baby — Rex hadn’t kicked him that hard.
The bum fell to his side, his face screwed tight in pain. “Ohmygod ohmygod … you broke my ribs.”
Rex leaned in until his face was only inches from the bum’s, so close Rex could smell breath that combined fruity alcohol and decay.
“Give it to me now , you motherfucker, or I will cut you !”
The bum shrank back, tried to bring his hands up in a defensive posture, but his face scrunched tight again and his hands shot to his side, where Rex had kicked him.
“ Please , boss, don’t hurt me!”
Rex felt electric — this man, this grown man , was terrified . Rex’s dick stiffened, throbbed.
“Hey!”
The voice came from down the street. Rex looked up. A half-block away on Washington stood a big man with a beer gut straining a white wife-beater shirt. He had a thick black beard that hung down to his chest. He wore a green John Deere baseball hat, and he was looking at Rex.
Looking so strangely.
“Hey,” the man said again. “You can’t do that when people are looking.”
Rex stared. More images, flickers of his dream phasing together in ghostly echoes. He’d seen this man before.
He’d seen this man in the dream.
Rex’s rage vanished. What the hell was going on? How could he see a man who had been in his dreams?
Then, a strange feeling blossomed in his chest. A warmth , a buzzing . It felt so good. The guy looked like a pedophile from a TV show, but the sensation in Rex’s chest made it feel like he could trust this stranger.
The man held out his hand. “I’ll help you. Come with me.”
Rex stared, then shook his head. The man was coming from where Rex had been walking … had the man been following him?
Rex turned to run, stopping only long enough to wind up with his right foot and kick the bum again, this time right in the face. The bum’s head snapped back, shaking hands reaching up to cover a mouth that already gushed blood.
Blood. I made him BLEED …
Rex sprinted down Washington, thumbs hooked under his backpack straps. He saw a Chinese restaurant and ran inside, pushing past anyone who got in his way. He slid past the tables, saw a door in the back and ran through it into the kitchen. People were yelling at him in Chinese or whatever, more in surprise than anger. Moments later, he found a door that led to a back alley.
He sprinted away from the restaurant, away from the bum, away from the bearded man. The emotions that pounded through his body, his brain, were exquisite in intensity and texture.
He had hit someone.
For the first time in his entire life, Rex had fought back .
Black Mr. Burns
John Smith focused on his computer screen, using a stylus to hand-trace the lines of a photo from new graffiti found in the Western Addition neighborhood. He didn’t recognize the artist’s work by sight — perhaps a new tagger from an existing gang, or, more likely, the markings of a brand-new outfit. John was so intent on mapping the image that he didn’t hear the office door open, didn’t even realize someone was there until that person spoke.
“Black Mister Burns,” said Pookie Chang. “How’s life sniffing the silicon ass of the digital dog?”
John turned and smiled at his former partner. “Computer work is just fine, thanks.”
John reached out to shake Pookie’s hand. Pookie had to juggle his ever-present overflowing manila folders to answer the shake. Some things never changed.
Years earlier, Pookie had used the unusual nickname to try and get a rise out of John. To most people, being compared to a character on The Simpsons would be less than flattering. Most people, sure, but not to a man who had the most common name in America, and in England.
John loved his moms, but when other black mothers were naming their children sweet names like Marquis, Jermaine, Andre, Deshon , or even something crazy like X-Ray , his mom settled on the rather unoriginal John .
When Pookie started calling John Black Mister Burns , it didn’t bother John at all. Then the rest of the cops picked up on it, laughing at how John’s overbite, long nose and his mottled bald head did, indeed, make him look like a black Mr. Burns.
John had loved it.
It was something people could remember — a name that wasn’t shared by over half a million American men. And for that, seeing Pookie always put a smile on John’s face.
“Burns, you look good,” Pookie said. “Only mildly anorexic this time. How’s that bike restoration coming? Eighty-eight softail, right?”
John’s smile faded, then he forced it back into place. “Finished it two years ago.”
Pookie winced. “Damn, I knew that. Sorry.”
Pookie Chang remembered the most obscure facts in the world. That he’d forgotten about John’s project showed how far apart the two men had grown in the six years since they’d last worked together.
“We got something for you,” Pookie said. “Could use your help on this.”
“Cool,” John said. “Where’s the Terminator?”
John was still a bit jealous that Pookie’s career had not only continued, but had skyrocketed with another partner. John couldn’t bring himself to be mad at Bryan Clauser, however — the Terminator had saved his life.
“Bryan’s at his apartment,” Pookie said. “He isn’t feeling so hot.”
“Sick? Bryan ?”
Pookie shrugged. “Yeah, I guess there’s a first time for everything.”
“Well, then stay away from me,” John said. “I know you guys were probably in the back of that Buick swapping spit and rubbing tummies.”
“Kissing dudes is my business and business is good. Now if you’re done fencing with your rapier wit, I need your help with this.”
“Is it from that body on Meacham this morning?”
Pookie nodded, looked for a place to set down his stack of folders. John cleared out a space. Pookie set them down, opened the top folder and handed John several printed crime-scene photos.
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