Caught Stealing - Charlie Huston [37]
And he starts leading me toward the back of the store. The girl at the counter stops in the middle of her transactions.
—Martin? Martin? Where you goin’ with that foulmouth?
—Cheryl, just mind your own fuckin’ business.
—Don’t curse me, don’t you curse me.
—Yeah, yeah, fuckin’ yeah.
—Oh, oh!
—Just work the register, Cheryl. This is a security matter, so you just work the register.
—You busted, Martin. You soooo busted.
The rest is lost as Martin takes me back into the stockroom.
—OK, man, come on.
He lets go of my arm and starts leading me through a series of twists and turns, around piles of boxes, and through a couple very short hallways to a door with about eight locks. Martin stops and looks at me.
—OK, man, this is the stock entrance. I’m gonna open it quick, so you just jump out, ’cause I got to get back out there and chill Cheryl. OK?
—Sure.
The whole time, he’s twisting dead bolts and sticking keys from a big ring into locks until there is just one left to open.
—You ready?
—Ready.
He snaps the last lock open, pulls the door inward and I jump out. The door is exactly ten yards down the street from the store’s main entrance and, as I hear Martin relocking the locks, I look up and see Red, who has spotted me immediately and is waving at me, a big fucking smile on his sadistic little face. And I run away as fast as I can.
As alcoholics go, I’m really more of a dedicated amateur than a true professional. I tend to be more of a bingeing, life-of-my-own-party kind of drinker rather than a steady, dying-an-inch-at-a-time kind of drinker. And even in the middle of a bender, I still get myself over to the gym most days. It gets the heart started and sweats out the worst of the booze and helps me to hide from the hard core of desperation that has somehow become my life. I’ve jogged, lifted weights, and even sparred while still fully plowed from the night before. It’s part vanity, but mostly I’m fighting a holding action against my lifestyle, convincing my mind that I’m not really trying to kill myself. I stay in shape. But even at my best, stone cold sober, well rested, well fed, with two kidneys and no recent beatings, even at my best I am not a shadow of what I once was.
I’m running west on 14th Street. Two lanes of traffic running both east and west, the sidewalk crowded with pedestrians checking out the discount shops. The bag from the store is in my left hand and, as I run, it swings crazily and keeps bouncing off the wound in my side and it’s all I can think about. After the first twenty yards I drop it. With my hands free, I try to focus on my stride, try to find the point where I can slip my legs into gear and let them carry me along, but it’s hard because I keep snapping my head over to the right to catch a glimpse of Red, to see how far back he is. He’s not far back at all; in point of fact he’s just about parallel to me, but he’s sticking to the north side of the street and seems satisfied to just keep pace. I catch a break at Second Avenue, a green light that lets me shoot across the crosswalk and onto the next block.
These days when I run, it’s really just jogging. I’ll open it up a bit every now and then to work out the kinks, but I never really kick it. I don’t like to feel what I lost. They talk about burst: the ability to explode into full speed from a dead standstill. I had burst. Against the guys at school and in Little League, I stole at will, and when the scouts came to see me play, they just clicked their stopwatches and shook their heads.
I’m about halfway to Third Avenue. My stride is uneven, I’ve got a stitch starting beneath the real pain of my wound, and the muscle where my leg broke is a stiff little ball in my calf. I snatch a look at Red and, from the way he’s reading the traffic, I can tell he’s getting ready to cross over to my side of the street. I figure I need to make a move.
At Third the light is green for me, but I cut left and head downtown instead. I don’t look back, but the horns and brake squeals tell me all I need to know: Red is crossing 14th