“I break you in the hedt!” he cries, voice surprisingly high. “You get oudt now!”
And where, in a penny arcade, did he find a brand-new ax handle?
“We’re just going,” calls Junior, ever the gentleman, as he lifts Royal by the shoulders and steers him away. “We don’t want any trouble.”
Royal sees they are the only customers left and the Orchestrion switches to Bill Bailey as he is hustled out the back entrance, stumbling over a drunken soldier sleeping curled on his side.
“I’ve been hit,” says Royal, the fact dawning on him with another wave of nausea. “Somebody hit my head and I’m sick.”
There is too much water in the air to breathe right and there is more shooting, shooting and shouted curses from the other side of the building. A small soldier hurries down the alley toward them, looking back over his shoulder and he is almost on them before they see it is Little Earl, his eyes shining with more excitement than fear.
“I been saved,” he says. “I’m prepared to meet my Maker.” And then, as if an afterthought, “Why everybody shooting?”
Tampa is a fever dream bubbling acid to the brain. Old hatreds are resolved in a flash, strangers try to murder one another, property is destroyed, storefronts violated.
A fire wagon races down the street, horses wide-eyed and prick-eared, thick-armed men ready to shoulder through doorways, but nothing is burning yet. Tampa is unhinged, thoughtless, thrashing in its own worst nightmare.
Coop has one round left in the chamber and they’re running. Not running away but running wild, running to spread it as fast and as far as possible, to do what is needed till it can’t be done anymore.
Too Tall trots with a sack of cans, beans and tomatoes and succotash they pulled from the grocery where the clerk spat at his shoes, and whenever one of the boys says There, they wouldn’t serve me there, they all reach in and grab a can and let fly at the glass. Coop wonders what the Army name for the formation they are running in is, a wide V with a few pedaling backward behind to cover the rear. Willie Mills has a new Winchester and a pocketful of shells he took from the hardware and hasn’t got to use yet. Now and again some white head will look out from a doorway or window, take one look and disappear before he can get a shot off.
“They sposed to pop up again,” Willie complains. “Give a man a chance.”
Coop is feeling good, feeling free and bold and keeping that one ace back in the chamber in case he needs it. The first one he knows he hit cause the man fell out, aimed at the balls and cut him under the hip, and two more must have hit somebody cause it was such a crowd of them coming all together he fired into. The Krag, what he would give to have the Krag in his hands right now and a belt packed with ammunition. Put these rednecks to school.
“It’s there on the left,” says Rufus Briscoe and they see the girls, most all of them white, looking down from the second-floor balcony. The V swings right and again Coop is sure the Army has a name for it, Too Tall shattering the door with the heel of his boot and the rest squeezing shoulder to shoulder to push it through.
A thick-necked black man sits on the parlor stairs, shotgun leveled and his face glistening with nervous sweat.
“You go upstairs,” he says, “they gone kill me for sho.”
“You put that shotgun up.” Too Tall spreads his arms out wide, drops the sack with the last few cans in it. Men still outside are shouting, wanting to know what the hold-up is.
“Don’t you make me do this.”
Coop drifts off to the side, toward the parlor. He has the pistol loose in his hand.
Too Tall takes a small step forward, arms still spread.
“We gonna get what we come for. These gals anything to you?”
“This my job.”
“It worth dyin for?”
“Ax you the same thing. White-woman pussy worth dying for?”
Too Tall laughs. “You all right. What’s your name?”
“Jawge.”
“There’s at least seven, eight of us here, Jawge. Aint no white man gonna blame you, overwhelm eight-to-one.”
Coop watches the man’s trigger finger. He’s seen a man taken apart by a shotgun this close once, in Raleigh. Saw backbone come out white behind and the man lifted clear off his feet.
“And this aint just no common layabouts, Jawge,” says Too Tall, easing his hands down. “You got professional soldiers here, out on a rampage. If you think your white man blame you for that, give us his name and we go get him.”
The man on the stairs ponders this for a moment, not happy, then looks over to Coop.
“Lay your shotgun back,” says Coop, smiling, “and step out the way.”
Coop eases back closer to Too Tall, not taking his eyes off the weapon. George stands, then swings the gun around and unloads both barrels into the parlor, shattering a mirror and blowing stuffing from a pink divan. Screams from upstairs.
“You done lost me this job,” he says accusingly. “But you tell them gals I peppered some hides down here, maybe Mist’ Carlyle won’t come after me.”
He steps aside and the men charge up the stairs, cheering.
“Aint a thing up there that’s worth it,” he says to Willie, left behind with his rifle to watch the street.
Coop is the first in the room. A blond woman with a face round as a pie plate, dressed in red silk, stands in front of the others with her hands on her hips.
“We don’t fuck no niggers here,” she announces.
“Aint nothing to it, darling,” says Coop. “And how things is, tonight you got no choice.”
The blond woman eyes the roll of money as he pulls it from his shirt pocket.
“You gone pay?”
“Yeah, darling, we gone pay,” says Coop, laying his winnings on the bureau and smiling. “One way or the other.”
Tampa is a fever dream, lingering through the night, a nightmare that won’t end.
“Who goes there?”
There are five of them, sharp-eyed boys from the 2nd Georgia. The boldest has the barrel of his rifle jammed against the center of Junior’s chest. There is enough light to see color now.
“What we got?” calls another as he steps around the side of a scrapwood shanty.
“Got a bunch of plantation monkeys all dressed up like sojers.” A scrawny dog is sniffing loudly at Royal’s leg and growling, its tail rigid. There is a distant popcorn-rattling of gunfire from back in Tampa City but here the black folks have barred their doors, or what they have that will pass for a door, praying the fight won’t blow their way.
“What you doing out here, Rastus?”
“Private Aaron Lunceford,” says Junior as calmly as he can. “25th Infantry, Company L.”
“Not what I asked you, is it?”
They cut through the Scrub hoping somebody might hide them till daybreak. Little Earl knows a house with two women who host card parties but nobody was in there and then they got turned around because the streets are just sand paths with no signs anywhere.
“We were just visiting here,” says Royal, feeling sick again, “and then heading back to the Heights.”
The leader looks down to the fyce, growling louder now and staring tense at Royal’s leg, ready to snap if he makes a twitch. “Dog botherin you, boy?”
“No.” Royal realizes it should have been “No sir” but the Army training has taken hold and this boy has only got one thin stripe on his arm.
“Bothers me,” says the leader.
Royal feels the force of the bullet passing close by his leg. Just a single startled yelp, the kind they do when they’re sleeping and you step on their tail, and it flops to the sand. He can smell the blood, and something else, urine. He shifts his leg slowly and is relieved to find it’s not his own.