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I walked into the room. He lay on the bed. His family was gathered there, waiting. He asked them to leave the room. He said, “No one will be straight with me. Am I going to die?”

I said, “I don’t know.”

He said, “Bring me a mirror.”

I did, and he looked at himself for a long time, and then he said, “You ever see those pictures of the Ethiopian babies starving in the ditches?”

He bore a striking resemblance.

He said, “You see me, don’t you?”

I nodded. I couldn’t talk. What could I do? I crawled into the bed with him. He was naked beneath the hospital gown and he had shit himself and some of the shit got on my pants. I held him for a while, and then he said, “You were right about the kung fu movies.”

And I said, “No, I wasn’t. I wasn’t right about anything.”

This was death talk we were talking.

Then he said something extraordinary. He said, “I’m still praying for a miracle. I’m still believing for a miracle.”

I did not want to tell him so I didn’t tell him what I had learned, what life had taught me, which is there’s no such thing as miracles. God doesn’t probably answer our prayers.

After we said our goodbyes I left and knew he only had another day, probably, and it was not information I was equipped to handle. I hadn’t cried since I was thirteen years old and received the last of my beatings from McKinnick. I had hardened myself so I wouldn’t cry anymore, and then I couldn’t undo it when I needed to undo it. So there I was, driving in my Chevy Corsica down Interstate 95, a little bit of Tony’s shit still on my pants, just a little black stain, the little bit I couldn’t get off with the hospital bathroom’s hand soap and sink water. I was still trying to burn into memory what it was like to hold him and feel his flesh hanging like rags from the scaffolding of his bones, and to feel like if I held him too tightly I might break those bones and that it wouldn’t take much at all. Not being able to cry made it all so much worse. The tightness in my chest was almost unbearable and I needed to somehow loosen the tightness, and even though the air conditioner was making the car uncomfortably cold, I felt a terrible heat in my chest and neck, and the veins in both temples were throbbing so hard I thought the vessels might burst. I pulled the car off on the side of the interstate, near a Jupiter neighborhood called The Heights where an ex-girlfriend still lived with her parents, their house a hundred feet or so from where I was sitting. I wanted to see her. I got out and scaled the six-foot chain-link fence separating neighborhood from interstate. My pants snagged on the fence and ripped a little, and I walked to her house and rang the doorbell. She wasn’t there, but her mother answered the door and asked what was wrong and I told her that Tony was dying, and she said she was very sad and very sorry and wished she had time to talk about it but she had to be off to a birthday party.

And then I scaled that fence again, and ripped my pants some more, and that made me angry, ripping my pants. A state trooper a quarter mile away turned on his blue lights and raced toward me. I was standing beside the Chevy Corsica in ripped, shit-stained pants, my chest tighter, my neck hot, a shooting pain running down my left arm, watching the state trooper’s blue lights parading like fun-house ghosts against the front of my shirt.

The trooper opened his door and stepped out, and then he looked at me, and I looked at him, and I saw that he was Drew McKinnick. I could feel the beating of my heart through my body. I could all but hear the ringing in my ears, and those old, familiar words: “You need to get some humility, boy.” But then I could see that he wasn’t Drew McKinnick. He only bore a striking resemblance. The same cold intensity in his eyes, same square jaw, same dog teeth.

A couple of years earlier, a state trooper had pulled my brother over on a dark road — he was still in high school and wore his hair long — and yanked him out of the car by the arm and threw him over the trunk and threw him around a little, asked him if he knew what happens to people who hit cops.

My officer, when he got a closer look at me, puffed out his chest, straightened to his full height. He asked what I was doing climbing the fence by the interstate. He was almost grinning. What passed between us was not unfamiliar. It was a flash of mutual recognition, the thing that two individuals of certain types immediately know about each other. Minor and McKinnick. I felt very small.

I told him I was having a hard time and I had stopped to see a friend. I said I knew I should not have climbed the fence. I said I would be glad to get back in my car and be on my way. I asked if he’d let me. I said I was very sorry. I was ready for him to throw me around, knew he would.

He waited a long time. He did not ask for my driver’s license, and this troubled me. Whatever was going to happen between us was going to happen off the record. His nostrils flared when he breathed. He breathed hard. Each breath was like a calculated blow to the stomach. He put his hand on his holstered pistol. He looked into my eyes, measuring. I could not return his stare and shifted my focus to a fixed space beyond his shoulder, the white of the sky. “What happened to your pants?” he said, and I did not want to mention the fence. He seemed to find pleasure in my discomfort. He put his other hand on my shoulder and leaned over me so I had to look up again to meet his eyes. I told him I had ripped them on the fence. At that he grinned again, the predatory grin. His fingers dug into my shoulder. He said, “I don’t want to see you on the side of this interstate again. That’s a warning. I only give one. You understand?” I nodded. He sniffed the air, made a sour face. “Do yourself a favor and take a shower,” he said. He gave my shoulder one last squeeze, then a little shove as he let go and walked back toward his patrol car and got in and waited for me to drive away.

I stepped into my car and drove away, and he followed me all the way to the Indiantown Road exit, and then I exited and he kept going north. I pulled into a service station, and then I began to sob. Present or not, Drew McKinnick had undone what he had undone. I could feel him in the presence of the cop. His joy at intimidation. Somehow I had made it possible. My ears were ringing though they had not been slapped. Somehow I still carried McKinnick around inside me. I cried for a long time, and if I said that I was crying for Tony dying, that would be true, but it would also be a very, very small portion of the truth. Mostly, I was crying for the twelve-year-old boy standing beneath the starfruit tree on the asphalt path and waiting for his beating.

When I had cried all I could cry, I started the car again. I dug through my cassette tapes and found one that Tony had given me, as a joke. It was Parliament/Funkadelic’s Greatest Hits. We used to listen to that tape in the car all the time. I liked it more than he did.

I was listening to George Clinton go through the ministrations of “Atomic Dog”—Why must I feel like that, why must I chase the cat? — and then I was singing along, falsetto: Nothin’ but the dawg in me.

The cell phone rang, and I knew it must be my brother — he was in Nashville auditioning for a six-month touring gig playing bass guitar for a well-known country singer — and I didn’t even check the caller ID display. I answered and said, “Dr. Funkenstein here!”

And the voice on the other end was not my brother. It was Tony’s niece. She said, “Kyle?”

I said, “Oh, oh, I’m so sorry, I didn’t know.”

“It’s Tony,” she said. “He’s dead. He died a few minutes ago. I knew you’d want to know.”

I didn’t want to know. If this, dear reader, was a story like the kind I’d like to write, maybe there would have been a miracle. Most likely, Tony would die, but something else miraculous would happen. There would be a turn toward beauty that would reflect the joy-from-sadness in the prophet Isaiah’s words, the comfort: You shall go out with joy and be led forth with peace.