“When?” She leans over to show some curves to the idiots flashing cash for booze. Hands a dopey-looking customer his beer.
“Five.”
“Hell, you’ll be back in time.”
“Nah, that shit takes forever. You get there. You’re on time. The shrink makes you sit around for a while like your time don’t mean shit. But she’s gonna charge you a couple hundred for hers.”
“Yeah. Doctors are all kinda the same.”
Kieron pours a couple shots of whiskey for two frat kids. Jack Daniel’s. Though the little idiots should know better and get Evan Williams. Cheaper and it tastes better. He says to Lizzy, “Not just kinda.” He smiles at the frat kids. They leave him a couple bucks.
Kieron says, “I know the boss checks the security tape. Wants to make sure his little ex-junkie tax-break is doing what he’s supposed to.”
Lizzy thinks for a minute. “He asks, I’ll tell him you were in the basement moving booze.” She gives Kieron a comforting grin. “I got your back.”
“Us scum of the Earth gotta stick together.”
“Asshole doesn’t pay enough for me to be on his side.”
***
Kieron starts putting the pieces together in his head.
Thing he doesn’t know?
What the Russians are up to.
***
Nine o’clock. Mostly regulars at the bar now. Unhappy bunch, but he’s glad they’re there. They know him and they tip better than college students.
Better taste in music, too. Rock. Some Blues. No Pop shit.
Kieron calls up to the apartment on the phone at the bar.
Sarah answers. “Hello?”
“How you kids doing up there, hot stuff?”
“We’re good, cowboy. Working on Aaron’s epic spaceship. Then I think dinner. Then I’m thinking Aaron’ll settle for a nap. I’ve got homework. How’s business?”
“Another shitty day in paradise. Least the tips are decent.”
“Let’s hope it stays that way.”
“Yeah. Lemme talk to Aaron?”
“I just need to drag him away from his creation.”
Thirty seconds pass. Then Aaron breathes into the receiver.
Kieron says, “How’re you, bud?”
“Good.”
“Sarah helping you with the ship?”
“Yeah.”
Aaron ain’t the easiest kid to talk to. And Kieron knows the boy won’t say much beyond what he already he has. So the tired dad says, “OK, bud. I’ll let you get back to it. Love you.”
“Love you.”
Sarah grabs the phone. “I’ll see you when you’re off.”
“Yes you will. Bye.”
“Bye.”
And then Kieron can’t stop thinking about how quick he can get to the old broad’s place and then back to the shrink tomorrow.
He tells himself: It’ll be easy. Sneak out when Aaron’s in with the shrink. Grab that key from under the mat. Slip in. Get out in time to get the kid. You did plenty of petty theft and robbery when you were a junkie. It ain’t like you forgot any of those tricks. And this one’s begging to be done.
All those goddamn bills.
Kieron mutters to himself. “Begging to be done.”
9.
Saim Dajani wakes up late. He thinks, This ain’t so bad. Like he’s got a handle on the hangover. But he forgets that once you hit the age of thirty, hangovers wait till you least expect it. Then they fuck you from behind without the courtesy of a reach-around.
He walks into his living room. Stumbles a little. Blinks against the afternoon sunlight. Makes his way over to the fridge. He grabs the handle.
The little exertion it takes to open the door is enough to trigger it: the hangover. Rotten, creeping headache. Feels like it’s pinching his spine at the base of his neck. Some kinda alien presence just squeezing and squeezing.
He grabs a can of Red Bull. Closes his eyes. Throws its contents down his throat.
Acid rumbles in his stomach. He coughs. Shakes his head. Pushes it down.
He looks at all the empty bottles scattered around his kitchen counter. Says, “That was stupid.” He’s got the day off, but he slept half of it away.
He looks up at a big movie poster of TOMBSTONE—his favorite cowboy flick. Movie’s got so many goddamn good lines—and shrugs.
Now he’s gotta spend some time nursing a headache.
He opens the medicine cabinet in the bathroom. Shakes a bottle of Advil hoping he’s got some. It rattles. He smirks and opens it. Two left.
Saim says, “My lucky fuckin day.” He chases the pills with Red Bull.
He sits on the couch and crosses his legs. “Indian style.” Only saying “Indian Style” ain’t politically correct anymore, like when he was a kid, so he’s just sitting on his damn legs with a lit cigarette between his lips.
He flips through the local TV channels till he hits NY1.
They’re talking about his gunfight yesterday with that fuckin gangsta idiot, Marquis Roberts. The dipshit’s mugshot flashes up on the screen.
Then comes Joe Leonard’s dumb smiling face.
Then comes his own dumb smiling face.
Then Saim’s grinning like an idiot, smoking a cigarette.
He throws on jeans. Boots. Sweatshirt.
Heads out the door to the nearest bodega.
He wants to see what the papers are saying.
***
The bodega owner down the block never particularly gave a damn about Saim till today—when he notices that the cop’s face is on the front page of both The Post and The Daily News.
No. Not just “the cop.” Now Saim Dajani’s a HERO COP, according to both tabloids.
Like fuckin magic, Saim’s beer and smokes and Gatorade and Red Bull are free.
Saim says something like: No, thanks. That’s okay. I’m not supposed to accept gifts cuz of x, y, z.
And then this Korean guy behind the counter just keeps telling him to take it.
So he does.
Fuck it.
Saim looks at the papers.
Thinks: Let’s see you run away from me now, dad.
***
Back in his apartment, Saim puts on something he can listen to and not really think about. ZZ Top. Good beat. Low, in the background. Lyrics just dumb enough to go along with.
He pours himself a small glass of Evan Williams bourbon whiskey. He got a taste for it. Had to. Mostly cuz his partner Joe Leonard, who’s actually from Kentucky, kept harassing him about how Jack Daniel’s was bullshit and blah blah history of American whiskeys and whatever.
Still... Decent shit. Cheap, too.
He looks at himself on covers of the Post and the News.
Tells himself he’s gotta frame these.
He sees Joe’s photo there next to his and realizes he hasn’t called him yet. Been too excited. Well, hungover and then excited.
Saim checks his phone. Buncha missed calls. Two voicemails. He ignores the folks who didn’t bother to leave a message.
First voicemail: “Mister Dajani, this is Clemente with the New York Post. My number here is 212-555-8500. We’d like, ah... We’d like your account of the shooting yesterday. So, please, give me a call back.”
Second voicemail: “Dude. It’s Joe. You see the fuckin Daily News? Holy shit. And can you imagine the Post putting your dumb ass on page one? Having to love you cuz you’re a hero cop even through you’re a demon Muslim Communist Nazi Arab? Fuckin awesome. Call me back. We gotta get a drink. I’ll come to Queens. Shit! You beautiful raghead you.”
Saim smiles. Says, “Fuckin honky.”
***
They wander into Tropix cuz it’s close and the barbeque wings are better than all right. Up Queens Boulevard. Between 63rd Ave
and 63rd Drive. They wanna stay near Dajani’s place since they’ve got work tomorrow. And they’re in too much of a good mood to pretend they won’t get kinda drunk.
Joe Leonard says, “I always wonder, y’know. We go out to get a drink. And we’re two young dudes. We look all right. Do folks think we’re a gay couple?”
Saim says, “Well, it’s two gay hero cops now.”
“Counterpoint.”
Saim arches his eyebrows. “You’re not really worried about that are you?”
Joe shrugs. “Nah. Well. I dunno. Tough enough finding a woman without fuckers thinkin we’re fuckin each other.” He sips his Coors. “I mean, no offense. I don’t give a shit what you do. Honest truth.”
Saim looks into his beer. “For a guy like you, no offense, maybe it’s easy to find a woman. But I’m guessing you’re talking about a ‘good one.’”
“Yeah.”
“Well why are you looking for a ‘good woman’ in a bar? Isn’t this stereotypically the last place some Country Joe like you supposed to be looking for a wife?”
“The fuck else am I supposed to meet one?”
“Go somewhere other than a bar?”
“Oh ho ho, you’re feeling clever.”
Saim takes a drink. “If I’d stayed Muslim and pretended I was straight, my folks would’ve forced me to settle down. Just play happy pretend time. All the time. And where my family comes from, women are brought up to be slaves. Obey the man. All that.”
“So? Lotta hot Middle Eastern chicks running around this city. Brown sugar. Hell, my cock ain’t racist. Nothin wrong with some tan titties.”
Saim glares. “You fuckin kidding me? These are women who are raised to be slaves to men. That’s fuckin disgusting.”
“Jesus dude, I was kidding.” Joe throws his hands up. “Just some dumb bullshit. Y’know, bar talk? Relax. I was raised strict Baptist. You know me. We been partners over a year. I know I ain’t gonna find the love of my life twirling around a bar stool. Wouldn’t want to.”
“Yeah, yeah. Sorry.”
“It’s fine, man. We’re both kinda dumb on beer.”
“And we’re both HERO COPS.”
“We are fuckin HERO COPS.”
They clink glasses.
Both been drinking for free after showing the bartender their photos in the tabloids. Just for fun. But the Tropix bartender musta figured: What the hell. Can’t charge HERO COPS for their beers.
Saim says, “You could go gay. There’s always that.”
Joe says, “Don’t get any funny ideas.”
***
They get back to Saim’s apartment and stand around in the kitchen. Shoot the shit. Slur a bit. Some George Thorogood plays on Saim’s little speakers while they drink and mutter.
Joe raises his glass. “At least you got Evan Williams.”
Saim lights a cigarette. “Yup.”
“You were sayin, in the bar —” Joe burps “— that if you were still Muslim and pretended you didn’t like dudes or whatever you’d be settled down.”
Saim squints. “Yeahhh...”
“Well, why aren’t you Muslim anymore?”
Saim starts: “That’s—” He thinks about his old man kicking the shit out of him and his mom when he was a kid. It being totally okay as far as cultural norms go in hardline Muslim communities. And his mom just taking it, like a “good woman.” The thought still makes him sick. “It’s a long story, man. But I wanted freedom.”
“Sucked in Afghanistan, huh?”
“It was the suck.”
“So the family moves here and then what?”
“Then everything’s different cuz, hey, Merica. We got here when I was seven, eight-ish. And my dad was still a dick, but I don’t think he felt like he could get away with what he could in Afghanistan.”
“Y’all started getting integrated and whatnot.”
“Yeah. I got older and I realized the idea of a god who was gonna spank me for x,y,z and thinking men are more attractive than women is bullshit. So I bailed. Second I turned eighteen my ass was out the door. I could finally be who I wanted.”
“I’ll drink to that.”
Joe and Saim clink glasses. Toss some whiskey down their throats.
Saim says, “What about you?”
Joe says, “Mine’s boring. Nothin bad happened to me. My parents are good folks. I’m a Kentucky boy so it wasn’t weird or nothin that I wanted to get into law enforcement. Just didn’t wanna to do it there. So I moved and here I am. Killing bad guys in the Big Apple.”
“Hey man, nothin wrong with that.”
They toast again. Drink.
Joe says, “What made you wanna be a cop?”
Saim considers it. Says, “A lot of it was cuz of how bad our dad treated us. I figured I could help kids. Help families. Put the bad guys away. Or at least scare the shit out of em. And I didn’t like this fuckin idea that gay dudes couldn’t be... dudes.”
“Sure. Honorable.”
“Second reason is gonna sound dumb as hell though.” Saim points to his big poster of the film TOMBSTONE.
Joe chuckles. “Kurt Russell made you wanna be a cop.”
“Man, I saw that movie years ago and it just got into my head. All that awesome righteous anger from the good guys. Russell and Val Kilmer. All those crazy one-liners. ‘You called down the thunder, well now you got it!’ Just awesome.”
“Who even has time to think up that stuff when you’re shooting people?”
“Doesn’t matter, man. It’s just the chill it gives you.”
Joe shrugs. “So when we go to sleep, you wanna be the big spoon or the little spoon?”
“Keep your ass on the couch.”
10.
Kieron says, “C’mon, bud. We gotta get ready to go.”
It’s always like this. Aaron doesn’t wanna leave. He wants to keep working on his project. Whatever project that might be. Usually LEGOs. Sometimes video games. But what the kid’s doing takes priority in his little mind.
Aaron says, “I don’t want to.”
Kieron says, “Well you got to.”
So Kieron finds himself trying to fit Aaron’s shirt on. One arm at a time. While the kid fidgets and keeps trying to build whatever it is he’s building. The whole time Kieron’s thinking: Christ, I need to get this shit done. I don’t have the time right now.
Frustrated but Kieron can’t show it. If he does, he’ll fuck up his already-awkward relationship with his son.
He just needs to be cool. Think about the old lady’s jewels.
Shit’ll get easier with some extra cash.
***
Kieron and Aaron walk down the street, hand in hand. Kieron stops to get a cup of not-entirely-awful coffee from the cart vendor on his block. Same guy he’s seen almost daily for years. But Kieron can’t remember his name. They grunt the typical bullshit and nod at each other till their time together is over.
It only takes Aaron a block and a half to get annoyed and distracted. Then he’s straining against his dad’s hands. Staring up at the sky. Cramming a finger in his nose.
Kieron picks the boy up and sets him on his shoulders. Aaron wraps his hands around his father’s forehead for balance. Locks his fingers together right over the bartender’s eyebrows.
Kieron says, “How is it up there, bud?”
“It’s tall. I’m tall.”
Kieron laughs. “Well, you will be.” He gets close to a branch. Ducks Aaron underneath it. Bounces the kid back up.
Aaron giggles and Kieron smiles.
He likes the sound. Feels like he doesn’t get to hear it enough. Thinks: You’ll get to hear the boy laugh a lot more if you could take him on vacation. Maybe. Old bird’s jewels could make that happen.
Then: You really gonna rob an elderly woman?
/> He feels the Yankees baseball cap and rubber surgical gloves in his leather jacket pocket. Mutters to himself under his son’s giggles: “Debt does fucked up shit to people.”
***
The shrink’s office is clean. White. Bright. Clinical.
There’s a leather couch. The requisite magazines on the table. Vase of fake flowers. Little box of tissues. Diplomas on the wall that say blah blah Sharon M. Stein, PhD. Water cooler. Muted TV showing NY1.
Kieron and Aaron sit. Wait.
Five minutes pass. Ten. Fifteen.
Kieron’s about to get up and hit her buzzer again when this Sharon bitch ushers out a girl in her mid-teens. Blonde. Nice dress on. She’s sniffling. Eyes puffy.
The shrink pats this girl, telling her they made a lot of progress and everything’s gonna be fine.
Kieron squeezes Aaron’s hand.
Sharon smiles at the girl.
The girls says thank you. Smiles back. Heads out the door.
Sharon says, “Hello, Mr. Palmer. And hello, Aaron. How are you today?”
Aaron says, “Good. Dad put me on his shoulders. I was like—” Aaron jumps up off the couch. Stands on his tiptoes. “Super tall.”
“That’s wonderful.” She takes Aaron’s hand. Nods once to Kieron. She has a look on her face. He knows the one. She’s saying: I know you were a shithead junkie and you disgust me and you’re lucky your kid isn’t more messed up and you live above a bar, you filth.
But, y’know, without saying it. So that makes it okay.
Kieron cocks an eyebrow at her. “He didn’t wanna come. We’re working on a LEGO project together. If he’s got LEGOs, and he’s happier with them, why’re we here again?”
Aaron’s ears perk up at “LEGOs” and he starts to turn back.
Sharon stops him. Turns her head to Kieron. “Well, Mr. Palmer, according to the court, I need to see him until I’m sure the environment he’s in is satisfactory. I have to make sure he isn’t in danger and that he’s developing correctly, Mr. Palmer.”
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