He drew a few beers, put out new dishes of nuts, then made salads and put them on ice. When the salads were taken care of, he flipped the steaks and walked back to John and Blaze. He placed his dishwater-reddened mitts on the bar and said, “You fellas see that gent at the far end of the bar, sittin all by his lonesome?”
Blaze and John looked. The gent at the end of the bar was dressed in a natty blue suit and was morosely sipping a beer.
“That’s Daniel J. Monahan.
John Cheltzman looked suddenly sick. He reeled a little on his stool. Blaze put a hand out to steady him. Mentally he set his feet. “We got that money fair and square,” he said.
“That right? Who’d you stick up fair and square? Or was it a fair and square muggin?”
“We got that money fair and square. We found it. And if you spoil it for Johnny and me, I’ll bust you one.”
The man behind the bar looked at Blaze with a mixture of surprise, admiration, and contempt. “You’re big, but you’re a fool, boy. Close either fist and I’ll put you on the moon.”
“If you spoil our holiday, I’ll bust you one, mister.”
“Where you from? New Hampshire Correctional? North Windham? Not from Boston, that’s for sure. You boys got hay in your hair.”
“We’re from Hetton House,” Blaze said. “We ain’t crooks.”
The Boston detective at the end of the bar had finished his beer. He gestured with the empty glass for another. The big man saw it and cracked a smile. “Sit tight, the both of you. No need to put on your skates.”
The big man brought Monahan another beer and said something that made Monahan laugh. It was a hard sound, not much humor in it.
The bartender-cook came back. “Where’s this Hetton House place?” Now it was John he was speaking to.
“In Cumberland, Maine,” John said. “They let us go to the movies in Freeport on Friday night. I found a wallet in the men’s bathroom. There was money inside. So we ran away to have a holiday, just like Blaze said.”
“Just happened to find a wallet, huh?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And how much was in this fabled wallet?”
“About two hundred and fifty dollars.”
“Baldheaded Jaysus, and I bet you got it all in your pockets, too.”
“Where else?” John looked mystified.
“Baldheaded
The big man leaned forward with his fingers splayed on the bar. His face had been cruelly handled by the years, but it wasn’t cruel.
“I believe you,” he said. “You got too much hay in your hair to be liars. But that cop down there…boys, I could sic him on you like a dog on a rat. You’d be cellbound while him and me was splittin that money.”
“I’d bust you one,” Blaze said. “That’s our money. Me and Johnny found it. Look. We been in that place, and it’s a bad place to be in. A guy like you, maybe you think you know stuff, but…aw, never mind. We
“You’re gonna be a bruiser when you get your full growth,” the big man said, almost to himself. Then he looked at John. “Your friend here, he’s a few tools short of a full box. You know that, right?”
John had recovered himself. He didn’t say anything, only returned the big man’s gaze steadily.
“You take care of him,” the big man said, and he smiled suddenly. “Bring him back here when he gets his full growth. I want to see what he looks like then.”
John didn’t smile back — looked more solemn than ever, in fact — but Blaze did. He understood it was all right.
The big man produced the twenty-dollar bill — it seemed to come from nowhere — and shoved it at John. “These steaks are on the house, boys. You take that and go to the baseball tomorrow. If you ain’t had your pockets picked by then.”
“We went today,” John said.
“Was it good?” the big man asked.
And now John did smile. “It was the greatest thing I ever saw.”
“Yeah,” the big man said. “Sure it was. Watch out for your buddy.”
“I will.”
“Because buddies stick together.”
“I know it.”
The big man brought the steaks, and Caesar salads, and new peas, and huge mounds of string-fries, and huge glasses of milk. For dessert he brought them wedges of cherry pie with scoops of vanilla ice cream melting on top. At first they ate slowly. Then Detective Monahan of Boston’s Finest left (without paying nothing, so far as Blaze could see) and they both pitched to. Blaze had two pieces of pie and three glasses of milk and the third time the big guy refilled Blaze’s glass, he laughed out loud.
When they left, the neon signs in the street were coming on.
“You go to the Y,” the big man said before they did. “Do it right away. City’s no place for a couple of kids to be wandering around at night.”
“Yes, sir,” John said. “I already called and fixed it.”