seat where she was sitting. And her mother always said she'd die before giving birth.
'Hang on,' Mike ordered.
As if she had a choice. April braced her hands against the dashboard. The tires caught, the car shot forward, skidding sideways on the other side. Mike slammed the Camaro into low and regained control, then accelerated exactly the same way into the next changing light.
Excited voices on the radio continued. Sirens sounded to the south of them, to the east. Even behind them in the north. Everybody was hot to join. The voice on the radio gave only one item of identification on the shooter. His head was covered with some kind of scarf. April snorted. It was snowing. Everybody's head was covered.
At 145th Street, Mike slowed the car to a crawl. He let the hammer have two final spurts of whine, then shut it off.
'What do you say, east, west?'
'Is it my call?' April asked, scanning the street.
'Yes. Yours.'
'You want me to flip a coin?'
'No, I want you to make a call.'
April shrugged. 'Okay, he'd go west. Hang out under a stoop for a while. Too much activity east of B- way.'
'Fine. Remember, you called it.'
'Oh, give me a break.'
'You called it.' Mike turned west, headed down a quiet street of brownstones. A few people were hurrying along. Not many. The snow was thicker now, was beginning to stick. They needed a spotlight to see through the storm.
Mike kept going, through the next light. Two blocks from Broadway at 141st Street everything was nice and quiet. No one out on the street here—except one guy halfway down the block, fiddling with the top of a garbage can. He had a scarf on his head.
'Let's check him out,' Mike said. He accelerated the car to where the man was standing, then stopped a few feet in front of the garbage
Startled, the man whipped around to look at them. Just as quickly, he gave them his back, let go of the garbage can top, and walked quickly down the street in the opposite direction. April was out of the car before Mike cut the engine.
'Oh, come on, April, no.'
In her haste, April planted the heel of one of her new boots in an ice slick in the gutter. She slid into a freezing puddle between two managed to grab the back of one of them before falling to her knees in the wet. She righted herself, splashed out onto the sidewalk, and charged down the street. The guy limped away through the snow, didn't look back at the car with one door gaping open and two people running after him.
'Hey, you. Stop. You dropped something.' April ran, slipping with every other step. Mike caught up and passed her.
The guy stopped suddenly at the word
April caught up, unholstered her gun. She didn't like the look of this guy. He was whining at Mike not to shoot him, but one hand dropped almost immediately. Bad sign. A big mocking grin on his face revealed an impressive ridge of gold where he should have had top teeth. He was not really frightened.
Good, she got that. Who's the girl? April raised her gun, covering Mike.
'Hey, hey, hey.' Mike growled at the hand slipping into the right-hand jacket pocket.
April got that, too. Raise your hands. He wanted her to cover him as he patted the guy down.
'Ayiie,
April saw a smear on the man's hand. Blood was leaking from a cut on his hand, or maybe his wrist. 'Blood,' she barked. 'He's injured.'
The man wiped his hands in a puddle on the windshield.
'Hey, hey, hey. Don't you move. I tell you not to move, you don't move.'
'Get back there.' Mike pushed him back against the car.
'Then why's your hand bleeding?'
'The fuck you don't, buddy.'
Mike patted down skinny legs. The man's hand held above his head caused the blood to drip down his right
sleeve. 'Ayiie,' he cried.
'Did you hear that, Sergeant? This man is sick, he didn't do anything, and he doesn't speak English.'
'We heard you the first time, around we go. Real slow here, keep those hands up. No fast moves.' Mike turned the guy around and unzipped his jacket. After a quick forage, he pulled out a mean-looking switchblade. 'Well, look at what we have here. A guy doesn't speak English. My partner here loves to shoot people who don't speak English, don't you, Sergeant?'
'Yes sir, my favorite. You want me to put him out of his misery?'
'Aw, come on, I'm hurt here. Don make a big thing. I have cut, gotta go to doctor.'
'Oh, I see we do speka de ingles. Didn't anybody tell you you could get hurt playing with knives.' Snow whipped Mike's face as he patted the guy some more. 'Oh, look at this, another one.' Mike sounded peeved as he pulled out another knife, this one sheathed in well-used leather. He gave both knives to April, yanked the man's arms behind his back. 'I'm getting cold. How about you, Sergeant?'
Tears stung in April's eyes. 'My feet are killing me,' she said. 'Let's take him in and warm up.'
'Oh, no, man, hey. I ain't done nothin'.'
'Looks like you were into something. We got a report someone looks just like you shot somebody. We'll take a little visit to the station, warm up a little. See what's up with you.' Mike cuffed him with a set of handcuffs he'd stuffed in his pocket before leaving the car. April holstered her gun. One on each side, they marched him back to the car. 'What a night,' she muttered, shaking out her boots.
'What's your name, hombre?'
The hombre whimpered. 'Oh man, no gun. I got no gun. You see a gun, huh? Come on. Some guy with a gun hit
'We'll come back for him.' April pushed the guy's snow-covered head down, guiding him into the backseat. 'Move over.' Damn, there was no guard between the front and backseat. She had to sit next to him. 'Gun's probably in the garbage can,' she told Mike.
'We'll take him in, send someone out to take a look.' Mike slammed the car door. The car was warm. He'd left it running.