Byron wiped his finger and thumb on his sock. Still squatting, he let the beam of his flashlight drift over the concrete ahead. He saw a dirty pink disk of flattened bubble gum, a gob of spit, a mashed cigarette butt, and a second drop of blood.
The second drop was three strides away. He stopped above it. Like the first, it was about the size of a nickel. Sweeping his light forward, he found a third.
Maybe someone with a nosebleed, he thought.
Or a switchblade in the guts.
No, a
with knives. He and Digby, one of the other ushers, had broken it up. Though the kids only had minor wounds, the john had looked like a slaughterhouse.
Compared to that, this was nothing. Just a drip once in a while. Even a nosebleed, he thought, would throw out more gore.
On the other hand, the person’s clothing, or a handkerchief, might have soaked up most of it - so that only a fraction of the spillage actually hit the sidewalk.
Just a little drip now and then.
Just enough to make Byron very curious.
The trail of blood was going in his direction, anyway, so he kept his flashlight on and kept a lookout.
‘What, the streetlights aren’t bright enough for you?’
He turned around.
Digby Hymus, known to the gals who worked the refreshment stand as the Jolly Green Dork, came striding down the sidewalk. The thirty-year-old retired boxer had removed his green usher’s jacket. Its sleeves were tied around his neck so he looked as if he were giving a piggy-back ride to someone who’d been mashed by a steam roller. His arms were so thick with muscle that they couldn’t swing close to his sides when he walked.
‘Hate to tell you this, By, but you look like a goddamn retard with that flashlight on.’
‘Appearances are often deceiving,’ he said. ‘Take a gander.’ He aimed his flashlight at the nearest spot of blood.
‘Yeah? So what?’
‘Blood.’
‘Yeah? So what?’
‘Don’t you find it intriguing?’
‘Probably some babe sprung a leak in her…’
‘Don’t be disgusting.’
‘Hey, you’re the guy so interested in blood. You’ve got a real ghoulish streak, you know that?’
‘If you can’t say something nice, don’t say it.’
‘Screw you,’ he said, and walked across the road to his parked car. Byron waited until the car sped off, then continued to follow the trail of blood. He stopped at the corner of 11th Street. His apartment was five blocks straight ahead. But the drops of blood went to the right.
He paused for a moment, considering what to do. He knew that he ought to go on home. But if he did that, he would always wonder.
Then guys like Digby - gals like Mary and Agnes of the snack counter - wouldn’t be so quick to poke fun at him.
His mind made up, he turned the corner and began to follow the blood up 11th Street.
The television. He could see it now. Karen Ling on the five o’clock news. ‘Byron Lewis, twenty-eight-year- old poet and part-time usher at the Elsinore theater, last night came to the aid of a mugging victim in an alley off 11th Street. The victim, twenty-two-year-old fashion model Jessica Connors, had been assaulted earlier that evening in front of the theater where Byron worked. Bleeding and disoriented, she had staggered several blocks before falling unconscious where she was later discovered by the young poet. Byron made the grisly discovery after following Jessica’s trail of blood. According to paramedics, Jessica was only minutes away from death at the time she was found. Her survival is being attributed to Byron’s quick actions in applying first aid and summoning paramedics. She is currently recovering, and extremely grateful, at Queen of Angels Hospital.’
Byron smiled.
Just a fantasy, he told himself. But what’s wrong with that?
The bleeder will probably turn out to be an old wino who cut his lip on a bottle of rotgut.
Or worse.
You’ll probably wish you’d gone straight home.
But at least you’ll
Stopping at Harker Avenue, he found a spot of blood on the curb. No traffic was nearby. But Byron believed in playing by the rules. So he thumbed the button to activate the WALK sign, waited for the signal to change, then started across.
If the bleeder had left any drops on the road pavement, passing cars must have obliterated them.
He found more when he reached the other side.
The bleeder was still heading north on 11th Street.
And Byron realized, with some dismay, that he had crossed an invisible border into Skid Row.
In the area ahead, many of the streetlights were out. They left broad pools of darkness on the sidewalk and road. Every shop in Byron’s sight was closed for the night. Metal gates had been stretched across their display windows and doors. He glanced through the checkered grating in front of a clothes store, saw a face at the window, and managed to stifle a gasp of alarm.
Just a mannequin, he told himself, hurrying away.
He made a point to avoid looking into any more windows.
Better just to watch the sidewalk, he thought. Watch the trail of blood.
The next time he looked up, he saw a pair of legs sticking out of a tenement’s recessed entryway.
Byron rushed to the fallen man. It
No left arm.
His right arm was folded under his head like a pillow.
‘Excuse me,’ Byron said.
The man kept snoring.
Byron nudged him with a foot. The body twitched. The snoring stopped with a startled gasp. ‘Huh? Whuh?’
‘Are you all right?’ Byron asked. ‘Are you bleeding?’
‘BLEEDING?’ The man squealed and bolted upright. His head swiveled as he looked down at himself. Byron helped by shining the light on him. ‘I don’ see no blood. Where? Where?’
Byron didn’t see blood on the man, either. But he saw other things that made him turn away and try not to gag.
‘Oh God, I’m bleedin’!’ the man whined. ‘They musta bit me. Oh, they’s always bitin’ me. Why they wanna bite on of Dandy! Where’d they get me? They after ol’ Dandy’s stump again? Jeezum!’
Byron risked a look at Dandy, and saw that the old man was struggling with his single arm to pull his sweatshirt off.
‘Maybe I’ve got the wrong person.’
‘Oh, they’s after me.' The shirt started to rise. Byron glimpsed gray, blotchy skin of Dandy’s belly.
‘Gimme yer light, duke! C’mon, gimme!’
‘I’ve gotta go,’ Byron blurted.