whenever the light would snap on, catching them every time. The simple pleasures.
Whoever had jumped out of the bush had been picked up by the motion detector. Myron saw a flash of light, heard a noise, a rush of wind, the sound of exertion, maybe words. He turned toward it, and saw the fist heading straight for his face.
There was no time to duck, no time to get up a forearm block. The blow was going to land. Myron turned from it. It was simple science. Move with the punch, not against it. Turning lessened the impact, but the powerful blow, delivered clearly by a strong man, still packed a wallop. For a moment Myron saw stars. He shook his head, tried to clear it.
An angry snarl of a voice: “Leave us alone.”
Another punch came at Myron’s head. The only way to get away from it, Myron saw, was to fall on his back. He did, the knuckles grazing the top of his skull. It still hurt. Myron was about to start rolling away, rolling to safety so he could regroup, when he heard another noise. Someone had opened the front door. And then a panicked voice: “Myron!”
Damn. It was Dad.
Myron was about to call out for his father to stay where he was, that he’d be fine, that he should go inside and call the police, that whatever he did, he should not come out.
Not a chance.
Before Myron could open his mouth, Dad was already in mid-sprint.
“You son of a bitch!” his father shouted.
Myron found his voice. “Dad, no!”
Useless. His son was in trouble, and as he always had, his father hurled himself toward it. Still flat on his back, Myron looked up at the silhouette of his attacker. He was a tall man, his hands balled into fists, but he made the mistake of turning at the sound of Al Bolitar’s approach. His body language altered in a surprising way. The hands suddenly went loose. Myron moved fast. Using his feet, he wrapped up his attacker’s right ankle. He was about to turn hard, trapping the ankle, snapping it or tearing the tendons ten ways to Sunday when he saw his father leap- actually leap at the age of seventy-four-toward the attacker. The attacker was big. Dad had no chance, and he probably knew it. But that didn’t matter to him.
Myron’s father reached out his arms like a linebacker blitzing the quarterback. Myron tightened the ankle trap, but the big man didn’t even lift a hand to protect himself, just letting Al Bolitar knock him off balance.
“Get away from my son!” Dad yelled, wrapping his arms around the assailant, both crumpling to the ground.
Myron moved fast now. He rolled up to his knees, getting his hand ready for a palm strike to the nose or throat. Dad was involved now-no time to waste. He had to put this guy out of commission in a hurry. He grabbed the man’s hair, pulled him out of the shadows, and straddled his chest. Myron cocked his fist. He was just about to snap a right into the nose when the light hit the attacker’s face. What Myron saw made him pause for a split second. The attacker’s head was turned toward the left, looking with concern at Myron’s father. His face, his features… they were so damned familiar.
Then Myron heard the man-no, he was a kid, really-beneath him say one word: “Grandpa?”
The voice was young; the snarl gone.
Dad sat up. “Mickey?”
Myron looked down as his nephew turned back toward him. Their eyes met, a color so much like his own, and Myron would swear later that he felt a physical jolt. Mickey Bolitar, Myron’s nephew, pushed the hand off his hair and rolled hard to the side.
“Get the hell off me.”
Dad was out of breath.
Myron and Mickey both snapped out of the stun and helped him to his feet. His face was flushed. “I’m fine,” Dad said with a grimace. “Let go of me.”
Mickey turned back to Myron. Myron was six-four, and Mickey looked to be about the same. The kid was broad and powerfully built-every kid today lifts weights-but he was still a kid. He jabbed Myron’s chest with his finger.
“Stay away from my family.”
“Where’s your father, Mickey?”
“I said-”
“I heard you,” Myron said. “Where’s your father?”
Mickey took a step back and looked toward Al Bolitar. When he said, “I’m sorry, Grandpa,” he sounded so damn young.
Dad had his hands on his knees. Myron went to help him, but he shook him off. He stood straight and there was something akin to pride on his face. “It’s okay, Mickey. I understand.”
“What do you mean, you understand?” Myron turned back to Mickey. “What the hell was that all about?”
“Just stay away from us.”
Seeing his nephew for the very first time-like this-it was surreal and overwhelming. “Look, why don’t we go inside and talk this out?”
“Why don’t you go to hell?”
Mickey took one last concerned look at his grandfather. Al Bolitar nodded, as if to say all was fine. Then Mickey shot Myron a hard glare and ran into the darkness. Myron was about to go after him, but Dad put a hand on his forearm. “Let him go.” Al Bolitar was red-faced and breathing hard, but he was also smiling. “Are you okay, Myron?”
Myron touched his mouth. His lip was bleeding. “I’ll live. Why are you smiling?”
Dad kept his eyes on the road where Mickey had vanished into the darkness. “Kid’s got balls.”
“You’re kidding, right?”
“Come on,” Dad said. “Let’s go inside and talk.”
They headed into the downstairs TV room. For most of Myron’s childhood, Dad had a Barcalounger, reserved specifically for him, the kind of dinosaur of a recliner that was eventually held together with duct tape. Nowadays there was a five-piece sectional called the “Multiplex II” with built-in recliners and storage areas for beverages. Myron had bought it from a place called Bob’s Discount Furniture, though originally he had been resistant because Bob’s radio commercials were four steps beyond grating.
“I’m really sorry about Suzze,” Dad said.
“Thank you.”
“Do you know what happened?”
“Not yet, no. I’m working on it.” Dad’s face was still red from the exertion. “Are you sure you’re okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“Where’s Mom?”
“She’s out with Aunt Carol and Sadie.”
“I could use a glass of water,” Myron said. “How about you?”
“Okay. And put some ice on your lip so it doesn’t swell.”
Myron headed up the three steps to the kitchen, grabbed two glasses, filled them up from the overpriced water dispenser. There were ice packs in the freezer. He grabbed one and headed back to the TV room. He handed a glass to Dad and sat in the recliner on the right.
“I can’t believe that just happened,” Myron said. “The first time I see my nephew and he attacks me.”
“Do you blame him?” Dad asked.
Myron sat up. “Excuse me?”
“Kitty called me,” Dad said. “She told me about your run-in at the mall.”
Myron should have known. “Did she now?”
“Yes.”
“And that’s the reason Mickey jumped me?”
“Didn’t you suggest his mother was something”-Dad stopped, searched for the word, couldn’t find it-“something bad?”
“She is something bad.”