Part 7 (2/2)

Jimmy opens the icebox and takes out a little box he made out of folded newspaper. It's wet and cold on the bottom. Jimmy bends back a corner of the well-worn lid and I peek in, holding back the damp newspaper with my thumb.

”See, he's still moving around too much. When they get a little colder, they go to sleep and you can slip the thread around their middles,” Jimmy explains. He shows me the tiny harness made out of red and yellow braided thread and demonstrates how he plans to slip the harness around the fly. ”Trouble is, they die. That's why I need so many.

”Five more minutes,” Jimmy decides, latching the icebox with the fly box safely inside as the canteen bell announces a new customer. Jimmy scurries back inside, Theresa right behind him. By the time I get there I see Piper drumming her fingers on the counter.

I take an unexpected gulp of air. I always forget how beautiful she is. Piper plunks her dime down. ”Two root beers,” she says. ”And when's Scout coming back anyway?”

Scout. Does she have to ask about Scout?

Theresa hops behind the counter, takes the dime and inspects it. ”Dime's real,” she announces, plunking it in the cash register.

”Of course it's real.” Piper takes the pop and uncaps it with the opener tied to the counter with a string. She takes a swig. I'm watching her. Staring at her, actually.

”Jiiiimmmmmmmmmmyyy!” Theresa screams, her voice high and twisted like she's being strangled by invisible hands.

She's standing over Rocky, who isn't crying now. He isn't making a sound. His eyes are panicky and his skin is almost blue. Why isn't he moving?

Jimmy hops the potato bins, knocking over the Cream of Wheat. I'm right behind him, leaping the rolling cylinders of cereal.

”Rooockky! MOOOOOMMMMMMMEEEEEEEE!” Theresa screams.

Jimmy scoops Rocky up in his arms. ”Oh jeepers! Doc Ollie! Moose! You're fast. Run him up to Ollie's! TAKE HIM! NOW!” Jimmy's shaking me hard like I've fallen into a stupid sleep.

Piper jams in between us. ”Me! Let me me! I'm I'm faster!” faster!”

”NO, NOOOOOOOOO!” Theresa pounces on Piper and shoves her against the wall.

Jimmy plunks Rocky in my arms. ”Go!” he shouts in my ear. My legs take off.

”I think he swallowed it!” I hear Theresa shout.

The weight of Rocky is warm and heavy against my chest. The screen door slams behind me, ringing the canteen bell.

”MOOOOOMMMMMEEEE!” Theresa is still screaming, but her voice is falling off in the distance.

Out of the corner of my eye I see Jimmy outside Mrs. Caconi's door, where the only phone for 64 building is located. Call Doc Ollie Call Doc Ollie. The words float through my mind in a blur of my own pounding feet.

Rocky's blanket is flying around my legs. I wind the blanket around my hand as I run, keep running. Don't trip. Don't stop.

”What's the matter? What happened?” somebody yells behind me.

But I'm not stopping. Not answering. I've got Rocky in my arms, I'm not going to look at him, I can't look at him. He's too quiet, too still. I'm afraid of what I'll see. Something is wrong with this baby. Really wrong like he might die. He can't die.

The hill is steep, the air is thick, my lungs are bursting. Past the switchback. The water tower. Gulls scatter out of my way.

”The back way! Go the back way!” someone yells.

”How do I get in?” The words come choking out of my mouth. I hear them as if someone else has said them. I've seen Doc Ollie go into the cell house here. But how can I get in?

Somebody's there now. Up ahead. Somebody will help me. A baby can't die while I'm holding him.

”Moose!” My dad's voice, then Mr. Mattaman's. Somebody else's too. They rush toward me and sweep me through the entrance. One, two, three doors open. Stairs appear. I can't stop running, don't stop, don't let go.

There are walls made of bars. The smell of bandages. More bars.

And then I see him. The big round gray-haired man in his clean white uniform. ”Doc Ollie!” I gasp. ”He's not breathing.”

In the narrow hospital room, Doc takes Rocky from me. He flips him on his back on the narrow cot.

”Jimmy said he may have swallowed something. That right?” Doc Ollie asks.

”Yes.”

”What was it?”

I shake my head, gasping, doubled over from the pain in my side. ”I dunno.”

Doc Ollie props open Rocky's jaws with a bent tongue depressor.

”I didn't see,” I wheeze. ”I think Theresa gave him something . . . to play with.”

Doc Ollie flips down the silver magnifier on his head. He looks in Rocky's throat, takes a long pair of silver forceps, and gently pulls Rocky's propped-open mouth toward him.

Ollie c.o.c.ks Rocky's chin this way and that, then firmly brings the forceps down his gullet, wiggles them slightly, his eye squinting in the magnifier. ”Okay, okay, don't move now, little guy, don't move. Just a little, yes!” He pulls the forceps out and Rocky begins to howl.

”Woo.” Doc Ollie rocks back on his heels, lets out a huge sigh. Then he opens his hand and shows us one s.h.i.+ny Lincoln head penny. ”Here's the culprit, right here.”

THAT YOUR BOY, BOSS?.

Same day-Thursday, August 15, 1935

Mr. Mattaman is holding his baby son as gently as he can while Rocky howls.

”That's okay, little feller. You go ahead and give us heck.” Doc Ollie smiles his big reliable smile. ”It's when they don't yell you worry. Gonna have a mighty big sore throat. Don't suppose it's fun having those forceps stuck down a tiny larynx like that. Would have had the right size on hand, if I'd a known you was coming.”

Rocky's hollering so loud I bet they can hear him clear over on Angel Island. His little face is red as a comic book devil.

”He sure didn't like that,” my dad says. ”Can't say I blame him.”

I'm making agreeing noises but I'm hardly listening to what he's saying, because it's suddenly occurred to me . . . I'm standing inside inside the cell house hospital! the cell house hospital!

Two long rows of cells mirror each other. Our cell has been converted to Doc Ollie's office with clear canisters filled with syringes, cotton b.a.l.l.s, wooden sticks. Slings hang from a hook, a wheelchair with a cane seat is parked in the corner, and crutches of different sizes lean against the wall.

”Poor little guy, he's mad as a hornet. I'm gonna give him a little whiskey and milk. Let him sleep it off,” Ollie says as he searches through a gla.s.s-faced cabinet.

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