beside him. âYâall coming home with me.â
âAw shit,â Big Henry breathes.
âWe ainât going nowhere.â Skeetah unlashes his arms and they come whipping out from his sides, and his voice is loud, and heâs like those little firecrackers we get on the Fourth of July that throw out sparks from all sides and jump in bright acid leaps across the hard dirt yard. âFirst of all, me and Esch done walked all around this field and watched the house for damn near an hour. Ainât nobody home, and all they got is a puppy on the other side of the house, over by that driveway. And I know what I need and I know where itâs at. And it ainât like you wonât get nothing out of this. If my dogs live, I can make eight hundred dollars off them. Eight hundred dollars. Do you know what we can do with eight hundred dollars? You wonât need to beg Daddy for the rest of the money for basketball camp week after next, and you wonât have to stress over playing good enough in the summer league to get one of those scholarships for it either. I know you want to go, just like you know Daddy donât have it.â Skeetah fizzles, his hands down by his side. Now heâs just trailing bitter, sulfurous smoke. âYou ainât the parent,â he mutters.
âThis is stupid,â Big Henry says.
âIâm the fastest,â Junior says as he yanks on Randallâs arm.
âShut up, Junior,â I say.
Randall pulls Junior to him and puts his hand on his head the same way I put mine on Skeetâs when he was wiping off the blood. Junior quiets, turns to face us, and Randallâs arm is around his neck like a scarf. Juniorâs still smiling; he still thinks heâs about to run with us.
âYou ainât running nowhere, Junior.â Juniorâs face pulls. Randallâs arms cradle him by the chest. Randall looks down at Juniorâs head, wipes away moss caught in his hair. âYouâd do that for me?â Randall speaks to Juniorâs head, so at first I donât know who heâs talking to, and then I remember Skeet, who is nodding next to me now. With each dip of Skeetahâs head, sweat drips unimpeded from his crown, past his strong nose, his downy upper lip, to fall from his chin like a weak summer sprinkle.
âYes,â Skeetah says, still nodding. âYes.â
Skeetah sketches the plan. It is what makes him so good with dogs, with China, I think, the way he can take rotten boards and make them a kennel, make a squirrel barbecue, make ripped tile a floor.
âYou too big to be out there in that field.â
âWasnât going to go anyway,â says Big Henry. Skeetah shrugs.
âSo you stay here in the woods with Junior. Shut up, Junior. This is serious. You ever heard of Hansel and Gretel? Well, thatâs who own that house, and they want to fatten you up like a little pig and eat you. So shut up and stay in the woods with Big Henry. And if you sneak out like you did last nightâshut up, Junior, I saw youâIâm going to catch you and whip you. Thatâs if the white people donât eat you first.â
âYou want me to help you get in the barn?â Randall asks.
âNo, I donât need no help. Besides, you too tall. You going to be at the edge of the field, right by the fence, and keep watch on the whole field. You see anything, you whistle.â
âWhat about Esch?â Randall says.
âEsch going to be in the middle of the field, laying down by them stumps right there: she got a better shot of the driveway than you âcause she going to be closer. If she see something, she going to whistle. And loud, Esch. No baby whistles.â
âI knew how to whistle with my fingers in my mouth before you did, Skeet,â I say.
âI know,â he says. He glances at me when he says it, and he and I both know that he is telling the truth. âWell, all right.
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