walk out behind her with my heavy suitcase.
“My angel … ,” Frances says.
“Walk!” I say. “We have to get away from here!”
“But this is so heavy,” she says, pointing at her bags.
I pull one of the bags out of her hands and carry it, along with my suitcase.
“Arsenio!” Curbelo yells from inside.
We walk quickly down First Street toward Sixteenth Avenue. But my suitcase is enormous and old, and as we reach Seventh Avenue it pops wide open, scattering books and clothing all over the ground. I bend down quickly to pick up the books. I shove a few back in the suitcase. A police siren wails, then a patrol car stops in front of us, blocking our way. I stand up slowly. Curbelo and a policeman get out of the car.
“All right, paisano … ,” the policeman says, taking me by the arm. “Stay still, paisano. Is this the paisano?” the policeman asks Curbelo.
“Yes,” he says.
“All right, paisano,” the policeman says in an even-tempered, almost indifferent voice.
“Give me those checks.”
“They’re ours!” I say.
Then Curbelo says, “He’s crazy. He’s out of whack. He doesn’t take his pills.”
“Give them to me, paisano,” the policeman says. I don’t have to give them to him. He notices that I have them in my shirt pocket and grabs them.
“He’s a very problematic kid,” Curbelo says.
I look at Frances. She’s crying. She’s bent down on the ground, still picking up my scattered books. She looks at Curbelo with rage and throws a book at his face. The policeman takes me by the arm and leads me to the car. He opens the back door and tells me to get inside. I get in. He closes the door. He goes back to where Curbelo is. They whisper to each other for a few minutes. Then I see Curbelo lift Frances up from the ground and pick up one of her bags. Then he takes her by the arm and starts to drag her back to the halfway house.
The policeman picks my things up from the ground and tosses them any which way in the trunk of the patrol car. Then he gets in the car and sits at the wheel.
“I’m sorry, paisano,” he says, starting the engine.
The car takes off quickly.
The patrol car crossed all of Miami and entered the northern neighborhoods. Finally it stopped in front of a large gray building. The policeman got out of the car and opened the back door.
“Get out,” he ordered.
I got out. He took me forcefully by the arm and led me to some sort of large, well-lit lobby. We stopped before a small office that said “Admissions.” The policeman pushed my shoulders and we entered the office.
“Sit,” he ordered.
I sat on a bench. Then the policeman went up to a desk and spoke in a low voice to a young woman wearing a long white coat.
“Paisano,” the policeman then said, turning toward me, “come here!”
I walk over to him.
“You’re in a hospital,” he tells me, “You’ll stay here until you’re cured. Got it?”
“There’s nothing wrong with me,” I say. “I just want to go live somewhere decent with my girlfriend.”
“That,” the policeman says, “is something you have to explain to the doctors later.” He slaps his holster. He smiles at the woman behind the desk. He leaves the office slowly. The woman gets up, grabs a pile of keys from the drawer and says to me, “Come with me.”
I follow her. She opens a huge door with one of the keys and leads me into a dirty, poorly lit room. There’s a man with a long gray beard who is nearly naked. He recites fragments from Nietzsche’s
Zarathustra
in a loud voice. There are also several ragged-looking black men sharing a cigarette in silence. I also see a white guy sobbing softly in a corner and crying, “Mama, where are you?” There’s a black woman with a decent figure who gazes at me with a drugged look, and a white woman who seems like a prostitute, with huge breasts that fall down to her navel. It’s already nighttime. I walk down a long hallway leading to a room full of iron beds. In a corner, I
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