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    "Okay? I dropped it, okay? Now lemme up."

    Jack released the arm but kept a foot on his back.

    "Empty your pockets."

    "Hey, what—?"

    Jack increased the pressure of his foot. "Empty them."

    "Okay! Okay!"

    He reached back and pulled a ragged cloth wallet from his hip pocket, then slid it across the dirt.

    "Keep going," Jack said. "Everything."

    The guy pulled a couple of crumpled wads of bills from his front pockets, and dumped them by the wallet.

    "You a cop?"

    "You should be so lucky."

    Jack squatted beside him and went through the small pile. About a hundred in cash, a half dozen credit cards, a gold high school ring. The wallet held a couple of twenties, three singles, and no ID.

    "I see you've been busy tonight."

    "Early bird catches the worm."

    "Yeah? Consider yourself a nightcrawler. This all you got?"

    "Aw, you ain't gonna jack me, are ya?"

    "Interesting choice of words."

    "Hey, I need that scratch."

    "Your jones needs that scratch."

    Actually, the Little League needed that scratch.

    Every year about this time the kids from the local teams that played here in the park would come knocking, looking for donations toward uniforms and equipment. Jack had made it a tradition to help them out by taking up nocturnal collections in the park.

    The Annual Repairman Jack Park-a-thon.

    Seemed only fair that the oxygen wasters who prowled the place at night should make donations to the kids who used it during the day. At least Jack thought so.

    "Let me see those hands." He'd noticed an increasingly lower class of mugger over the past few years. Like this guy. Nothing on his fingers but a cheap pewter skull-faced pinky ring with red glass eyes. "How come no gold?" Jack pulled down the back of his collar. "No chains? You're pathetic, you know that? Where's your sense of style?"

    The previous donor had been better heeled.

    "I'm a working man," the guy said, rolling a little and looking up at Jack. "No frills."

    "Yeah. What do you work at?"

    "This!"

    The guy lunged for his knife, grabbed the handle, and stabbed up at Jack's groin—maybe thinking he'd find a uterus there? Jack rolled away to his left and kicked him in the face as he lunged again. The guy went down and Jack was on him once more with the knife arm yanked high and his sneaker back in its former spot on his back.

    "We've already played this scene once," he said through his teeth as the blackness rose again.

    "Hey, listen!" the guy said into the dirt. "You can have the dough!"

    "No kidding."

    Jack yanked off the glove and looked at the hand within. No surprise at the tattoo in the thumb web.

    These guys were starting to pollute the city.

    "So you're a Kicker, eh."

    "Yeah, man. Totally dissimilated. You too? You seem like—"

    He screamed as Jack shifted his foot into the rear of his shoulder and kicked down while giving the arm a sharp twist. The shoulder dislocated with a muffled pop, nearly drowned out by the high-pitched wail.

    He hadn't wanted him to finish that sentence.

    The Rambo knife dropped from suddenly limp fingers. Jack kicked it away and released the arm.

    "Don't know about the rest of you, but that arm is definitely dissimilated."

    As the guy retched and writhed in the dirt, Jack scooped up the cash and rings. He emptied the wallet and dropped it onto the guy's back, then headed for the lights.

    He debated whether to troll for a third donor or call it a night. He mentally calculated that he had donations of about three hundred or so in cash and maybe an equal amount in pawnable gold. He'd set the goal of this year's Park-a-thon at twelve hundred dollars. Didn't look like he was going to make that without some extra effort. Which meant he'd have to come back tomorrow night and bag a couple more.

    And exhort them to give.

    Give till it hurt.

2

    As he was coming up the slope toward Central Park West he saw an elderly, bearded gent dressed in an expensive-looking blue blazer and gray slacks trudging with a cane along the park side of the street.

    And about a dozen feet to Jack's left, a skinny guy in dirty Levi's and a frayed Hawaiian shirt burst from the bushes at a dead run. At first Jack thought he was running from someone, but noticed that he never glanced behind him. Which meant he was running toward something. He realized the guy was making a beeline for the old man.

    Jack paused a second. The smart part of him said to turn and walk back down the slope. It hated when he got involved in things like this, and reminded him of other times he'd played good Samaritan and landed in hot water. Besides, the area here was too open, too exposed. If Jack got involved he could be mistaken for the Hawaiian shirt's partner, a description would start circulating, and life would get more complicated than it already was.

    Butt out.

    Sure. Sit back while this galloping glob of park scum bowled the old guy over, kicked him a few times, grabbed his wallet, then hightailed it back into the brush. Jack wasn't sure he could stand by and let something like that happen right in front of him.

    A wise man he'd hung with during his early years in the city had advised him time and time again to walk away from a fight whenever possible. Then he'd always add: "But there are certain things I will not abide in my sight."

    This looked to be something Jack could not abide in his sight.

    Besides, he was feeling kind of mean tonight.

    He spurted into a dash of his own toward the old gent. No way he was going to beat the aloha guy with the lead he had, but he could get there right after him and maybe disable him before he did any real damage. Nothing elaborate. Hit him in the back with both feet, break a few ribs and give his spine a whiplash he'd remember the rest of his life. Make sure Aloha was down to stay, then keep right on sprinting across Central Park West into yuppieville.

    Aloha was closing with his target, arms stretched out for the big shove, when the old guy stepped aside and stuck out his cane. Aloha went down on his belly and skidded face-first along the sidewalk, screaming curses all the way. When he stopped his slide, he began to roll to his feet.

    But the old guy was there, holding the bottom end of his cane in a twohanded grip like a golf club. He didn't yell "Fore!" as he swung the metal handle around in a smooth, wide arc. Jack heard the crack when it landed against the side of Aloha's skull. The mugger stiffened, then flopped back like a sack of flour.

    Jack stopped dead and stared, then began to laugh. He pumped a fist in the old guy's direction.

    "Nice!"

    "I needed that," the old dude said.

    Jack knew exactly how he felt. Still smiling, he broke into an easy jog, intending to give the old dude a wide berth on his way by. The fellow eyed him as he neared.

    "No worry," Jack said, raising his empty palms. "I'm on your side."

    The old guy had his cane by the handle again; he nonchalantly stepped over Aloha like he was so much refuse. The guy had style.

    "I know that, Jack."

    Jack nearly tripped as he stuttered to a halt and turned.

    "Why'd you call me Jack?"

    The old man came abreast of him and stopped. Gray hair and beard, a wrinkled face, pale eyes.

    "Because that's your name."

    Jack scrutinized the man. Even though slightly stooped, he was still taller than Jack. Big guy. Old, but big. And a complete stranger. Jack didn't like being recognized. Put him on edge. But he found something appealing about that half smile playing about the old dude's lips.