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Runs to the sidewalk screaming “Help, police, murderer in our apartment, 35 Ribeka, second floor.” Was that good to do? Denise. Man might break the bathroom lock. Runs around the building and rings all the tenants’ bells. “What?” someone says. “Yes?” “Hello?” “Who’s there?” others say. “Not all at once,” he says. “It’s Howard Tetch. There’s a murderer in my apartment and my family’s there. I just got out through the fire escape but they’re in the bathroom. My wife and kids. Ring me in.” Lots of buzzing. One person says “Oh Lord” over the intercom. He goes in, runs back to the door, holds it open with his foot, stretches over and rings all the bells. “Yes?” “What is it?” “Who’s there?” “Does anyone have a gun? If you do, could you bring it to me at my door or just by the staircase?” No answer. “If you do have one, loaded — please.” Runs upstairs, down the hall, bangs on his door. “I’m coming in with the cops, you bastard, so you better get the hell out. The door to the fire escape’s open. Denise, you all right?” Doesn’t hear anything. Thinks he hears something. “Yell if you’re all right, Denise.” “Yes, OK,” she yells. “Stay there.” Runs back down the hall, into the short alcove that has a door at the end of it opening onto the fire escape. Opens it, gets on the escape, man doesn’t seem to have left, not a person on the sidewalk. Goes into the apartment, gets the big cutting knife out of the drawer, bottle of ammonia under the sink, fills up a water glass with it, walks into the front hall. Man’s not there. Holds his breath. Can’t hear him, maybe because Olivia’s still crying. Maybe he did leave. “I advise you to get out now, fella. You have my permission. Go through the front door,” unchaining and unlocking it and throwing it open, “or the outside kitchen door. That’s open now too.” The two women in the apartment across the hall look at him through their half-opened door. “What’s wrong?” one of them says. “You’re bleeding something awful.” “Call the police. Burglar with a knife might still be inside. If he comes out — you hear this, burglar? If you come out, I’m telling my neighbors across the hall, they should let you go. Don’t even try to stop him or even scream,” he shouts to the women. “I’m stepping back now, burglar. I mean I’m going to the middle of the front hall but against the wall without the door. The front hall’s the one by the opened front door. If you’re in the living room, go out through the dining room into the kitchen or just go past me through the front door or just any way you want to go. Through the dining room into the kitchen and then out the kitchen door to the front door in the front hall. Or you want me to go into any other room but the bathroom when you leave, say so. But you better do it fast. The police have to be here soon. But if you try anything funny before you leave, I’ve a glass of ammonia I’m holding that I’ll throw in your eyes and several knives and something to chop off your head too. Do you hear? You going or not?” “I hear,” from the back hall or one of the kids’ rooms. “It sounds like a trap.” “It isn’t. Just go. I won’t stop you. You can understand why. I just want you out.” “I don’t know.” “Through the kitchen door and down the fire escape’s the best and quickest way. I did it myself just before to get out. It’s easy.” Listens. Nothing. No sound from the bathroom too. “I have that door wide open now. I came back through the building’s hallway onto the fire escape. You can even go out that way if you want and down the stairs and out the building’s front door. But you’ll probably have a better chance of escaping through the kitchen door to the fire escape and down the ladder. It’s still dark out there; nobody will see you. Anyway, you better be going.” “OK, I’m going. Out the kitchen door. Step into the fucking living room.” “Anything you say.” “No tricks. You die before you pull something on me.” “Don’t worry, none. I just want you gone.” Man runs into the kitchen and out the kitchen door. Howard goes into the kitchen, sees him hanging from the ladder about to drop, goes on the fire escape and says “I hope you break your fucking leg, you bastard. Break it. Drop, you bastard, fucker, sonofabitch,” and leans over and spills the ammonia on his head. The man screams. Howard goes into the kitchen to get the rest of the ammonia but when he gets to the fire escape the man’s gone. “Thief on the street, tall guy,” he shouts. “Shaved skull, black T-shirt with no sleeves — an undershirt, sneakers. Thief, broke into our apartment, has a big knife.” Denise comes into the kitchen carrying Eva and her arm around Olivia. “Good God, your arm.” “All over. Something not to be believed, right?” and shuts and locks the door. “You have to take care of that. Is it deep?” “Two places. Not deep. Got it with his knife. One’s already stopped.” “Daddy’s bleeding,” Olivia says. “It’s not so bad, sweetie,” and washes the arm down with a wet dishtowel and holds a bunch of paper towels to his shoulder. Knock on the door. He starts. “Is it OK now?” one of the two women says. Beverly or Rhonda. Can never get their names straight, when he remembers their names. “There really was a burglar here?” she says, both coming into the kitchen. “Excuse me,” turning away, the other going back out. “Let me get a bathrobe on,” he says and kisses Denise, Olivia, top of Eva’s head, says to the other woman in the front hall “Go back in there; I’ll be right out,” goes into the bathroom, washes the blood off the rest of his body, puts antiseptic on the cuts, gets his bathrobe on, the handkerchief out of the bathrobe pocket and holds it to the shoulder cut, goes to the kitchen. “Have you seen the cat?” he says to the three women. “She might have got out.” “In our closet,” Denise says. “She was as scared as the rest of us.” “That sonofabitch,” he says. “I thought we were done for, all of us,” and closes his eyes, feels like crying but doesn’t want to scare the kids more than they’ve been so holds back. “We called the police,” Beverly or Rhonda says. “Thank you.” Bell rings from downstairs. “That must be them,” one of the women and Denise say at the same time. He presses the intercom’s talk button and says “Yes, police?” “It’s me, you fag. I know where you are. I’ll get you for burning me. We had a deal. I’ll get you good. Knife in your heart when you’re not looking. When you’re in bed or walking on the street.” “Try it,” he shouts, “just try it. I’ll be armed from now on. No bullshit, I’m not kidding, so try it. I’ll kill you first.” Presses the listen button. No answer. Presses the talk button. “Did you hear me, killer? I said did you hear me? Just try your shit with me and you’re dead.” “Forget it,” Denise says. “Really, he’s probably gone. Just shut the door and I’ll get the girls back in bed.” He shuts the front door. “Need any help?” Beverly or Rhonda says to Denise. “No thanks, you’ve been very helpful as it is.” “You know, this same thing happened this summer in this building.” Denise shakes her head, indicates with her eyes the kids. She takes them to their rooms and the woman says to Howard “It did, almost the same thing. We didn’t tell you. We forgot. When you were away. To the people who moved into F-5. But after it happened, moved out the next week. He took their money and jewelry and some other things and threatened to hurt them but didn’t. I forget what they said he looked like except he was white. Do you remember, Ron?” “Not exactly. He wasn’t so young, that I remember. Forty, they said, closer to fifty, and very dirty looking. They were surprised he was still hoisting himself up to fire escapes at that age.” “Mine was much younger and actually pretty clean looking, and black. It’s terrible, though, whenever it happens.” “Fortunately, nobody got too hurt.” Beverly grabs Rhonda’s arm, says “That’s enough chatter if we want to let Howard get back to sleep,” and he sees them to the door. He goes to the back hall. Eva’s already asleep. Olivia’s room is dark, Denise is humming a tune to her, when he hears a siren. Siren stops, he sees flashing through the living room window, must be the light on top of the car. Then more sirens, cars, flashing, doors slamming, two-way radio and talk and static, voices in the street. He goes downstairs to meet them. Doesn’t want them ringing the downstairs bell, which is loud, or even coming up, as they might wake up the kids and scare them. But he’s sure they’ll want to see things and make a report.