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    "Does he have a girl back there?"

    "He usually did. I don't know about now. I hadn't seen him in years and years, you know."

    She looked pensively toward the tunnel. "I don't know if I could like New York," she said.

    Surprise on surprise. Francis looked at her and said, "Why on earth should you ever go there?"

    She shrugged again, looking more like a lost orphan than usual. "I don't know," she said. "Gabe keeps saying he's going back there just as soon as he gets enough money."

    "Back to New York? Whatever for?"

    "He says it's the only place to live."

    Francis' own memories of the Big Apple were less delicious. "After seeing San Francisco?" he said, astonished.

    "He says San Francisco is a lumpy Newark."

    "And you'd actually go with him?"

    "I don't know," she said. Her brow was as furrowed as the hillside. "I wouldn't want to, but I guess if he asked me I'd go, yes."

    "Oh, I can't lose you both," Francis said. "We'll just have to convince Gabe to change his mind."

    She looked hopeful. "Do you think we can?"

    "We can only try."

    She clasped his hand in both of hers. "Francis," she said, "I'm glad you're on my side."

    His heart full, Francis told her the simple truth: "You're my dearest friends," he said.

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

    Gabe stood outside the Mint. He had been standing there for hours in the fog, watching.

    About eleven in the morning the fog burned off. He shifted his weight to the other foot.

    A little past noon Vangie brought him his lunch in a paper bag. He ate mechanically, watching the Mint, totally self-absorbed.

    At one-fifteen there was an alarm of bells, and Gabe stepped back into a doorway. Fire horses careened into the street, and the great red fire engine went thundering through the city.

    It went downstreet toward the waterfront. Up over the lower rise and then on toward Pacific Street. From his hilltop vantage point Gabe watched narrowly, thoughtfully.

    At half-past three he was still standing there when he saw McCorkle, the tall red-haired cop, staring at him dubiously from across the street. McCorkle took a huge notebook out of his hip pocket, jotted something down, and then went on around the corner out of sight.

    At five Gabe headed downhill.

    Five-oh-three, another fire alarm. He got off the street. The fire-engine went past with an earsplitting noise-flash of white, flash of red.

    Down below near the foot of the hill, two figures stood out in isolated silhouette because they were the only two people still on the street. Gabe narrowed his eyes to pierce the five-block downhill distance. Finally he recognized the two figures.

    It was Ittzy Herz's mother dragging Ittzy across the street by the ear.

    Mme. Herz was talking. Evidently she was talking so loudly that she didn't hear the fire engine.

    It filled Gabe's vision, blocking Mme. and Ittzy from his view. The fire engine was obviously going to trample them both.

    But then the dust began to settle in the engine's wake and Ittzy and his mother were still walking across the street, unperturbed; Mrs. Herz continued to drag Ittzy by the ear and yell at him.

    Gabe shook his head in renewed amazement and went on down to the Golden Rule Saloon.

    Inside, Vangie and Francis were at the usual table-the one just big enough for three glasses and six elbows. Gabe threaded a path to them and sat.

    They were having coffee and Francis was complaining about it. "They brew it up six weeks in advance and pour some molasses in and, my dears, they simply let it sit. And then they drop a horse-shoe into it, and if the horse-shoe sinks the coffee isn't strong enough."

    Gabe adjusted his elbows on the table. "What do you expect from this burg? Real coffee?"

    Vangie put on her arch look. "And just what's wrong with this burg?"

    "It's too far from New York."

    "Will you forget New York?"

    "No."

    Vangie turned to Francis, who was touching the surface of his coffee with a doubting fingertip. "Francis," she said, "you used to live in New York. You like San Francisco better, don't you?"

    Francis looked up. "Well, I do, yes, I suppose," he said. He licked coffee from his fingertip, made a face, and gave Gabe a quick worried look. His brow furrowed in his obvious effort to please everybody. "But different people are, uh, well, different. Gabe might rather…"

    "Gabe," Vangie interrupted fiercely, "could do just fine in San Francisco. He could make a million dollars here."

    "Yeah," Gabe said. "That's just what I'm going to do. I want to talk to you about that, Francis."

    But Vangie wouldn't let the conversation be changed. "This is a city of great opportunity," she said, leaning closer to Gabe and holding tight to his forearm on the table. "A man with your brains, Gabe, why, you could own this city if you wanted."

    "I don't want."

    "But…"

    Gabe made one more effort to get his point across. "The city I want to own," he said, "is New York. All I want from this burg is enough cash money so I can go back to New York in style."

    Francis said, "Why did Twill throw… that is, why did you have to leave?"

    "Aagh," Gabe said in disgust, "the fat son of a bitch said the neighborhood needed a little shaking up. Said they were forgetting who the boss was, some of them. So I had to go out and shake things up a little. Or down."

    "Down?" Vangie said.

    "I shook somebody down. A pushcart peddler. I mean, you got to keep these people in their places, otherwise they start thinking maybe you're not as tough as you say you are."

    Francis said, "So you shook down a pushcart peddler. What did you do to him?"

    "Hardly a thing. I just looked fierce and took a little kick-back from him for allowing him the privilege of working on Twill's turf."

    "Well what went wrong then?"

    Gabe threw up his hands. "How was I to know he was the wrong peddler to push? How was I to know his nephew was one of Twill's ward bosses? The guy had no right pushing a cart. I mean if he was my dear old uncle and I was the ward boss, would I let him push a crummy cart around the streets? I ask you."

    "And so this ward boss complained to Twill?"

    "Complained? I guess maybe he complained. He wanted them to dump me off a pier."

    "But one gathers they didn't."

    Gabe let his lip curl. "This ward boss wasn't as high as me on the neighborhood ladder."

    "Then why'd Twill listen to him at all?"

    "Because the ward boss's sister is Twill's mother-in-law." Gabe shuddered. "Mother-in-law." He turned swiftly to Vangie. "Listen, you haven't got a mother hidden out somewhere around here, have you? Because if you do, the whole…"

    "She died when I was nine," Vangie said.

    Gabe gulped. "Oh, hey, listen Vangie, I'm sorry, I didn't mean… I just got kind of carried away. I mean…"

    "Never mind. It's all right." She patted his hand. Then she stiffened. "What about your mother?"