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Despite the chilliness, there was a great coming and going of people in cheap clothes, women in wrinkled print dresses and cloth coats, men in slacks and windbreakers or suits five years out of date. Behind the pastel-painted snackbar was a double row of black plastic lounge chairs with a miniature TV set affixed to one arm of each. Docker chose one, sat down with the attaché case carefully in his lap, fed in coins. The set came on, but Docker’s eyes kept busy around the echoing building.

If they saw anything alarming, they did not reflect it. After five minutes, his muscular body had slumped against the plastic.

Dumpy little Rowlands, still wifeless, was standing against the wall near one of the candy machines by this time. He seemed impatient now, a horseplayer waiting for his bookie, perhaps. Twice he looked toward the back of Docker’s head, then cast a measuring glance at the bank of pay phones.

With sudden decision — have to place the bet by phone, damn near post time back East — he came off the wall, turned left and went out between the eight-by-eight posts which divided two of the long-haul gates. His face looked irritable, as if he had a rip in the seat of his pants and wasn’t sure whether it showed or not.

This route took him between two beat-up doubledecker yellow baggage carts and across the diagonal yellow lines marking the bus lanes. It also took him out of Docker’s sight. The broad blacktopped area where the buses pulled up was open to Jessie Street, a narrow alley running down the length of the bus terminal from Seventh Street.

Across Jessie, between the end of the broadshouldered squatty Greyhound Express building and its chain-linked parking lot, was a phone booth. Like Rowlands’ route, it was out of sight of the double bank of TV lounge chairs where Docker sat.

As soon as the little tubby man had moved from his wall, Docker’s heavy pale head had come up. He had brushed the blond hair back from his face, had watched Rowlands out the boarding gate and across the blacktop and out of sight.

Docker stood up, stretched, sauntered away. But not away from the loading area, not down the ramp to the terminal from which he could have reached Seventh Street unobserved. Instead, he went through the loading gate himself, and across the blacktop toward Jessie Street in Rowlands’ wake.

Here was the rattle of baggage carts, the roar of motors and throat-clearing of gears and fart of diesels as the buses jockied for their gates. Behind Docker a metallic female voice announced a departure full of drawnout vowels which made it as incomprehensible as Swahili. A dozen buses were angled nose-first toward the gates to gorge themselves on travellers. A man in grey work clothes squealed open the baggage compartment in the side of one of them and said he would be a son of a bitch, as if he had found sacred mushrooms growing there.

Docker angled across Jessie to the big open sliding metal doors of the Greyhound Express building. Several baggage-handlers were having a smoke. Docker made no attempt to enter the doors, but stopped beside them. One of them was saying, “... ol’ boy caught me with a pool cue right on the nose and I hit the door like that, man...”

“Pardon me,” said Docker, “could you—”

“An’ then this boy starts puttin’ his number nines on me, I mean, man—”

“Could you tell me—”

“Man, he was layin’ nothin’ but Neolite all over me. He was walkin’ up an’ down my spine—”

“I’d like to know,” said Docker, “if I can get to Mission—”

“I said to him, ‘You dam’ fool, let me up an’ I’ll run!’ ”

Docker laughed with the others, finally getting their attention. He said, “I’d like to get to Mission Street without going out to Seventh. Is there any way to do that?”

There was. Go the length of these fences that back the parking lots facing on Mission, and he would come to a wide blacktop area between the end of the fences and the bus drive-through. See it? Well, where all them not-in-service buses are stored, just take a left down there between them buses. Take you right out to Mission.

As they talked, Rowlands also talked, almost desperately, into his phone a dozen yards away at the end of the building, as if terrified by the fact they seemed to be pointing in his direction as they spoke with Docker.

“I tell ya it’s the fucker you want! Limp an’ everything... Fuck no, he’s a big mean-looking bastard, I ain’t gonna...”

Docker was coming his way, his uneven stride lengthening as he approached. Rowlands’ head ducked, so he was looking at the filth and trod-out butts on the floor of the booth. A used rubber testified to the ingenuity of the sexual urge.

“Fucker’s comin’ right at me, I tell you, he... Oh!”

Docker had gone past, throwing a quick look over his shoulder at the waiting room, not even noticing the small pudgy man talking with almost desperate haste into the phone. Docker had begun nearly trotting. Rowlands let out a long breath. A drop of sweat fell from his chin.

“Yeah, okay, I’ll stay with him, but I ain’t going up against him, fucker looks mean as sour owl shit.”

After going the length of the chest-high hurricane fence interwoven with thin redwood slatting, Docker turned abruptly down between the rows of buses toward Mission. There was a three-foot aisle between them. In the center of the rows a bus was missing, making a large opening. Docker, out of sight of Rowlands, turned briskly into this.

Rowlands was moving at a quick nervous walk himself by this time, hands thrust in pockets, shoulders hunched against the bite still in the air despite the late-morning sunshine, an unlit cigarette stuck behind one ear. He too turned down between the parked buses.

When Rowlands reached the end of the narrow passage, where it opened out but while he was still in the aisle, Docker was on top of him. He had nowhere to go except back, and there wasn’t time for that.

The hulking blond man came around the back of the bus with the attaché case at full swing, yelling. There was nothing of science in the attack, only an apparent blind fury. The hardened plastic edge of the case caught the fat little man in the upper chest. His collarbone broke with a snapping sound like a .22 cartridge.

Docker, like a man possessed and foaming obscenities, dropped the case to thud his fists into Rowlands’ lower belly. Rowlands had screamed once when his collarbone had snapped. He flew back against the side of a bus under the frightful power of Docker’s blows, lit on his ass and puked in his lap. Docker set his feet to kick the fallen man in the head.

“Hey!”

He was already whirling as a second voice exclaimed, “What the fuck, man!”

Still straddle-legged and with startling agility, Docker had sprung in a complete 180-degree turn so he was facing the two black baggage-handlers who had burst out of the empty bus where they had been eating sandwiches.

One of them was a big man, big as Docker, with a scar across his forehead that said he’d mixed it in the past. Docker, in a slight crouch now, pointed a thick accusing finger at him like a ref calling a foul on Nate Thurmond.

Freeze!” he shouted.

All fury had gone from his voice and face, so the words carried a momentary authority. Behind the hornrims his eyes were level and observant and not at all worried. The black man froze, startled.

“You kickin’ the livin’ shit outta this dude,” objected the second weakly. He was a smaller man, not in condition for fighting. Grey touched both his voice and his tight-kinked hair.

“He welched.”