"I don't know," Luis said. "Perhaps."
"I hope so. Gee, Louise, I hope so."
From Zip's vantage place on the packing crate, he saw her at once, working her way through the crowd. He waved to her instantly, and then shouted, "Elena! Hey, Elena, over here!" He poked Sixto and said, "Hey, Sixto, it's Elena."
Softly, Sixto said, "I thought China wass your girl."
"Variety, huh?" Zip said, grinning. "Hey, Elena!"
The girl waved back. She was sixteen years old, an attractive girl with dark hair and dark eyes, wearing a skirt and blouse. The girl with her, slightly shorter than she, was wearing black tapered slacks and a boy's white shirt. "Hello, Zip," Elena called, and then said to her friend, "Juana, it's Zip and the boys."
Flatly, Juana said, "He's a terrifying creep."
"He's not so bad," Elena said. "Come on."
They walked over to the crate. Zip offered his hand to Elena and pulled her up beside him. Papa studied the chivalrous gesture, and then repeated it, offering his hand to Juana who took it with the disdain of a countess accepting aid from a doorman.
"You ever see anything like this, Elena?" Zip asked excitedly. "He shot one of them."
"Who shot one of them?" Elena asked.
"Pepe Miranda!" Papa said.
"Who?"
"Pepe Miranda," Zip said. "He's got a whole arsenal in that apartment with him. The cops can't figure how to get him out. Man you shoulda seen him. He come right up to the window and spit at the bastards!"
"Who's this?" Juana asked, turning her attention to Zip.
Papa, as if repeating a lesson he had learned, a lesson he
"Yeah?" Juana said aloofly. "I never heard of him."
"So
"There ain't no numbers on Sunday," Juana said distantly. She was not a very pretty girl, but she had learned somewhere that her eyes were very attractive and had further learned how to use make-up on them. Her eyes were the focal point of her face, as green as jade and, combined with her jet-black hair, they created an instant impression of desirability which overshadowed the true facts of her plainness.
"You came through the next block?" Zip asked Elena.
"Sure. Why not?"
"No reason." He paused. "That's Royal Guardian territory."
"So what?"
"Nothing. Nothing."
"Royal Guardians or not," Elena said, "this is a free country."
"We walk where we want to," Juana added.
"That's because you're a chick. It ain't so easy when you're a guy," Zip said.
"Why not?" Juana asked.
"Because it ain't, that's all. You can't go messing in another club's territory."
"That's nuts. Haven't you got anything better to do than play war? That's kid stuff."
"There's nothing kid stuff about it," Zip said. "You just don't know."
"I know plenty," Juana said. "You haven't got anything better to do, that's all. That's why you've got these territories and these street bops and…"
"I got plenty to do," Zip said. "We always got plenty to do, ain't we, Sixto?"
"Sure, he's got plenty to do," Elena said. "He's got China to chase after."
"Hey, listen," Zip said, grinning. "How about a hug, Elena?"
"If you had things to do," Juana persisted, "you wouldn't get involved in this childish nonsense. What you are is an acting-out neurotic."
"A
"An acting-out neurotic," Juana said professorially.
"How come you're so smart, huh? Where'd you get your medical degree, huh?"
"I read an article in the newspapers," Juana said smugly.
"Dig the big reader!" Zip said, and he burst out laughing. Dismissing her, he turned to Elena, "Hey, come on, no hug for me?"
"Go hug China," Elena said coldly.
"Come on, come on," Zip said, still grinning. But his grin seemed to have no effect on Elena. Deliberately she turned to Sixto.
"Who's your cute friend?" she asked archly.
"Huh?" Zip said.
"What're you?" she asked Sixto. "The strong silent type?"
"Me?" Sixto asked, bewildered by her sudden attention.
"What's your name?" she asked, moving closer to him, smiling the way she had once seen Jane Russell smile in a movie.
"Sixto," he answered.
"The article said you're insecure," Juana said to Zip.
"Don't give me any bull you read in the newspapers," he said, turning on her angrily, miffed by Elena's behavior. "I don't believe nothing I read."
"You probably don't even know