Date: Sun, 3 Dec 2006 11:03:27 -0500 From: carl_mason@comcast.net Subject: STREETS OF NEW YORK - 9 Copyright 2006 by Carl Mason All rights reserved. Other than downloading one copy for strictly personal enjoyment, no part of this story may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, except for reviews, without the written permission of the author. However based on real events and places, "Streets of New York" is strictly fictional. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. As in real life, however, the sexual themes unfold gradually. Comments on the story are appreciated and may be addressed to the author at carl_mason@comcast.net This story is indebted for both its inspiration and many of its ideas to several books, especially Tyler Anbinder's FIVE POINTS, Jacob Riis's HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES, and Luc Sante's LOW LIFE. This story contains descriptions of sexual contact between males, both adults and teenagers. As such, it is homoerotic fiction designed for the personal enjoyment of legal, hopefully mature, adults. If you are not of legal age to read such material, if those in power and/or those whom you trust treat it as illegal, or if it would create unresolvable moral dilemmas in your life, please leave. Finally, remember that maturity generally demands safe sex. CHAPTER 9 (Revisiting Chapter 8) "Well, I didn't tell you last month," Tom responded, "but I went home at Thanksgiving to tell my parents that I was gay. Guess how they responded?" "Well," Dross drawled, "they said you were a sinner and to get your mangey hide out of the house?" "Dross!" Tom exploded, "Hell, no! They said they had known for years, that it didn't matter, and that they loved me. More than that, they said my partner would be welcome in their house...when I found him," he added with a Dross-baiting grin. "Humph," the white- haired one offered. "Guess it's going to be a long, cold winter." "Dross!" his mate yelled again, tackling him and dragging him down onto the floor. "You're going over to Jersey Sunday to meet my folks!" Dross looked up at him, his face calm, but his heart racing at flank speed. Calmly, he bent forward, extended his long tongue, and wetly licked Tom's face from the bottom of his chin to the hairline on his forehead. With a wicked grin, he asked, "Guess where I'm going this Sunday?" "Dross!" (Continuing Our Story - Westward Ho!) As the new year (1894) progressed, Tom became increasingly convinced that the only hope for the Subway Gang was to get them out of New York. He talked to the Agency people, he talked to the older members of the Subway Gang, he talked with youngsters who were scheduled to go West on an Orphans' Train. Obviously, there were "minor" problems, e.g., raising about $730.00 needed for their tickets and additional money for their food and supervision, plus some clothing. There was also the need to identify as many prospective foster parents in the West as possible. The Agency said that it could probably find a supervisor and work on finding foster parents, but funds for transportation, food, and clothing were simply beyond their budget for the foreseeable future. Tom remembered that Colonel Marsden was in railroads and had promised to provide any service he might need on request (see Chapter 6). Further, when their relationship was at an end, he had firmly told the young man that he would honor every promise made to him, for "his word was his bond" (see Chapter 7). Tom had never made a request of Marsden, nor, for that matter, had he ever intended to do so. In this case, however, he was not talking about his own welfare or advantage, but the future of nearly 30 young boys who deserved a chance to live and grow. He would speak with the Colonel. Entering the lobby of the midtown building, Tom indicated that he wanted to make an appointment to see Colonel Marsden. When the receptionist called the Colonel's office, however, he was told that he might come upstairs immediately. Seeing him coming, the Colonel's secretary simply smiled and reminded him of the correct door. As Tom entered the inner sanctum, Marsden stood and smiled affably. "I'm glad to see you, Tom. You are looking well. What can I do for you?" Briefly reminding him of his promise, Tom briefly reviewed the Subway Gang's problems. He emphasized that he was asking nothing for himself, only for the children. Asking what was involved, Tom provided him with the data. He admitted that the transportation was beyond him, but said that he would do his best to provide the money for food and clothing. The Colonel simply said, "Yes, I'll take care of it...gladly. Whom do I contact?" Tom mentioned the name of the supervisor at the Agency. The Colonel added, "Better let me take care of the food and clothing as well. It will be easier on all concerned. Contact the Agency in about two weeks. They should have arrangements by then to share with you. Is there anything else, Tom?" Tom stood...voiceless...confused. "Thank you, sir," he managed haltingly. (Pause.) "I shan't contact you again, but you should know that I think you have proved yourself to be an honorable man. Also, I value what you brought into my life and will always remember you affectionately for it." Marsden began to lose his composure and moved as if to come out from behind his desk. A slight shake of Tom's head, however, stopped him. "Good day, sir," Tom said quietly, turned on his heels, and left the office. He never again had direct contact with the Colonel. Nearly a month later, Tom and Dross saw the latest Orphan's Train off from Grand Central Station. The Agency had indeed provided a most pleasant supervisor and had already identified several foster families and individuals. The boys of the Subway Gang rode in their own car - and it was one of the very best in the entire train. Food had been brought aboard for them, and the supervisor had received additional money to purchase anything else they needed. Each boy wore a new outfit of serviceable clothes and carried a small pack with extras. The Colonel also watched the train depart, though he did so from the vantage point of the Station Master's office. In truth, a tear appeared at the corner of his eye as he watched the little ones mob Tom and Dross, hugging and kissing them good-bye. (Down on the Docks) Tom was tired...bone tired. Physically and psychologically, his magnificent constitution had gradually been drained by the constant demands for energy in a basically unsupportive environment. Then, too, major crises had appeared in his life, crises that had not easily been surmounted. Rather than allow it to tear him apart unexamined, Tom had finally accepted his homosexuality. The psycho-physiological need of those in their early twenties to find "the One" was well on its way to being satisfied. The main group of people - the Subway Gang - for whom he had personally accepted responsibility was on its way west, hopefully to a better life. In other, less successful efforts, e.g., restoring Tony Prieto, he had clearly fulfilled the obligations of a friend. Whatever the achievement, however, the price had been high. The young man desperately needed to relax his body and his mind...if you will, to let down his hair for a bit! It was late June again in lower Manhattan and the mounting heat cruelly pressed down on the tenements and their inhabitants. Further, before the summer was out, Tom would face major changes in his life. The time had come, he and Dross concluded, to throw a party to end all parties. Where? The boys were disinclined to hold it in a saloon; parks and playgrounds in that part of town were a few years away. The best bet seemed to be one of the closed private East River wharves where their friends could gather, swim, eat, drink, and generally enjoy their company. One was selected and rented for a pittance. Were a little money to find its way into Officer McGuire's hand's, it was even possible that a permit could be had that would allow a carefully tended fire. And so it was decided. The day of the party had dawned viciously hot and the temperature had never let up. Adding to the misery, it was so humid that the sun appeared to be circled by a ring of shimmering moisture! Nevertheless, by seven o'clock, the grills for cooking food were in place. A mouthwatering collection of German sausages and deli delights could reach the site within ten minutes when the fires were right, sodas and a some beer were cooling in buckets of ice, and a small, protected fire had been set around which they could gather later in the evening to sing and have fun. Tom and Dross were delighting in the fact that twenty or so friends, many of whom they not seen for some time, had made their way up the wharf towards them. Oh, yeah! Bernie, Phil O'Connor, two of the Columbia footballers who helped with the outing on Morningside Heights (the third had graduated), Carlo (a teen-aged cousin of Tony's whom they met on the search), a couple of Dross's friends from school, two of the younger technicians from Serge Morstein's photography shop, Sergei Petrov, and on and on. A few of the guys had accepted the invitation to bring their girls. Partying was already underway when they suddenly heard yells and a screeching sound of metal on metal as the gate was torn apart at the street end of the wharf. Almost immediately, a dark, fast-moving wall of people swept up the wharf and into the party area. Their party had been crashed by perhaps three dozen hoods. Several women were with them, women who appeared to be every bit as hard as they. Before the two groups encountered each other, Manny Landau (whose younger brother the boys had saved from the reformatory) gave Tom a hurried summary of what he faced. "It's 'The Goat Horn Boys', Tom - one of the worst gangs in the area," he said. "You'll not find a choicer band of thieves, murderers, muggers, and extortionists this side of hell. Right now they're constantly fighting Chinese gangs for control of the local drug business. Merchants and single men and women on the streets - male or female - are terrified of them. They teach young kids how to use blackjacks, heavy boots, guns, knives, and brass knuckles. (I had one hell of a time keeping my brother Isaac and his friends away from them.) Several of the biggest criminals use them as 'muscle', and there are rumored ties to Tammany Hall itself. Most of them are in their 20s, though there are a few big teens. The boss? Well, Grant Horn - if that's his real name - is quite a specimen. See for yourself. He's on his way over." "Arnold, I'm Grant Horn. I see that you found our wharf." "Your wharf," Tom said coolly. "Yeah, they never rent it out to anyone but us - and this is our party night. The cop at the gate said he didn't know what had happened, so we opened it up and came on in." (The gang boss let out a loud, rather obscene snort, somewhere between a guffaw and a bray.) Tom noticed that the lead ranks of the bowler-clad toughs and their women were approaching his friends. Stalling for time, he asked Horn what he thought should be done. Somewhat taken aback, Horn paused and then struck an imperious pose...rather like Napoleon surveying the battlefield at Waterloo. Loudly, he trumpeted, "Well, you could take your stuff and leave." For some reason hesitating, he turned down the volume and added, "No reason, though, why we should spoil your party, or you ours. We'll share if you'll share. Could be fun...if you're not Chicken." Tom cooly replied that he would speak with his friends. The general opinion was that the Goat Horn Boys were bad news, but that they had looked forward to their party, had made their arrangements properly, and didn't feel like being driven off. Thus, they would stay. When Tom informed the gang chief of their decision, he seemed vaguely disappointed, but guessed that there was plenty of room for everyone. His boys had a lot of food and drink that they would now start bringing onto the wharf. Tom watched with some amazement as their boss shouted his directions and gang members began to drag a large cart down the wharf. Its contents were even more amazing: a table, a full keg, several cases of liquor, and assorted glasses, food containers, and other party stuff. "Obviously, they know something about how to party," Tom laughed to Dross. Catching a strange look on Dross's face, Tom thought for a moment and then asked if the white-haired one were suggesting that "one should be wary of Greeks bearing gifts" - if they were Greek, that is? Dross snickered and said, "Well, I guess they ARE educating you up at that school of yours! Let's just be careful." All things considered, things were going pretty well. There was plenty of room for all the food on the grills Tom had brought; Horn's boys were invited to cook their food on them. In turn, the gang members were soon sharing their suds with the others - and they found plenty of happy takers. Tom got a little nervous when the toughs started drinking boilermakers (whiskey with a beer chaser), but they soon began sharing their bottles of whiskey as generously as they had shared their beer. Before long, no one was feeling the slightest pain! The water of the river felt good; the food and drink felt good; it was a good party! It was perhaps a couple of hours into the party when a few cracks began to appear. For instance, several of the gang women became quite interested in some of Tom and Dross's friends. Their boyfriends made it clear that they did NOT appreciate it when they discovered them in dark corners on the wharf! Conversely, several of Tom's friends were gay. As alcohol loosened their inhibitions, the call of some prime-beef-in-bowlers became more and more difficult to resist. (In at least two cases, there seemed to be some interest on the other side!) Also, many of the gang members seemed to becoming increasingly resentful of the inroads Tom's friends were making in their alcohol. Sniffing the increase in tension, Tom wandered over to speak with Grant Horn. Tom found Horn lying on a blanket, getting a little head rub from his woman de jour. There was something in his eyes that told him to let gang chief speak first. "You know, Arnold, you had plenty of polite warnings: Don't become too visible. Don't stir up a hornets' nest. Don't interfere with the gangs. Isn't that true?" "Yeah, I guess," Tom responded, perhaps just a bit emboldened by the alcohol and testosterone. "Did you know that we let Tony Prieto into the gang not long before he had his latest trouble - and that made him our responsibility?" Wondering what "his latest trouble" was, Tom admitted he hadn't heard about that. "Did you know that the group of kids you call the 'Subway Gang' lived in our territory, and that we planned to recruit them? Don't you see that you are interfering in our business - and that we can't possibly allow that to continue? As a matter of fact, you've got to be punished for what you've already done. I'd have a blade between my ribs if I let it go." Tom looked at Horn without flinching and said nothing. "Arnold, I want you to meet someone, someone real special," Horn said quietly. "Cass...Cass Scully! Get over here!" he yelled in the general direction of the fire. As Scully trotted over, Tom had to admit that he made quite a picture. Looking more like a steel worker than a hood, the enforcer appeared to be in his mid 20s and perhaps 5'11" tall. Tom guessed that he carried 195 lbs or a little less on his fireplug frame. In any case, there was a spark of intelligence in his otherwise cruel eyes and he didn't look as if he carried an ounce of fat. He was just solid, fully mature muscle that had been honed to a killing edge. Just twenty-one, standing at 6' tall, and weighing in the neighborhood of 168 lbs, Tom didn't look small, but his body was still far from being fully developed physically . "This is that Arnold guy," Horn snapped as his boy arrived - "the one who's been sticking his nose into our business. I'm going to ask you to teach him that this was a really bad way to go." Scully grunted, adjusted his bowler, and sneered at Tom. His eyes reminded Tom of a rattlesnake that he had once caught in his barn at home. "Ok, Scully, that'll do for now. Get yourself ready." The bullyboy grunted again and headed back to the fire. "What makes you think I'd fight this cretin?" Tom asked. Ignoring his vocabulary, Horn paused and turned towards the footballer with a glare so malevolent that a shiver ran up and down his spine. "Let me see, Arnold, you'd like your friends to get out of here alive...no matter what happens to you? If you won, you'd like to walk out of here alive yourself? That answer your question?" "You'd hurt them?" Tom murmured. "Try me!" the gang leader snapped. "Try to run and the cops will be pulling dead bodies out of the river for days. Believe that they'd never spot the Mickey Finns we gave them before packing them into that boat and sending it out into mid river to sink! You have my word, though. Put up a good fight and, win or lose, and I won't lay a hand on them...nor will any of my boys." Tom stood up at his full height and nodded. "Ok," Horn muttered. "It'll be bare-knuckles, Greek-style, London Prize Ring rules! In twenty minutes..." As best he could, Tom filled Dross in on what had transpired during his conversation with the gang chief. "Don't worry, Dross, I don't intend to lose. Just be in my corner - and do your best to protect our friends if things don't work out." A red-faced Heinie looked as if he wanted to read Tom the riot act, but he helped him strip and get ready. Just before it was time, gang members roped off a 24-foot-square ring and one of the gang climbed into the space. "Ladies and gentlemen," he shouted, "gather 'round for the entertainment of the evening!" Moments later, he continued: "London Prize Ring rules: no gloves, wrestling is ok, biting, headbutting, and hitting below the belt aren't. A round lasts until one fighter is knocked down, and a fight lasts until one fighter is unable to get up off the floor within 30 seconds and return to the 'scratch' [a mark in the center of the ring]. In this corner: the mighty Goat Horn champion, Cass Scully; in the other corner, Tom Arnold. May the best man win!" Stripped, i.e., in the Greek style, Scully looked even more formidable than he had earlier. Swathed in black hair, he sported a barrel chest with heavy pecs, arms that looked strong enough to crush a bull, surprisingly squat legs that resembled tree trunks, and equipment that had the gang molls squealing. By comparison, Tom appeared to be a callow youngster. Yes, he had a powerful, muscular body, but shorn of most of his body hair, he lacked Scully's appearance of brute force and danger. True, those of his crowd who had never seen him stripped - e.g., the girls and a few of the gays such as the fourteen-year-old dancers Davy and Pat - began rolling their eyes and grinning lustfully at their partners. Finally, the fighters were called to the center of the ring and all was ready for that which Grant Horn had planned as the main event of the evening. Tom was no boxer, but he had never allowed himself to be bullied in school or around the neighborhood. As his dad had taught him, the main thing you had to remember with the bullyboy was not to allow him to corner and pound you. He'd had a few lessons in "manly defense" up at college. Thus, sans gloves, mouthpiece, or referee, he concentrated on avoiding Scully's bull-like rushes, blocking, slipping, countering, and wrestling. The Goats Horn champion showed early that he would not wage an honorable fight. When breaking one clinch, he delivered a passing blow to Tom's genitals with his knee. In a second case, an elbow dug deep into younger man's lower stomach. In the third round, Scully drove him to a knee with a flurry of blows to his face and abdomen. The superbly conditioned youngster easily returned to the scratch, however, and in the fourth landed one solid right that broke Scully's nose and sent blood splattering across the ring and down his body. Shifting his attack to his opponent's body, Tom began burying lefts and rights in his midsection. After another five or six rounds of that, the Goats Horn champ had slowed appreciably, but Arnold knew that he remained deadly. One of Scully's blows could end the fight. Were Tom to ask too much of knuckles that were scarcely battle hardened, something could easily break, leaving him at Scully's mercy. By the fifteenth round, Tom had a bad cut on his right cheek, his nose was bleeding steadily, and his lips were split. Scully had a black eye, his battered nose continued to bleed on and off, both hands were swollen to twice their size, and his ribs had taken a steady pounding. Both fighters were covered in blood and sweat. And so the epic battle continued: Tom escaping major damage, Scully taking everything that his opponent could dish out and shrugging it off as he would the irritating attentions of a horsefly. Beginning in the twentieth round, Scully began to tire visibly. In the twenty-third, Tom unleashed a whirlwind of punches that staggered the champion. Bleeding and battered he retreated to a corner where a right hand dropped him to his knees. Gamely, he tried to rise, but a crushing combination of blows pitched him forward on his face and chest. Finally, he was counted out. As his friends rushed into the ring, Tom stood up straight and looked at Grant Horn. With a gesture of disgust, the gang leader motioned for Tom and his people to leave - something that they did neither silently nor humbly. (Author's Note: Everything in this world seems to reflect cause-effect rules. Unfortunately, it is almost impossible to predict which will be positive effects of any one cause and which will be negative. In this case, Tom and Dross's friends suffered no retaliation on the streets, but his startling victory in the ring had a certain negative effect on Tom. That is, his victory brought with it a certain feeling of invincibility, a sense reflected in the part he was about to play on the gay scene and even in other events of the final chapters of our story. Read on.) To Be Continued