smaller than Skeetah, he was almost as quick, and he dribbled to the raggedy hoop. Big Henry winked at Manny and laughed. Mannyâs face was smooth and only his body spoke: his muscles jabbered like chickens. He spread himself over Marquise, guarding him from the goal, and Randall clapped his hands at the edge of the beaten dirt court, waiting for Manny to steal and pass the ball. Big Henry shouldered against him, guarding. He was almost as tall as Randall but much wider, graceful and light as a spinning top. It was a real game now.
The crack of the bottle I was shaking sounded like change clattering in a loose fist. The bottle shattered, and the glass fragmented, slid along my palms. I dropped what I held.
âMove, Junior!â I said. My hands, which moments before had been pink, were red. Especially the left. âIâm bleeding!â I said under my breath. I didnât yell; I wanted Manny to see me, but not as a weak, sorry girl. Not something to be pitied because I couldnât take pain like a boy. Randall caught Mannyâs rebound and walked over to me as I kneeled, my left hand under the faucet, a ribbon of red making for the mud at my feet. He threw the ball backward. The cut was the size of a quarter, bleeding steadily.
âLet me see.â He pushed around the wound, and it pulsed blood. I felt sick to my stomach. âYou got to push on it until it stops bleeding.â He put my thumb, which had been stopping the head of the bottle, over the cut. âYou push,â he said. âMy hands are too dirty. Until it stops hurting.â It was always what Mama told us to do when we went running to her with a cut or a scrape. She would push and blow at the wound after putting alcohol on it, and when sheâd stopped blowing, it wouldnât hurt anymore. There. See? Like it never happened.
Manny was throwing the ball back and forth with Marquise so quickly it sounded like the fast beat of a drum. He glanced over at Randall kneeling over me; his face was even redder than it usually is, but then he hissed like he always does when heâs playing basketball, and I knew he was excited, not concerned. You got to push ⦠until it stops hurting . My stomach tilted. Randall squeezed once more and stood, and the glimpse I saw of Mama in his mouth when heâd told me to push was gone. Manny looked away.
Chinaâs next puppy is black-and-white. The white circles his neck before curling away from his head and across his shoulder. The rest of him is black. He jerks and mewls as Skeetah lays him on the blanket, clean. His mewl is loud, makes itself heard among the crickets; and he is the loudest Mardi Gras dancing Indian, wearing a white headdress, shouting and dancing through the pitted streets of the sunken city. I want him because he comes out of China chanting and singing like the New Orleans Indians, like the Indians that gave me my hair, but I donât think Skeetah will give him to me. He is worth too much money. His bloodline is good. China is known among the pit bulls in Bois Sauvage for locking on to dogs and making them cur. She pulls tendons from necks. The daddy dog from Germaine, a few towns over, is equally fierce. Rico, his owner and Mannyâs cousin, makes so much money fighting him he only has a part-time job as a mechanic at an oil change shop, and he spends the rest of his time driving his dog in his pickup truck to illegal dogfights set back in the woods.
âI wish he was all black,â Skeetah says.
âI donât care,â I say in return to Skeetah, to everyone, to the dogs multiplying in the shed, but no one hears me over China. She yelps. She sounds like I do when I let go of the swinging rope that hangs from the tall tree over Wolf River: terrified and elated. Her clipped ears curl forward. The puppy slides from her. It looks yellow, streaked with black, but when Skeetah wipes it off, the black vanishes.
âBlood look black at night,â