Authors: Paulo Lins,Cara Shores
âMuggin' residents is risky, 'cos they tell the cops on the quiet, then the cops come along and raid us.'
Tiny also wanted the residents to like him so that if he needed a hideout or helping hand, they'd be quick to come to his aid.
From time to time the boss of The Flats took a walk Up Top, always accompanied by other gangsters, to find out who was dealing, if a particular den was doing good business, if the same supplier was stocking the dens there. He'd go to Teresa's den for his information, as they were very fond of one another. He liked it Up Top; it was the first place he'd lived in City of God, and it was where he'd met Sparrow, Slick, LuÃs Sting, Squirt, Hellraiser and Hammer. Whenever he walked through those streets, he remembered Black Charlie and Slick, who were doing time in Lemos de Brito Prison. One day soon he'd send them some money. He often showed up at bars and footed the bill for the cool guys, slapped his friends on the back, and invited them down to The Flats for a beer. He moved around the entire area, but avoided passing in front of his mother's house, as he hadn't spoken a word to her in a long time.
One Friday morning, Tiny and his partners were
cycling
through the estate looking for Carrots. They'd already been Up Top and to Block Thirteen. Tiny looked for his friend, who'd stopped hanging around with him ever since he'd taken to giving orders and yelling at everyone. He didn't know the real reason why Carrots had become distant, and imagined he was envious because he'd always done better for himself in hold-ups and robberies. Actually, Tiny had always thought Carrots a bit weird; aloof. He often saw him shooting the breeze with friends, but whenever he saw Tiny he'd clam up.
Long before Tiny became the boss of the dens in The Flats, Carrots had set up a den on Block Thirteen with Sting and had been running the den on his own ever since his partner had wound up behind bars. On Block Thirteen there was a bunch of youngsters who committed crimes both within City of God and elsewhere. Some of these kids worked as sellers for Carrots, whose den didn't do much business because customers from other areas were afraid to walk through the estate.
âHey, seen Carrots around?' he shouted down the alleys Up Top, as if the question was directed at everyone in the bars, on street corners, in doorways.
âHe's takin' a nap over at Rattler's place,' answered a teenage boy.
âGo wake 'im up, quickly.'
âI can't, I gotta stay â¦'
âYou can't my arse, kid!' shouted Tiny, going over to the boy to clout him across the face. Then he asked:
âAin't ya goin'?'
âI'm goin', I'm goin'!'
The boy sped off through the alleys while Tiny had a beer with his men at Noé's Bar, always with his gun in his hand, glancing around. Carrots emerged on the street corner, strolling
along in a pair of Bermuda shorts and no shirt. Tiny waved cordially, drinking his beer in small sips. Sparrow said that Carrots was getting fatter by the day. Carrots shook hands with each member of the gang and made a point of hugging Sparrow.
âYou know it's us that's runnin' the show down in The Flats?'
Carrots nodded his head.
âWell then! Don't let them kids over on Thirteen thieve down there, right? Tell 'em to do it somewhere else. It'll attract the pigs to both our dens if they keep workin' the area, you know. I reckon â¦'
âHey man, I mind my own business and no one else's. It's not my thing to go around givin' orders and I'm not the police either, you know. Go tell 'em yerself.'
âI came to talk with you 'cos I heard them kids was hangin' round your den,' said Tiny coldly. âSeein' as it's not your thing, when they all start droppin' dead, don't come to me for help.'
Before Carrots could answer, Sparrow intervened:
âI knew you wouldn't want to get involved. You always did like to keep to yourself, but here's the story: tell the kids you like to lay off if they don't want any trouble from us, right? We've come in peace, know what I'm sayin'? We just want to see eye to eye ⦠You don't need to give anyone a hard time or kill anyone, but have a chat with them kids, OK man?'
Then Sparrow quickly got on his bike and said:
âLet's go, let's go, let's go.'
Along the way, Tiny discussed the possibility of eliminating Carrots. He thought he'd been rude to them when they'd only gone to have a word with the guy, precisely to avoid a clash with him; he was an old friend after all.
âThat's just the way the guy talks, man! He just don't wanna get involved, full stop. You warned him, didn't ya? Right then!
I'll have a word with them kids over on Thirteen ⦠They listen to me â¦' said Sparrow.
They were passing in front of Batman's Bar when Sparrow said:
âHey, I'm gonna swing by my place, OK? I'm gonna grab some clothes and I'll head over to The Flats in a bit. Can you take my shooter?'
He doubled back along the same path he'd taken on the way there, then took the road along the right branch of the river, went down an alley, turned left and came out on Edgar Werneck Avenue, where he lived, but braked his bike when he passed a kiosk where some guys were playing samba.
He ordered a beer, sat next to a man playing the
cavaquinho
and positioned himself so he could see the guy's fingers strumming the strings. He got friendly with him. After a while, it was he who led the sambas. He sang out loud, drank beer quickly, and insisted on paying for the beers ordered by the musicians. His expression of joy at being there grew with every passing second. Everything was going fine until two men arrived, looking as if they already knew Sparrow was there. They called him over. Their curt conversation lasted a little over ten minutes, until one of them gave him a shove. Sparrow stumbled back, but quickly found his balance again and flew at his attacker. The samba stopped when the fight started. Although slightly drunk, Sparrow leaped about, dodging the kicks and punches the men were now throwing at him. He was short and chubby, but he wasn't afraid to take on a big guy with his fists. He could even sprint off to his place to get one of his ten brothers to come and help him, but he decided to see the fight through to the end. Some people shouted:
âTwo against one is gutless!'
People gathered around to see Sparrow beating up two men who were bigger than him. The fight was ending when one of them jumped behind the counter, grabbed a butcher's knife and flew at Sparrow, stabbing him twice in the stomach.
Sparrow tried to run home, while his enemies backed away amidst hissing and swearing. Sparrow fell before he'd gone a hundred yards, and asked someone to call a taxi, finding it difficult to talk. Acerola and Orange stopped a car on Edgar Werneck Avenue and made the driver take him to hospital.
There was commotion over in The Flats when Sparrow's own brother brought the news. He told Tiny what had happened and asked him for a gun.
âYou don't need a gun, 'cos you're not a gangster. You need money.'
He turned and shouted:
âRussian Mouse, ask Carlos Roberto for money to pay for the hospital and Sparrow's medicine.'
When Sparrow's brother had gone, Tiny, somewhat confused, talked about several other things, then off he went, flitting from thought to thought without giving anyone a chance to cut in and without mentioning Sparrow's name in his agitated monologue. Sometimes he'd stare off into space, then come back gushing his feelings, still reeling from the events. He fired shots into the air while chewing his lips, cocked and uncocked his gun, laughed his quick, shrill little laugh for no reason at all, wandered back and forth between all the blocks of flats, ordered people to roll him joints, punched in the face anyone he thought looked like a dickhead, and several times recited a prayer which no one could understand a single word of. Late in the afternoon, he ordered Bicky to buy thirty pounds of the best quality meat and threw a barbecue near Building Seven. No one dared ask him a single
question, and he was the only one who talked in that tense atmosphere. He'd talk to himself and laugh after a long silence, and would order the gang to eat â because at this barbecue only the gangsters were allowed to enjoy the rare steak, its blood oozing from the corners of their mouths. Even the cool guys were excluded from the barbecue, which continued on into the night.
At exactly midnight, without explanation, Tiny got on his bike and quickly pedalled Up Top. He wandered through the darkness of that moonless night and found out from a reliable source everything that had happened. He went to Teresa's place and ordered her to stop dealing without telling her why, went to Block Thirteen, where he rudely gave Carrots the same orders with his gun cocked, then returned to The Flats.
âLet's snort, let's snort ⦠! Gangsters've gotta snort to stay switched on ⦠So they don't sleep on the job! Gangsters've gotta snort, gangsters've gotta snort â¦' he said over and over, laughing his quick, shrill little laugh.
The next morning dawned grey. Everything seemed slow in the sinister atmosphere that enveloped the people in the streets, who went about with grave expressions in the omission of alleys and lanes, whose desertion made up the sadness of the day.
Down at The Flats, Tiny was still snorting coke with his men. He was even more agitated than when he'd first heard what had happened to his friend.
It was midday on the dot when he told everyone to follow him. Some went by bike, others on foot, running along with their eyes wide open, teeth clenched, glaring into places both real and imagined, with the intention of instilling terror in the eyes of whoever Tiny wanted. Because he was the one who gave orders, he was the one who took the lead, with three guns, and decided
which path to take. He was going to give his enemies the full tour of death.
They turned into the alley where Poison César's den was. Tiny asked a group of people on the street corner where to find him. A woman pointed at the bar. Tiny followed her finger with his eyes and saw Poison eating fried sausages, drinking beer and telling jokes.
âWhat's up, Poison César? Let's talk!'
When he saw fifteen armed men, Poison made a run for it, but one shot from Tiny caught him at a distance. Although he'd been hit, Poison disappeared down an alley, jumped two walls and hid under a car. Tiny's gang scoured the area but didn't find him. As they were leaving, they passed the car Poison was hiding under. The dealer, thinking he'd been found, begged them at the top of his lungs not to kill him, then handed his gun over to one of Tiny's men. Tiny laughed his quick, shrill little laugh and pumped three bullets into the bastard's head.
Valter's family celebrated Poison's death. Poison had killed Valter, a thief from Up Top, two days earlier, then lit candles around his body out of sheer malice.
Tiny and his men took off running again towards the New Short-Stay Houses. They arrived shooting locks off doors and scouring all the houses and, just like the police, captured two dealers. They headed for Block Fifteen with their prisoners at gunpoint. Bicky and Tiny invaded Sparrow's attacker's house. They hauled him out of bed, hitting him with the butts of their guns, and took him with the other two to the river's edge.
âHit the ground, hit the ground â¦'
âWhat's up, Tiny? ⦠Don't do this, don't ⦠What've we done? For God's sake!' said one dealer, already defecating, feeling his entire body tighten with the despair of one who finds himself in death's path.
The other two dissolved in silent tears amidst the members of Tiny's gang, who were also finding the situation hard to understand. They knew Sparrow had been stabbed, but they'd thought they were only going to take revenge on the guy who had stabbed him. Some of them wanted to leave. But who had the courage to go against Tiny? Bicky and Russian Mouse looked happy and thumped them with the butts of their guns when they raised their voices begging for mercy. The rain was light, the river ran a little faster, and Tiny's laugh was quicker, shriller and littler. He was unblinking, his head swinging back and forth towards every extreme of that moment.
The first of the three was brought down with blows and bullets. Several shots blasted his head open. Tiny rolled the still writhing body into the river with his feet. The first murder made the other two prisoners fall silent. The man who'd stabbed Sparrow fainted before his body was pumped full of bullets. He too was pushed into the river writhing. The last one suddenly jumped into the river and stayed underwater trying to hold onto something. When he came to the surface for air he took a bullet from Tiny's gun in the left side of his head. Before Tiny had even uncocked his gun, two friends of the executed dealers emerged from an alley; they'd come to ask Tiny to spare their friends. When they saw the bodies floating in the water, they asked what was going on.
âCome to make a request, have ya? Well I don't take requests, I don't! You tooled up? Are ya?' asked Tiny.
âYeah, but we're here in peace.'
âPeace my arse! Gimme your shooters! Gimme your shooters!'
The two looked at one another, put their right hands on the backs of their waistbands and stared firmly at Tiny, who, on hearing one of their guns cock, shot them both and yelled to Russian Mouse:
âThrow 'em in the river! Throw 'em in the river!'
They walked around Up Top firing shots into the air and ordering bars to close. As always, Tiny went around thumping people in the face if he didn't like the look of them, and warned everyone that he was the boss of those parts and anyone who set up a den in the area would snuff it. He told Teresa she could sell all the dope and coke she had, but afterwards she'd only be allowed to sell for him. He hung around a little longer then headed to Block Thirteen looking for Carrots.
âCome here, Carrots, come here, Carrots ⦠Here's the story: I killed everyone Up Top, right? And it's like this: you're only gonna be the frontman, got it? But only if you send some dough over to the slammer, right? You gotta send money to Slick and Sting, OK? If you don't, you've had it!'