For about a hundred and fifty dollars I would’ve left. But there weren’t any philanthropists in the vicinity. I went over to him. He had rolled onto his back and when he saw me standing over him he started talking in Spanish. He had a rip in the side of his thin jacket and there were dark stains around it. I took off my denim coat and kneeled down, and when he saw what I was doing he moved his hands and let me use the coat as a compress. Some warm blood soaked into the denim, but not much. He seemed more panicked than anything. He just kept on jabbering.
Then I heard other voices. Two Mexicans were standing a few yards away, at the edge of the light.
"Habla ingles?" I called out.
"No much, no much," the taller of the two said.
I got him to hold the jacket in place and right away he and the injured man started talking, arguing it sounded like. I ran the three blocks to the store where I made a point of buying my coffee every morning because I liked the way the clerk looked. I asked her to call 911.
"Sorry, the phone’s not public," she said.
"Are you kidding?" I said.
She shook her head. "That’s the rule."
"But a guy’s been knifed or something."