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For the next three years, sometimes as often as four times a week, Michael rode the A train north, immersing himself in the lives of the brothers. He began spending days at a time in the neighbourhood, staying at a guesthouse overlooking the wooded slopes of the park. From his top-floor bedroom he witnessed three autumns burnish its trees, among which the island's original Lenape inhabitants had once made their cave dwellings. After a year of regularly checking him in, the owner supplied Michael with a desk, an old pine table notched and scarred with the cuttings of a kitchen knife. As he wrote up his notes in that room over those three falls, he witnessed the beginnings of gentrification take root in the area. Temporary Sunday market stalls evolved into permanent secondhand bookstores and cafés. Real estate offices moved in to occupy the premises of launderettes and cobblers. Young white couples began painting the exteriors of boarded-up houses. The bright colours of baby buggies and infant slings began dotting the pathways of the park on midweek afternoons.
?
At first, Michael's ignorance of the brothers' world in the streets and blocks west of this park was in his favour. He was an oddity: a tall English guy with a preppy haircut and an accent like from one of those British sitcoms. Handy to have around for a word to a social worker, or to touch for money. At times he was like a child to them, eager to learn, to harvest what they knew. But gradually, over the months and then the years, the scales of knowledge began to tip. After the apprenticeship of his magazine stories Michael had become adept at fitting himself to the lives of others. He never blended as such, but he did begin to stick. Among Nico and Raoul's friends an appreciation for his stubbornness began to grow, and with it an acknowledgement that at least he wanted to listen, at least he wanted to try and see things from their point of view. In the goldfish bowl of Inwood's street life he even began to be sought after, for advice or confidence. When Nico's girlfriend got pregnant, Michael knew before he did. When Raoul ran for a rival dealer, he made Michael swear he'd never tell his brother. But his learning of their world was not always helpful. The police pressured him to give them leads, while the growing currency of his knowledge began to unnerve some of the older boys. Michael in the dark was one thing. Michael knowing too much was another thing altogether.
The A train Michael took from SoHo up to Inwood followed the route of a Lenape hunting path that once traced the length of Manhattan's forests and hills. One morning, as if he'd sensed a regeneration of that route's purpose in Michael's visits, Nico had called him on what he was doing. They were hanging out at their aunt's apartment at the time, a studio high in the projects on Tenth Avenue.
"El tronco's a hunter, bro, I tellin' you," Nico said from the couch, speaking to Raoul but holding Michael's eye. "Ain't you, Mikey?" he continued, flicking a toothpick at him. "A lootin' puta. Ain't that you? Jus' divin' on us wrecks up here."
Michael laughed it off at the time, but for a few seconds he'd felt the air tighten between them. Not so much because of the threat in Nico's voice, but because they all knew, whether intentionally or not, what he'd said was true.
Five years after first meeting Nico and Raoul in their case-worker's office, Michael published BrotherHoods. He'd hoped the book would help the brothers, but it didn't. HBO bought their life rights, for $25,000 each. They said they wanted to make a series. That they wanted to use their characters to build a long-running franchise. Box sets, advertisements on the sides of city buses. But nothing came of it. For a brief period the two of them basked in their newfound notoriety. But in the end the attention, the money, fanned their troubles more than doused them. As the book became the talked-of publication in Manhattan, Nico, its central character, began a sentence upstate for unlawful possession of a firearm. Raoul, in trouble with a dealer and without his brother's protection, went to stay with a cousin in a one-bed in Pennsylvania. At the same time as they left the city, readers across Manhattan were being introduced to them. On subway trains, park benches, under duvets by the light of bedside lamps. Throughout New York and beyondin Vermont, San Francisco, across the whole countrystudents on college lawns, commuters on trains, middle-aged couples on sofas were all embarking on the small tragedies of the brothers' lives.
Excerpted from I Saw a Man by Owen Sheers. Copyright © 2015 by Owen Sheers. Excerpted by permission of Nan A. Talese. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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