****, they may as well have started holding hands And making paper dolls together, The way they carried on Back in the neighborhood after push came to shove, Like none of it ever happened: All the times they spit on us, The constant **** and ******* and goya, The ***-kickings if we went one alley too far. Peace didn’t last; hell, it couldn’t It’s just the way things have to be, man. If I ever got in front of some parole board (Not that I’ll ever have that chance, As I ain’t goin’ anywhere unless they send me To Auburn or Attica for some change of pace) This is what I’d tell ‘em: You come home to your nice house In your tidy little sub-development After a day at Corning or IBM, And you find out that some punk Has ******* one of your daughters And stuck a shiv into her quarterback boyfriend, What are you gonna do if you find him Hiding in one of your neighbor’s rosebushes? Exactly. Save the taxpayers the expense of a trial.
Musta been a year, maybe eighteen months ago, This bunch of goody-goody types, All social workers and sweet boys, Show up here to put on some **** play Where this guy’s uncle kills his dad And starts puttin’ the blocks to his mom, And for hours it’s nothing but yak, yak, yak. And I’m thinking Man, could you just ice the guy, already. Let me tell you, I’ve never seen ‘Nardo’s ghost (Let alone that ******’ ******’s one) But if he ever shows, It ain’t gonna be to accuse me of nothin’; No, he’d smile and shake my hand, Because I did what the code said you gotta do. Just what the code said.