White Butterfly
Page 1
White Butterfly
The police don’t show up on Easy Rawlins’s doorstep until the third girl dies. It’s Los Angeles, 1956, and it takes more than one murdered black girl before the cops get interested. Now they need Easy. As he says: “I was worth a precinct full of detectives when the cops needed the word in the ghetto.” But Easy turns them down. He’s married now, a father—and his detective days are over. Then a white college coed dies the same brutal death, and the cops put the heat on Easy: If he doesn’t help, his best friend is headed for jail. So Easy’s back, walking the midnight streets of Watts and the darker, twisted avenues of a cunning killer’s mind…
WHITE BUTTERFLY
Walter Mosley
Easy Rawlines Series, Book 3
Copyright © 1992
by Walter Mosley
Dedication:
For the stories
he keeps on telling,
I dedicate this book
to Leroy Mosley.
— 1 —
“EASY RAWLINS!” someone called. I turned to see Quinten Naylor twist the handle of my front gate.
“Eathy,” my baby, Edna, cooed as she played peacefully with her feet in her crib next to me on the front porch.
Quinten was normal in height but he was broad and powerful-looking. His hands were the size of potholders, even under the suit jacket his shoulders were round melons. Quinten was a brown man but there was a lot of red under the skin. It was almost as if he were rage-colored.
As Quinten strode across the lawn he crushed a patch of chives that I’d been growing for seven years.
The violent-colored man smiled at me. He held out his beefy paw and said, “Glad I caught you in.”
“Uh-huh.” I stepped down to meet him. I shook his hand and looked into his eyes.
When I didn’t say anything there was an uncomfortable moment for the Los Angeles police sergeant. He stared up into my face wanting me to ask him why he was there. But all I wanted was for him to leave me to go back into my home with my wife and children.
“Is this your baby?” he asked. Quinten was from back east, he spoke like an educated white Northerner.
“Yeah.”
“Beautiful child.”
“Yeah. She sure is.”
“She sure is,” Quinten repeated. “Takes after her mother, I bet.”
“What do you want wit’ me, officer?” I asked.
“I want you to come with me.”
“I’m under arrest?”
“No. No, not at all, Mr. Rawlins.”
I knew when he called me mister that the LAPD needed my services again. Every once in a while the law sent over one of their few black representatives to ask me to go into the places where they could never go. I was worth a precinct full of detectives when the cops needed the word in the ghetto.
“Then why should I wanna go anywhere wit’ you? Here I am spendin’ the day wit’ my fam’ly. I don’t need no Sunday drive wit’ the cops.”
“We need your help, Mr. Rawlins.” Quinten was becoming visibly more crimson under his brown shell.
I wanted to stay home, to be with my wife, to make love to her later on. But something about Naylor’s request kept me from turning him down. There was a kind of defeat in the policeman’s plea. Defeat goes down hard with black people; it’s our most common foe.
“Where we gonna go?”
“It’s not far. Twelve blocks. Hundred and Tenth Street.” He turned as he spoke and headed for the street.
I yelled into the house, “I’m goin’ fo’ a ride with Officer Naylor. I’ll be back in a while.”
“What?” Regina called from her ironing board out back.
“I’m goin’ out for a while,” I yelled. Then I waved at my forty-foot avocado tree.
Little Jesus peeked out from his perch up there and smiled.
“Come on down here,” I said.
The little Mexican boy climbed down the tree and ran up to me with a silent smile stitched across his face. He had the face of an ancient American, dark and wise.
“I don’t want you off exploring today, Jesus,” I said. “Stay around here and look after your mother and Edna.”
Jesus looked at his feet and nodded.
“Look up here at me.” I did all the talking when around Jesus because he hadn’t said a word in the eight years I’d known him.
Jesus squinted up at me.
“I want you close to home. Understand me?”
Quinten was at his car, looking at his watch.
Jesus nodded, looking me in the eye this time.
“All right.” I rubbed his crew-cut peach fuzz and went out to meet the cop.
OFFICER NAYLOR DROVE ME to an empty lot in the middle of the 1200 block of 110th Street. There was an ambulance parked out front, flanked by patrol cars. I noticed a bright patent-leather white pump in the gutter as we crossed the street.
A crowd had gathered on the sidewalk. Seven white police officers stood shoulder to shoulder across the front of the property, keeping everybody out. The feeling was festive. The policemen were all at ease, smoking cigarettes and joking with the Negro gawkers.
The lot itself was decorated with two rusted-out Buicks that were hunkered down on broken axles in the weeds. A knotty oak had died toward the back end of the lot.
Quinten and I walked through the crowd. There were men, women, and children stretching their necks and bobbing back and forth. A boy said, “Lloyd saw’er. She dead.”
When we walked past the line of policemen one of them caught me by the arm and said, “Hey you, son.”
Quinten gave him a hard stare and the officer said, “Oh, okay. You can go on.”
Just one of the many white men I’ve shrugged off. His instinctive disrespect and arrogance hardly even mattered. I turned away and he was gone from my life.
“Right this way, Mr. Rawlins,” Quinten Naylor said.
There were four plainclothes policemen looking down at the back of the tree. I couldn’t make out what it was that they saw.
I recognized one of the cops. He was a burly white man, the kind of fat man who was fat everywhere, even in his face and hands.
“Mr. Rawlins,” the burly man said. He held out a pillowy hand.
“You remember my partner,” Quinten said. “Roland Hobbes.”
We’d come around the tree by then. There was a woman in a pink party dress, a little open at the breast, sitting with her back against the trunk. Her legs were straight out in front of her, a little apart. Her head tilted to the side, away from me, and her hands were on either side of her thighs with the palms up. Her left foot sported a white pump, her right foot was bare.
I remember the softness and the underlying strength of Roland Hobbes’s hand and the insect I saw perched on the woman’s temple. I wondered why she didn’t bat it away.
“Nice to see you,” I was saying to Hobbes when I realized that the insect was a dried knot of blood.
When Roland let go of my hand he listed toward Quinten and said, “Same thing.”
“Both?” Quinten asked.
Roland nodded.
The girl was young and pretty. It was hard for me to think that she was dead. It seemed as if she might get up from there any minute and smile and tell me her name.
Somebody whispered, “Third one.”
— 2 —
THEY CARRIED THE BODY AWAY on a stretcher when the photographers were through—police photographers, not newsmen. A black woman getting killed wasn’t photograph material for the newspapers in 1956.
After that Quinten Naylor, Roland Hobbes, and I got into Naylor’s Chevrolet. He was still driving a 1948 model. I imagined him on his days off, in short sleeves, slaving and struggling under the hood to keep that jalopy running.r />
“Don’t they give you a car when you with the police?” I asked.
“They called me from home. I came straight here.”
“Then why’ont you buy yourself a new car?”
I was sitting in the front seat. Roland Hobbes had gotten in the back. He was a deferential kind of a person, always polite and correct; I didn’t trust him worth a damn.
“I don’t need a new car. This car is just fine,” Naylor said.
I looked down at the ruptured vinyl seat between my thighs. The gold-colored foam rubber gushed forth under my weight.
WE DROVE QUITE A WAYS down Central Avenue. That was before the general decline of the neighborhood. The streets were clean and the drunks were few. I counted fifteen churches between 110th Street and Florence Boulevard. At that corner was the Goodyear Rubber plant. It was a vast field with two giant buildings far off to the northern end. There was also the hangar for the Goodyear blimp there. Across the street sat a World gas station. World was a favorite hangout for Mexican hot-rodders and motorcycle enthusiasts who decorated their German machines with up to three hundred pounds of chrome piping and doodads.
Naylor drove to the gate of the Goodyear plant and flashed his badge at the guard. We drove to a large asphalt parking lot where hundreds of cars were parked neatly in rows like they were on sale. There were always cars parked there, because the Goodyear plant worked twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
“Let’s take a walk,” Naylor said.
I got out of the car with him. Hobbes stayed in the backseat. He picked up a Jet magazine that Naylor had back there and turned directly to the centerfold, the bathing-suit picture.
We walked out into the center of the grassy field. The sky was tending toward twilight. Every fourth or fifth car driving the boulevards had turned on their lights.
I didn’t ask Quinten what we were doing. I knew it was something important for him to want to impress me with the fact that he could get onto that fancy lawn.
“You hear about Juliette LeRoi?” Quinten asked.
I had heard about her, her death, but I asked, “Who?”
“She was from French Guiana. Worked as a cocktail waitress for the Champagne Lounge.”
“Yeah?” I prompted him.
“About a month ago she was killed. Throat cut. Raped too. They found her in a trash can on Slauson.”
It was back-page news. TV and radio didn’t cover it at all. But most colored people knew about it.
“Then there was Willa Scott. We found her tied to the pipes under a sink in an abandoned house on Hoover. She had her mouth taped shut and her skull caved in.”
“Raped?”
“There was semen on her face. We don’t know if that happened before or after she died. The last time she was seen was at the Black Irish.”
I felt a knot in my gut.
“And now we have Bonita Edwards.”
I was watching the field and the row of businesses beyond on Florence. The air darkened even as Naylor spoke. Lights twinkled on in the distance.
“That this girl’s name?” I asked him. I was sorry I had come. I didn’t want to care about these women. The rumors around the neighborhood were bad enough, but I could ignore rumors.
“Yes.” Quinten nodded. “A dancer, another bar girl. Three party girls. So far.”
The grass shifted from green to gray with the dusk.
I asked, “So why you talkin’ t’me?”
“Juliette LeRoi had been in that can for two days before somebody called in the smell. Rigor mortis had set in. They didn’t find the marks until after the news story was out.”
My stomach let out a little groan.
“Willa Scott and Bonita Edwards had the same marks.”
“What marks do you mean?”
Quinten darkened like the night. “Burns,” he said. “Cigar burns on their, their breasts.”
“So it’s all the same man?” I asked. I thought of Regina and Edna. I wanted to get home, to make sure the doors were locked.
The policeman nodded. “We think so. He wants us to know he’s doing it.”
Quinten stared me in the eye. Behind him L.A. sizzled into a net of electric lights.
“What you lookin’ at?” I dared him.
“We need you on this one, Easy. This one is bad.”
“Just who do you mean when you say ‘we’? Who is that? You and me? We gonna go’n hire somebody?”
“You know what I mean, Rawlins.”
In my time I had done work for the numbers runners, churchgoers, businessmen, and even the police. Somewhere along the line I had slipped into the role of a confidential agent who represented people when the law broke down. And the law broke down often enough to keep me busy. It even broke down for the cops sometimes.
The last time I worked with Naylor he needed me to lure a killer named Lark Reeves out of Tijuana.
Lark had been in an illegal crap game in Compton and was down twenty-five dollars to a slumming white boy named Chi-Chi MacDonald. When Chi-Chi asked for his money he was a little too cocky and Lark shot him in the face. The shooting wasn’t unusual but the color line had been crossed and Quinten knew that he could make a case for a promotion if he could pull Lark in.
As a rule I will not run down a black man for the law. But when Quinten came to me I had a special need. It was a week before Regina and I were to be married, and her cousin Robert Henry was in jail for robbery.
Robert had argued with a market owner. He said that a quart of milk he’d bought had soured in the store. When the grocer called him a liar Robert just picked up a gallon jug and made for the door. The grocer grabbed Bob by the arm and called to the checker for help.
Bob said, “You got a friend, huh? That’s okay, ’cause I got a knife.”
It was the knife that put Bob in jail. They called it armed robbery.
Regina loved her cousin, so when Quinten came to me about Lark I made him an offer. I told him that I’d set up a special poker game down in Watts and get the word out to Lark. I knew that Lark couldn’t resist a good game.
High-stakes poker put Lark in San Quentin. He never connected me with the cops who busted the game and dragged him off to be identified at the station.
Quinten got his promotion because the cops thought that he had his thumb on the pulse of the black community. But all he really had was me. Me and a few other Negroes who didn’t mind playing dice with their lives.
But I had stopped taking those kind of chances after I got married. I wasn’t a stool for the cops anymore.
“I don’t know nuthin’ ’bout no dead girls, man. Don’t you think I’d come tell ya if I did? Don’t you think I’d wanna stop somebody killin’ Negro women? Why, I got me a pretty young wife at home right now… ”
“She’s all right.”
“How do you know?” I felt the pulse in my temples.
“This man is killing good-time girls. He’s not after a nurse.”
“Regina works. She comes home from the hospital, sometimes at night. He could be stalkin’ her.”
“That’s why I need your help, Easy.”
I shook my head. “Uh-uh, man. I cain’t help you. What could I do?”
My question threw Naylor. “Help us,” he said feebly.
He was lost. He wanted me to tell him what to do because the police didn’t know how to catch some murderer who didn’t make sense to them. They knew what to do when a man killed his wife or when a loan shark took out a bad debt. They knew how to question witnesses, white witnesses. Even though Quinten Naylor was black he didn’t have sympathy among the rough crowd in the Watts community; a crowd commonly called the element.
“What you got so far?” I asked, mostly because I felt sorry for him.
“Nothing. You know everything I know.”
“You got some special unit workin’ it?”
“No. Just me.”
The cars passing on the distant streets buzzed in my ears like hungry mosquitoes.
&n
bsp; “Three girls dead,” I said. “An’ you is all they could muster?”
“Hobbes is on it with me.”
I shook my head, wishing I could shake the ground under my feet.
“I cain’t help you, man,” I said.
“Somebody’s got to help. If they don’t, who knows how many girls will die?”
“Maybe you’ man’ll just get tired, Quinten.”
“You’ve got to help us, Easy.”
“No I don’t. You livin’ in a fool’s nightmare, Mr. Policeman. I can’t help you. If I knew this man’s name or if I knew somethin’, anything. But it’s the cops gotta gather up evidence. One man cain’t do all that.”
I could see the rage gathering in his arms and shoulders. But instead of hitting me Quinten Naylor turned away and stalked off toward the car. I ambled on behind, not wanting to walk with him. Quinten had the weight of the whole community on his shoulders. The black people didn’t like him because he talked like a white man and he had a white man’s job. The other policemen kept at a distance too. Some maniac was killing Negro women and Quinten was all alone. Nobody wanted to help him and the women continued to die.
“YOU WITH US, EASY?” Roland Hobbes said. He put his hand on my shoulder as Naylor stepped on the gas.
I kept my silence and Hobbes took his friendly hand back. I was in a hurry to get to my house. I felt bad about turning down the policeman. I felt miserable that young women would die. But there was nothing I could do. I had my own life to attend to—didn’t I?
— 3 —
I ASKED NAYLOR TO LET ME OFF at the corner, intending to walk the last few steps home. But instead I stood there looking around. Night was coming on and I imagined that people were scurrying for shelter from a storm that was about to explode around them.
Not everybody was in a hurry.
Rafael Gordon was running a shell game in front of the Avalon, a tiny bar down toward the end of my block. Zeppo, the half-Italian, half-Negro spastic, was standing watch at the corner. Zeppo, who was always in a writhing fit, couldn’t finish a sentence but he could whistle louder than most horn players could blow.