Tishomingo Blues

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Tishomingo Blues Page 14

by Elmore Leonard


  “She was a very cute girl.”

  “But what?”

  “People born and raised in New Orleans only move if they’re forced to.”

  “And you didn’t love her enough to stay.”

  “And get a regular job for the rest of my life, no. You check everybody out, huh?”

  “Pretty much. Charlie was the most fun.”

  “You check on guests?”

  “Some.”

  “What about Germano Mularoni?”

  “And his lovely wife, Anne? Yes, I did.”

  “What does Germano do for a living?”

  “He’s a gangster. I thought you knew that.”

  It surprised Dennis that she said it though not to hear that he was.

  “Detroit Mafia?”

  “No, but that’s rather murky. He was in prison once, for tax evasion.”

  Dennis said, “So Robert—”

  “He works for Jerry, but that doesn’t really tell you where he stands, does it? Take this battle reenactment coming up,” Carla said, “why is Jerry on one side and Robert on the other?”

  15

  HECTOR DIAZ ARRIVED FROM DETROIT and Robert and Tonto picked him up in Memphis. There he was coming out of the jetway in a black suit buttoned up, Hector less primitive than Tonto but not much. Hector was tall for being Mexican and liked to pose in his sunglasses, the ring in his ear, his hair pulled back into a pigtail, a coleta that was like a matador’s. Hector, a long time ago, had caped bulls in Mexico City but never made it to Spain; he was older than Tonto by twenty years, somewhere in his late fifties. And was tired now from sitting around Detroit Metro when the flight was delayed. Robert told him to sit in the backseat of the Jaguar, stretch out and take it easy.

  On the road south Tonto gave Hector a Navy Colt cap-and-ball pistol he got out of the glove box. Give him an idea of the kind of weapons they would be playing with. Hector checked it out, spinning the cylinder, thumbing back the hammer.

  Robert said to the rearview mirror, “Be sure what you doing, man, it’s loaded.”

  They picked up Jerry in front of the hotel after waiting close to an hour. Jerry came out in a black windbreaker and all four of them were in dark clothes—Robert in dark brown, Tonto in his denim jacket and a black bandanna—because Jerry said you always dressed dark you’re going to confront somebody; you dress in light colors you looked like a fuckin twink. Tonto went in back with Hector to let Jerry ride in front. They got on Old 61 again, south, down to the Dubbs turnoff, left, and pulled into the lot in front of the club, Jerry saying, “This is it?”

  Not impressed by this big run-down barn of a place, junebug’s painted to fit across the entire front where cars and pickups were angle-parked. “It’s a honky-tonk,” Robert said, “what Loretta Lynn sings about.” He crept the Jaguar past an open spot and backed in to face out. Robert said to Hector, “Stay where you are, man, and rest. Know what I’m saying? You watching my auto.”

  It was after ten, the club the only lights out here in the country on a dark night.

  They were out of the car now, Robert and Tonto slipping on their shades, Robert saying to Jerry, “They gonna be looking us over.”

  Jerry said, “Yeah . . .?”

  “Don’t say to anybody the fuck you looking at, till we do our business.”

  “Say please and thank you,” Jerry said, “and wash my hands after I take a piss. Come on.”

  Robert followed him inside, Tonto watching their backs: the three walking in to country swing coming from the sound system but no two-steppers out on the floor, Robert observing country dudes at the bar and some of the tables on this weeknight, not much of a crowd, a drum kit and speakers on the empty bandstand straight ahead, only a few women among the beer drinkers, that little blond whore . . . Toni? No, Traci, talking to a dude at the end of the bar that was to the left and ran all the way back. Robert followed Jerry toward the near end where a young dude stood resting his back against the bar, elbows on the round edge, baseball cap curved down around his eyes inspecting Jerry coming toward him, the kid hanging in, but then bailed to give Jerry room, Jerry not even looking at him. Jerry had his arm raised, calling to the bartender, “Hey, come here,” to Wesley in his undershirt, maybe the same one from the other night. Robert said, “Wesley, how you doing, man?” Wesley looking but not knowing shit who he was looking at. Jerry handed him a business card saying, “You don’t have to read it, Wesley. Give it to your boss.” They watched him walk down the bar with the card, looking at it again. Jerry said, “Fuckin Wesley. Beautiful guy.”

  Robert imagined Arlen Novis somewhere in the back, maybe an office, looking at the business card that said Germano Industries, and smaller, Manufactured Home Specialists, a Detroit address and the name at the bottom, Caesare Germano.

  Jerry said, “You think he can read?”

  “There he is,” Robert said as Arlen came out of the doorway next to the bandstand, “the one in the Confederate hat.” Following him was a dude with a build, short sleeves tight on his arms, the shirt hanging out. “The other one I’m gonna say is Arlen’s gun, Dennis told me about, they call Fish.”

  Arlen was looking at the card again as he reached them. He said, “Who’s Ceezur German-o?” fucking up both parts of the name. Robert thought of helping out, but Jerry stepped in.

  Jerry telling him, “It’s Che-za-ray,” and Arlen, trying to understand what that meant, shook his head.

  “Like Julius Caesar,” Robert said to him. “Mr. Germano’s name. Call him Caesar, be close enough. He wants to talk some business with you.”

  “What kind of business?” The man suspicious.

  “Why don’t we sit down at a table,” Robert said, “have Wesley bring us some cold drinks? Caesar likes rum and Coca-Cola, working for the Yankee dollah, as they say.” Arlen looking at him, not knowing shit what he was talking about. But it got all five of them sitting around a table by the dance floor, away from people watching them, Jerry saying to Arlen, “You’re at Southern Living, right?”

  He said yeah? Still holding back.

  “You do all right?”

  “What is it you want to know?”

  “You have building materials you don’t need?”

  “I’m head of security,” Arlen said.

  “That’s why I’m talking to you,” Jerry said. “I’m asking do you have anything you want to move, yes or no? I’ll make you a good offer.”

  Robert watched him, the man tempted, thinking of what he could move in the dead of night—shit, a whole house, take the motherfucker apart—but was still suspicious.

  Saying to Jerry, “You want to show me some ID?”

  They were wasting time. Robert moved on him. He said, “Arlen?” in a quiet tone, almost soothing. “I know what you been up to, don’t I? What we talked about in Vernice’s kitchen? You got deals going you have to protect. The reason you had Junebug pop Floyd. The reason you had this man here—Fish, they call you?—pop Junebug for telling people your business. Arlen. Haven’t I kept all this to myself, as I told you I would?”

  Robert paused, giving Arlen, both of them, a chance to speak if they wanted to.

  No, they both stared, Arlen looking cold but had to be wondering, shit, what was going on here? In his place of business, people around, Shania Twain belting out country.

  “You have to trust somebody, the kind of deals you must have going—and it ain’t hard to speculate about that. I imagine, for instance, you run the drug business in Tunica County. I bought some fine weed here the other night and could’ve bought anything, Junebug going down the list—what do I need, crank, blow? All I had to do was name it. I understand why you popped him, the man was dangerous. But there always people you have to trust. You can lose all the Junebugs around as long as you have a man like Kirkbride with you. Am I right?”

  Robert laid it out there to see what the name would bring and watched Arlen take his time before saying, “Well, he ain’t a bad guy to work for.” Shoved that aside and said
to Jerry, “Who am I talking to here, Caesar, you or him?”

  “What’s the difference?” Jerry said. “You haven’t said a fuckin word yet. I ask you about a Midnight Sale, what you can move, you don’t say yes or no.”

  Arlen said, “If I’d been able to get a word in—”

  And Robert cut him off. “Let’s wait, Arlen. You got your mind on the reenactment. We’re getting ready, too. We ain’t about to move anything right now anyway.” He said to Jerry, “Me and Arlen are in the same outfit, Forrest’s Escort. We both gonna be shooting at you, man.” Robert turned to Arlen again. “Caesar’s going as General Grant. Can’t miss him.”

  Jerry got into it with, “How you decide who wins?”

  “Whoever won the real battle,” Arlen said. “Brice’s it was us.”

  Robert, one of Forrest’s colored fellas, said, “That’s right, man, us.”

  They left. Got in the car and drove off, Hector Diaz telling them a couple of guys came by and looked in the car.

  Robert said, “They wake you up?”

  “No, man, I was awake. I cocked the pistol and they left.”

  Jerry said to Robert, “You find out what you wanted to know?”

  “I have to think on it,” Robert said, “but I’m pretty sure, yeah.”

  He dropped the three off at the hotel and got back on Old 61 to Tunica, to Vernice’s house.

  It was late now, the house dark as Robert pulled up and parked in front. No, a light showed in the yard, he believed coming from the porch. Robert walked around to the side and there was Dennis on the porch by a lamp, reading. Robert scratched on the screen and watched Dennis jump. “Jes’ me, man, the nightstalker.”

  They sat down and Robert said, “You learning anything?”

  “Rap rivals Lil’ Kim and Foxy Brown were involved in a shootout, in New York.”

  “The place to have it. My money’s on Lil’ Kim,” Robert said, “even though she’s chubbier than I like.”

  “One was going in a radio station,” Dennis said, “when the other was coming out and their posses started shooting at each other.”

  “Nobody killed, huh?”

  “One guy hit, a minor wound.”

  “They think they gangstas, the hangerons, the en-tou-ragers, shit. All they are’s unemployed niggas. Ask me where I been.”

  “Where?”

  “Junebug’s. I took Jerry and Tonto to see the place and another one’s joined us, Hector Diaz from Mexicantown in Detroit. Use to be a bullfighter.”

  “What’s he do now?”

  “What we all do, man, help Jerry develop land.”

  Dennis said, “Land or territories?”

  Robert didn’t speak for a moment, looking at him.

  “You know what you talking about?”

  “Carla says Jerry’s a gangster. She said, ‘I thought you knew that.’ From my hanging around with you.”

  “Bad influence.”

  “You told me yourself you sold drugs.”

  “When I was a child.”

  “Young Boys, Incorporated,” Dennis said. “I think you have your own young boys now, your own crew.”

  Robert was shaking his head. “Gangs, Dennis. You recruit the gang, walking around in their colors, nothing to do. They Young Dogs now I send on the road. Go to Fort Wayne, South Bend, Muncie, Kokomo. Was in the paper, two out of three dealers in Muncie, Indiana, are from Detroit. We move over to Ohio, set up Young Dogs in Lima, Dayton, Findlay. You ever hear that joke, the traveling salesman gets laid in Findlay, Ohio, and goes to confession?”

  Dennis said, “And then gets laid in New York and goes? Yeah, I heard it.”

  “Canton, Ohio, man, there’s a neighborhood there, projects, they call Little Detroit account of all the Young Dogs operating there. There’s gangs from L.A. working into the same territories. It’s how come you have your drive-bys. Mostly the trade is crack, ’cause you make more cooking and then cutting a hundred-dollar gram of coke into a hundred rocks you can sell for ten each. The Young Dogs go to a town, set up crack houses. It’s like a franchise, Dennis, the McDonald’s of drugs.”

  “What do the Dogs need you for?”

  “The product, man. Where these kids gonna score it in quantity?”

  “They could skim on the profits.”

  “I sell ’em the hamburger patties, the McNuggets. They sell it and come to me for more.”

  “Now you’re looking at Tunica County? Working south, setting up your franchises?”

  Robert said, “Dennis, you approaching your crossroads. You know what I’m saying? You come a long way, baby, and you almost there.”

  “Playing your stooge. I make your con game look legitimate. The con throws them off while you look into the drug business here.”

  “Having some fun with ’em. But listen,” Robert said, “tonight I took Jerry and Tonto and Hector to Junebug’s—”

  “You took Tonto the other night.”

  “We didn’t make it. Tonto saw a hooker in the hotel bar looked good to him. This is tonight, we sitting at a table talking to Arlen. Also the one you said was his shooter, Fish.”

  “Vernice said that.”

  “I accept her word,” Robert said. “This young dude, the Fish, sits there, Tonto staring at him through his shades, Tonto seeing if the man would stare back. And he did, almost the whole time. You understand? The two of them getting on a personal basis. But see, what I wanted to know was if Arlen worked for Mr. Kirkbride or Mr. Kirkbride worked for Arlen.”

  Robert waited, giving Dennis time to think about it while bugs hit the screen going for the lamplight. All kinds of bugs making noise down here in the summer.

  “You told me,” Dennis said, “Kirkbride’s a fool. I took that to mean harmless.”

  “It was a hasty call. See, then I got to thinking, this Arlen is too dumb to run an outfit. What’s he do with all the money they make? I said to Arlen, we’re sitting there—” Robert paused. “See, I had already fucked with the man’s head, saying I knew he ran the Tunica drug business. I said to him, Junebug wasn’t any loss, was he? Long as you had a man like Kirkbride with you.”

  “What’d he say?”

  “Was what he didn’t say. Mr. Kirkbride? You crazy? Any kind of shit like that. No, what he said, Kirkbride wasn’t a bad guy to work for.”

  “He didn’t get it. What you meant.”

  “He got it. I watched him. He skimmed over it and went to something else.”

  “You’re telling me Walter Kirkbride’s in the drug business?”

  “Yes, I am.”

  “And you’re gonna take over whatever they have going?”

  “Yes, we are.” Robert paused and said, “You ready?”

  “For what?”

  “You at the crossroads, Dennis. I’m about to make an offer to buy your soul.”

  Dennis said, “How much?”

  And Robert beamed.

  “You’re my man, Dennis. Hundred and fifty thousand the first year, two hundred the second and so on. Plus what you make off your business. That’s yours, too.”

  “What business?”

  “The one we set up for you.”

  “I’m the front.”

  “You the Mr. Kirkbride of the deal. Look at him. Nobody knows what he’s up to except one that knows one. You’d have the same deep cover. You the store that local business goes through. You take over Junebug’s and clean it up, get rid of Wesley. Put a man in there wears a red vest, he’s the seller. You’re playing golf, you don’t know shit what he’s up to.”

  “I run a honky-tonk,” Dennis said.

  “You keep an eye on things. But your main business . . . You ready? You set up a traveling high-diving show, a big operation, Dennis Lenahan’s Dive-O-Rama, bunch of young good-looking dudes, some cute girls that dive, but you’re the name, World Champion Dennis Lenahan, been doing it twenty-two years.”

  “The diving show,” Dennis said, “cleans the drug money.”

  “Distributes it here and the
re—that’s something we’ll get into later. Jerry wrote the book on how to do it.”

  “And went to jail.”

  “For not paying his taxes. He was into something else then, burning down buildings people wanted the insurance on. Jerry’s good with high explosives, too. He put a man out of business was fuckin with his brother. I’ll have to tell you about Jerry sometime.”

  “And the lovely Anne.”

  “You picked that up from Carla, didn’t you? That Carla’s as cool as Mr. Billy Darwin, you know it? I look at the two of them—they must have it going.”

  “They don’t,” Dennis said. “I asked her.”

  It brought Robert’s smile. “You working in there? Never mind. But if you gonna be staying here and she’s here . . .?” He could see Dennis taking his time now, looking at the offer.

  “I don’t handle any product? Drive around with drugs under the seat?”

  The man just got himself a car.

  “What kind you want, Mercedes, Porsche? No, man, you never touch the product. Not directly. Tonto’s the one gets it up from Mexico and Hector Diaz sees to where it goes. We get you a Dive-O-Rama accountant to handle the business, keep the books. I imagine the same as Mr. Kirkbride, if he knows what he’s doing.”

  “There’s still risk,” Dennis said.

  Robert liked him saying that, the man leaning, looking for a way he could accept the offer. Robert answered him straight. “Sure there’s risk. That’s why I picked you out. You know all about high risk, it’s your friend, it’s what keeps you going. Soon as I saw you up there on the ladder, the other evening, I said to myself, that’s my man. I didn’t even need to speak to you, I knew it.”

  “You sound like you already have the business here.”

  “It’s sitting there waiting on us.”

  “How do you take it away from the Dixie Mafia?”

  “That’s the fun part,” Robert said. “Remember you asking—we just met, I’m driving you home and you ask me, being funny, if I’m checking out the historical points of interest? And I said history can work for you, you know how to use it.”

  “I don’t get it.”

 

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