by Nora Deloach
ROAD RAGE
From the corner of my eye I saw the driver of the blue Ford pick up speed. He put on his turn signal, then pulled out in front of me. As he drew even with me, he threw up his index finger like he was pulling the trigger of a gun. The Ford slowed, then shot past me along the deserted road.…
When I noticed the blue Ford again, it was ahead of me, the driver moving less than twenty miles per hour. I slowed. As I did, he put on his signal to pull off to the side of the road, as if he had a flat tire. I drove past, looking for any sign of car distress. There was none. But as I pulled past, I noticed the baby’s car seat strapped behind him.
The whole encounter took less than a minute and I wouldn’t have thought any more about it except the Ford soon caught up with me again. This time the driver didn’t pass. He was driving so close behind me that I thought he was going to ram my tail end. I glanced at the rearview mirror. The driver was staring at me unblinkingly. Something in the look on his face told me that this man would hurt me if he ever got the chance.…
Bantam Books by Nora DeLoach
Mama Stalks the Past
Mama Rocks the Empty Cradle
and coming soon
from Bantam Books
Mama Pursues Murderous Shadows
This edition contains the complete text
of the original hardcover edition.
NOT ONE WORD HAS BEEN OMITTED.
MAMA ROCKS THE EMPTY CRADLE
A Bantam Book
PUBLISHING HISTORY
Bantam hardcover edition / 1998
Bantam mass market edition / November 1999
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1998 by Nora DeLoach
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For information address: Bantam Books
eISBN: 978-0-307-79492-5
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New York, New York 10036.
v3.1
Dedication
To William, Sr., my husband of thirty-four years; Edwin, my oldest son; Shekinah, my daughter (and best friend); Vincent, my son-in-law; their sons, Joshua, my first grandchild, and Cedric, the newest addition to our family; William, Jr., my youngest son; Stacey, his wife; Delcena, my niece; Richard, her husband; and Morgan, their daughter.
Contents
Cover
Other Books by This Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Part 1 - Midnight … One
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Part 2 - Midnight … Two
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Part 3 - Midnight … Three
Chapter Twenty-one
About the Author
MIDNIGHT …
ONE
The midday heat was desertlike. Soybean husks seasoned the air. Midnight stopped to sniff a clump of kudzu, then crossed a makeshift bridge which led to an almost hidden path. He was near the large branch that made a shadowy tunnel overhead. He sniffed again. The air smelled of rain.
The dog’s coat gleamed ebony. He walked forward slowly, wagging his tail, then stopped to bark at a squirrel who, after scampering up a tree, turned and stared contemptuously down into his eyes. The sounds of singing birds filled the darkening July sky. The Labrador lumbered toward the carpet of leaves. It had been a little over six months since he last stood under the huge oak that flanked the old house.
The shack’s door squeaked in the rising wind. Midnight eyed the red-tipped shrubbery then began digging. Overhead, what started as a gentle sprinkle quickly turned into a downpour. Midnight headed home.
It was dark and wet when the dog walked into his backyard. He barked. The door opened. Midnight smelled food; love and warmth were inside. A tall dark man patted his head. “What you got there, boy?” he asked.
Midnight’s tail wagged as he dropped the infant’s skull at his master’s feet.
CHAPTER
ONE
I’d failed.
Frustration hung over my head like a halo. The task hadn’t been hard. My boss had given me a routine assignment, one that normally took me less than a week to do. “Run a paper trail, find this witness; our client swears he exists,” he’d said. Then he gave me a name, a description, and an approximate age.
When I didn’t come up with the person, my boss, one of Atlanta’s best defense lawyers, plea-bargained for his client. Then he boarded a plane from Hartsfield to take a European vacation.
I sat, staring at a diploma that I’d taken so much pride in earning, and thinking about the day I’d interviewed for the position of paralegal in Sidney Jacoby’s research department. I’d already had five such interviews in less prestigious law offices without a hint of a job offer.
Except for my urge to flick dandruff from his shoulders, I swiftly sized Sidney Jacoby up to be pretty cool. Sidney looked down at my résumé, then back up to meet my eyes. “Simone Covington,” he said, as if he liked the sound of my name.
I nodded.
“Graduated from Emory, I see.”
“Yes,” I said.
“Are you going on to law school?”
“No,” I admitted. “I like the legal research.”
Sidney laughed. “I like the research myself,” he admitted. “Did a lot of that when I was in law school.”
“You were a paralegal?” I asked, surprised.
“Yes,” he said, shaking his head, his dark brown eyes twinkling in a way that made me sure he could be warm with compassion at one moment and cold at the next. He leaned back in his seat, and crossed his fingers in front of him. “Nobody can tamper with the truth,” he continued. “If you dig deep enough, peel off all the layers of appearances, cut away through the lies, and strip through the absurdities, you’ll find the truth, Miss Covington.”
I smiled.
“The adrenaline you feel from the experience is priceless,” he said.
My eyes widened. I believed the man, believed he shared my passion for getting to the heart of things.
“When I was a boy,” he continued, “I almost drove my mother crazy. Later, after I’d finished law school, my father died. I offered to move back home, thinking I could help her. She wouldn’t have it. She even gave me five thousand dollars and told me, ‘I cannot take another day of your questioning everything and everybody that comes to my house.’ ”
We laughed.
“My teachers loved me,” I said. “They could always count on me to research the things that they couldn’t find time to research themselves.”
Sidney said, “I could never do anything that other kids called fun, but I knew the details of just about anything. And the things I didn’t know, I wouldn’t stop until I learned them.”
“I suppose we have
a gift,” I heard myself say.
“Yes,” he agreed, as if I had said something profound. His eyes twinkled. “And don’t you ever take that gift for granted, Simone Covington.”
The next day, Sidney Jacoby telephoned me and made me a generous offer. Needless to say, I like the man. To be honest, from that day forward, I felt good about working for him. He genuinely believed in what I do, and he supported the way I do it.
I’ve worked for Sidney for five years now, five years in which he had never taken a vacation. Oh, he’d planned to get away, all right—every detail of a six-week tour of Europe from the time the plane leaves Hartsfield until it lands in London, he had planned. But he had never done it.
When I admitted that I’d come up empty-handed in my search for our witness, Sidney didn’t say much. But I was sure he was disappointed. I suppose that’s why I was thinking about the day he had interviewed me, remembering our mutual belief in digging until we got what we sought.
Still studying my diploma, I reached for a box of Godiva chocolates and my phone and called my mama. “Sidney’s gone on vacation,” I told her.
“Good, then you can take some time off, too—come home,” she replied.
“Just because Sidney is out of town doesn’t mean that there isn’t any work for me to do.”
“It’s midsummer. Sidney needed a vacation and you do, too.”
“When I told Sidney that I couldn’t come up with his witness,” I told Mama, “he stared like he saw something in me that he’d missed all these years—”
“Simone,” Mama interrupted. “You’re doing it again. Overreacting. It’s normal for people to take vacations in the summer and Sidney is normal. Besides, if that witness existed, you would have found him. Sidney and I both know that!”
I swallowed. “Maybe that’s why he didn’t push me to keep looking,” I said, my spirit lightening.
Mama’s voice was softer. “Forget the case. Take a week’s vacation and come home—I need you.”
“You want help to solve another murder?” I asked, and laughed.
Mama laughed too, a light, musical sound. “Not this time,” she told me. “I’m scheduled for surgery first thing Monday morning.”
I sat up straight. “What kind of surgery?” I demanded. “What’s wrong with you?”
“Nothing serious,” Mama replied. “I’m just having bunions removed from both my feet. I’d planned for James to go with me to the hospital—”
“Hospital?”
“It’s outpatient surgery, Simone,” Mama said. “Anyway, you’d be a big help to me. With Sidney out of the country for six weeks, you can spare a week of your vacation, can’t you?”
“Cliff—” I started to say.
“You and Cliff will have at least two weeks left to do something together. But, tell you what I’ll do,” Mama said, and I knew I was about to be bribed. “You come home on Friday, you and I will shop and cook on Saturday, then Cliff can drive here and have Sunday dinner with you, me, and your father.”
My boyfriend, Cliff, is a divorce lawyer who is working hard to become a partner in his firm. The thought of how much Cliff and I both loved Mama’s cooking whirled through my mind. “Cliff has been pretty busy with another one of his detachment clients,” I said.
“Divorces seem to be plentiful these days,” Mama commented.
I nodded although she couldn’t see me. “It’s worst when a client thinks her divorce lawyer should be at her disposal every minute of the day.”
Mama didn’t say anything.
“How long will you need me?” I asked again. My spirit rose at the thought of eating another one of my mama’s meals.
“A week,” she said.
“A week,” I repeated, thinking that Sidney would surely expect me to use some of my vacation time while he was gone, especially to take care of my mama.
My mama’s name is Grace, but she’s called Candi because of her candied sweet potato complexion.
My parents are originally from Otis, South Carolina. They got married right out of high school and my father joined the Air Force. After a career of thirty years and the birth of my two brothers (Rodney and Will) and me, Captain James Covington retired and he and Mama moved back home to Otis, a town of five thousand people.
“Okay,” I told Mama, “but I want you to cook roast pork, fried chicken, collard greens, macaroni and cheese, string beans and new potatoes, rice and okra. And, for dessert, I want carrot cake and sweet potato pie.”
On Saturday morning, we were in Winn Dixie shopping for groceries when the baby’s wail rang through the aisles. It sounded like somebody had stuck a hand down the infant’s throat and squeezed its intestines.
I flinched. Mama held her shopping list in one hand, a can of mushroom soup in the other. She was saying something about sodium when the child’s second scream broke her concentration. She glanced in the direction of the cry. “Something is wrong with that child!” she said softly, putting the can of soup back on the shelf.
A voice over the loudspeaker suggested that shoppers visit the produce section … watermelon, grapes, and peaches were on sale. Then one of my favorite songs by the Manhattans began to be piped through the store.
Mama eased her shopping cart toward the juices; I hummed along with the music.
The baby screamed again, the sound as sharp as a police siren. Mama looked at me; I threw her a look of reluctance, but it didn’t do any good. She was going to see what the matter was with that child and that was all there was to it. I shrugged, then followed her toward the noise.
On the next aisle, near the canned vegetables, we spotted a woman who looked all of thirty-five years old, who smelled powerfully like the camphor used for canker sores. She was holding a baby and shaking it. The woman’s skin was dark. She had small eyes, and a very large nose. As we walked toward her, she looked scared, almost terrified.
I glanced at the baby … it was beautiful, although its tiny face was as red as the labels on the cans of tomatoes that were on the shelf. It wailed again.
“Birdie Smiley, what’s wrong with that baby?” Mama demanded.
Birdie stammered but she didn’t stop shaking the baby in her arms. “I—I had no business—”
Mama interrupted impatiently, “That’s Cricket’s baby, Morgan. What have you done to that child?”
Birdie didn’t look up. Instead, she began shaking the baby harder. The baby screamed.
“Stop that!” Mama shouted, then she snatched the crying baby from Birdie’s arms. “If you keep that up you’ll knock the wind out of her—she’ll stop breathing!”
Birdie’s body was trembling. Beads of sweat were on her forehead. “I—I ain’t got no business keeping her … ain’t got no business letting her come with me … I just remembered, I ain’t got no business keeping nobody’s baby!” The words poured from her mouth like a hot flood.
Mama was cradling the sobbing baby in her arms, looking down into its wide-open eyes. “Now, Morgan,” she whispered. “Everything is going to be all right!”
“I ain’t got no business keeping a baby,” Birdie stammered. “Doctor told me I ain’t got the nerves for it … ain’t got no business … can’t take care of no baby … won’t do it again!”
The baby hiccuped and stopped crying. “I was at the hospital the day this baby was born,” Mama said, as if talking to herself. “She had the brightest eyes, and when you talked to her, she paid attention like she understood exactly what you were saying.”
I looked closer at Morgan. She was indeed enchanting. For a moment, I felt a strange inkling, like the prickle of an unfamiliar emotion. Morgan’s eyes charmed me, too.
“Is Birdie some kin to Morgan?” I asked, thinking that such a nervous woman had no business taking care of this delightful baby.
“I don’t think she is,” Mama answered. “Cricket Childs, Morgan’s mother, is one of my clients.” Mama works for the Social Services Department.
“Then this beautiful child is the other
side of the coin of a single-parent home,” I said.
“I suppose,” Mama replied, in a tone that told me that she didn’t think my statement relevant.
As long as Morgan held on to my eyes, I had to agree with Mama. This captivating baby girl looked almost a year old. She had thick black hair and a flawless milk-chocolate complexion. Her eyes were dark and bright, her mouth small and round. She smelled of Johnson’s baby powder. But cuteness wasn’t all there was to this little girl. There was something bewitching about that child’s gaze.
Mama smiled down at Morgan, clearly having fallen in love. This baby’s bright beckoning eyes had that kind of power. “I can’t imagine Cricket leaving you, sweet child,” Mama whispered.
Birdie Smiley stood anxiously rubbing her arm and staring at Mama and little Morgan when Sarah Jenkins, Annie Mae Gregory, and Carrie Smalls eased up quietly beside Mama. In Otis, these three women are jokingly called the “town historians” because they go out of their way to know everything about everybody in Otis. Mama actually finds them helpful. She calls them her “source.”
I was surprised to see the ladies, but Mama glanced at them as if she’d known all along that they were in the store. “Ladies,” she said, without taking her attention from the smiling baby, “it’s good to see you.”
“I told you,” Sarah Jenkins said, her voice strong despite her pasty complexion and constant preoccupation with her health, “that was Cricket’s baby hollering.”
Annie Mae Gregory is an obese woman, whose body is the shape of a perfect oval and who has dark circles around her stonelike eyes; Annie Mae always reminds me of a big fat raccoon. When she looks at you a certain way, she appears cross-eyed. She asked Mama, her jaws shaking like Jell-O, “Candi, what are you doing with Cricket Childs’s baby?”