A Red Death
Page 16
I left a note in the kitchen telling Etta that Mouse would be by to visit his son in a couple of days. I told her that everything was fine. I signed it, “I love you.”
— 27 —
FROM ETTAMAE’S I WENT OVER to Mercedes Bark’s house on Bell Street. Bell was a short block of large houses with brick fences and elaborate flower gardens. During Christmas everyone on Bell put out thousands of colored lights around their trees and bushes and along the frames of their houses. People lined up in their cars to see that street for three weeks either side of Christmas Day. It was just that kind of a neighborhood. Everybody worked together to make it nice.
It was all good and well but there was a down side to the Bell Street crowd; they were snobs. They thought that their people and their block were too good for most of the rest of the Watts community. They frowned on a certain class of people buying houses on their street and they had a tendency to exclude other people from their barbecues and whatnot. They even encouraged their children to shun other kids they might have met at school or at the playground, because it was the Bell Street opinion that most of the black kids around there were too coarse and unsophisticated.
Mercedes had a three-story house in the middle of the block. The walls were painted white and the trim was a deep forest green. There were chairs and sofas set out along the porch and a bright green lawn surrounded by white and purple dahlias, white sweetheart roses, and dwarf lemon trees.
Mercedes’s husband, Chapman, had been a dentist and could afford the upkeep on so large a domicile. But when he died the widow was quick to realize that his life insurance wasn’t enough to maintain the family in the way they had lived before. So she took the money and turned the upper floors into a boardinghouse. She could accommodate as many as twelve tenants at one time.
The neighborhood association took Mercedes to court. They complained that their beautiful street would be ruined by the kind of riffraff that had to live in a single room for weekly rent. But the county court didn’t agree and Mrs. Bark started her rooming house.
Mofass was her first and most long-lasting tenant. He didn’t need a kitchen because he took his meals at the Fetters Real Estate Office. And he certainly didn’t want to be bothered with leaky roofs and shaggy lawns after doing that kind of work all day.
I got to the Bell Street Boardinghouse at about nine-thirty that morning. I knew that Mrs. Bark was sitting in a stuffed chair just inside the front door but I couldn’t see her. She was hidden in the shadow of a stairwell and by the screen door, but she still had a good view of whoever came to visit.
I waited patiently, ringing the bell even though I knew damn well that she could see me. I carried a tan rucksack in which I had two quart bottles of Rainier Ale.
“Who is that?” Mrs. Bark asked after the fourth ring.
“Easy Rawlins, ma’am. On some business for Mofass.”
“You too late, Easy Rawlins. Mofass done moved out already.”
“I know that, ma’am, that’s why I’m here. Mofass called me from down south and said that I should get some papers that he left in his room by mistake.”
I wasn’t taking much of a chance. If Mofass had moved out all of a sudden he might have left something that would give me an idea about his relationship with Poinsettia. If he’d moved out clean I would have just been caught in a white lie by one of the snobs of Bell Street.
“What?” she cried. The audacity of Mofass forced Mercedes Bark to her feet, which was no easy task. She waddled her great body to the door and then rested by leaning her upper arm against the jamb. Mercedes wasn’t tall, and if you only looked at her bespectacled face you would never have guessed how large she was. Even her shoulders were small, you might have called them slender. But from there on down Mercedes Bark was a titan. Her breasts and buttocks were tremendous. She took up the entire lower half of the doorway.
“He got some nerve,” she said. “Sendin’ you here when he left me a room fulla mess and now I cain’t even rent the place until I hire somebody to clean it out.”
“But that’s just it, ma’am. Mofass told me that he was sorry but that his mother got sick so fast that he didn’t have time to think things out. He don’t wanna move outta this place. He told me to pay you the sixty dollars for his next month’s rent.”
I had the money in my hand. Mrs. Bark turned from a snapping wolf to a loon, crooning her sorrows for Mofass’s poor mother and complimenting a son’s deep love.
She got the key, after taking my money, and even came out of her apartment to point me on the way. Mofass’s room was far from being a mess. It was neat as a pin and as orderly as a pharaoh’s tomb. In the center drawer of his desk were his pencils, pens, pads of paper, and ink pads. In the right-hand drawers were all of the receipts of his bills for his entire life. He still kept ticket stubs for movies he’d seen in New Orleans twenty years before. In the lower left drawer he kept folders detailing his daily business. One folder was for expenses, another for expenditures, and like that.
He also had a drawer full of cigars. I knew something was wrong when I saw them. For Mofass to leave fifty good cigars he must have been really shaken.
I searched the rest of the place without finding very much. Nothing under the bed or between the mattresses or even in his clothes. No loose boards or envelopes taped under the drawers.
Finally I sat down at his desk again and put my hand flat on top of it. Really it wasn’t flat because there was a blotter there. I lifted it but there was nothing underneath so I let it fall back. And it made a little sound: flap flap. Not a single flap but two, as if there were two blotter sheets.
Mofass had slit his blotter in two and then taped it back together so he could keep things in there secret without calling any attention to them. But the tape had worn thin and the pages had separated.
I found a few items of interest there. First there was a receipt signed by William Wharton (Mofass’s real name) from the Chandler Ambulance Service of Southern California. The bill was $83.30, issued for the transmission of a patient from Temple Hospital to 487 Magnolia Street on January 18, 1952. There was another hospital bill for $1,487.26 for two weeks of hospitalization of a P. Jackson. I couldn’t imagine Mofass spending twenty dollars on a date and here he was spending six months’ salary for a girl he urged me to evict.
The last two items were both envelopes. One had a hundred dollars in twenty-dollar bills and the other had a list of eight names, addresses, and phone numbers. The addresses were widely spread around the city.
While I was trying to make sense of what I’d found I sensed someone, or maybe I heard him there behind me.
Chester Fisk was standing in the doorway. A tall and slender elderly gentleman, Mr. Fisk was Mercedes’s father and a permanent resident of the Bell Street Boardinghouse. His skin color was somewhere between light brown and light gray highlighted in certain places, like his lips, with a brownish yellow.
“Mr. Rawlins.”
“Hey, Chester. How’s it goin’?”
“Oh.” He contemplated for a few seconds. “All right. Sun’s a li’l too strong and the night’s a li’l too long. But it beats the hell outta bein’ dead.”
“Maybe I could take a little of that heat off,” I said. Then I pulled out the two bottles of ale.
For a moment I thought Chester might cry. His eyes filled with gratitude so docile that it was almost bovine.
“Well, well, well,” he said. He rested his hand around the neck of the closest bottle.
“You seen Mofass just before he moved out, Chester?”
“Sure did. Everybody else was asleep but old men hardly need t’sleep no more.”
“Was he upset?”
“Powerful.” Chester accented his answer with a nod.
“Did you talk with him?”
“Not too much I didn’t. He just had this one li’l bag packed. Prob’ly just had a toothbrush and a second pair a drawers in it. I ast’im was somethin’ wrong an’ he said that things were bad. The
n he said that they was real bad.”
“That’s it? Did he say anything about his mother?”
“Nope. Didn’t say nuthin’ else ’bout nuthin’. Just rush in in a hurry an’ run out the same way.”
ON THE DRIVE BACK to my house I tried to figure what it all meant. I knew that Mofass had paid for Poinsettia’s hospital bill and probably for her rent, maybe for a year or more. I also had some names that I didn’t know all around L.A.
Maybe his mother was sick.
Maybe he killed Poinsettia. Maybe Willie did. Everything was just cockeyed.
— 28 —
THE PHONE RANG EIGHT TIMES before Zaree Bouchard answered. “Hello?”
She sounded bored or fed up.
I said, “Hey, Zaree, how you doin’?”
“Oh, it’s you, Easy.” She didn’t sound happy. “Which one of ’em you want?”
“Which one you wanna part wit’?”
“You could have ’em both fo’a dollar twenty-five.”
I could see that we weren’t going to play, so I said, “Let me have Dupree.”
I heard her yell his name and then I winced at the hard knock of the receiver as she dropped it.
After a minute of quiet the phone started banging around again until finally Dupree said, “Yeah?”
“Mr. Bouchard,” I exclaimed. “Easy here.”
“Well, well, well.” His voice reminded me of an alto sax going down the scale. “Mr. Rawlins. What can I do for you?”
“You heard about Towne?”
“Ain’t done nuthin’ but hear about it. That was a shame.”
“Yeah. I was the one found the body, at least the one after Winona.”
“I heard that, Easy. I heard that an’ it made me think all over again how you was the last one saw Coretta ’fore Joppy Shag did her in.”
Dupree always blamed me for his girlfriend’s death. I never got mad at him, though, because I always felt a little responsible for it myself.
“Cops brought me in and I’m scared they might try an’ pin it on me.”
“Uh-huh,” Dupree said. Maybe he wouldn’t have minded the police finding me dirty.
“Yeah. Anybody know who the girl was they found with’im?”
“Couple’a folks I heard said that her name was Tania, somethin’ like that. But nobody said where she come from, or where she been.”
Dupree was a good man. No matter how he felt about me we were still friends. He wouldn’t lie.
“What’s goin’ on with Zaree?” I asked.
“She mad on Raymond.”
“How come?”
“First he all wild over Etta. Then he start drinkin’ an’ get all slouchy an’ filthy. Then, just yestiday, he gets all dressed up an’ last night he come in wit’ two white girls.”
“Yeah?”
“I tell ya, Easy.” The old friendliness returned to Dupree’s voice. “I couldn’t sleep wit’ the kinda racket they was makin’. I mean he had’em beggin’ fo’it! An’ if they asted fo’ a little more in a soft voice he’d say, ‘What you say?’ and they had to scream.”
“That got to Zaree?”
“Well, yeah,” Dupree chuckled. “But what really got to’er was that I got hard up ev’ry time he got one of ’em, and then I’d go after her. I told’er that if she didn’t want it then one’a them girls out there would.”
Mouse was a bad influence on anything domestic.
“Lemme talk to’im, okay, Dupree?”
“Yeah.” Dupree was still laughing when he got off the phone.
“Whas happenin’, Ease?” Mouse asked in his cool tone.
“You gotta call Etta, Ray.”
“Yeah?” You could hear the satisfaction in his voice.
“Yeah. Call’er an’ take LaMarque out, to the park or somethin’.”
“When?”
“Soon as you can, man, but you gotta remember some-thin’.”
“What’s that?”
“LaMarque ain’t hardly more than a baby, Ray. Don’t go showin’ him yo’ business or takin’ him out wit’ one’a yo’ girl-friends.”
“What should I do?”
“Take him swimmin’, or fishin’. Take ’im to the park an’ play ball. What did you do when you was a boy?”
“Sometimes I’d sneak up on one’a them big river rats sunnin’ hisself on the pier. You know I’d grab’im by the tail and swing the mothahfuckah ’round till I smash his ass on the pilin’.”
“LaMarque is sensitive, Ray. He wanna play little kid games. All you gotta do is remember that an’ he ain’t gonna want you dead.”
Mouse was quiet for a few moments, and then he said, “Okay,” softly.
“So you gonna call?” I asked.
“Yeah.”
“An’ you gonna play wit’ him?”
“Uh-huh, yeah, play.”
“Okay then,” I said.
“Easy?”
“Yeah?”
“You all right, man. You might got a nut or sumpin’ loose, but you all right.”
I didn’t know just what he meant but it sounded as if we had become friends again.
— 29 —
I WAS STILL LAUGHING about Dupree and Zaree when I got off the phone. A good story or joke seems funnier when you’re surrounded by death. I never laughed harder than when I rode along with Patton’s army into the Battle of the Bulge.
I DON’T KNOW HOW long he’d been knocking at the front door. Whoever it was he was a patient man. Knock knock knock, then a pause, then three more raps.
I can’t say I was surprised to see Melvin Pride standing there. He wore black cotton pants, a white T-shirt, and a black sweater vest. It had been years since I had seen Melvin informally dressed.
“Melvin.”
“Could I come in, Easy?”
There was an occasional twitch in his right cheek—a large nerve that connected his bloodshot eye with his ear.
I offered him coffee instead of liquor. After I’d served it we sat opposite each other in the living room, white porcelain cups cradled in our laps.
Then, instead of talking, we lit cigarettes.
After a long while Melvin asked, “How long you been living here?”
“Eight years.”
Melvin and I were both serious men. We stared each other in the eye.
“Do you want something from me, Melvin?” I asked.
“I don’t know, Brother Rawlins. I don’t know.”
“Must be somethin’. I’m surprised that you even knew my address.”
Melvin took a deep draw on his cigarette and held it for a good five seconds. When he finally spoke, wisps of smoke escaped his nostrils, making his craggy face resemble a dragon.
“We do a lot of good work at First African,” he said. “But there’s lotsa pressure behind that good work. And you know all men don’t act the same under pressure.”
I nodded while gauging Melvin’s size and strength.
“Who you been talkin’ to, Melvin?” I asked. A spasm ran through the right side of his face.
“I don’t need to be talkin’ t’nobody, Easy Rawlins. I know you. Fo’ years you been stickin’ yo’ nose in people’s business. They say you got Junior Fornay sent up to prison. They say you’n Raymond Alexander done left a trail’a death from Pariah, Texas, right up here to Watts.”
Even though what he said was true I acted like it wasn’t. I said, “You don’t know what you talkin’ ’bout, man. All I do is take care’a some sweepin’ here and there.”
“You smart.” Melvin smiled and winced at the same time. “I give ya that. I seen you cock your ear when me an’ Jackie was talkin’ on the church stair. Then I see you gettin’ tight wit’ Chaim Wenzler. You don’t be givin’ stuff away, Easy. Ev’rybody knows you a horse trader, man. So whatever you doin’ up there I know it ain’t gotta do wit’ no Christian love. An’ this time somebody talked. This time I know it’s you.”
“Who said?”
“Ain’t no need fo’me t’t
ell you nothin’, man. I know, and that’s all gotta be said.”
“There’s a name fo’the shit you talkin’, Melvin,” I said. “I learned it at LACC. They call it paranoid. You see, a man wit’ paranoia be scared’a things ain’t even there.”
Melvin’s cheek jumped and he smiled again.
“Yeah,” he said. “I be scared all right. An’ you know it’s the scared animal you gotta watch out for. Scared animals do things you don’t expect. One minute he be runnin’ scared an’ the nex’ he scratchin’ at yo’ windpipe.”
“That’s what you gonna do?”
Melvin stood up quickly, setting his cup on the arm of his chair. I matched him, move for move.
“Let it be, Easy. Let it be.”
“What?”
“We both know what I’m talkin’ ’bout. Maybe we made some mistakes but you know we did some good too.”
“Well,” I said, trying to sound reasonable. “Let’s just lay it out so we both know what’s happening.”
“You heard all I got to say.”
Melvin was finished talking. He didn’t have a hat so he just turned around and walked away.
I went after him to the door and watched as he went between the potato and strawberry patches. His gait was grim and deliberate. After he’d gone I went to the closet, got my gun, and put it in my pocket. An hour later I was pulling up to a house on Seventy-sixth Street. The house belonged to Gator Wade, a plumber from east Texas. Gator always parked his car in the driveway, next to his house, so he had no use for the little garage in the backyard. He floored the little shack, wired and plumbed it, and let it out for twenty-five dollars a month.
Jackie Orr, the head deacon at First African, had been living there for over three years.