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by Chester Himes


  The whole front line of Red Johnny’s teeth caved into his mouth, two of the bottom teeth flew out sidewise like corn popping, and Red Johnny spun over backward in the tubular chair. The back of his head hit the linoleum floor with a dull thud while at the same instant his feet flew upward and kicked the bottom of the enamel table. The whiskey bottle rose six inches in the air and shattered the drinking glass when it came down.

  The abrupt ear-shattering din panicked the dog. She leapt over Red Johnny’s face, making for the inner door. Red Johnny thought she was leaping for his throat and tried to scream. Nothing came out but a spray of blood and he choked on his teeth.

  Coffin Ed didn’t see it. He had swung back to take a left-handed bead on Red Marie’s stomach, and had frozen her in midstride, her right hand waving out in front, left hand floating out behind, her big sloppy fat body poised on the ball of her right foot like a rip-roarious burlesque of a ballerina executing a movement in Swan Lake.

  But no one thought it was funny. Her face was distorted with terror and Coffin Ed looked like a homicidal maniac.

  The chair scraped as Red Johnny rolled over, clawing at his throat, making choking sounds.

  The inside of Coffin Ed’s head was one great flaming-red blast of pain, through which sound trickled like curses. From somewhere came the thought that Red Johnny was trying to draw a gun. He wheeled back and kicked Red Johnny on the base of the jaw.

  “Ugh!” Red Johnny grunted and fainted.

  The dog pushed open the inner door and ran down the hall, her chain clanking behind her.

  Red Marie grabbed at the table edge for support; her fingers slipped off and she fell to the floor with a crash.

  From the front of the house came the sound of women screaming.

  Coffin Ed stood in the center of the floor with the long-barreled nickel-plated pistol in one hand and the sap in the other, looking as dazed as though he had just emerged from a shock treatment for insanity.

  On the television screen three shrunken lunatics, arms about one another’s shoulders, were dancing frantically back and forth, eyes rolling and lips flapping but no sound coming out.

  Coffin Ed’s head suddenly cleared; only a shrill, almost imperceptible whistling in both ears still remained.

  He pocketed the sap, stuck the pistol back into his belt, and reached down and rolled Red Johnny over onto his stomach.

  “Lawd, don’t kill him,” Red Marie wailed. “I’ll talk.”

  “Give me a tablespoon and shut up,” Coffin Ed grated. “He’ll do his own mother-raping talking.”

  She crawled on all fours around the table and got a spoon from the drawer.

  “Bring it here,” Coffin Ed said, kneeling beside Red Johnny and lifting his head.

  Red Johnny had swallowed his tongue. Coffin Ed stuck the spoon down Red Johnny’s throat and kept levering until he got enough tongue out so he could reach in with his other hand and grab hold of the tip. The tongue was so slippery with blood it took half a dozen tries before he got hold of the tip and yanked it back into position. Blood gushed over his hands onto the floor and four broken teeth fell out.

  “Here, you hold his tongue down until he gets his breath,” he ordered Red Marie and made her take the handle of the spoon.

  He got up and went to the sink and washed the blood from his hands with cold water from the tap, dried them on a kitchen towel. There was a small bloodstain on the cuff of his blue shirt, but he didn’t bother it.

  He came back and stood over the two people on the floor. “I’m going to ask some questions-”

  “I’ll answer ’em,” Marie said.

  “Let him answer them. When the answer is yes, nod your head. You hear me?”

  Red Johnny’s head nodded carefully.

  “When the answer is no, shake your head. And don’t make any more mistakes.”

  Again Red Johnny nodded.

  “It hurts him,” Red Marie said.

  “I want it to hurt him,” Coffin Ed said. “You run a shooting gallery in here?”

  Red Johnny nodded.

  “It ain’t really no regular shooting gallery,” Red Marie said defensively. “It’s just we have some jags here sometimes, just folks with a chicken habit-”

  “And pushers,” Coffin Ed cut in.

  Red Johnny shook his head.

  “If I catch you lying-”

  “I hope God may kill me,” Red Marie blurted. “We don’t let no pushers come in here. It’s just parties we has and folks bring their own stuff. We gets a few skinpoppers but the H they has ain’t even strong enough to be habit-forming. Ain’t none of ’em real addicts. Most of ’em just blows weed. Just to get a kick. That ain’t our racket. We just sells poontang here.”

  “Pinky is an addict.”

  “Yes, but-”

  “Let him answer.”

  Red Johnny nodded.

  Coffin Ed stepped back from the pool of blood that was reaching toward his feet.

  “Lawd be my secret judge, he don’t come here for it,” Red Marie said. “He don’t come for the jags neither. He just buys pussy.”

  “Has he got any particular choice?”

  “He too ugly to score a home here; he’s like Jesus, he loves ’em all.”

  “Was he here today?”

  Red Johnny shook his head.

  “Last night?”

  Again Red Johnny shook his head.

  “Know where he lives?”

  The answer was the same.

  “You’ve been doing so much talking; talk some now,” Coffin Ed said to Marie.

  “We don’t know nothing ’bout Pinky, I swear ’fore God; he just come here to see the girls and I wish to heaven he had picked on somebody else for that; I don’t need his money and I can’t stand his looks.”

  “Where does he hang out?”

  “Hang out?” She started to parry, but one glance at Coffin Ed’s face loosened her tongue so that she began to stammer. “Kid Blackie’s gym is all I know. I heered him say once he’d just come from there. You know somewheres else, Johnny?”

  Red Johnny shook his head.

  “All right,” Coffin Ed said. “That’s Pinky’s dog I got. I’m gonna take it through this house and let it sniff around. If I find out you’re lying-”

  “As God be my benefactor and protector and my haven-” Marie began, but Coffin Ed cut her off.

  “You’re making me puke. How is it that all you worn-out whores get so chummy with God?”

  “It ain’t really Him,” Marie said solemnly. “It’s Jesus.”

  He couldn’t tell whether she was in earnest or not. He pushed open the door and went toward the front hall and called the dog.

  “She’s here!” a woman’s voice replied.

  He went up the front stairs to the second floor and traced the voice to an open bedroom at the rear. A brownskin whore in a negligee was stuffing cream chocolates into the side of the dog’s mouth through the muzzle. The bitch loved it.

  Coffin Ed took the chain leash and led the dog. He didn’t know exactly what he was looking for, but he was playing out a hunch. Nothing came of it but some curses from some whores working at their trade.

  “Gawddammmm!” one of the girls said disgustedly when her white customer became suddenly deflated at sight of the big colored man and monstrous dog poking into the room. “As long as it took to get this slow-John started-”

  Upon seeing a pay telephone in the front hall, Coffin Ed stopped and telephoned the hospital.

  The answer was the same.

  Red Johnny and Red Marie were nowhere in sight when he passed through the kitchen.

  He led the dog around on the other side of the table from the pool of blood, through the back door and around the house. He didn’t encounter anyone. The whole block looked deserted.

  He put the dog in the back of the Plymouth and got into the front seat behind the wheel. He looked at his watch. It read 4:51.

  He had a sudden crazy, desperate feeling that he was looking for a
needle in a haystack, wasting time; and that time was the most precious thing on earth.

  16

  Kid Blackie was a short black man with a face like a monkey’s and a shining bald head. His torso was naked in the dim-lit stinking heat of the small dirty gym. Big flopping breasts shaped like gourds with rusty-looking teats as big as a woman’s hung down to his navel. His flabby muscles seemed about to drop from the bones and his bay window was big enough to give birth to quintuplets.

  He had his thumbs hooked in frayed suspenders holding up baggy-seated pants that looked loaded, and was chewing the stub of a cigar in the corner of his mouth, as he watched two young chocolate-skinned middleweights work out on the greasy square of canvas.

  “Wait a minute, Ed,” he said and blew on a whistle that hung from a string about his neck.

  The boys stopped punching and stared at him.

  He climbed into the ring and squared off with one of the boys.

  “Like this,” he said, the cigar butt wobbling in the corner of his mouth, and jabbed a left at the boy’s face.

  When the boy’s guard flew up automatically, he crossed a right to the boy’s stomach, bringing it down. The boy’s right shoulder dropped as he started a looping right hook. Kid Blackie hooked a left to the boy’s jaw so fast the boy never saw it. The boy sat down, looking dazed.

  Kid Blackie turned to the other boy. “You seen how I done it?”

  The boy nodded mutely.

  “You try it.”

  The boy jabbed with his left. Kid Blackie went under it and left-hooked him in the stomach. The boy bent in slightly, dropping his left arm, and tried to cross with his right. But he wasn’t fast enough. Kid Blackie threw an overhand right to his jaw and knocked him unconscious.

  He spat frayed tobacco to the canvas and climbed down out of the ring. His old glassy brown eyes looked sad.

  “These boys that turn up nowadays,” he bemoaned. “If they was chicks they’d never get hatched.”

  Kid Blackie had been lightweight champion of the world at one time. Rumor had it that he had squandered over a million dollars on white women and Cadillacs. He didn’t look as though he regretted it.

  “All old people say the same thing,” Coffin Ed dissented. “There’re always some good and some bad. You don’t expect everybody to be like you.”

  “Maybe you’re right.” He watched the two boys helping one another up. “What’s on your ass?”

  “I’m looking for Pinky.”

  Kid Blackie scratched his bald head. “That’s funny. Some bitch was just in here looking for him too. Cat-eyed woman. Ain’t been more’n ten minutes ago.”

  Coffin Ed tensed and his tic started jumping.

  “By herself?”

  Kid Blackie wasn’t looking directly at him, but he didn’t miss the sudden change.

  “Yeah,” he said. “She come up by herself but I got curious. Only reason for a bitch like her be looking for Pinky would be to shoot him, so when she left I looked out the window. She got in a car with two white jokers — looked like mobsters.” He let it go at that.

  Coffin Ed felt his heart constrict and his breath turned rock-hard in his lungs. I’m on your tail now, you mother-rapers, he thought. Pain flooded his head like a sudden hemorrhage and his tic went spasmodic. He tried to control his voice.

  “Get a look at ’em?”

  “Not much. Come on, let’s take a gander. Maybe they’re still hanging around.”

  They walked to the grimy flyspecked window and looked down on 116th Street.

  “Had a gray Buick — little one,” Kid Blackie added.

  Their gazes searched the parked cars lining the curbs.

  The sun was on the south side and the street lay in shadow. Colored people dressed for the heat milled about on the wide sidewalks, shiny black faces peering from beneath a variety of headgear, black arms protruding from light cotton fabrics.

  A two-wheel pushcart loaded with slices of watermelon packed in ice and covered with wet gunnysacks was parked behind an empty ice truck. A hand-lettered sign on one side read: SUGAR TOOF GORGIA MELON, with the S turned around. Water dripped from the bottom.

  Farther down an old man with a smaller pushcart was selling glasses of flavored ice. The varicolored bottles stood in a rack about a block of ice covered with wet newspaper. Fronting on the sidewalk behind it was an open hot-dog counter with big glass bottles of orange-flavored ice water and a grill covered with franks like soldiers on parade.

  Venetian blinds covered the windows of the bars. Signboards in the lobby of a movie theater depicted gangsters never seen on land or sea shooting it out with blasting rods. On the street in front ot it, skinny black children wearing loincloths romped in a stream of water gushing from a fire hydrant.

  Coffin Ed had left the dog in his Plymouth and she had her head out of the window, panting. A crowd had collected to stare at her. They kept a respectful distance despite her muzzle.

  One little boy was holding up his mongrel in his arms to see the big dog. The mongrel didn’t like that business.

  There was no sign of a gray Buick.

  Kid Blackie shook his head. “They musta gone.”

  The distant blaring of a jukebox came from a bar somewhere below. A bottle fly buzzed against the grimy windowpane.

  “You didn’t get a look at ’em?” Coffin Ed asked finally, trying to keep the disappointment from his voice.

  “I didn’t see ’em too good,” Kid Blackie confessed. “The mugs looked like mugs look anywhere. One looked sort of bony, white-faced, like he was sick, a hopheaded-looking character. Other was a fatty, too light to be a greaser, maybe a Swede. Both of ’em was wearing straw hats and smoked glasses. That mean anything to you?”

  “They sound like the ones who sapped me and got Digger.”

  Kid Blackie clicked his tongue. “Too bad about Digger. Think he’ll make it?”

  There wasn’t much sympathy in his voice, but Coffin Ed understood it. Kid Blackie liked Digger, but he was so old he was glad it was somebody else dying and not himself.

  “Can’t tell ’til the deal’s down,” he said.

  “Wish I could help you. The woman was dressed sharp, had on a light green suit-”

  “I know her.”

  “Well, that’s all I seen.”

  “Every little bit helps. You ain’t seen Pinky?”

  “Not since three days ago. What you think these mobsters want with him?”

  “Same as me.”

  Kid Blackie looked at Coffin Ed’s face through the corners of his eyes and dropped it.

  “Too bad about that big ape,” he said. “He might have made the grade if it wasn’t for his skin.”

  “What’s the matter with his skin?” Coffin Ed asked absently. He was thinking of the janitor’s wife, trying to figure this new angle.

  “Bruises too easily,” Kid Blackie said. “Touch him with a feather and he’ll turn black-and-blue. In the ring it always looks like he’s getting beat to death when he ain’t even hurt. I remember once the ref stopped the fight and Pinky wasn’t even-”

  “I ain’t got much time, Kid,” Coffin Ed cut him off. “You got any idea where I can find him?”

  Kid Blackie scratched his shiny bald head. “Well, he’s got a pad somewhere on the Riverside Drive.”

  “I know that, but he’s on the lam.”

  “Yeah? In that case I couldn’t say.” Kid Blackie screwed up his eyes and gave Coffin Ed a tentative look. “A man can’t ask you no questions, can he?”

  “It ain’t that,” Coffin Ed said. “I just ain’t got time to answer.”

  “Well, I heered he got an aunt up in the Bronx somewheres,” Kid Blackie volunteered. “Called Sister Heavenly. You ever heered of her?”

  Coffin Ed was thinking. “Yeah, once or twice. But I’ve never seen her.”

  “From the stone age they say. She got a faith healing pitch. Cover-up they say.”

  “For what?”

  “Pushing H they say.”

/>   Inside of his blinding headache Coffin Ed’s thoughts were jumping like ants frying on a red-hot stove. Whichever way it went, it came back to H, he was thinking.

  “Has she got a temple?” he asked.

  “I couldn’t say.” Kid Blackie shook his head. “Pinky says she’s got a pisspot full of money but she wouldn’t give him the sweat off her ass. She must got some kind of joint.”

  “Know whereabouts it’s at?”

  “I couldn’t say. Somewheres in the sticks.”

  “That don’t help much. There’re sticks all over the Bronx.”

  Kid Blackie decided finally to give up on the cigar butt. He spit it to the floor and carefully picked the shreds from his snaggle-tooth mouth.

  “Who might know is Daddy Haddy,” he said. “You know where he’s at?”

  “Yeah,” Coffin Ed said, turning about to leave. “See you.”

  “Don’t tell him I told you.”

  “I won’t.”

  All the time he was there Kid Blackie had been looking him over covertly. His wise old eyes hadn’t missed a thing. He had made the two guns and the sap and he figured they weren’t all.

  He let Coffin Ed reach the head of the staircase, then called, “Wait a minute. You got some blood on your shirt cuff.”

  He was curious to know whose blood it was but it was too risky to ask outright.

  Coffin Ed didn’t even look at his cuff; he didn’t stop walking; he didn’t look around. “Yeah,” he said. “And there’s going to be some more.”

  17

  Unlike the opium derivatives and cocaine, marijuana gives one an esoteric appetite.

  Sister Heavenly had just come from seeing Daddy Haddy. After listening to Daddy Haddy’s recital of Pinky’s latest brainstorm, she had a sudden wild craving for something she’d never eaten before. She couldn’t even think until she ate; she couldn’t figure out what it meant.

  Twenty-five minutes later she left her hired car and the driver on 116th Street and staggered up an alley to a small, dirty “Home-Cooking” restaurant where she knew the cook. It stood in back of a store that advertised: Seafood — Eggs — Chicken-on-the-Feet — Southern Specialties. That gave her an idea.

 

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