Black Water Rising

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Black Water Rising Page 27

by Attica Locke


  “Jimmy must have misunderstood me,” Jay says, frightened by how easily the words come, the lie leaping from his lips. “When Jimmy said Marshall hadn’t been heard from, I believe I asked Jimmy if he’d called the police.”

  “He says you called looking for Marshall.”

  “Two of his lady friends also said you contacted them,” Brad­

  shaw adds.

  “Why were you trying so hard to get in touch with him?”

  Jay doesn’t want them to see him thinking. He goes with the first words out of his mouth. “My wife lost a bracelet. We thought it might be on the boat.”

  “But you never spoke with Mr. Hennings?” Detective Brad­

  shaw asks.

  “No.” Then he adds, “And anyway, my wife found it, the bracelet.”

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  Detective Bradshaw smiles. He and Widman exchange a glance. For the first time, Widman steps away from the filing cabinet. Bradshaw tucks his notepad back into his pocket. The two detectives thank Jay for his time.

  “That’s it?” Jay asks, trying not to sound too relieved.

  “Unless there’s something else you want to add,” Widman says.

  “Not that I can think of,” Jay says.

  “Well,” Detective Bradshaw says. “Thank you again, Mr. Porter.”

  “Sure thing, Detective.”

  The cops gone, Jay tells Eddie Mae to keep the front door locked.

  Then he shuts himself in his office and, alone, reaches under his desk for the phone book. He’s got some questions of his own that he wants answered.

  The Chronicle’s main line is busy. He gets a voice on the fourth try. He asks to speak to a Lon Philips. The line is soon ringing again, twelve times before someone finally picks up. The voice on the other end is thin and high pitched for a man. He sounds young, Jay thinks, green as a new blade of grass.

  “Philips.” His tone is impatient, distracted. Jay can hear a typewriter clackety-clacking a mile a minute in the background.

  “What is it?” he barks.

  Jay clears his throat. “Sir, I want to ask you about a piece you wrote a couple of months back. Late June, you wrote an article about an Erman Ainsley.”

  The typewriter comes to an abrupt stop. “I’m sorry, who are you?”

  “My name is Jay Porter. I’m an attorney here in Houston.”

  Bla c k Wat er R isi n g 287

  There’s a pause on the line. “The old man got himself a law­

  yer, huh?”

  The question strikes Jay as curious. What in the world does Ainsley need a lawyer for? “No,” Jay says. “I’m calling you about someone else, actually.”

  “Well, I’m in the middle of a story right now.” The typewriter starts up again, at full speed. “I’m on a three o’clock deadline.”

  “I’ll be quick.”

  Jay checks to make sure the door to his office is closed. Then he asks the million-dollar question: “Why have you been trying to contact Elise Linsey?”

  The typing stops again. Jay can hear Philips’s breathing through the line.

  “She was the real estate agent you wrote—”

  “I know who she is,” Philips says.

  “I know you’ve been by her house,” Jay says. “Two months after your article went to print, you’re still trying to reach her, and what I want to know is, why?”

  “My work is my business, Mr. Por-ter,” Philips says. By the way he draws out the name, Jay gets the idea that he’s writing it down.

  “I guess I just want to know,” Jay says, “if this is something to do with the homicide in Fifth Ward.”

  “You one of Charlie Luckman’s boys?” Philips asks. “I’m not doing anything illegal, just so you know. Your client is free to call me back or not.”

  “I think you’ve misunderstood me,” Jay says. “I don’t work for Charlie Luckman. And I certainly don’t work for Elise Linsey.”

  “Well, who are you then?”

  “I said my name is Jay Porter. I’m a lawyer here in Houston, which, in this case, is somewhat incidental,” he says. “The thing 288 Attic a L o c ke

  is, I read your piece on Mr. Ainsley, and I was wondering about the connection to Elise Linsey, why you’re still following her movements. Is this about her court case?”

  “How do I know you’re not a reporter?” Philips asks from out of the blue.

  To Jay, it’s another odd question. “I just told you I’m not.”

  Philips is quiet a minute, his typewriter completely still.

  “Well, that’s not good enough,” he says.

  Jay hears a loud click. It’s another second or two before he realizes the line is dead. The phone book is still sitting on his desk, sitting right on top of all the other work he should be doing. He picks it up and opens to the S’s.

  The Stardale Development Company maintains an office on Fountainview, out west of the Loop, just off the 59 freeway. Jay heads in that direction on his lunch hour, but not before trying the number that’s listed in the phone book. He gets a recorded message, five times in a row.

  The foolishness of this errand is not lost on him. But he feels reeled in by her, yoked by his own curiosity and his inability to take at face value Elise’s promise to leave him out of her trou­

  bles. Somewhere deep down, he knows. It’s his own fault. He knows what the weight of his past has cost him, then and now. He knows the places where he can’t let go. Where his faith falls short.

  His wife still out of the house, the dirty money still stashed inside his office, the man in the black Ford still at large, in pos­

  session of Jay’s .22. . . . He has not slept a solid night in days. Or is it years?

  He gets mixed up sometimes.

  Bla c k Wat er R isi n g 289

  Talk radio is hot on the strike.

  Almost every number on the Buick’s AM dial has callers lined up, one after the other, happy to offer what little informa­

  tion they’ve picked up. From somebody’s brother who works the docks. Or an uncle who’s a project manager at one of the refineries. Jay listens to the parade of rampant speculation over a ham sandwich and a Coke as he makes the drive to the west side.

  One gal on 740 AM claims to know firsthand that the strike won’t make it another week. She’s got a girlfriend who answers phones over to the mayor’s business development office, and according to this friend, the mayor and the unions and the busi­

  ness heads have already worked out some kind of an agreement. They’re just holding out on this thing a little while longer so they can jack up the price of everything from gasoline to coffee. She advises a citywide boycott in protest. To which the next five call­

  ers reply that there is no way in hell they intend to live without gasoline or coffee. Or any other goddamned thing they want to buy with their money. One man calls in to remind the listening audience, “You know, we got it good down here. They’re pay­

  ing near a dollar fifty for gas over to Arkansas and Oklahoma, a dollar sixty out in Arizona and California. We got nothing to complain about.”

  Jay snaps off the car radio and balls the butt of his ham sand­

  wich inside the waxed paper it came in, stuffing the whole of it into a paper bag. He lights a cigarette as he pulls into a stripcenter parking lot across the street from 4400 Fountainview, which is a newly constructed, low-lying office building encased in walls of mirrored glass that painfully catch the afternoon 290 Attic a L o c ke

  sun. Jay yanks down his car’s plastic visor, shielding his eyes. He smokes his Newport and waits.

  Twenty minutes pass, then thirty. In the whole time he’s watching and waiting, no one, that he can see, has come in or out of the building across the street. When the heat in the Sky­

  lark becomes unbearable, he finally gets out of his car. Dodging lunchtime traffic, he crosses the street to the office building. The doors to 4400 Fountainview are locked. The building, as far as Jay can tell, is completely cl
osed. He walks around to the parking lot in back. There are no cars anywhere, not a stitch of litter, not a paper cup or even a gum wrapper. The building’s back doors are locked too. Jay pulls on them a few times. Then, cupping his hands around his eyes and pressing his face against the glass, he peers into the building. Inside, he sees nothing. Not even a desk or a telephone. The Stardale Development Company is, apparently, no more than an empty building.

  C h a p t e r 2 2 He has a dream about dead ends. Streets in his hometown. He’s a boy, five, maybe six years old, dressed in a Roy Rogers vest and cowboy boots made of cheap plastic and dusty with red clay. He’s got a toy holster on his belt. The matching gun is missing, has been for some time. He lost it or let his sister take it or some neighborhood kid ran off with it. In the dream, he can’t remem­

  ber. In the dream, he’s looking for something else. He sets out early in the morning with two ham sandwiches in a knapsack and a small carton of milk.

  He sets out to find his father.

  He imagines his daddy tied up on somebody’s fort, held cap­

  tive by a general’s army or maybe taken in by Indians. Jay will be the one to save him, the one to bring him home. But in the 292 Attic a L o c ke

  dream, he’s only a little boy, and scared of the dark sometimes. He doesn’t have a horse or even a gun. And he can’t get out of Nigton. The streets ain’t laid out right, not like he remembers. And seems like every road he tries starts out wide with promise, only to stop a few yards later at a point so narrow he can barely pass through. The road suddenly becomes thick with scrub oak and weeds, tall and thin as reeds, with points as sharp as needles. He thinks of snakes and chigger bites and is too scared to venture forth. Each time, he backs up the way he came, starts over again, down another road . . . until he finally accepts that he’s going nowhere, only walking in wide circles, always ending up on the same street corner, stuck in the middle of an unworkable grid. The light behind the trees starts to fade.

  His food is almost gone.

  He feels himself getting scared.

  Jay turns and sees a kid not that much taller than he is. The kid says he’s Jay’s father, says it more than once. Jay shakes his head over and over, stamps his little foot in the dirt. His daddy is a man, not no boy. The kid kicks a rock with his shoe, tells Jay he can believe him or not. But the truth is waiting for him, if he can just get home. Just look under the house, the kid says. I’ll be waiting for you, he says, kicking the rock all the way down the street. The way home is long and black and full of thorns and mos­

  quito bites.

  Jay arrives hungry and tired and without any satisfaction. His sister is hanging her feet off the porch, telling him he’s in big trouble for staying gone so long. He asks her if she’s seen a man come by, somebody asking for him. She shakes her head, swinging her matchstick legs in the air.

  The kid said his father would be waiting. Just look under the house, he said. In his good clothes, Jay crawls in the dirt, clawing his way under the house. He pretends he’s an old-timey soldier, Bla c k Wat er R isi n g 293

  breaking into the enemy’s fort after dark. There is no great res­

  cue, though. He never finds his father.

  Only a nickel-plated .22 lying in the dirt.

  Friday, his other father calls.

  The Reverend and his wife invite Jay to dinner. He’s told to be at their house by seven o’clock. Yes, sir, he says, sure he’ll be asked to explain himself tonight, why he’s got the man’s young­

  est daughter staying at a house that is not her home. Jay’s plan was to leave the office at six, give himself plenty of time, maybe stop off for some flowers for his wife. But at a quarter ’til, Rolly shows up at the office unannounced. Eddie Mae buzzes him past the waiting room. He strides by her desk with a wink and walks into Jay’s office, moving his long legs like a man on stilts, every­

  thing slow and deliberate. He’s wearing a Rolling Stones concert T-shirt beneath his usual black leather vest. When he smiles, plopping himself in the chair across from Jay’s desk, his teeth are tobacco stained. “Guess who rented a gold 1980 Chrysler LeBaron from a Lone Star Rentals out near Hobby Airport on July thirty-first,” Rolly asks, somewhat proud of himself. “The day before the shooting that’s got you wound up so tight?”

  Jay shrugs and states what seems obvious by now. “Dwight Sweeney.”

  “Nope,” Rolly says, smiling, relishing the curious look on Jay’s face. “Try a man by the name of Neal McNamara, a man who, I’m made to understand, bears a striking resemblance to Mr. Dwight Sweeney.”

  “You think it’s the same guy?” Jay asks. “The same car?”

  “Well, I can tell you this much. That Chrysler was never returned.”

  “Neal McNamara?” Jay says, repeating the name. 294 Attic a L o c ke

  “The guy I talked to at the rental place said two detectives come around wanting to look at the books. They told him the car was being impounded.”

  Jay shakes his head to himself, wondering why he didn’t think to call the rental place himself. “So you think he was using an alias?”

  “Something like that.”

  “Elise said the guy told her his name was Blake Ellis,” Jay remembers.

  “Three names, one dude. Sounds like trouble to me.”

  “Maybe he was married,” Jay offers. “You know, covering his tracks.”

  “I can do you one better,” Rolly says, leaning forward in his chair, pulling out a couple of pieces of folded-up yellow legal paper, smudged with gray pencil markings on both sides. Rolly slides the pages across Jay’s desk. “Dwight Sweeney has quite a colorful background, enough to rival that of the girl’s.” He pulls a pack of Camels from his vest pocket. “The name thing was a tip-off. It just ain’t normal to be a Neal on Friday and a Blake on Saturday and come up dead and it turns out your real name is Dwight Somebody. It, frankly, sounds shady. And trust me, I would know. It takes one criminal to spot another.”

  He lights the cigarette in his hand. “Turns out Mr. Sweeney did a couple of stints at my alma mater in Huntsville.”

  Jay gets a bad feeling about the guy almost instantly. He remembers the bruises on Elise’s neck, her cries for help. Rolly turns the pages upside down, trying to read his own handwriting. “Let’s see, we got a couple runs for extortion here, a time or two for battery and making criminal threats, blackmail, the works. Plus, my man did seven years for taking money from an undercover officer, all in a scheme to suppos­

  edly get rid of the guy’s wife.” Rolly looks up from his notes, Bla c k Wat er R isi n g 295

  his expression quite serious. “You ask me, the dude sounds like a pro.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “He sounds like a hired gun.”

  Jay remembers the description of a struggle in the car, a crystal-clear picture forming in his mind. He mumbles it softly to himself. “He came after her.” He rented the car the day before, invited her to dinner. It was all a setup, Jay realizes. She walked right into a trap. “He came after her,” Jay whispers.

  “And he didn’t know she was packing,” Rolly says, shaking his head to himself. “Fatal mistake, man.”

  Jay sits at his desk, somewhat dumbfounded.

  Here it is, a piece that finally makes sense. A new way of look­

  ing at this whole thing. And still he’s confused. “I don’t under­

  stand,” he says out loud. “Why not tell the cops he attacked her? Why would she keep that a secret?”

  “Scared, probably.”

  Which, to Jay, would explain why she’d been hiding out in Sugar Land.

  “Just ’cause she took out the dude,” Rolly says, “don’t mean the dude who hired that dude ain’t still at large. Maybe she thinks it’s best to keep her fucking mouth shut.”

  “Why the hell would her lawyer go along with that?” Jay asks. “When he’s got a good shot at a self-defense angle with this thing?” Of course, as soon as the words are out of his mouth, Jay
thinks he has the answer. “Unless her lawyer’s planning to get the whole thing thrown out of court,” he says, thinking of Char­

  lie’s petition to get the contents of the police search tossed.

  “The real question,” Rolly says, “is why someone wanted to put a hurtin’ on her in the first place. ’Course, a girl like that, you know, been around the block once or twice . . . it could be anybody.”

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  “Which Dwight Sweeney or whoever hired him must have known,” Jay says. “The guy tried to choke her and leave her in an empty field. The cops were supposed to find an ex-prostitute out there, a throwaway crime that might be traced to anybody.”

  Rolly scoots forward, to the edge of his seat all the way, sitting himself eye to eye with Jay. “Look, can I offer something here, man, some advice?”

  “Yeah.”

  “If she don’t want to tell the police about you, and you don’t want to tell the police about you . . . what’s the problem, man?”

  Rolly asks. “I was you, I’d leave it alone.”

  That was of course Jay’s entire plan. To stay out of it. What he has, so far, not been able to do.

  “This don’t have a goddamned thing to do with you, man.”

  Jay sits on that a second. “I’m beginning to think you’re right.”

  “And let me tell you what else, whoever put Mr. Sweeney on the girl, I’m guessing he don’t want it known,” Rolly adds, look­

  ing around the office, snooping with his coal-black eyes. “The reason for your sudden windfall, I imagine.”

  Jay understands the logic now. The real reason for taking his gun. All of it just to scare him away. And he, of all people, fell for it. He, of all people, had made the perfect mark. Rolly looks across Jay’s desk. “My feeling . . . I mean, whatever this is really about . . . it’s bad, man, real bad. I’d let it alone, Jay.”

  An hour later, the sight of his wife is breathtaking. In a bright yellow sundress, tight across her belly, she’s bare­

  foot, sitting on the Boykinses’ aging porch swing, using the meat of her big toe to push herself back and forth. She’s holding a glass of iced tea, watching Jay come up the walk.

 

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