A Blues Singer to Redeem Him
Page 1
“Are you alright?” he said.
She didn’t respond right away. Lorenzo worried she was in shock from the near assault.
“I’m fine, and I don’t need you acting like a Neanderthal for my benefit.” Her hands were balled into fists. Lorenzo wondered if she’d planned to hit Simmens herself.
Lorenzo couldn’t understand why this woman would get sore when his gesture was nothing less than chivalrous. It seemed like she had been offended by his defending her.
“I...I was just... He was going to say...” No one had made Lorenzo stutter in his entire life.
“I know what he was going to say, Mr....”
“De Luca. Lorenzo De Luca.” Lorenzo tried to regain some semblance of control over the situation.
“Mr. De Luca. And it wouldn’t be the first time, and it won’t be the last. I don’t need your help.”
Lorenzo, aghast at her words, couldn’t think of anything to say, partly because of her harsh tone and partly because of how beautiful she was. The demure dress couldn’t hide her womanly figure. With her high cheekbones and sharp chin, brown skin and pink lips, she should have been a movie star; maybe she was.
“I’m looking for the owner of this club.”
“I’m the owner,” Lorenzo said, still confused by her reaction. He realized everyone in the club was looking at him, this woman and the unconscious man on the floor.
Author Note
This book was created out of a need—a need to see the beauty in diversity, hear the untold stories of our history and uncover the ugliness of the truth. In my pursuit of truth, I realized the depth of human interaction that takes place in life. Good and evil can live simultaneously within us. We are all a combination of things. That’s what makes us human.
Yes, this is a work of fiction, but fiction is a reflection of so many truths. The inspiration for this story evolved over time. I’d recently learned about the Tulsa Race Massacre, and shortly after that, the characters came together in a whirlwind of unimaginable sadness, anger, love, beauty, cruelty and hope.
ELLE JACKSON
A Blues Singer to Redeem Him
Elle Jackson writes everything from historical romance to science fiction and fantasy romance. A Midwest girl at heart, Elle was raised in Kansas City, Kansas. She credits her desire to become an educator to her mother, who taught for more than thirty years. Elle has a doctorate in educational leadership, a master of fine arts in writing popular fiction and a master of arts in teaching. Working in urban, richly diverse schools, Elle has transitioned into writing stories about the beauty in diversity. She thanks her husband, son and toddler daughter for keeping her grounded in reality when she goes too far into her imagined worlds.
A Blues Singer to Redeem Him
is Elle Jackson’s debut title
for Harlequin Historical.
Look out for more books from Elle Jackson
coming soon.
Visit the Author Profile page
at Harlequin.com.
Mikal—the one who makes it all possible.
Contents
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
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
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Epilogue
Excerpt from Lady Olivia’s Forbidden Protector by Christine Merrill
Prologue
May 31, 1921, Greenwood, Oklahoma
Evelyn
Evelyn Laroque had never smelled human flesh burn. The metallic stench hung heavy in the air as she and her family packed to flee Greenwood. Her father and mother, Mr. and Dr. Laroque, had heard from one of their friends in the Tulsa Police Department about the mob headed for Greenwood.
Evelyn’s fearless mother trembled with terror. Watching as her mother’s hands shook, Evelyn blinked back warm tears. Her mother dropped several garments to the floor before they actually made it into the bag she was packing. The smoke from the fires seeped into their two-story home like the smells from a barbeque.
Evelyn followed her mother from the kitchen to the living room, stepping over large bags filled with her mother’s medical books, her dad’s collection of pocket watches, the jewelry her grandmother had handed down to her mother, that Evelyn had used to play dress-up as a child. The black bags stood out against the gray couch, the light oak floors, and paisley-patterned red-and-beige carpet.
“Why do we have to leave?”
Evelyn stood under the arched opening separating the dining room from the living room, intentionally blocking her mother’s way. She tried desperately not to yell, but she could no longer feign indifference to her mother’s resolve to flee. Her mother had been flitting about since she’d gotten the phone call. As soon as the first gunshots rang out, her mother’s demeanor had completely changed.
“Evelyn Anne Laroque, go to your room and pack. We don’t have much time, so only take the things you need.” Her mother’s voice quivered.
“No, Momma. I’m not going. If the police know about what’s happening, why aren’t they stopping it?”
Evelyn couldn’t understand what her mother was doing. Her mother hadn’t backed down from a fight ever. Now Evelyn couldn’t reconcile the woman she saw, hands shaking, packing only the essentials, with the woman who’d fought to become a doctor when the entire world had said she wasn’t smart enough, wasn’t good enough.
How could her mother leave Greenwood so willingly? Their custom-made artistic white house with navy shutters was their dream home, a home that contained some of their best memories—Evelyn’s seveneenth birthday, the first time she’d told her parents about her dream to become a singer and the first date she’d been allowed to go on with Jimmy Martin, a future dentist.
In her mother’s study, Evelyn could see the destruction from the window. Their house sat high on a hill that overlooked Greenwood. Tulsa was flat, but her parents had bought the only lot that offered a view of the city.
Black clouds of suffocating smoke billowe
d up from the raging fire that ate through the entire town. The mob led by the Ku Klux Klan had opened the gates of hell and were burning everything the residents of Greenwood had. Hate had clawed its way into Tulsa and erupted on the affluent Black section known as Black Wall Street.
Evelyn’s father had been silent throughout Evelyn’s protest. He quietly pulled pictures that couldn’t be replaced from the walls and stuffed them unceremoniously into a bag. Evelyn looked at him for a moment. What had he and her mother been like when they were Evelyn’s age? Was she the crazy one for wanting to stay and fight?
Evelyn’s mother went upstairs. Evelyn followed her. Her normally charismatic mother pulled clothes frantically from the drawers and took Evelyn’s favorite paintings from the walls. Beads of sweat dripped down her forehead. Her mother even packed Evelyn’s favorite gramophone records. She had many, but her mother knew Evelyn’s favorites were always on top.
Looking around one last time, Evelyn’s mother grabbed Evelyn’s arm and pulled her back down the stairs and out of the house. Her father threw as many bags as he could carry into their Nash Touring before returning to their home to get the rest. The smoke smothered Evelyn. She coughed, choking on the particles in the air that might be the remains of burned bodies—her friends and neighbors’ burned bodies. The thought made her retch.
Her mother opened the passenger door of their brand-new car and got in, pulling Evelyn after her. The future, no longer certain, clenched scorching hands around Evelyn’s throat and she coughed uncontrollably. She could barely breathe, but she couldn’t shake the feeling that her family owed it to the rest of Greenwood to stay and help.
“I’m not leaving without my friends, Momma. I can’t. What about the rest of our family? We have to help them.”
Dr. Laroque always had a stern expression. It was her normal everyday look. But today she had been more than stern throughout Evelyn’s objection to their abrupt retreat. By the time news had spread about the Black boy who’d been accused of attacking a White girl in an elevator Downtown, Evelyn’s mother had already had them packing.
“We told everyone we could, baby. Our family and friends are doing exactly what we’re doing right now—the only thing we can do. We have to get out of here before they kill us all.” Tears slid down Evelyn’s mother’s face, cresting over high cheekbones. Her dad used his thumb to wipe them away.
They’d only been in Greenwood a short time. Leaving Louisiana had seemed like the right thing to do. Evelyn and her older brother, Carmichael, her dad and her mother, had only come a year ago. They’d traveled a long way so her mother could practice medicine in a town where Black people could be successful.
Carmichael had left Greenwood six months ago to move to Kansas City. Evelyn hoped to go stay with him as soon as she finished school to finally take a chance at singing the blues. Evelyn wanted to follow in the footsteps of her Aunt Shirleen, who sang in the same nightclubs as Mamie Smith. Now all that seemed foolish.
The car jerked as her father shifted and accelerated too fast. The moon shone brightly in the sky, casting a spotlight on the destruction of their hometown. Evelyn stopped fighting and allowed the tears to fall.
Her heart started to beat normally as they neared the border of the town. Her father had slowed to make the turn to leave Greenwood when blinding bright lights barreled down toward them. Another set of lights headed straight for them. They were trapped.
Chapter One
Five years later, August 1926
Lorenzo
Lorenzo De Luca stared up at the massive estate. The red brick stood out against the backdrop of a starry night sky. This home had been built as an homage to his family’s native country of Italy. Generations of De Lucas had lived in this house.
The windows loomed like eyes to the soul, reflecting a childhood of happy memories now clouded with the blood of all who’d lost their lives because of his family. His mind went to Holly briefly, before he shook his head to clear his thoughts.
The only reason he’d come was to see his madre. She’d been his saving grace as a child. It was her strength that he’d pulled on to stay committed to not falling into the family business.
Lorenzo stepped onto the porch and sighed deeply. It had been months since the last time he’d been home—if he could still call it that.
His thoughts floated back to that night—the final family meeting he’d attended. The memory carried him back.
He could still hear the way the wineglasses had clanged and the moonshine had sloshed in mugs gripped by the callused hands of the De Luca family. A memory of the centuries-old table with all the important members of the family business around it stung especially deep. The young children who hadn’t been old enough to hear the gory details of the family’s work had played in the courtyard of the mansion that day.
Lorenzo had unbuttoned the top button of his dress shirt and cleared his throat. That had been his almost imperceptible signal that the meeting needed to start immediately.
After a few more pats on the back and kisses on the cheek, Lorenzo’s father, Alonzo “No Hope” De Luca, had said, “All right, everybody sit down, already.”
Lorenzo had grown up running the halls of this mansion that had seemed full of ghosts to a child. At that meeting, he’d stood next in line to run the De Luca family. Ghosts should’ve been afraid of him.
The room had grown quiet and everyone had taken their seats. There’d been an obvious hierarchy.
The most important and dangerous members of the family sat toward the middle of the table. They were the central players in the business. Lorenzo’s grandfather’s seat was left empty out of respect. His grandfather was serving two consecutive life sentences for the murders of the Ricci family bosses. He hadn’t acted alone of course, but he wasn’t a rat. Being the oldest, his grandfather had taken the fall for the younger bosses, as was expected.
“We need to get down to business. I’m getting old, and the time has come to prepare to hand over the reins to the next Don. I’m honored that my son, Lorenzo, will be taking on a more active role in the family.”
Alonzo had turned and kissed Lorenzo on both cheeks. Everyone around the table had erupted in cheers. Lorenzo’s jaw had tightened. The thought of having to take on the burden of his family had sat heavily on his chest, making it hard for him to breathe.
The wallpaper in striking golds, blacks and whites had seemed to close in around him. He’d hoped the smile he’d practiced so well wouldn’t betray the roiling emotions he’d hidden inside. He’d been able to hold himself in check so far, but the closer he got to being an actual boss, the more he’d feared what he had to tell his father.
Seeming to notice Lorenzo’s discomfort, Alonzo had said, “All right, let’s settle down. There’s a lot to go over and the change won’t happen overnight. I’m just excited that my son, in all his brilliance, along with his cousins, will be leading our family into a new era.”
Lorenzo hadn’t been able to breathe. He’d unbuttoned another button on his dress shirt. Sweat had slicked his skin. Dragging his hands through his hair, he’d closed his eyes and rested his head against the back of his chair.
The old chairs had been brought over from Italy when the house had been built, a hundred years ago. They’d been restored a couple of times and were now adorned in black and embellished with gold. He’d briefly considered throwing the relic through the stained-glass window.
“Can I talk to you...in private?” His voice had been but a whisper in the large room.
Alonzo had looked at his son, concern etched in his features. He’d nodded. “Discuss the issues we’re having with the new city officials. When we get back, I want to hear options for handling it.”
Lorenzo’s father had led him to the library, down the hall from the meeting room.
As soon as the door had closed behind them, Lorenzo had turned to his father and said, “I can’t
do this.” His voice had come out stronger in the small room than he’d expected.
“What did you say?” His father’s voice, though tempered, had been laced with venom.
Lorenzo had lifted his head and met his father’s glare. “I said, I can’t do this. I won’t continue to be a part of this business. I wouldn’t even call the intentional murdering of people a business.”
“It’s called a family,” Alonzo had said. “And if you can’t be a part of the business, then you aren’t a part of this family either. Think about what you’re saying and tread carefully.”
Lorenzo had walked closer to his father to make sure he got his point across. “Then I guess I won’t be a member of the family. I’m finally realizing the cost of being in this family. It’s too great.”
“Don’t forget what the De Luca name has done for you and continues to do for you.” His father’s voice had risen.
Lorenzo walked to the door. With his hand on the handle, he said, “That’s the problem. How can I call myself a boss, someone to be respected, when I stand on the backs of the De Lucas? I won’t continue to benefit from this...” Lorenzo motioned to the expensive furniture in the room “...this family any longer.”
He’d opened the door and walked out. The sound of glass shattering behind him as he’d fled the room hadn’t surprised him. His father’s temper was legendary.
“Lorenzo, where are you going?” His father’s voice had thundered.
“Don’t worry, Father. I won’t be back.”
Lorenzo had let the door slam in his wake.
The memories flooded in as Lorenzo stood outside the front door to the home he’d once loved. The night air yanked Lorenzo from his reverie. He couldn’t focus on his last conversation with his father. He had to move forward and try to stay connected to the only member of his family who still spoke to him—his mother.
Before he could knock, the heavy door swung open. “Lorenzo, my sweet boy. I was worried you’d changed your mind about coming. Why are you standing out here?”