Changó's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes

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Changó's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes Page 35

by William Kennedy


  “They wouldn’ta strangled me,” Tremont said.

  “You never know with liberals. I wasn’t taking chances.”

  “Why’d you sing that, Tremont?” Roy asked.

  “I’m sick of them songs about overcomin’. What we gotta do is change color. We’d fit in better. Wouldn’t need no segregation.”

  “You’re a clown, Tremont, but you can’t do that old shit, tommin’ the crowd, scratchin’ your head.”

  “‘Man in the Moon Is a Coon,’” Tremont said. “‘Shine,’ ‘All Coons Look Alike to Me.’”

  “Right,” said Roy. “Deep trash.”

  “My daddy made a career singin’ those tunes. That’s the way it was.”

  “Long gone.”

  “You ever hear the Mills Brothers and Bing Crosby do ‘Shine’?” Quinn asked.

  “Doesn’t matter. You can’t shine shit.”

  Cody had been listening to the talk, standing behind Roy.

  “I recorded ‘Shine’ with Count Basie,” he said, pulling a chair next to Roy.

  “I heard you do it with Crosby when I was a kid,” Quinn said. “It was great.”

  “When Bing and the Mills Brothers sing it it’s a joke. Always was. And the joke’s on the guy who calls you shine.”

  “All right,” Roy said, “all right. If Cody does it it’s all right.”

  “Cody’s all right,” Tremont said, “but my daddy’s shit you can’t shine.”

  “Not your daddy, Tremont, the coon, the coon. Je-zus.”

  “Satchmo sang ‘Shine,’” Tremont said.

  “Satchmo,” Roy said. “He smiles a whole lot for white people.”

  “Ella sang ‘Shine,’” Cody said. “So did Django.”

  “Hey, Roy,” Quinn said. “What happened to your sense of humor? Tremont was putting everybody on. That song is so far out it’s anti-racist.”

  “Coons aren’t funny,” Roy said. “All that coon stuff is rat shit. Flush it all.”

  “How about shines?” Cody said.

  “Oh, man, oh, man,” Roy said, and he twisted in his chair to face Gloria.

  “Don’t get excited, Roy,” she said. “Tonight’s important, don’t fight with your father.”

  “Damn,” Roy said, “it’s so nice you’re here. But I don’t want you here. I want you someplace else. We’ll blow this joint.”

  “To go where?”

  “Someplace quiet.”

  The father and son squabbling over the coon factor crystallized a musical lineage for Quinn—the slaves singing, dancing, cakewalking in their Pinkster revels, whites imitating them by blackening up as minstrels and turning it all into a theatrical phenomenon that would last more than a century, blacks then blackening their blackness and creating their own minstrel stage—mocking the white imitation of their cakewalk and the white-black argot, and filling theaters; Big Jim making the leap from sideshow minstrel to black theater and he’s along for the ride when the slave song and dance (and the coon factor) arrive on Broadway, a long walk from slavery. Bert Williams is Broadway’s black megastar as a singing blackface shuffler, Al Jolson is a white Broadway megastar in blackface, Satchmo, the ragtime genius trumpeter sings to the world in his arcane language of scat, and ragtime turns into jazz, a word Satchmo never liked. Bing Crosby and the Mills Brothers learn scat from Satchmo and rock the world with “Shine” and “Dinah.” Fats, another smiling clown and musical wizard, discovers Cody Mason plays fine piano, and Cody emerges into jazz, formerly ragtime, first accompanist and early lover of Billie Holiday, the great-granddaughter of a slave: how those slaves do rise. Cody sees all these connections, understands where he came from, and how he got here, understands also that Roy now wants to obliterate this matrix that created his father and himself; and Cody quietly implodes.

  But he changes the subject and says to Quinn, “It was great you got that lawyer. Roy called me about being busted, said he might get out on bail but didn’t know how much. Next thing, he taps me on the shoulder. You and Max make things happen.”

  “Some things you can do so you do them. How are you and your lungs doing after all that exercise?”

  “I’m holding. Didn’t fall over.”

  “Bit of a generation gap here with Roy.”

  “He’s in a hurry to forget things.”

  “You don’t want to forget.”

  “It’s so tough to get anyplace, you got to remember the moves. Big Jimmy, he was no coon. He owned that routine, turned it inside out, giant tapdancer, the singing shine, and he made it pay. He played coon like I play piano and he got someplace way beyond Coontown. He was big and he got bigger, he had clout. He opened that club and he took me in when I left New York. We blew a whole lot of jazz in his place and I turned a corner and down the road I got my own club.”

  “What happened that you lost that record date in New York missing a train?”

  “Didn’t miss any train. I cut a record with Brunswick, one session, eight tunes. I was going down to do eight more and then weed out the dogs, but the Brunswick big boys didn’t like my first takes. John Hammond calls me leavin’ the house, says you gotta know this, Sonny. They don’t want a second session, I’m sorry. So I missed the train.”

  What they didn’t like was Cody’s timing—a little off on two cuts, speeded up, then fell back, but he’d been playing alone for months, no rhythm backup, could’ve been fixed, just give him a drummer. But he also blinked a few notes on two or three cuts, that won’t do. You had to be Art Tatum to sell solo piano records. They put a label on Sonny because he’s a little off one day, and it dogs him, and he’s at the bar and meets these cats comin’ through and they say, Here, Sonny, have a few, and they slip him some. He goes to his room and there’s a knock on the door, what are you doin’, man? I’m having a good time, he says, and they take him to the judge and somebody says he’s a dope pusher. I’m no pusher, judge, I was just way down and I met these cats and they gave me a few. Three months. My old gal Billie died a junkie. Cops busted her for possession and all she had was eighty-seven cents. Forty-four-year-old queen of the damn world with eighty-seven cents.

  “Your ‘Blues for Fats’ was very fine. You recorded it?”

  “New record coming this month. Hank O’Neal put it together.”

  “I should write a piece on that. Anybody recording this concert?”

  “I think Hank’s got it covered.”

  Vivian reached across the table and touched Cody’s arm. “Cody, George has a request. When you go back to play could you do a waltz? George was a prize waltzer. Do you play waltzes?”

  “For Georgie, sure I do.” And Cody went to the piano and welcomed all waltzers with “All Alone,” “When I Lost You,” and “Remember,” Cody in a sentimental mood.

  George walked Vivian onto the floor and said, after we leave here I want to go to Van Woert Street and show you the trophies I won for waltzing. We’ll go tomorrow, Vivian said, and George guided her into his prize-winning moves, dancing on the balls of his feet, heels never touching the floor, because the judge puts straight pins in your heels and if you bend a pin you’re out. He put the back of his hand on the lady’s back (Vivian, is it?) so any sweat from his hand would not stain her dress, and he did his turns, the open strides, the reverses, which are always difficult and for some people impossible, but if you can’t reverse you’re out. He moved Vivian into the open rolls—toward her left, then her right—and holding her right hand with his left he circles backward, Vivian right with him, some things you do not forget, and after all she’d waltzed with George before, that night at Electric Park. George breaks, turns, recaptures and spins her, alone, then spins himself also to the rhythm of Cody’s brisk pacing, and they reunite with graceful ease in each other’s open arms; and on they glide across the floor, the stars of the evening.

  At the table Renata put her hand on Quinn’s. “Your father is a wonderful dancer,” she said. “And Vivian reminds me of Ginger Rogers, with an extra twenty-five pounds.”

 
; “He always said he danced better than Fred Astaire. My grandmother would always say, ‘You’re a damn fool.’”

  “Dance with me,” Renata said.

  “To a waltz?”

  “I know the waltz. I didn’t like dancing but I learned it. My mother was a prize waltzer.”

  “Ah, yes, so she was.”

  Cody segued into “Shine” in waltz tempo (Quinn had never heard it played this way) and did three choruses, then jumped to another beat, which Quinn’s feet translated into a fox-trot. Cody stayed with “Shine” (making a statement are we?) and now Quinn realized this would be one of Cody’s epiphanies, when he takes dominion over a song, enters it, owns it, transforms it. Quinn stopped dancing and moved with Renata nearer to the piano to watch Cody’s hands, those long right middle fingers so straight, pointing the way into a serial revelation of what the song could become. Then Cody dropped in a new phrase, “I Ain’t Got Nobody,” not the tune, just the first four bars and he moved on, slowly, deep left-handed chords challenging the right, which rose to it with resonance, major to minor, very educated. There was beauty in his ease, his sureness, no clunked notes tonight, and he switches keys and ups the tempo, just a little, and ba-boom goes that left hand, the power of it, he’s on a ride, six choruses and counting, feel that beat, beat, beat, that goddamn beat, this is stride on high, stride the way it’s supposed to be, brilliant invention, the poor guy can’t help himself, smothering the song with his gift, exploding it, and Quinn’s pulse is up and cantering, those left-handed arpeggios, the glissando that surprises, and he notches the speed upward, I Ain’t Got, eight choruses and the left takes over, the right playing catch-up, and they level at a gallop, Cody humming his zum-zums now and Quinn counts and discovers the man is using twelve fingers, the left six doing that resonant bounce and the right a syncopated strut—how that Cody Mason does strut. He’s into his tenth chorus and running off limits into a double-and-a-half-time free-for-all, you can’t stop him, a driving two-note beat and both hands racing, right foot on the pedal, left foot keeping time with the universe, zum-zum za-za-zum-zum he’s a one-man band I Ain’t Got it’s a horserace between the hands and now Quinn counts fifteen fingers Cody kidnapped this piano and there’s no more dancing, no feet can move this fast, the crowd is cheering, applauding every breakaway they could never have imagined and Cody is burning, a man on fire with maniacal speed, inhuman precision, colossal invention—oh, yes, I Ain’t Got—and he coughs, he coughs, and he pauses, hits two chords with his left hand, one with his right, he stops.

  The End.

  He pulls his white silk handkerchief out of his lapel pocket and coughs into it, and everybody is standing, applauding, sending up screeches, cheers, hoots of joy and other eruptions that are rejoicings of what they can’t utter, salutes to the ineffable. Cody gets it, and he plunges his hand into his coat pocket, gripping the handkerchief. Quinn glimpses blood on it. Cody holds on to the piano, smiles at everybody, shakes his head to tell them it’s too much, he can’t stand it, but on and on goes the applause and Cody still has that smile. He can’t get rid of that smile. He always wears a smile. That’s why they call him Shine.

  At the table Martin said, “That was a marvelous performance. He doesn’t play like a dying man.”

  “No, but he’s goin’,” Tremont said. “Got a couple of months, what I hear.”

  Roy and Gloria left the table to talk to Cody, and Roy told him the playing was fantastic and the song was not bad, since it didn’t have any words. Cody gave him a triumphal smile and they shook hands. Gloria said they were going to feed Cody since he didn’t get any dinner. Quinn said he’d talk to the kitchen and get him dinner, but Gloria said he wants pizza, and Renata said, Daniel, no quieren comer. Renata told Gloria, “Don’t you stay out all night, you’re still convalescing.” Gloria said of course and kissed her aunt and made a kiss mouth at Quinn.

  At the table Matt asked Tremont where he was staying tonight. “You still have that place you had with Mary?”

  “I got it but I don’t go there anymore. Rats ate the bed.”

  “You have money?”

  “Dollar and a quarter.”

  “That’s not even enough for a flop. Last night you slept on that stoop.”

  “Won’t do that again.”

  “I thought tonight you’d be in the hospital, or in jail.”

  “Missed out on both,” Tremont said.

  “So where can you stay?”

  “I got friends. Mighta stayed with Rosie but they’re knockin’ down her house. Maybe the mission, if they got a bed, maybe the bus station. I’ll be all right. It’s warm, if it don’t rain.”

  Quinn and Renata came back to the table on that line.

  “What about the Corine Hotel, you stayed there,” Quinn said.

  “They make you pay.”

  “How much, ten, fifteen?”

  “Like twenty.”

  “If you’re in the Corine a few days, a week, can you get yourself together? Claudia wants you in rehab and that’s a good idea.”

  “Oh, yeah. I’m good. Corine, rehab, I need that.”

  The concert crowd was thinning out, George and Vivian came back to the table and Quinn said quietly to Matt, “I can’t take him, I’ve got a carful. Can you grab a cab and get him installed? I’ll give you two hundred, get him a room for a week and give him maybe twenty for walking-around money. Hold on to the rest, or maybe you need it yourself.”

  “I need it. I have a dollar and a quarter less than Tremont. I can’t pay for the room I rented here for tonight.”

  “All right I’ll cover that and you keep the change of the cash. You’re really not going back to campus tonight?”

  “Really am not.”

  “Is this how you abdicate sainthood? Don’t you have to turn in your robe?”

  “I’ll send it to the cleaners. I’ll go through the tribunals, whatever is necessary. But I’m history.”

  “You’re the life and death of the world in twenty-five words or less.”

  “Less. What’s all this cash? Where did you get money to burn?”

  “I hit the number, but I left the envelope in the car. I’ll get it and meet you at the hotel’s Eagle Street entrance in ten minutes.”

  Quinn told Renata about the money and where he was meeting Matt.

  “You didn’t want the money,” she said, “but now you’re Santa Claus with it.”

  “Consider it short-term borrowing. Max can take me as a tax deduction.”

  “It’s not Max’s money. It’s mine, and yours.”

  “Not yet.”

  Quinn was now acutely conscious of the precise amount of money in his trunk. Corporations rise and fall on less. Max couldn’t need that much to get into Cuba. He’s got fifty-plus in his briefcase; send him another hundred and that’s big money. Fidel will let him in for that. Won’t he?

  For a hundred, yes, Quinn decided. He would hold that much for pickup whenever by Max or his messenger. He’d stash it, safe deposit, maybe; that amount was finessable. Also he’d keep Renata’s fifty. But the rest was too much—seven hundred and fifty thousand and change. Quinn needed to give that to somebody, someplace, where it would do some good.

  This was precipitous, giving Max’s cash away even before he’s in Canada; but depriving him of three quarters of a million was a satisfying prospect. Would Max react like most humans, with rage and revenge against Quinn? No. He’s dying, and too blasé. Money never meant much to him. It was only a means of moving with the high life on whose fringe he was always scrambling. All right, maybe a hundred isn’t enough; give him back Renata’s fifty. She doesn’t need it. She only wants it. It was fast money as it came to Max; if it vanishes it’s fast in the other direction.

  Give the money to Matt and let him found a new order: the Church of the Benevolent Dollar. He’d give it all away in six months. And you’re ready to give it away in three hours, Quinn.

  Give it to Tremont? Instant disaster. The police would pull him in a
nd do what they do so well with drug money: make it disappear.

  Claudia and Better Streets? She’d spread it around, also buy a new house, new furniture, and everybody would see her sudden wealth as drug-related, which it would be.

  Give it to the Brothers? That would really contaminate them—just what the machine wants. They’d sink forever as dealers.

  Leave it on the street in front of Hapsy’s and let it be a random find. If Trixie got to it first it would go into her bank vault and seduce her into early retiremant, and Albany would never see a nickel.

  Keep it yourself, Quinn, have a broker invest it, obliquely, even secretly; become, simultaneously, a philanthropist and a financial criminal. No. And no hiding it in walls, or banks, or underground, except for the hundred. Even that’s a major risk. And, hey, your fingerprints are all over the cash and the suitcase; so are Max’s, and who knows who else’s? Face it: it’s a goddamn worthless treasure.

  “Daniel,” Martin said, standing up from his chair, surveying the racially mixed stragglers, “what happened to this hotel? I’m surprised they booked this party. I’ve been coming here since they opened in 1926 and they always barred Negroes. They rejected Marian Anderson and Paul Robeson.”

  “Satchmo too,” Quinn said. “I interviewed him in 1956 at the Kenmore when he was here to play the Palace. He was a world celebrity but no major hotel in this town would give him a room. Mixed parties here now? I suppose it’s token time. But upstairs is still lily-white.”

  Quinn parked in front of Vivian’s flat and put on his blinkers, turned off the car. George and Vivian were in the backseat and he said, “Pop, we’re here.”

  “Where?”

  “Vivian’s house.”

  “Vivian? Vivian who?”

  “Vivian me,” Vivian said, and she grabbed George’s face in her fingers and turned it close to her own. “Your date for the evening, one of your old girlfriends. It’s time to go home, George.”

  “Then let’s go.”

  “Yes, let’s.”

  “Where do we go?”

  “Here.”

  “Here? Where are we?”

 

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