Authors: Ace Atkins
If only he would look at him. But Freddie just trailed away as McNab took a stab at him, asking him questions that Roscoe could not hear with the hot blood wooshing through his ears. The final insult was McNab asking Freddie if he was sure that it was Roscoe Arbuckle who asked him for the key, couldn’t he have been mistaken for another person on a very crowded lot, another portly man?
Freddie calmly caught Roscoe’s eye then and Roscoe stared back at Freddie, time seeming to stop as Freddie pointed his long index finger—never being asked to—and shot it straight at Roscoe.
Roscoe did not move. He could not breathe.
He felt McNab’s disappointment as the old man falsely gathered his papers, making motions, actions while he tried to make sense of what had just happened, like a man in shock after being run over by a bus. Roscoe leaned in and said, “I want to see the Pinkerton.”
“There are a dozen Pinkertons on your case, Roscoe.”
“I want the tall one. The thin man. The one who came south.”
“May I ask why?”
SAM WAS BACK on the deck of the
Sonoma
, working in the heated bowels of the ship, shirtsleeves rolled to the elbow, only taking a break for a quick smoke, checking in with the other ops to see if they’d found anything. There was a commotion down below on the pier where flashlights worked around the dark green water and on the mooring lines. A man in a diving suit had been dropped a half hour ago, an air pump chugging away, the lifeline running down into the black depths. Sam checked his watch. It was past nine.
He hadn’t eaten since morning.
They’d found some of the coin, the robbers dropping the strongboxes over the side of the ship suspended from hemp rope. More coin was found in drainage pipes, raining down on the heads of sailors when an old salt unplugged them to lay down a coat of paint on the deck.
There was still twenty-five thousand somewhere, but Sam figured they were all going through the motions now. The money long gone. A seaman by the name of Ducrest having disappeared hours ago.
He returned belowdecks, the ops being paid by Seamen’s Bank to go room by room, slowly down each level. And now Sam was back near the engine room, grease on his hands and forearms, still smoking a cigarette, checking out ventilation ducts. He ran a flashlight into them and pinged them with a rusted wrench, duct by duct, room by room. He wanted to get home.
Two hours later, there was a sound. A solid dull thud instead of a ping.
He used the flashlight to look into the shaft. Nothing. He reached deep into the grimy, oily shaft, stretching with his right arm and fingers until he touched the brass top of a fire hose and grabbed hold, pulling it out.
Sam was alone. Two levels down from the main deck.
The hose was heavy and full. He unscrewed the nozzle and found a continuous trail of loosely packed gold coins that jangled with heft in his hand.
When he glanced back up, he could see an image of himself in the glass of a porthole. Grease covered his face like war paint. He used a handkerchief to clean himself off, some of the white cloth spotted in blood. He looked back at himself and then lifted the hose back into the shaft, pushing it far back into the pipe and screwing it tight with a pocketknife.
He was back on deck when he saw a man he recognized as one of Arbuckle’s lawyers, the young one, Brennan. Brennan nodded at another nameless op and the op pointed over toward Sam.
Sam met Brennan halfway on the deck, still wiping grease off his hands. “Mr. Arbuckle would like to speak with you.”
“It’s a little late.”
“It wasn’t my idea.”
Sam checked the time again. Below, men were helping the fellow in the diving suit out of the water, a great brass helmet on his head that they had to remove with wrenches. The man had been out of air and took in great lungfuls when the helmet was removed.
“Where is he?”
“Waiting in the car.”
“What’s this about?”
“I haven’t a clue.”
“I’ve been reassigned.”
“This is important to Mr. Arbuckle,” Brennan said. “He’s having trouble sleeping.”
“Tough day in court?”
“The worst.”
“Okay,” Sam said. “Lead the way.”
28
M
inta thinks you’re a good egg,” Roscoe said. “Minta is a sensible woman.” “That she is.”
There was a long silence between the two men in the rear of the Pierce-Arrow limousine. Roscoe was dressed in pajamas and a robe. He rolled another cigarette, fumbling around with the paper and tobacco until he got the thing made. The leather inside the cab reminded Sam of a fine saddle; it all smelled rich and oiled.
“Now we got that settled,” Sam said, “I need to get back to work.”
“I read about that gold,” Roscoe said. “They said it was a ‘Mystery at Sea.’ ”
“Not much of a mystery,” Sam said. “We found most of it.”
“You found the robbers?”
Sam shook his head.
“Can I call you Sam?”
“Sure.”
“Sam, I was set up.”
“I know.”
“Fred Fishback directed the whole thing. He arranged the trip, called the girls, and brought the booze. The son of a bitch blindsided me. All that crap he said on the stand about me asking for the key to the ladies’ changing room is a bunch of hooey.”
“Why?”
Roscoe looked out the window, the machine idling at Pier 35. A group of sailors passed his car, eyes wide with amazement at the fine machine. He smoked and shook his head. “I don’t know.”
“You remember me asking about you knowing Mr. Hearst?”
Roscoe didn’t say anything.
“Why’d you lie?”
“I said I’ve met the man once.”
“He’s taken an interest in you.”
Roscoe turned from the window, his profile in the glass.
“His bagman paid Fishback,” Sam said. “I saw it. That same man poisoned the woman who’d come to the city to testify on your behalf. Between Hearst and Brady, the facts will never be heard. The real truth has already been buried or burned up in an incinerator.”
Roscoe looked confused but nodded, and then nodded some more.
Sam leaned into the space between them. He checked his watch and rubbed his head.
“Why do you continue to protect him?”
Roscoe shook his head.
“He’s walking all over you,” Sam said. “Hearst is making you look like a fool. You keep on keeping whatever you know a secret and you’re headed to San Quentin. Why a grown man would want to be anyone’s whipping boy is beyond me. My ass would get sore after a while.”
Roscoe looked at him and Sam saw more rage than he expected. But the rage soon softened and he started to cry, and he was very open about it. Sam had never seen a grown man so open about weeping before another man. He looked like he was about ten, wiping the mess away with his fists.
“I’m not protecting Hearst,” he said. “I’m no one’s whipping boy.”
Sam leaned into the soft leather seats. He lit a cigarette, reached into the bar and poured himself a drink from a crystal decanter. “Jesus Christ,” Sam said, taking a long pull.
Roscoe reached over and poured him another.
“I could get used to this.”
“No, you couldn’t,” Roscoe said, not looking at him anymore but staring out the window and thinking. The hand-rolled cigarette burned between his fingers. His robe was silk and probably cost more than Sam’s suit and shirt and shoes put together. “All this makes you soft.”
“I left my hat on the boat,” Sam said, reaching for the door.
Roscoe held up his hand. “Hold on. Christ, let me think. I just don’t know. God damn. I don’t understand any of it. It’s making my head hurt.”
“It’s a simple story, Roscoe. You walked into a frame job and the frame job went really wrong. About as wrong as it can get. And that isn’t your fault. But to hold out on me with anything isn’t just pigheaded, it’s damn stupid.”
“Do you know that for the weeks I spent in that jail, all I did was try to remember what happened in that room?”
“What happened?”
“I couldn’t. I thought maybe I did kill her. I could imagine it. I could imagine me falling asleep on her, touching her too rough.”
Sam finished the glass.
“I’m so goddamn clumsy when I drink,” Roscoe said. “I wanted to die. If there had been a gun in that cell, I would’ve stuck it into my mouth. I convinced myself that I’d killed her. I read the stories and those stories rolled in my head. I saw myself crushing her. I didn’t really stop blaming myself until today. When Freddie turned on me, I knew it had been a frame job. He worked me goddamn perfectly. He arranged the sets, brought in the actors, and had it play out just like he’d written it.”
“Except for one thing.”
Roscoe looked up at Sam.
“The girl wasn’t supposed to die.”
“Sure she was.”
Sam shook his head. “She was sick. No one was planning on that. But when it happened, they changed the script and rolled with it, and now you’re being railroaded to prison. So why don’t we cut out all the bullshit and you tell me why William Randolph Fucking Hearst wants to destroy your life.”
It began to rain outside. The rain pinged on the waxed hood of the big machine. Roscoe flipped a switch and told the chauffeur to drive. The wheels rolled.
“I don’t want her hurt.”
“A woman,” Sam said. “Always a woman.”
“She’s a hell of a woman,” Roscoe said, as the chauffeur kicked it in gear and they headed down the never-ending row of piers, arc lights blazing the way, the rain catching in their bright glow. “She saved my life. And, above all, I want her name left out of this. She’s sweet and gentle and caring. She saved my life.”
“You said that.”
“Well, it’s true.”
“And just how did that work?”
“There was a New Year’s party,” Roscoe said. “Two years ago. She owns a beautiful beach home that looks like an old-fashioned plantation. We were all very, very drunk.”
“What’s her name, Roscoe?”
“Marion,” he said. “Marion Davies.”
“The film actress?”
Roscoe nodded.
Sam nodded. He waited.
Roscoe didn’t say anything.
“And who is Mr. Hearst to her?”
“A friend,” Roscoe said. “Her benefactor.”
“I bet.”
“You ever have a woman care for you when you’re down-and-out? When you feel like you’re at the bottom of a well and can’t see for the dark?”
Sam glanced away.
“I had problems,” Roscoe said. “With my manhood. I confided very personal issues to her. I was drunk and told Miss Davies. I was quite drunk. Very drunk.”
“So you were drunk,” Sam said.
“She said I lacked confidence and the whole business was in my head,” he said. “We walked on the beach when all hell was breaking loose with fireworks and champagne bottles uncorking and all that, and she led me by the hand behind a sand dune.”
“And proved you wrong,” Sam said. He ashed his cigarette into his hand.
Roscoe noted the gesture and handed him a cut-glass tray.
“This is all in confidence,” Roscoe said. “You must assure me.”
“I assure you.”
“Miss Davies isn’t what I call chaste,” Roscoe said. “Surely Mr. Hearst understands that. He’s quite a bit older, and for him to go to all this trouble . . . She’s known to entertain other gentlemen.”
“God bless her.”
“No one saw us.”
“Oh, someone saw you,” Sam said. “You just didn’t see them.”
“The only thing on that beach was shadows and moonlight,” Roscoe said. “I never told a soul.”
“They’ll convict you, Roscoe,” Sam said. “If Miss Davies is the friend you think, she’ll give us the goods on Hearst.”
Roscoe shook his head.
“This man has destroyed your life.”
“I don’t believe it,” Roscoe said. “Why would a man like Mr. Hearst go to all that trouble?”
“Do I need to draw a picture for you?” Sam asked. “You screwed his girl.”
“Mr. Hearst doesn’t have time to take such an interest—”
“I’ve seen him take an interest in a lot less.”
Roscoe watched Sam. Sam drank some more. There was more rain and headlights cut across the darkness of the cab.
“Miss Davies is—”
“I’ve done some work I’m not proud of,” Sam said. “I know for a fact Mr. Hearst once sent a man, the very same man who paid Fishback, to kill a fella by the name of Little. All Little did was try and help some miners and he ended up with his neck stretched under a train trestle.”
“That sounds like a business matter.”
“It wasn’t just money,” Sam said. “Hearst couldn’t control him. He spoke out louder and better than any Hearst stooge. He attacked Hearst in his speeches and on street corners. Workers listened to Little, respected him.”
“I can’t.”
“Get a message to Miss Davies,” Sam said. “I’ll take care of the rest.”
Roscoe shook his head, arm casually resting against the door. The cigarette smoldered in his hand, Roscoe seeming to forget about it.
“Hearst may have set the trap, but I was dumb enough to be snared,” Roscoe said. “I’ll carry my own water, thank you.”
“If you don’t speak up, they’ll win,” Sam said. “This isn’t just Hearst, it’s the lot of lousy bastards.”
“Who are we talking about?”
Sam studied the fat actor’s profile.
“He’s already won,” Roscoe said. “And dragging Miss Davies into the mud won’t do a goddamn thing.”
“Thinking like that is the reason this country is a goddamn mess.”
“I don’t follow.”
Moments passed. The big black Arrow rolled on. Sam ran a handkerchief across his sweating face. He felt his breathing slow as he composed himself and smiled at Roscoe.
“How’s your”—Sam pointed to Roscoe’s crotch—“now?”
Roscoe crossed his legs. He turned his eyes back to Sam, face breaking into a grin.
“Every time I see those Vigilant women, I feel like a scared turtle.”
THANKSGIVING MORNING, Sam awoke to the baby crying. He could smell coffee and bacon in the tiny kitchen and hear Jose rummaging around with the groceries and dry goods he’d brought home. He found his watch and his cigarettes, neatly made the Murphy bed and closed it up into the wall. He was still working on the cigarette when he walked into the kitchen, Jose handing him a warm cup and smiling. He kissed Mary Jane on the head. It was cold in the apartment. He owed the landlady for the heat.