Authors: Walter Mosley
Tags: #Fiction, #Library, #Literary, #Historical fiction, #Mystery, #Historical, #Mystery fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #Los Angeles (Calif.), #World War; 1939-1945 - Destruction and pillage
After breakfast I spent a couple of hours on the phone trying to get a line on the Messenger of the Divine church. I called
every religious group listed in twelve different counties and every soul that I knew. I wanted to ask Reverend Grove a question
or two; like when had he last seen Elana Love and was she driving my red Rambler.
There was a certain urgency behind my search because I was bothered by Latham’s visit. Why had he come? L.A. cops didn’t make
friendly visits to warn you that they were watching. They didn’t come to the door unless they were serving papers or making
an arrest.
So I went on thinking and calling, fretting and drinking Fanny’s homemade lemonade. She spent the morning baking noodle pudding
and making meals for later. She told us that cooking calmed her nerves. We didn’t complain. Both Fearless and I were bachelors,
and when a woman came around she did very little cooking — food, that is.
Fearless played catch with Blood. They were completely happy roughhousing and relaxing on the sunny lawn. Since he was just
out of the lockup, a day in the sun was heaven for him.
At one Fearless took Fanny and Blood to pick up Gella and go for a drive down to see Sol and maybe let the dog have a run
in the park. I couldn’t see where they needed me, so I stayed by the telephone making useless calls.
“Hello,” one man answered.
“Council for the Baptist churches of greater L.A. county?” I inquired in my pretend official tone.
“Yes.”
“I was wondering if you could help me find a minister.”
“A particular minister?” the soft-spoken secretary asked.
“A Reverend Grove or a Father Vincent. They’re affiliated with a church called Messenger of the Divine.”
“Never heard of the institution,” he said with quiet distaste. “Doesn’t sound like one of our congregations at all.”
“No Grove or Vincent?”
“What is this concerning?”
“An exorcism,” I said.
“A what?”
“I got a white man locked up in my basement and I wanna see if an old-time Holy Roller can call the devil out of him. That
way maybe I can save the world from his evil… Uh-oh, he’s trying to
break out of his cage. I’ll call you back.” I hung up and laughed a mean laugh.
Before my venom was through, the phone rang. I had the immediate and irrational fear that somehow the Council for the Baptist
churches knew the numbers of the sinners that called them. I let the ringing go on for a while before answering.
“Tannenbaum residence,” I said brightly.
“May I speak to Hedva Tannenbaum, please?” a man asked. He spoke in perfect but not necessarily American English. His tone
was haughty, that’s really the only word for it. The words were mannered, but the voice was not.
“Who’s askin’?” I said in response to the voice.
There was a moment’s hesitation and then, “John Manly.” The name didn’t sound right on his tongue.
“Well, Mr. Manly,” I said. “Mrs. Tannenbaum doesn’t want to speak to anyone just now. She’s had a pretty rough time of it
the past few days and doesn’t want to be disturbed.”
I was being hard on Mr. Manly for no other reason than that his tone reminded me of the snootiness of the secretary at the
Baptist Council.
“To whom am I speaking?” Manly inquired.
“To whom,” I replied, “doesn’t matter. What matters is that Fanny isn’t gettin’ on the phone, so either you gonna tell me
what you want or we gonna break off the connection right here and now.” For an instant the image of that bureaucrat sitting
at the window of the courthouse flashed through my mind.
“Excuse me? What did you say?” Manly asked.
I realized that, in my anger, I had slipped into the fast-talking patter of my neighborhood. Manly hadn’t understood my brilliant
barbs.
“What do you want me to tell Fanny?” I asked, now patient.
“I must speak to her personally. It’s very important.”
“Maybe to you, but Fanny’s got other things on her mind. Does she know you?” I asked.
“What I have to tell her is very important.”
“I’ll give her the message. What’s your number?”
“Tell her now, while I am waiting.”
“No.”
There were big red-and-purple flowers, shaped like bells, clustered on a bush outside the sitting room windows. A sleek green
hummingbird appeared next to one of them. From one to another that hummingbird milked five of those flowers before Manly spoke
again.
“It’s about business,” he said. “I’m a real-estate agent. I want to know if she’s interested in selling her house.”
“I don’t think she’s movin’ nowhere right now, but gimme your number and she’ll call ya.”
He finally relented and left a number. It was a Hollywood exchange. “Room three-two-two,” he added.
I hung up and wondered about that number on the way to the window. The hummingbird fled at my approach. I could hardly blame
him; when a shadow the size of a mountain looms up above you, you run first and worry about what it could be later on — from
the safety of your nest. If you had a nest, that is.
FEARLESS AND FANNY RETURNED
at about four. Before I could tell them about the call Fearless started in.
“Paris, it was on the car radio.”
“What?”
“Conrad Till, that’s what. He’s dead.”
“Dead?”
“Yeah. They said about him gettin’ found on account of a, a what you call it, ’nonymous tip. Yeah. Then they said that they
took him to Mercy Hospital, but he died in the night a’cause of the wound.”
“He was shot up pretty bad.”
“Yeah, he was. And maybe it killed him too. But you know, I been shot worse than that myself, an’ it didn’t near kill me.
I mean maybe he had a weak heart or sumpin’, but I don’t think so. But that’s not what I wanted to tell you.”
“What then?”
“The cop that talked to the newsman. That there they said was Sergeant Latham.”
“Damn,” I said.
“That Latham gets around,” Fearless said.
“What does it mean?” asked Fanny.
“Does Rya still work at Mercy?” I asked Fearless.
“Prob’ly. You know they made her head nurse in the baby section. That’s the kind’a job you hold on to.”
“Maybe we should talk to her.”
“Okay.” With that Fearless went off to the kitchen to call.
“Do you know a guy named John, um, Manly?” I asked Fanny. “Said he was a real-estate agent, but I don’t know.”
“No. Why?”
“He called while you and Fearless were gone.”
Fanny shook her head at me.
“The only weird thing was he didn’t ask for Sol. It was like he knew that he was in the hospital, at least not here. You sure
you
don’t know his name? John Manly. Talks all proper like he learned English in another country.”
“What can it all mean?” she quailed.
“He’s probably just what he said,” I reassured her. “He probably got your name off of a mailing list and wants to get your
house to sell.”
“I’m not interested,” Fanny moaned. “All I want is Solly home and to get on that airplane.”
“What airplane?” I asked.
“We’re going to Israel,” the old lady said. “We have been planning to go all the time he was in prison. We would talk about
it in our letters. Now that he was home we had only to buy the tickets and make our plans.”
I had a thought or two about a convicted embezzler planning to flee the country a few weeks after he got out of stir, but
whatever he did, or didn’t do, wasn’t important to me right then. I was angry because John Manly was so rude, because Latham
had threatened us. I was getting pretty mad, and anger in my small frame is almost like courage.
“How was Sol?” I asked.
“He opened his eyes. Mr. Jones told him that he was protecting me, and he smiled. But he was still too weak to talk.”
“Was he happy to see you and Gella?”
“Oh yes, very much. He loves that girl as if she were his own daughter.”
“What did the doctor say?”
Fanny’s face clouded at that question. She didn’t want to say the words. I understood. I didn’t want to push her. When Fearless
returned we were both relieved.
“I called her, Paris,” Fearless said. “She said that we could meet her on her break at eight-fifteen tonight.”
“Meet her? Didn’t you ask her about Till?”
“No. You didn’t say that.”
“What?” For an instant I was angry, even at Fearless. But that was okay. I had to stay mad so I didn’t fall prey to fear.
I was in it up to my neck and scared was an anchor that would drag me down to death.
WE DROPPED FANNY OFF
at her niece’s house again.
“Too many people seem to know your address,” I told her. “And none of them would I trust with my grandmother.”
That got a smile from Fanny. She touched my wrist with her short, thick fingers.
“Where to?” Fearless asked when we were on our way.
“To where my bookstore used to be.”
Fearless drove because I wanted to keep my mind free to think us out of our troubles. He stayed on main streets in mostly
colored neighborhoods so there wasn’t much of a chance of being stopped by the police.
The sight of the burnt-out lot still tore at my chest.
“Damn, man,” Fearless said. “That’s bad. Why he wanna burn you down like that?”
“I don’t know. But it break my heart to see it.”
We went to the convenience store next door, Antonio and Sons. It was owned by an Italian family, but five times out of six
you were likely to run into Theodore Wally at the cash register. Theodore had been a neighborhood kid who used to come into
Antonio’s on milk-and-bread runs for his mother. Antonio liked
him. He gave him a job sweeping when Theodore was twelve and increased his responsibilities over the years until he was a
fixture there. I don’t believe he was over twenty-five, but he looked to be forty going on sixty.
“Mr. Minton,” Wally said. His fleshy face revealed deep concern over my misfortune. “They been lookin’ for you.”
“Who has?”
“Hey, Fearless,” Theodore greeted my friend and then answered me. “The fire department investigation man and the police.”
“What they want?”
“The fire might’a been because of gasoline, they said, and they wanna know if you owned that place and if you had the bookstore
insured. The police was just askin’, they said.”
Theodore looked worried, so I asked him, “What you tell ’em?”
“I said about the man who hit you. I mean I had already told them before and I thought that they would think it was somebody
tryin’ to hurt you burnt down the store. That’s all right, right?”
“That’s okay,” I said. “You right too. If they think somebody was after me, then maybe they’ll blame him for the fire. Maybe
they’ll find the motherfucker and put him in jail.”
Theodore smiled uncertainly. He wasn’t a dumb man, but he was very shy, more comfortable with numbers and merchandise than
he was with looking people in the eye. Antonio loved him because he was a whiz at keeping books and remembering inventory.
“You remember those Messenger of the Divine folks had the store down the street?” I asked.
“Uh-huh. Yeah. They used to buy two jugs’a High Mountain red wine every Thursday before their meetin’. That was the blood.”
Fearless grinned at that.
“Did you know Reverend Grove or Father Vincent?”
“T’say hi.”
“You know where they went when they left here?”
“Uh-uh. No. But…”
“But what?”
“Dorthea Williams used to go to the meetin’s. She used to go on Thursdays and then some other times too.”
“That’s Dorthea from the beauty parlor across the street?”
“Uh-huh. Yeah.”
“How much these barbecue potato chips, Theodore?” Fearless asked, holding up a big bag of chips.
“Twenty-nine cent, but you could just take ’em, Fearless. Just take ’em, okay?”
“Thanks, man.”
I shook Theodore’s hand, but after the usual grip he didn’t let go.
“You need money, Mr. Minton?” the clerk asked me.
“Why? You wanna reach in the register and gimme some?”
“I got some savin’s. I got a little money put away. If you needed to get on your feet…”
“Thanks, Theodore, but I need more than you got to give. But let me ask you somethin’?”
“What?”
“How come you call Fearless Fearless, but you still call me mister?”
ACROSS THE STREET
and down half a block was a small building with a plate-glass window for a front wall. That was The Beauty Shop, owned by
Hester Grey and run by her daughter Shirley. There were three chairs set side by side before the window where a black woman
could get everything from gold frosting on her hair to application of the newest skin bleaching techniques.
Shirley was smoking a cigarette, and Dorthea, her number two girl, was putting curlers in a woman’s hair. They were all talking
loudly.
From outside it was really nice. The three were almost yelling, you could tell by the posture they took to speak. After yelling
they’d laugh hard, but you couldn’t hear a sound through the thick glass. It was like experiencing the deep pleasure of music
without being able to hear it.
When we opened the door, a brief moment of mirth reached us before the women clammed up. The room smelled of cigarettes and
hair spray. It wasn’t a pleasant odor, but it conjured the memories of many a woman I had known.
“Fearless,” Shirley Grey said. “Paris.”
“Afternoon, ladies,” I said.
Both Shirley and Dorthea had big puffed-up hairdos. That was where the similarities ended. Shirley had a lot of flesh with
no figure to speak of and a permanent scowl on her face. She thought she was a raving beauty though. She always wore tight
dresses that showed more than anyone wanted to see.
Dorthea was an African beauty who had been brainwashed into thinking she was ugly by movies and magazines. She had straight
blond hair puffed out like a white country singer and all kinds of costume rings and beads. Her breasts were trussed up in
a brassiere that pushed them out like battering rams, and her long skirt was so tight that she walked like one of those Chinese
women with the destroyed feet. Still, her face was elegant with deep brown skin and high cheekbones. Her eyes slanted up,
and her teeth were as white as the enamel on a new gas stove.