Gideon - 05 - Blind Judgement (22 page)

BOOK: Gideon - 05 - Blind Judgement
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Jorge hardly spoke a work of English, and so we relied on Alvaro Ruiz to tell him what to do.”

That name rings a bell, and I rummage through the file to find his statement. As I do, I ask, “Who is he?”

“He’s worked for Willie ever since the plant opened and is like a godfather to the Mexicans who come through here. A real steady and sweet old guy. Jorge lived with him before he took off.

I’d go talk to Alvaro if I were you.”

 

I’ve scanned his statement once before and do so again. Darla adds, “Alvaro had another part-time job he went to after he got off at the plant.

He worked as a butcher for Bear Creek’s one supermarket, so he was never a suspect.”

In his statement Alvaro says that their usual arrangement after work was for Jorge to drop him off at Jenner’s Foodsaver and then come pick him up at six. That day Jorge had told him he was going fishing. Two days after the murder he put a battery and tires on an old truck he had in his front yard and was gone.

“Did the sheriff really consider him a suspect?” I ask, squinting at the papers in the poor light.

Darla returns to the couch.

“I’ve heard they think he was just scared and took off. That’s what Alvaro figures, anyway. Since there was no robbery, it’s hard to figure his motive.”

I sip at my beer.

“Not unless somebody like Paul Taylor hired him to murder Willie,” I speculate.

“He’d make a perfect hit man. A faceless Mexican who sticks around just long enough to collect his money, and within twenty-four hours has slipped back across the border never to be seen again.”

 

Darla smiles.

“You guys are something,” she says, a hint of admiration in her voice.

“I can hear your closing argument right now.”

It is never as easy as this, of course.

“Tell me what you thought about Bledsoe. Did he seem like he was capable of murdering Willie to you?”

Darla strokes the arm of the couch. She has a ring on her right hand, but the stone is a modest opal.

“Frankly, no,” she says carefully.

“Willie really liked Class. He wasn’t one of these wild-ass blacks who drives off to the Lady Luck a couple of times a week to throw away his paycheck and come in half drunk the next day. He was an excellent worker and could do anything you asked him. Always on time. Neat, clean, careful.

Never cut himself. A model employee if you want to put it like that.

If he did it, I don’t know why he did it.”

If he did it. I ask, trying to sound offhand about it, “When you were in the bathroom and heard him on the telephone, could it have been someone else who just sounded like him?” “I know his voice,” Darla says, but her

tone isn’t stubborn.

“We worked together five years.”

“Is it possible,” I ask, looking down at my pen, “that it could have been someone who sounded like him?”

She is quiet for a moment.

“I doubt it,” she says finally, “but I haven’t really tried to compare his voice to others. I just assumed it was Class because that’s who it sounded like.”

“Obviously, that could be real important,” I say, beginning to hope she will help me.

“I assume occasionally the workers come up to the front for things like to use the phone or something?”

Darla takes another sip of her beer.

“They come up to get their checks, sign forms, use the phone, stuff like that.”

I’m reluctant to press her further right now.

This won’t be my only visit, and the better she gets to know me and like me, the more likely she will be willing to say that it could have been someone else’s voice. I ask her if she knew Paul Taylor. She shrugs.

 

“How could anybody not know him? When I was growing up, and, I guess, you, too, the Taylors were supposed to be one of the richest families in the state.”

The front door flies open, and her two sons saunter in. They are lean, good-looking kids, tanned and lean with no stomachs. Dressed in jeans, flannel shirts but no jackets, and tennis shoes, they look from their mother to me and back to her.

“Is this guy the lawyer?” the taller of the two asks, his voice protective.

“This is Mr. Page,” Darla introduces me.

I stand up. The boys eye me suspiciously, but politely introduce themselves as Arlen and Walker. Arlen, stockier and shorter, and whose upper lip hints at a thin mustache or maybe is just dirty, says anxiously to his mother, “You’re not getting fired, are you. Mom?”

Darla laughs and makes a show of rolling her eyes.

“No, for heaven’s sake. Listen, you two get back in the car and go get yourselves a pizza.

Bring me back a couple of slices of pepperoni and sausage.” She reaches down into her purse, pulls out a twenty, and hands it to Walker, who jams it into his front pants pocket.

“And I want all the change back, too.”

 

Pleased by their good fortune, they both grin and are out the door.

When she hears the door slam, she says quickly, “The plant’s losing money under Eddie. That hasn’t happened in years. It was a gold mine with old Willie running it.”

She must be scared to death of losing her job.

“They seem like real nice kids.” “They are,” she says, and tears suddenly fill her eyes.

“It’s not easy alone.”

“It must be hard raising boys,” I say, thinking about Angela.

“I have a daughter a little older than your two, and we’ve been alone a long time, so I know what you mean. If it’s not one thing, it’s another. She’s a great kid, but if she told me tomorrow she’d shaved her head, it wouldn’t surprise me.”

Darla is able to smile at this, and I return the conversation to the Taylors.

“What was your take on Paul?” I ask.

“I have to confess I’ve never been a big fan of him or Oscar.”

Darla drains the last of her beer and seems to be thinking about getting up for another one.

 

“I’ve got mixed emotions since he’s given work to my boys for the last two summers. Paul’s reputation is that if he wants something, he’s used to getting it,” she says, her voice bitter.

“You’ve probably already heard that until a couple of years ago, he was the major stockholder of Farmer’s State Bank here. That’s how he was able to keep as much land as he did after they got in trouble. A lot of people who used to farm but don’t now, including my father, thanks to Paul, hate his guts for cutting off their loans when things got bad.

Of course he didn’t cut off his own. He played favorites and a lot of people still despise him for it. For one thing, he knew how much Willie was making, because four years ago when he expanded the plant he borrowed some money from Farmer’s and paid it back a year ahead of schedule. I think Paul’s been wanting the plant for years.”

Damn. Why didn’t Angela tell me this? Like a dumb student finally catching on in school, it hits me that Dwight and Angela were among his favorites. I finally understand her reluctance to criticize him. But now that he’s no longer involved, the bank won’t loan her any more money.

“What happened?” I ask.

“It got bought out last year,” Darla explains, “by an out-of-state bank, but they’ve kept the name. All this is common knowledge or gossip, depending on who you talk to.”

It shouldn’t be hard to find out. Now I understand, too, where Paul got the money to try to buy Willie’s operation. Instead of getting back into the farming business on a large scale, Paul wanted a cash cow to milk,

but Willie refused to sell, and being a Taylor, Paul wasn’t going to stand for that. My respect for Darla Tate grows by the second. Though she may still be country as all get out, she knows how things work in Bear Creek. And though she may not be willing to say it yet, I’m convinced she suspects Bledsoe may have been set up, and with a little massaging, may well say so, even if it means coming off her story that she heard his voice. We talk for a while longer, and she suggests the names of a couple of other workers she believes might have something to tell me. When her boys come back I thank her and say I’ll be in touch.

She walks me out to the Blazer and hugging herself in the cold, says, “I hope this was helpful.

I thought the world of that old man. If I think of anything else, I’ll let you know.”

I assure her it was and drive away, congratulating myself on having the sense to start my investigation with Darlatate. Women like her—homely, dependable, and completely country—are always ignored in small towns. Truth be told, they’re the ones who don’t miss a trick. I wasn’t a snob and never underestimated the kids who came in from the country. They may not have had the social graces we did, but they were always watching what we did and obviously were keeping score.

Darla was, anyway.

Saturday morning, I get up early and drive to Bear Creek to pay a surprise visit to Alvaro Ruiz and three other workers who have agreed to talk to me today. By making it a point to encourage me to talk to Ruiz, I assume Darla suspects he could know more than he is telling about this

murder and is simply scared he will end up getting deported if he talks too much. If he would be willing to say that Jorge Arrazola had acted suspiciously before he took off, it would help enormously.

Of course, what I would like for him to say is that he suddenly remembers he saw Paul Taylor stuffing hundred-dollar bills into Jorge’s hands the night before he took off, but that is a bit much to expect.

It is at least worth a try.

Somehow, even though I can’t remember where I put down my reading glasses half the time, I remember some Spanish from my Peace Corps days and perhaps can establish a rapport with this guy that will loosen him up a little.

I pull into town and stop for some toast at the Cotton Boll, where Mckenzie greets me with a smile and old Mr. Carpenter comes out of the kitchen to remind me to come by to visit him. He seems lonely and I promise that I will. I then head east through town toward the river, resisting the temptation to drive by Angela’s on the off chance she changed her mind and didn’t go to Atlanta. I go nearly thirty years without seeing her and now she is on my mind every day. As I fumble on the seat for the list of workers Eddie faxed to me, it occurs to me this visit won’t entirely be a surprise to Ruiz, since presumably he was around when Eddie announced that it was okay to talk to me.

In the cold morning light I squint at the address I have for him. All it says is “The Landing,” but I remember enough to get me close.

Lasker Huber, a kid in my sixth-grade class, caught his foot under a

submerged tree limb at the Landing and drowned. For weeks afterward, I had nightmares of being caught by a branch and struggling unsuccessfully to free myself. Even now it is the first thing I think about when anyone mentions the L’Anguille River.

Lasker’s family was basically white trash. River rats, we called them.

I liked Lasker. He hadn’t lived long enough to have a chip on his shoulder like the rest of his family. Unless it has changed, the Landing is a boat dock behind a defunct lumber company. A road the city fathers never bothered to name leads down to it. There were some shacks down by the dock, which I doubt have become mansions since I last saw them thirty years ago.

As I suspected, the Landing hasn’t changed much. Though it has been fixed up, I think I recognize Bobby Don Hyslip’s old shack and wonder what happened to him. One hot summer’s night parked in the gravel outside the Dairy Delite—where our most sophisticated joke was to send a younger sibling to ask for “colored water” and laugh hysterically as the help sent him or her around to the drinking fountain for blacks-Bobby Don had taunted me with the hoary gossip of my paternal grandfather’s own sexual escapades. He had infuriated me by calling me a “nigger lover.” My mother had never allowed me to say “nigger,” not out of some passion for equal rights, but because our family was above that sort of thing. The daughter of a physician, she had no intention of doing anything that would allow her, or anyone under her control, to be equated with the Bobby Don Hyslips of the world. She vehemently denied any allegation of sexual misconduct on the part of her father-in-law. As it turned out, Bobby Don was right.

 

The L’Anguille River, a tributary of a tributary on the way to the Mississippi, was once said to be good for fishing, and may be still, though I never caught any. As I look into the cold greenish water, a pleasant boyhood memory surfaces of a Sunday afternoon outing with my father. We had borrowed or rented a boat and small outboard motor at the dock, and while we were out a fish literally jumped into the boat with us. It was before he had become delusional, but it was hard not to regard the event as an omen that we would be successful if we took up fishing. We did and never caught a single fish. That summer, bonded by bad luck or simply incompetence, we were closer than we would ever be again. I walk up to the door and am astounded when Bobby Don, now a carbon copy of his own father, answers my knock.

He doesn’t quite know me. Balder than I am, fatter, too, he squints at me as if he should recognize me but doesn’t.

“Yeah, who you lookin’ for?”

I try to look into the room behind him, but he fills the door like a bear protecting his den. I get a whiff of cooking odors, onion and grease, and perhaps fish. Talk about white trash: Bobby Don is still writing the book.

“You know where an Alvaro Ruiz lives around here?” I ask, hoping he won’t recognize me.

“Who are you?” Bobby Don demands, staring hard at my face.

“Gideon Page,” I say and then add, hoping my lying is not ridiculously apparent, “You look real familiar.” I feel a curious mixture of

distaste, superiority, and shame. Somehow, this man, by his resentment and boldness as a teenager, has a hold over me after all these years.

“I’m Bobby Don, Gideon. You remember me,” he says, his upper lip curling in a sneer that is familiar after three decades.

“Hell, yeah,” I say, pretending his face is coming back to me.

“You’ve changed a little,” I throw in, beating him to the punch.

“You look like your father.”

To his credit, Bobby Don doesn’t deny it or make a comment about my own.

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