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'You married?' he asked.
I shook my head. 'Still in the field.'
'I been married thirty-two G.o.dd.a.m.ned years,' he said. 'Got the best G.o.dd.a.m.ned finest woman in the world. Got three boys in the Marines. And G.o.dd.a.m.nit, every time I come into this G.o.dd.a.m.ned joint I don't find nothing but empty tables.' I thought for a moment he was going to bang on the table and complain to the management, 'You work at Consolidated?' he asked suddenly.
I shook my head. 'I work at Atlas.'
'That G.o.dd.a.m.ned stinking joint!' he said. 'The Navy nad to take over that G.o.dd.a.m.ned yard before they could get any work done. That is the G.o.dd.a.m.nest, laziest, prissiest, undermanned, prejudiced s.h.i.+pyard--' He cursed out Atlas until my steak came, then he looked at it and said, 'That looks pretty good. They must be getting some better beef out this way now.' Until his steak came he cursed out the West Coast beef.
We ate silently. I'd never eaten steak that tasted so good. When I'd finished I got up, paid my bill, said, 'See you,' and left. He didn't say anything; but I felt all right about it.
I decided to go back by Figueroa, and when I turned into it a couple of white sailors thumbed me and I stopped to give them a lift. They were very young boys, still in thei1 teens, scrubbed-faced and slightly tanned. The three of us sat in the front seat; the one in the middle put his arm behind me to make room. For a time we went along without talking, then I asked, 'What's you guy's names?'
'Lester,' the one in the middle said, and the other one said, 'Carl.'
'What's yours?' Lester asked, and I told him, 'Bob.'
'You work in a s.h.i.+pyard?' Carl asked.
'Atlas,' I told him. 'I'm a sheet-metal worker.'
'I worked a while up at Richmond--Richmond No. 1, Kaiser's yard,' he said. 'I'm from San Francisco.'
'I was up there once,' I said. 'I like Frisco, it's a good city.'
The boy in the middle hadn't said anything, so I asked him, 'Where you from, Lester?'
'Memphis,' he said. 'You ever been there?'
I gave him a quick side glance; then I chuckled. 'No, I never been to Memphis,' I said. 'I'm from Ohio--Cleveland.'
'I bet you'd like Memphis,' he said as if he really believed it.
'Maybe,' I said. 'But I'll never know.'
He grinned. 'You like Los Angeles, eh?'
'Just between you and me,' I said, 'Los Angeles is the most over-rated, lousiest, countriest, phoniest city I've ever been in.'
That was one thing we all agreed on. They liked my car and we talked about cars for a time as we skimmed along the wide straight roadway. The boy from Frisco said, 'Of course if I had my way I'd take a Kitty.'
I said, 'Who wouldn't?'
We pa.s.sed a couple of girls jiggling along in thin summer dresses and the boy from Memphis whistled.
I said, 'I bet you wouldn't take it if she gave it to you.'
'What you bet?' he said, and they both blushed slightly.
I got a funny thought then; I began wondering when white people started getting white--or rather, when they started losing it. And how it was you could take two white guys from the same place--one would carry his whiteness like a loaded stick, ready to bop everybody else in the head with it; and the other would just simply be white as if he didn't have anything to do with it and let it go at that. I liked those two white kids; they were white, but as my aunt f.a.n.n.y used to say they couldn't help that.
When we got closer to town and saw more women on the Street we started a guessing game about every one we pa.s.sed, whether they were married or single, how many kids they had, whether their husbands were in the Army, if they played around at all. All the elderly women they called 'Mom.' We had a lot of fun until we came to a dark brown woman in a dark red dress and a light green hat carrying a s...o...b..x tied with a string, falling along in that knee-buckling, leaning-forward, housemaid's lope, and frowning so hard her face was all knotted up. They didn't say anything at all. I wanted to say something to keep it going, but all I could have said about her was that she was an ugly, evil-looking old lady. If we had all been coloured we'd have laughed. like h.e.l.l because she was really a comical sister. But with the white boys present, I couldn't say anything. I looked straight ahead and we all became embarra.s.sed and remained silent for a time. When we began talking again we were all a little cautious. We didn't talk about women any more.
When we neared Vernon Avenue I asked them where they were going and they said down to Warner's at Seventh and Hill. I took them down and dropped them in front of the box office. They thanked me and went off. I kept over to San Pedro and turned south. It was two-thirty when I got home. Henry had already left for work and Ella Mae had taken the baby out for a sunning.
I took a shower, shaved, put on slacks, sport s.h.i.+rt, and sandals; got my .38 Special out of the bottom bureau drawer, checked to see that it was loaded, went out, and got in my car and drove over to Central to get some gas. I put the gun in the glove compartment and left the car in the station for Buddy to check over while I strolled down past the Dunbar Hotel.
I felt tall, handsome, keen. I was bareheaded and my hair felt good in the sun. A little black girl in a pink draped slack suit with a thick red mouth and kinky curled hair switched by. I smelled her dime-store perfume and got a live-wire edge.
Everything was sharper. Even Central Avenue smelled better. I strolled among the loungers in front of Skippy's, leaned against the wall, and watched the babes go by. A white woman in a Ford roadster with the top down slowed for the traffic and a black boy called, 'h.e.l.lo, blondy!' She didn't look around.
Tia Juana pulled up in his long green Cat and parked in a No Parking zone. He got out, a short, squat, black, harelipped Negro with a fine banana-skin chick on his arm, and went into the hotel, and some stud said, 'Light, bright, and d.a.m.n near white; how does that n.i.g.g.e.r do it?'
A bunch of weed-heads were seeing how dirty they could talk; and a couple of prosperous-looking pimps were standing near by ignoring them. Some raggedy chum came from the barber shop across the street where they had a c.r.a.p game in the rear and said that Seattle had won two grand. The coloured cop grabbed him for jay-walking and started writing out a ticket; and he was there trying to talk him out of it: 'You know me, man, I'm ol' Joe; everybody know ol' Joe--' Everybody but that cop, that is.
It was a slick, n.i.g.g.e.rish block--hustlers and pimps, gamblers and stooges. But itdidn't ruffle me. Even the solid cats in their pancho conks didn't ruffle me. It wasn't as if I was locked up down there as I'd been just yesterday. I was free to go now; but I liked it with my folks.
A couple of my boys came up. 'You still on rubber, man?' one wanted to know.
'That's right,' I said.
'Say, run me out to Hollywood, man.' It was twelve miles to Hollywood. I laughed.
'Don't pay no 'tention to that. n.i.g.g.e.r, man,' the other one said. 'That n.i.g.g.e.r's mad. Lemme take a sawbuck, man. I got a lain hooked down here and all he needs is digging.'
'That's right,' I said. 'Try a fool.'
They grinned. 'You got it, Papa.' They went off to find another one.
My people, I thought. I started to get a drink, then glanced at my watch. It was a quarter to four. I hurried over to the parking lot, got my car, circled into Central, and began digging. It was just four-thirty when I pulled up before the entrance to the parking lot at Atlas s.h.i.+p.
I got out, walked over to the gate where the copper shop let out. My boy was one of the first ones through. I was thinking of him as 'my boy' now. I followed him, wondering how I could work it if he caught a P.E. train. But I got a break; he waited on one side of the street until a grey Ford sedan slowed for him and climbed in. I sprinted back across the street, got in my car, and dug off just as one of the yard cops was coming over to move me. I muscled in ahead of a woman driver three cars behind the grey Ford; kept the position until we came to Anaheim Road in Wilmington, then pulled up to one car behind and stayed there. I thought about my riders; they were burning, I knew.
The next instant I'd forgotten them. It felt good following the guy, knowing I was going to kill him. I wasn't at all nervous or apprehensive. I thought about it like you think about a date with a beautiful chick you've always wanted to make; I just had that feeling that it was going to be great.
The grey Ford had five riders besides the driver. At Alameda Street it turned north into Compton, and two of the riders in back got out, leaving my boy alone. When it stopped before a house in Huntington Park I rolled up and parked right behind it. My boy got out, said something to the fellows in the front seat, and the car moved off. He glanced idly at my car, took two steps towards the house, then wheeled about and stared into my eyes. His eyes stretched with a stark incredulity and his face went stiff white, like wrinkled paper. He stood rigid, half turned, as if frozen to the spot.
I reached into the glove compartment and got my gun, then I opened the door and got out into the street. I wasn't in any hurry. They'd probably hang me, I knew, but I'd already accepted that, already gotten past it. He turned quickly and started up the walk toward the house, walking stiff-jointed, his shoulders high and braced and his back flattened like a board. When he got to the steps a homely blonde woman opened the door from the inside and two small towheaded kids squeezed past her legs and ran toward him.
He pushed the children back through the door with a rough, savage motion, then whispered something sharply to the woman. She snapped a quick frightened look toward me and her mouth opened as if to scream. She let him in and slammed shut the door and I could hear it being bolted from the inside.
I stopped. I didn't have to kill him now, I thought. I could kill him any time; I could save him up for killing like the white folks had been saving me up for all these years.
Out of the corner of my eye I saw two old ladies coming down the sidewalk with loaded shopping bags, giving me frosty looks. It didn't occur to me that my boy might stick a gun out the front window and blow off the back of my head. I felt cool, untouchable, indifferent. I thought perhaps he might be calling the police, but it didn't worry me. When the two old ladies came opposite me I gave them a wide, bright smile and said in my best manner 'It's a beautiful day, isn't it?'
I left them standing dead still on the sidewalk, twisting their scrawny necks about to stare at me with outraged indignation as I climbed into my car and dug off.
I could even go back to the s.h.i.+pyard and work as a mechanic, I thought. As long as I knew I was going to kill him, nothing could bother me. They could beat my head to a b.l.o.o.d.y pulp and kick my guts through my spine. But they couldn't hurt me, no matter what they did. I had a p.e.c.k.e.rwood's life in the palm of my hand and that made all the difference.
CHAPTER VI.
I called the best hotel in town when I got home and made reservations for a deuce at nine o'clock. The head waiter's voice was very courteous: 'Thank you, Mr. Jones.' I grinned to myself; he'd fall out if he knew I was a Negro, I thought.
Then I called Alice. I'd decided to knock myself out and when I told her to wear evening clothes her voice became excited. 'Now I know we're going to the Last Word.' That was a new club out on Central she'd been trying to get me to take her to ever since it opened; I suppose she figured that the people in her cla.s.s didn't patronize such places and the only way she'd get there was for me to take her.
'Nope,' I said. 'The Avenue's out tonight.'
'You know I want to go to the Last Word,' she said. Her low, well-modulated voice was cajoling.
'That's not the mood,' I said. 'And anyway, n.o.body dresses for the Last Word.'
'Where, Bob, the Seven Nymphs?' That was a Hollywood joint where Negroes went sometimes.
'Nope, bigger and better,' I said.
'Don't tease me, Bob.' A thread of annoyance had come into her voice. 'I absolutely refuse to go unless you tell me now.'
'It's a secret,' I laughed. 'I'll call for you at eight.' I hung up before she had a chance to reply.
Ella Mae pa.s.sed through the living room with the baby wrapped in a blanket. She had just finished bathing it. 'You oughta be 'shamed of yourself, teasing Alice like that,' she said.
'Don't you worry about Alice,' I told her. 'Alice can take care of herself.'
She began pinning a diaper on the baby. 'You're going to mess up yet,' she said. 'Alice don't know you like I do.'
I grinned at her. 'n.o.body knows me like you do. You're my baby.' She snorted. I began peeling off my sport s.h.i.+rt. 'I'm just playing around with Alice until you and I figure out how to get rid of Henry,' I said. 'Then we're going to get married and I'll keep Alice as my Monday girl.'
She gave me a long peculiar look. Then suddenly she giggled. 'You'll have to raise Emerald.'
'Emerald what?' Then I laughed. 'I forgot her name was Emerald.' It always startled me. 'You sure did your baby a dirty trick,' I added.
'I think Emerald's a pretty name,' she defended. 'Prettier than Alice, anyway.'
'Emerald Brown,' I p.r.o.nounced, going into my room to finish undressing. 'You must think she's gonna grow up to be one of the green people.'
She didn't reply.
'Well, it's your baby,' I said.
I took another shower and began dressing. When Ella Mae came into the kitchen to heat the baby bottle she said, 'You oughta be clean enough even for Alice now--two baths in one day.' Her voice was ridiculing.
'I'm tryna turn white,' I laughed.
'I wouldn' be s'prised none, lil as it's said,' she cracked back.
'You know how much I love the white folks,' I said; I couldn't let it go.
'You just ain't saying it, either,' she kept on. 'All that talking you do 'bout 'em all the time. I see you got the whitest coloured girl you could find.
'd.a.m.n, you sound like a black gal,' I said, a little surprised. 'I thought you liked Alice.'
'Oh, Alice is fine,' she said. 'Rich and light and almost white. You better hang on to her.'
'Okay, baby, I quit,' I said. I wondered what was eating her.
She went into her room and closed the door. I put on dinner clothes, cloth pumps, midnight-blue trousers, white silk s.h.i.+rt with a soft turned-down collar, a pointed-tip dubonnet bow, and a white jacket. I'd bought the outfit a year ago, but the only chance I'd had to wear it was at the Alpha formal at the Elks Hall during the Christmas season, except when I wore it down on the Avenue late at night as if I'd just come from some affair or other. I felt sharp in it.
I stepped out into the parlour and called Ella Mae. 'Come look at your sweet man, baby.'
She looked strictly evil when she stepped into the room. She gave me one look and said, 'All I hope is you don't come home mad and try to take it out on me.' Then she softened. 'You do look fine, sure 'nough.'
I grinned. 'Well, talk to me, baby.'
She stepped forward suddenly and pulled my face down and kissed me. She made her mouth wide so that her lips encircled mine completely, wet and soft; and her tongue came out and played across my lips, forcing itself between my teeth.
I pushed her away roughly, almost knocking her down. 'G.o.dd.a.m.nit, quit teasing me!' I snarled.
'Just like a n.i.g.g.e.r,' she said angrily, blood reddening in her face. 'Get dressed up and can't n.o.body touch you. Shows you ain't used to nothing.'
'h.e.l.l, I wasn't even thinking about my clothes,' I said, stalking out.
Outside the setting sun slanted from the south with a yellowish, old-gold glow, and the air was warm and fragrant. It was the best part of the day in Los Angeles; the colours of flowers were more vivid, while the houses were less starkly white and the red-tiled roofs were weathered maroon. The irritation ironed quickly out of me and I got that bubbly, wonderful feeling a*ain.
I glanced at my watch, saw that it was a quarter to, and hurried to the car. At Vernon I turned west to Normandie, driving straight into the sun; north on Normandie to Twentyeighth Street, then west past Western. This was the West Side, When you asked a Negro where he lived, and he said on the West Side, that was supposed to mean he was better than the Negroes who lived on the South Side; it was like the white folks giving a Beverly Hills address.
The houses were well kept, mostly white stucco or frame, typical one-storey California bungalows, averaging from six to ten rooms; here and there was a three- or four-storey apartment building. The lawns were green and well trimmed, bordered with various jocal plants and flowers. It was a pleasant neighbourhood, clean, quiet, well bred.
Alice's folks lived in a modern two-storey house in the middle of the block. I parked in front, strolled across the wet sidewalk to the little stone porch, and pushed the bell. Chimes sounded inside. The air smelled of freshly cut gra.s.s and gardenias in bloom. A car pa.s.sed, leaving the smell of burnt gasoline. Some children were playing in the yard a couple of houses down, and all up and down the street people were working in their yards. I felt like an intruder and it made me slightly resentful.
The door opened noiselessly, and Mrs. Harrison said, 'Oh, it's you, Bob. Come right in, Alice will be ready shortly.'
I had to get my thoughts straightened out in a hurry. 'How are you today, Mrs. Harrison?' I said, following her into the small square hallway. 'How is Dr. Harrison?'
She was a very light-complexioned woman with sharp Caucasian features and glinting grey eyes. Her face was wrinkled with countless tiny lines and sagged about the jowls. She wore lipstick but no other make-up, and her fine grey hair was bobbed and carefully marcelled. She was aristocraticlooking enough, if that was what she wanted, but she had that look of withered soul and body that you see on the faces of many old white ladies in the South.
'Oh, the doctor is busy as usual,' she said in a cordial voice, turning left down three carpeted steps into the sunken living room. 'I've told the doctor a dozen times that he's just working himself to death, but there's nothing to do with him. He says there's a shortage of experienced physicians now and he's such a humanitarian at heart.'
I could picture the doctor, a little cheap, small-hearted, lecherous, cushy-mouthed, bald-headed, dried-up, parchmentcoloured man in his late sixties, who figured he was a killer with the women. He was probably out chasing some chippy chick right then and I caught myself about to say, 'Strictly a humanitarian.'
Instead I said, 'Yes, he is,' lifting my feet high to keep from stumbling over the .thick nap of the Orientals. Their house reminded me of a country club in Cleveland where I worked summers when I was in high school; you knew they had dough, you saw it, it was there, you didn't have to guess about it. 'Of course the money he's making ought to compensate in part,' I added evenly.