Gideon - 05 - Blind Judgement
Page 25
Johnson wouldn’t let me.
“When did it end with Paul,” I ask, my own voice tight.
“Or has it ended?”
“We were never together again after Paul said that,” she says, her eyes searching mine.
“Dwight was getting sicker, and I felt terrible. It’s only been since I met you again that I’ve begun to admit to myself how deprived I felt all those years. I’ve finally admitted to myself what a sham of a marriage I had.”
I stare at her in amazement.
“What are you talking about?” I ask, incredulously.
“You said Dwight was as close to a saint as any man you ever knew.”
Angela stares past me at the diplomas on my wall.
“A plastic one,” she says, her voice bitter.
“Dwight never let himself entertain a real doubt in his life. He had this image of the way our lives were supposed to go, and no matter how ridiculous the reality, nothing interfered with it. Yet, by most standards, he was considered a wonderful man. He worked hard, went to church, loved his children, and kept every emotion he’d ever had bottled inside twenty-four hours a day. I think now that he was scared to death of life the whole time we were married, but his defense mechanisms were so strong he never admitted it. When I finally got through my head you weren’t going to propose, instead of going back east, I went after Dwight because he seemed to be the nicest guy around. I probably did it to spite you. I didn’t know I’d never get closer to him than I am to my cat. True enough, Paul is a womanizing son of a bitch, but I found out
he was wonderfully human, and I was starving for somebody real. It wasn’t until after I got involved with him that I even had an inkling of how much I had allowed myself to miss in life.”
My emotions begin to whirl around me like a dust storm. Put side by side with Paul, Dwight, to ninety-five percent of the population, sounds like a bargain, but something in me is stirred by Angela’s story. Her confession makes me realize how I, too, have always tried to idealize women, making them either Madonnas or whores. I should be repulsed by what Angela has told me, but I’m not sure what I feel.
“It sounds to me like you’re still in love with Paul.”
Angela brushes her hair back from her face and gives me a grim smile.
“I know this sounds terribly callous, but he was just a wake-up call. I can do much better than Paul Taylor. I love you, Gideon.”
Angela’s intensity forces me to drop my eyes.
I’ve been waiting to hear these words for two months, but given the moment, I’d be a fool to believe them right now. The problem is, I’m in love with her. I stand up, and say, “I need to go home and think about all of this, Angela.”
She stares at me and nods.
“I know.”
I leave her sitting at the table and let myself out of the house,
thinking I am a damn fool. How could I get myself in such a mess?
My phone is ringing when I walk through the door in my house. It is Dickerson, who wastes no time in getting to the point.
“Angela called Paul.
According to him, she says that Class is going to make a deal and testify against him.”
“You better talk to Angela,” I say, stalling, “and get the facts. I didn’t tell her that. She’s just worried that her friend Paul is going down.” I have no idea how much Dick knows about their relationship. I doubt if Paul has told him the truth, but maybe he has by now.
“What I want to know, Gideon,” Dick says harshly, “is whether your client is going to testify against Paul. Either he is or he isn’t.”
“I don’t know,” I reply, “and that’s the truth.
He may feel he has no alternative.”
“He’ll be perjuring himself,” Dick says fiercely.
“Paul may be many things, but he’s not a murderer.”
I have heard that too many times.
“How in the fuck do you know, Dick?” I blast into the phone.
“Unless I’m a total idiot, Paul has lied to you already about this case, so I wouldn’t be so damn sure if I were you.”
“What in the hell are you talking about?” he sputters.
I can’t imagine that Paul hasn’t admitted to him by now that he was having an affair with Angela. On the other hand, perhaps he has, and Dick merely wants to see if Angela’s confession matches Dick’s. Well, I’m not going to give him that satisfaction. He can talk to Angela if he wants. I’ve been humiliated enough already.
“Dick,” I say, knowing I am enraging him, “it’s not up to me to figure out this case for you.”
There is a deadly silence on the other end.
“If you are suborning perjury in this case,” Dick finally says, “I will spend the rest of my life seeing that you never practice law again. And if I hear of you talking to Paul again without my permission, you can be sure you’ll be reported to the committee on professional conduct.”
I feel my forehead grow warm. If Bledsoe goes through with his plan to implicate Paul and then a year from now begins to suffer from a guilty conscience, I know one person who will take him seriously. I wonder how close I have come to encouraging Class to lie. A good lawyer could argue that I put the idea in his head because I wanted revenge against Paul. And Dick is definitely a good lawyer.
“I think I’d spend some time on this case if I were you, Dick.”
Dick sputters into the phone that I better tell him what Bledsoe is going to do. For the first time since I have known him, there is a sound of desperation in his voice. He knows that he didn’t have time to take this case. He knows now that he will have to prepare for the worst, regardless of what I say. Finally, he concludes by saying, “Your mother would be ashamed of you, Gideon. I’m glad she’s not here to watch how you’re handling yourself.”
I’m glad she isn’t either, but I’m not about to admit it and give Dick that kind of satisfaction.
He’s such a holier-than-thou prick he makes me want to puke. Abruptly, I tell him I have to get off the phone and do some work, and hang up.
To hell with the old fart.
At three o’clock the next afternoon I’m on the road to Bear Creek.
Judge Greer, who has a history of heart trouble, became sick on the bench and abruptly declared a mistrial, freeing me to focus on Doss’s case. I’m headed straight for Oldham’s Barbecue. I was out there a month ago and got nothing out of him, but maybe I didn’t ask the right question. Henry Oldham is nothing like his nephew. A tall, light-colored elderly man with short, white hair, he was a high school math teacher who, according to Class, lost his job when the schools were first desegregated and then was hired back when blacks got control of the school board. He retired from teaching three years ago and worked out his arrangement with Paul. On my way to his restaurant, I pass the Cotton Boll, and suddenly it hits me that the one person who may put some things in perspective for me is an old gay man who never had much
respect for my abilities. I have been out of synch for most of this case, and I don’t know why. My recollection of what went on in Bear Creek when I was growing up doesn’t seem to jibe with what others rem em her. Maybe Mr. Carpenter, who has spent his life on the outside looking in, can clue me in. I will stop by here as soon as I finish with Oldham.
Oldham’s Barbecue is a nondescript whitish concrete block house out Highway 1 just inside Bear Creek’s city limits. There are five vehicles parked in the gravel out front, and I realize I have arrived at the worst possible time to talk to him.
Inside there are only six plain vanilla tables and metal chairs on a concrete floor. Most of Oldham’s business is carry-out. Uke last time, a black girl who surely isn’t out of high school is at the counter handing over Styrofoam containers to a black customer, with two behind him. I remember that before Oldham was out back tending his cookers. I retrace my steps, go around the north side of the building, and almost run into Oldham, who is leaning up against the wall smoking a cigarette. The smell of barbec
ue is delicious. I tell him I realize he can’t talk but a minute or two, but that it is important to his nephew’s case. He gives me a look of scandalized distaste. Clearly, the last thing he wants to do is be called as a witness. Throwing his cigarette into the grass beside him, he says, “I told you everything I know last time.”
Knowing I won’t get much out of him, I ask the most important question first.
“Mr. Oldham, all I want to know is whether Paul Taylor had talked to you about retiring at any time or giving up your arrangement with him, either before or after Willie Ting was murdered.”
“Why do you want to know?” he grunts, irritably.
“All I can tell you is that it’s important to your nephew’s case.”
“Well, I don’t remember right now,” he says cagily.
I want to throttle the old man.
“Class can easily end up on death row if you don’t tell me what you know.”
Mr. Oldham gives me a skeptical look.
“You tell me why you need this.”
“I can’t do that right now,” I insist.
“You know that I represent your nephew. All I’m looking for is the truth.” This last sentence comes out sounding hollow and trite. What am I looking for? I have felt so conflicted about this case I don’t even know.
As if the odor of hypocrisy is overpowering the smell of the cooking meat, the older man frowns.
“I gotta go help inside,” he says abruptly, and wheels to his left inside a back door into the building.
Frustrated, I stomp around to the front, get back in the Blazer, and
drive back toward the Cotton Boll, where I pull in and give Mckenzie an order for chicken fried steak, lima beans, cole slaw, mashed potatoes, corn bread, and iced tea.
Maybe I will have a heart attack and die so I won’t have to try this case. I dawdle over my food and order coffee and a piece of pecan pie for dessert. By 7:30 the last of his few customers has cleared out, and Mr. Carpenter himself brings out a pot of coffee to pour me a refill.
“Gideon, you’ve never come by,” he reproaches me, wiping his hands on a mostly clean apron.
I cut through the syrupy crust. It is wonder 3
folly sweet and perfect with coffee.
“I’d like to come by tonight,” I say, watching him refill my cup, “if you’re not too tired.”
He gets up from the table.
“I’ll start locking up now,” he says gloomily.
“I won’t have any more business tonight.”
I had forgotten how early people in small towns eat at night. Fifteen minutes later I follow him to his house and realize I could almost close my eyes and get there, so familiar is my old neighborhood.
Nothing in my memory is more vivid than a few select moments in my
childhood.
On nights like this if our homework was done, we played kick the can until bedtime. Though I can’t see the honeysuckle, I can smell it.
Inside he flips on lights, and tells me to have a seat while he disappears down a hall, presumably toward the bathroom.
I look around the room, curious about what I will find. I can’t ever remember being here.
Mother must have suspected he was homosexual and discouraged me from coming here. Since I was such a flop as a science student, he probably wasn’t interested in me anyway. On his walls are reproductions of what I call “trick art.” It looks like a bunch of white ducks flying one way, but if you stare at it long enough you realize a flock of black ducks is headed in the opposite direction.
Only the baskets and stands of fresh flowers around the room indicate a sensibility that fits my idea of a gay man. His furniture is, I realize, probably a collection of antiques, though I’m not knowledgeable enough to know if any of the desks, tables, and chairs are simply junk or fine pieces of furniture. Knowing Mr. Carpenter, they’re the real thing.
“You want a beer?” he asks from the doorway. Even without his apron he still looks like a baker or delivery man in white pants and shirt. I nod, and he heads into his kitchen, leaving me to wonder again why he has stayed in Bear Creek. Surely he would feel more comfortable around others who are like him. But as soon as I think this, I realize (not for the first time in my life) that assumptions have always been my worst
enemy.
When he returns with a beer for me, and a glass of what smells like sherry for himself, I ask him why he is still here. He sits down on a love seat across from me and takes off his shoes.
“Too much standing for an old man,” he says apologetically, before adding, “I was seventy-three when mother died at the age of ninety-five in the room behind you, and then it didn’t seem to matter anymore.” He points with his thumb over his shoulder.
“I never was out of her sight except for two weeks every summer, but for some reason I couldn’t stand being away from her. Don’t ask me what that was all about,” he says, warning me away from psychoanalyzing him.
“It’s too late for me to worry about. Most humans aren’t capable of any more than playing out the hand genetics and our upbringing have dealt us. Look at the blacks around here. You wonder how they get out of bed. What could be more disheartening than knowing the people around you consider you genetically inferior? Did you read The Bell Curve?” he demands, his voice harsh and accusing as if he were back in the classroom.
I shift in my chair, trying to get comfortable.
Too many buttons sticking into my rear.
“I just remember reading something about it,” I say.
“It didn’t really say anything new about I.Q.” did it?”
Mr. Carpenter gives me a look that takes me back to my junior high days when I gave him an answer that revealed how limited my potential for understanding science was.
“And nothing new will be said until they can quantify what goes on in a person’s brain,” he says in an imperious tone.
“What is worthwhile is the authors’ opinion about what this country is going to look like in the future. There’s going to be a technological elite, and then a giant black underclass that’s going to make the current racial situation look like a minor irritant. Nobody wants to face it. In my opinion, the Delta has already returned to pre-Civil War days, but without the slavery. The whites here who can afford it have their own schools, their own culture and entertainment, basically their own society. If they had their way, they’d close down the federal government except for an army that wouldn’t venture off American territory. You think things are bad now? I’m glad I won’t be alive to see what’s coming.”
I nod, thinking of Beverly’s tirade. I’m afraid he’ll go on all night on this subject if I let him. I ask how well he knew my physician grandfather.
Without missing a beat, Mr. Carpenter assures me, as he did the morning Angela and I had breakfast at the Cotton Boll, that he was an intelligent man.
“My mother was the one who really knew him. A fine man who worked himself to death. She said he was one of the leaders of the Klan around
here after the First World War. Did you know that?”
I squint at this old man, who is beginning to seem crazier by the minute.
“That can’t possibly be right,” I say, wondering if he is kidding me or even has my grandfathers confused.
“He wasn’t that type of person at all.” Granddaddy Page may have been susceptible to that kind of racial violence, but my mother’s father most certainly could not have been.
Air. Carpenter grins broadly and slaps the back of the couch.
“Don’t get your nose too out of joint. If you knew your history after the First World War, you’d realize the Klan back in those days wasn’t a redneck organization. They had thousands of members and elected their own people to the Legislature. Some of the best men in Arkansas were members. Lawyers, doctors, businessmen, planters. It was probably as much a reaction to the war as anything. Besides blacks, they were against Catholics, foreigners, and for keeping the country lily-white and isolation
ist.
Pat Buchanan would have fit right in.”
“How do you know for sure my grandfather was a member?” I ask, furious at this information.
He doesn’t mention homosexuals, but I suspect they were on the enemy list, too. Clearly, this old man enjoys unsettling me.
“Like I say, my mother was a great admirer of his. I can’t prove he was, but look in a college yearbook from the times and you’ll see it wasn’t something a man was ashamed of.”
He brings his mouth to his glass, but hardly touches the liquor in it.
“You knew my mother pretty well, didn’t you?” I ask, realizing now they were almost the same age.
He nods vigorously.
“A Southern lady if there ever was one,” he pronounces.
“She shouldn’t have ever married your father. She should have found someone with money who would have taken care of her all her life.
That’s what she expected to do.”
This comment pisses me: my father couldn’t help his mental illness. I don’t want to shut him up, however. I ask, “What do you mean?”
Mr. Carpenter takes a tiny sip of sherry.
“She never coped a single day after he died. She wasn’t trained to make a living. If your daddy had left her rich, she could have managed, but the way I remember it,” he says, slightly embarrassed, “she kind of went to pieces after he died.”
I shift uneasily in my chair. I don’t remember it that way at all. I was
the one who had problems and ultimately had to be shipped off to Subiaco to get straightened out.
“People took advantage of her,” I contend.
“Oscar Taylor foreclosed on the pharmacy.”
Mr. Carpenter winces the way he did when I would give a wrong answer in class.
“Well, I think he carried her for almost a year before he did anything.
And then all I think he did was let her sign it back to him and didn’t actually foreclose and go after any deficiency. That building stood vacant for a couple of years before he got anybody in there.”
“I think you’re wrong,” I say, shaking my head.