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Parishioner

Page 22

by Walter Mosley


  “I’m heading out to Maui,” Jocelyn said, unafraid.

  “I guess that’s a good enough destination. But it’s a little gaudy for me. I want an old house in a white neighborhood where all the families can trace their roots back to Jefferson and Washington. Just give me that and I’ll live out the rest of my days in peace.”

  Sipping his brandy, Ecks felt an odd kinship with the men on his screens. Each one of them had been born in the everyday world that provided the path that led from school to work to marriage to retirement and finally a sleepy death. At one point on this road they took a detour thinking that they’d get ahead of the herd somehow. And now they were outlaws with no way back. They still had family and friends, dreams and aspirations—but the pack that spawned them had moved on.

  Ecks poured himself another brandy while the men settled into silence, waiting for victims that would never arrive.

  “Jesse,” Chick Martindale called out at four fifty-seven. He was reading a newspaper while Jocelyn thumbed through a small tome he carried in his jacket pocket.

  “Yes, boss?”

  “You sure he said four o’clock?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Today?”

  “I asked him twice. Had to pay five hundred for it.”

  Toy had said three hundred. And Toy wouldn’t lie—not to a fellow Parishioner. Working thugs like Link and Jesse were always hungry for a few bucks. It was no surprise that they would lie to their boss. They’d lie to their own mothers if that helped pay the rent.

  Ecks was on his fifth drink. He wasn’t worried, because the cameras were recording every word and movement. He had no intention of facing four men who were as untamed as he had been in the old days back east.

  Criminal time, Ecks remembered, was often indolent and sluggish: sitting guard at a front door or waiting for a victim who might not ever show. Between the inherent danger and boredom it was not a job for everybody.

  But there were moments, times when you were so free that the rest of the world seemed as if it were born and would die in chains.

  A few minutes shy of six Chick folded his newspaper and reached over, touching Jerry’s knee. The rogue lawyer looked up and a preagreed-upon high sign was passed between them.

  Ecks had been drifting for a while, seeing but not really registering the safe house interlopers. But when Chick alerted Jerry the brandy seemed to evaporate in Ecks’s system.

  Something was up. Something serious.

  The lawyer and boss both produced weapons. Ancient farmers, they practiced the religion of scorched earth.

  Jerry Jocelyn moved quietly into the range of camera thirteen while Chick appeared on monitor eleven.

  The henchmen were gazing out of their windows, yawning now and then.

  “Jesse!” Chick called out as he swung his pistol up.

  Jerry was pointing his gun at Jesse’s slowly turning head. The muted gunshots went off at the same moment.

  In that brief span, less than one second by Ecks’s reckoning, two men had perished.

  After checking the bodies, Chick and Jerry hastily returned to monitor seven. Ecks was wondering whether the second double cross would happen then. But no. Saying nothing, the killers made sure that they hadn’t left any incriminating evidence. Then they hurried out the front door, past the watch of monitor five, and out to the street.

  The inebriation that had dissipated now came back with its full weight on top of Ecks’s skull. It was to him as if he were watching himself and Swan on one of their misadventures. The letting of blood and the taking of life were such simple things for men like him and Chick and Jerry.

  At that moment it seemed as if the whole world were rotten through and through. Every man, woman, and child was a part of the corruption. He was evil by virtue of his species and there was no deliverance, no way out.

  The sound of Thelonius Monk came as no surprise. He answered the little cell phone automatically.

  “Yeah?”

  “You okay, Ecks?” George Ben asked.

  “Yeah. Why?”

  “You sound funny.”

  “What you got for me?”

  “Lenny is up and kinda nervous. Those tattoos are a fright.”

  “Put him on the line.”

  The distraction of conversation fended off the darkness, pushing it back three or four inches. Ecks felt that the shadows of his victims were scurrying about the corners of the room, mumbling and muttering curses upon all things living. These curses, he felt, had damned all humanity ever since Cain slew his brother.

  “Hey,” Lenny said through the phone.

  “How you doin’, Len?”

  “Did you drug me, man?”

  “I gave you that joint. It was pretty strong, but I didn’t think it was gonna knock you out like that.”

  “Why’d you leave me here?”

  “You were out and I had business. I told you that I’d put you somewhere with a bed.”

  “But you put me with this faggot.”

  The shadows receded a bit farther when Ecks considered the fact that Lenny had offered to have sex with him only a day ago. What, the gangster wondered, was this young man’s convoluted understanding of sexual identity? But he didn’t ask.

  “I’ve got a bead on your parents, Lenny,” Ecks said.

  “You do?”

  “Uh-huh. I don’t know where they are exactly, but I’m close to it.”

  “I don’t know, man,” Lenny said. “I don’t know if you should be doin’ that.”

  “Why not?”

  “You seen me. You know what I am. How’s some mother and father gonna call a piece’a shit like me son?”

  “They were the ones who lost you when you couldn’t take care of yourself, Len. When they look at you they’ll see their own crime, not your failings.”

  “Really? You think so?”

  “I know it’s true,” Ecks said.

  Maybe Lenny O was a piece of shit, but Ecks and Jerry and Chick were entire waste-disposal plants.

  “Gimme two days there with George, Lenny,” Ecks said in a controlled tone. “Stay there and I will help you make a man out of yourself.”

  “What if I say no?” the young man challenged.

  “I only asked George to put you up, son. If you think that you’re better off on your own, just go.”

  “Really?”

  “Look, Len, it’s like I told you: I’m working for the woman who took you when you were a baby. She wants to make things right. And you already said that there’s people lookin’ for you. If you think you’re better on your own, though, I won’t stand in the way.”

  “So I could leave?”

  “Yeah.”

  It was at that moment that Ecks lost heart. Whatever Benol or Frank wanted, he wouldn’t bully or lie to Lenny—not anymore. He’d tell the truth and go by where that led. There was no other choice when two dead men lay in the monitors—men who died while he watched and did nothing.

  “You there, Mr. Noland?”

  “Yeah, Lenny.”

  “Okay, I’ll stay for two days. But you know, I could use another one’a those blue joints if you got ’em. I slept pretty good with that one you give me.”

  “Hand the phone to George and I’ll make sure you get something.”

  Driving down the hill at seven fifteen, Ecks called Frank on the minister’s private line.

  “Are they both dead?” the pastor asked after Ecks made his report.

  “Both shot in the head by men who were not new to the job. I didn’t go in, because someone might have heard the shots, and I couldn’t be connected to another murder so soon.”

  “Don’t worry about them. Are the tapes still in the cameras?”

  “Yeah.”

  “I’ll get somebody to take care of it.”

  “And what should I do?”

  “Make sure the remaining boy is safe and find out what part Benol has played in these events.”

  At seven thirty-one, driving down Sunset B
oulevard, Ecks made a second call.

  “Hello?”

  “Hey, Benicia.”

  “Mr. X,” she said playfully. “I wondered if you were the kind of man who’d call a girl the next day.”

  “The old me might have forgotten, but he’s not in the driver’s seat no more.”

  “How’s the new Egbert doing?”

  “Struggling with the past.”

  “How can I tell the difference?”

  “Kiss me good night and see if I call the next day.”

  “Do you want to come over and test that hypothesis?”

  “Can’t tonight.”

  “Oh? Church business?”

  “Somethin’ like that.”

  Ecks drove back to his apartment and set himself up at the window to gaze down on the alley and think.

  We all carry our own loads, Frank had once preached. No one can help us bear the weight. No one will stop for us if we’re about to fail or stray. You can only take one step at a time with the knowledge that there is no way to pass the burden on. Be at peace with this solemn responsibility; do not hope for a time when you can lay this mortal duty aside, and you will find that the weight is not so heavy and that the time as it passes is filled with wonder and sometimes even brotherhood. Because you know brotherhood is not helping your fellow man—it is loving him.

  The hours passed.

  Now and then a homeless man or woman staggered down the alley with a rickety grocery store cart or a backpack. They moved between the few lights on the lane, fading into shadows now and then, only to reappear a few yards farther on. Cars drove through taking the shortcut, and a police cruiser had done three passes, looking for anything that might indicate a crime.

  At four in the morning, life seemed to come to a halt. He hadn’t been thinking about the lost boys or Benol, Dodo or her aunt, but they roiled in the back of his mind.

  Xavier Rule then took out his phone and called Swan’s number.

  “Hello?” a woman said sadly, her tone echoing the emptiness inside Ecks.

  “Is Swan there?”

  “Um, no,” the voice said.

  “Could you leave him a message for me then?”

  “He died last night,” she murmured softly. “Passed away in his sleep.”

  Ecks made the next call at seven in the morning. After a long and detailed discussion he asked, “So is that okay, Ms. Pride?”

  “Are you sure you need me there?” Cylla asked. “You know it’s really not my case.”

  “This is church business. We can’t have someone outside the circle running the room.”

  “I’ll have to call Frank.”

  “If he says no, tell him that I’m buying a ticket on a deep-sea fishing boat and a bottle of Jack Daniel’s and that he shouldn’t look for me until at least the end of next week.”

  Winter met Ecks in front of the Parishioner’s apartment building at eleven o’clock that morning.

  “Hey, brother,” the driver greeted as his fare climbed into the front seat.

  “How you sleepin’, son?”

  “Like a baby,” he said, “up every hour or so with a whimper and scared of the dark.”

  “I’m sorry about that, Win. I should’a sent you away when you asked to tag along.”

  “No, man, no. I got this. I got it by the tail. Every night I sleep a little longer and I know a little more about how much I can bear.”

  “Today will be no problem, man. I just need you to stay in your car somewhere around the courthouse. I’m lookin’ for somebody but don’t know who they are. When I see ’em I might need to move fast, so I’ll call you and you come and let me have the wheel.”

  “You don’t want me to go with you?”

  “Not unless you wanna end up like one’a them men in that house we broke into.”

  There was a visitor’s pass left for him at the guard post of the state court building. He’d left his pistol and throwing knife in a locked briefcase in Winter’s car and so passed through the metal detector with confidence.

  Cylla was waiting for him in conference room four-FB. She was sitting at the far end of a long table designed for many lawyers and plaintiffs in some corporate case. There was a window at that end of the room and sunlight flowed over the legal predator like heavenly grace on a crocodile’s back.

  “I hope you’re right about this, Ecks,” she said as he took the seat next to her.

  “Hope is all you can ask for in a building like this,” Ecks replied.

  Cylla smiled and shook her head, denying and agreeing with the same gesture.

  “When’s he get here?” Ecks asked.

  “Three minutes.”

  “Exactly?”

  “They hop for me around here,” she said. “Money knows every language that’s ever been spoken.”

  “So how does this work?”

  “He’ll come in under heavy guard and we’ll confer. Then I’ll bring him to be released by an officer of the state’s attorney. That’s the charade.”

  “And me?”

  “You are my personal security, Mr. Noland.”

  She handed him a paper ID in a plastic badge. This he attached to the lapel of his copper-colored suit.

  “Tell me somethin’, Cylla.”

  “What’s that, Ecks?”

  “How can a stone-cold mass murderer like Lehman get a day pass from prison?”

  “The police were too eager,” she said. “They came into his home without a warrant and made ninety percent of their discovery on that bust. It wouldn’t mean a thing except for a thirty-thousand-dollar retainer my firm got to overturn the verdict. He’ll go back in, but right now the law is on his side.

  “The thing I don’t get is why you need to talk to him,” Cylla added. “I mean, he’s just a piece’a shit madman. When the partners offered me the case I turned them down flat. I mean, I’ll still work for them, but I won’t try to free a man like that.”

  “I don’t know either, Cyll. I just wanna cover all my bases.”

  “It won’t be pleasant.”

  At that moment Ecks registered the heavy metal chair against the wall on the other side of the lawyer. There were leather manacles on the arms and front legs of the specially designed prisoner’s seat.

  Thirty seconds later there came a knock. Cylla went to the door and opened it wide.

  Four uniformed guards came in surrounding a manacled, gray-clad, crew-cut inmate: a young white man with smoldering blue eyes and a grimace that could have come only from painful and pain-giving experience.

  His muscles were bulging from weight lifting and fear. His gaze rivaled many corpses that Ecks had seen.

  Lester Lehman was silent while the guards maneuvered him into the chair and cinched tight the leather manacles. His scrutiny settled on Ecks. The stare, Rule thought, was like the invisible gaze of a predator bird ready to dive down from the heavens.

  The head guard had Cylla sign a form attached to a clipboard and then led his friends outside to wait in the hall.

  “Where’s Jonas?” Lester asked when the guards were gone. He was still staring death at Ecks.

  “Mr. Nayman had a sudden health problem,” Cylla said. “He wanted me to stand in for him, seeing that you were already down from San Quentin.”

  “Who’s the nigger?” Lester asked then.

  Ecks smiled.

  Cylla did not answer the question.

  “What is this shit?” Lester said.

  “You got three years in San Quentin,” Ecks uttered. “I got forty-six in the street. Let’s not play, son.”

  “I’m no blood to you.”

  “You’re not blood to anybody you know. When you were eighteen months old your parents left you at a day-care center, where you were kidnapped with two other boys. Your new parents, the Lehmans, bought you from a slaver. Probably thought they couldn’t have children.…”

  All the prison-made hardness fell from the young killer’s face. He sat forward, leaning against his restraints.
r />   “You probably felt like you didn’t belong,” Ecks continued. “And then, when your parents had a child of their own, they began to see the flaws in you. Maybe they even stopped loving you. That’s probably why you killed them. I mean, what else could you do?”

  “No,” the child in Lester said.

  “Oh, yeah,” Ecks said. “And then a man named Martindale had Jocelyn who’s calling himself Ansel Edwards hire Jonas Nayman to find a loophole and get your sentence temporarily overturned. They needed you outside the halls of justice, where you would be a sitting duck. The only thing I need to know, Les, is where you were meant to meet the man who contacted you.”

  “I don’t know. I mean, I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about, coon.”

  “Come on now, Les,” Ecks said easily. “Name-callin’ is for the playground. We out here in real life now.”

  Out of the corner of his eye Ecks could see Cylla watching him.

  Lester was shivering ever so slightly. His whole life had been rendered before him like a puppet show.

  “I wasn’t adopted,” he said.

  “Oh, yes, you were. You talk about me bein’ a nigger, the child of slavery. But you, Les, you yourself were the real slave. You murdered your masters but that shit didn’t get you home.”

  Ecks hoped, for Lester’s sake, that those leather restraints were strong and well tied. The youth was pulling against them with all his might and hate and anger.

  “Think about it, Lester. You lost your inheritance when you killed the Lehmans. Why would somebody hire Cylla’s expensive law firm to help your sorry Aryan ass outta jail? Nobody does anything for nuthin’; you know that. So there’s got to be a payday somewhere. Got to.”

  “You don’t know.”

  “Oh, yeah, son. I do. I really do. I know that the state’s got a whole drawer full of evidence that will put you right back in. Somebody paid thirty thousand dollars for a clear shot—plain and simple.”

  The Harlem gangster had hit the high notes of Lester’s young life. He hated his family, remembered in his veins the humiliation of his kidnapping, knew for a fact that he was being set up by the lawyers and whoever hired them. But what choice did he have? He was doing life times four for a crime he couldn’t deny. Even a day of freedom and a chance to run was worth whatever waited for him.

 

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