Wig arrived at the Seventh Avenue Armory with Sweets. It was a dusty castle with dark brick walls. He’d never seen a soldier inside the armory, but he’d heard that it had housed a black regiment during World War I. Wig couldn’t believe it. His uncle had told him about black cooks and black orderlies who’d attached themselves to white generals and had “grown” into sergeants in the white man’s Army, but not one black battler. But his PC was a strange case. Sweets’ ancestors had fought alongside George Washington as free men in the middle of the Revolution. That was some powerful shit. Brave niggers kicking some British ass.
Sweets seemed uncomfortable. Harlem had never been his terrain. It was broken country. He couldn’t get used to all the abandoned buildings, the yellow grass that grew out of the cracks in the sidewalk, the half-empty beer bottles that lined the curb, waiting for some ghostly drinker.
Wig recognized the men loitering on the steps of the armory. They were whiskey preachers who had lost their congregations, convicted felons who were hiding from the law, brain-damaged psychopaths, Harlem rats who’d gone to school with Wig and couldn’t pass the policeman’s test. He knew their names, their rap sheets, their sexual preferences.
“Hello, Brother John, hello, Joshua. How’s my man?”
“Aw, Wig, you aint gonna bother us?” one of the loiterers said.
“No. We looking for the white king.”
The loiterers started to laugh.
“You mean the sucker that’s got them delusions? Thinks a mattress in our barracks is better than Gracie Mansion.”
“Yeah, that’s the king. But don’t you belittle him.”
“Hell, we wouldn’t dis the next mayor of New York. Who’s your friend?”
“The police commissioner,” Wig said. “Mr. Carlton Montgomery the Third.”
“Aint our little fraternity brother still the Commish?”
“No,” Wig said.
And the loiterers saluted Sweets. “Hello, Brother Carlton.”
Wig shoved them out of the way and entered the armory with Sweets. A guard tried to stop them until he recognized Wig. The guard was carrying a nightstick. He wore a uniform of sorts, with shirt and trousers that didn’t match. There was another man behind a glass cage. He was the “night manager,” who worked in one continuous eighteen-hour shift, until time and weather merged into some endless midnight fog.
“You can’t go in there, Wig, without a warrant.”
“You’re looking at the police commissioner, Brother William.”
“That don’t mean much. This is our armory, Wig. Them poor mothers have their rights.”
“You wouldn’t be hiding something, would you, William? Because if you get Brother Carlton angry, he’ll come back with a pair of special prosecutors and shut down this stinky hole.”
And Wig led Sweets into the heart of the shelter, a bleak barracks with row after row of beds, like some ultimate unwashed world. The smell was unbearable. It seemed to slide off the walls, circle that enormous room, and descend upon Sweets. He began to cough. He could barely breathe. Nothing in his own privileged life had prepared him for this. He’d come out of a place that still carried George Washington’s ghost. He’d had his own nanny, who taught him magic tricks. He could have played for the Harlem Globetrotters, bad knee and all, or become a vice president of the Ford Foundation. But he’d discouraged all search committees. He was a police commissioner standing inside a shelter for homeless men, some of whom had covered themselves completely with white sheets, like figures in a morgue.
He recognized Isaac, who sat on a particular bed in his winter underwear, scribbling words in a long pad. He had no neighbors to bother him. The beds around Isaac were emptied of lost souls.
“Hello, Mr. Mayor.”
“Not so loud,” Isaac muttered. “I’m using an alias. Geronimo Jones. And don’t call me ‘Mr. Mayor.’ I’m only the mayor-elect.”
“But you’re our king,” Wig said.
“Did you have to bring him?” Isaac asked the police commissioner. “He’s a hired gun. I suspend Wig, and you put him back on the payroll.”
“That’s right, motherfucker,” Wig said. “You’re a stinky old man. And I’d off you without a contract. I’d do it for free … how’s your son-in-law, Barbarossa? He still sell drugs to college kids?”
“Enough,” Sweets said. “Isaac, you can’t occupy this bed.”
“Why not? I needed a holiday. I can meditate in this room.”
“Isaac, you have an apartment on Rivington Street. The City doesn’t have to shelter you.”
“Sweets,” Isaac said, staring at Wig. “Will you send him away? I can’t bear him. He gives me the creeps. How the hell did he find me?”
“Harlem’s his crib.”
“Baby,” Wig said to Isaac. “I could have done you while you were asleep, put my piece under your pillow and shot your brains out. I was tempted, Brother Isaac, listening to you snore like a walrus. I could have strangled you, nice and clean.”
“Why didn’t you?” Isaac asked, with a child’s look in his eye.
“I wouldn’t make Sweets a widow.” Wig started to laugh and walked right out of the shelter.
“He gives me the creeps.”
“Isaac, I can arrest you for malfeasance. You’re not allowed to impersonate a homeless man.”
“Sweets, I’m scared.”
“Scared of what? You had eighty-six percent of the vote. It was a landslide.”
“Ah,” Isaac said, “the Republicans put up a dog.”
“The town’s crazy about you. It’s the hottest romance we’ve ever had. You can do what you want. The town will go with you, Isaac. You have an open ticket.”
“Do me a favor, Sweets. Move into the shelter with me, and we’ll talk about tickets. I’ve read the budget. What happens in nineteen eighty-six? Do we build more shelters?”
“Ask your budget people. I’m not the mayor. I can’t tell you what the City can afford.”
“That’s the problem, Sweets. No one can predict the City’s fucking revenues. A two hundred million dollar surplus, they said. And we had a fucking shortfall. I can’t find out how many teachers are in the school system. Teachers come and go. That’s the answer I get. We’re living inside a Leviathan. I can’t change things. I’m doing a little research. That’s why I’m here. I see guards stealing from people, I see them asking for sex.”
“They’re like jailors, Isaac, that’s all.”
“But this isn’t a jail.”
Isaac put on his shirt, pants, and shoes, knotted his tie, and got into one of his famous winter coats from Orchard Street. He liked to dress “downtown.” He needed a shave, but he was still the mayor-elect.
“The cardinal’s been asking for you, Isaac.”
“I don’t talk to cardinals these days.”
“I thought Jim was your friend.”
“I have no friends. I have supplicants and seekers.”
“And what the hell am I, Mr. Sidel?”
“My former First Dep. You’ll start asking me favors in five weeks, after my coronation as king. But there might not be a coronation, Sweets. I could skip town, you know.”
“Wig would find you,” Sweets said.
2.
Isaac began to miss that armory the moment he arrived on Rivington Street. He was fifty-five years old, almost fifty-six, and the woman he loved was off somewhere with the FBI. Margaret Tolstoy, a refugee from Roumania. She’d split with the Justice Department, but Frederic LeComte, Justice’s cultural commissar, had lured her out of Isaac’s bed and back into the fold. She’d been Isaac’s roommate for a little while, some kind of guest. The newspapers had discovered her during the campaign, had called her “the mystery woman, Anastasia.” But all the papers loved Isaac, and they wouldn’t reveal her past.
She’d gone to Odessa during World War II, as the infant bride of Ferdinand Antonescu, the Butcher of Bucharest, who’d slaughtered gypsies and Jews near the Black Sea. He was finance ministe
r of Russian Roumania, and advertised her as his niece. They’d lived in a mansion on Little Angel Street. But when Ferdinand began to starve along with the rest of Odessa, he stole children from the insane asylum and devoured their flesh. He was a fucking cannibal without a future. Ferdinand sneaked Anastasia onto a Red Cross boat and she arrived in America, a lady of thirteen. She joined Isaac’s junior high school class. It was love at first sight for Sidel. But it didn’t last. Anastasia was whisked away, returned to Roumania, and was only a little item in the war between the FBI and the KGB. She attended a KGB kindergarten, lived with a general, seduced scientists, changed identities until she had one constant in her skull: a dark-eyed boy who reminded her of a gypsy. Sidel.
He’d married, had a child, Marilyn, and now a son-in-law, Joe Barbarossa, but nothing could jolt him as much as that junior high school princess, Anastasia with her torn socks.
The king was all alone. Isaac couldn’t inhabit Rivington Street without Anastasia and all her wigs. He believed in astral bodies, but he never seemed to bump into Margaret’s emanations in his own little rabbit’s hutch of rooms. And so he’d lived at the Seventh Avenue Armory for a week as Geronimo Jones, a fictitious man who didn’t have to respond to telephone calls and entreaties from politicians and businessmen and all those other seekers of Sidel. He’d have to form his own administration, find commissioners and secretaries, hire and fire, but he was stalled. He’d be mayor in a month and he’d interviewed no one.
He slept for sixteen hours, like a grizzly bear. Then he looked at the calendar he kept on his shirt cuff. He was due at the Waldorf for a power breakfast with three of the City’s biggest real-estate barons. They’d all contributed to his campaign. Papa Cassidy, who was a Mafia go-between, Jason Figgs, the lord of residential real estate, and Judah Bellow, the architect-builder who’d once been an apprentice of Emeric Gray, the baron of an earlier time. Isaac loved Emeric, who’d built apartment-house palaces between the wars, with ornamental balconies and terra-cotta tiles, who’d had a kingdom of artisans at his command, who’d covered water towers with brick turrets, who’d never skimped on materials. Emeric didn’t die a rich man. He lost whatever he had during the Depression and was run over by a trolley car when he was eighty-six.
Isaac’s deepest pleasure was to turn a corner and stumble upon an Emeric Gray, with its terra-cotta pieces that were like musical scales on a brick and stone wall. Ah, he might have been an architect in another life.
He arrived at the Waldorf. The three barons had rented a private room. They had their own butler. Isaac ordered shirred eggs, like a country squire. Jason Figgs was forty-nine. He’d inherited his father’s fortune and quadrupled it. He was old society gelt, a Protestant in a Catholic and Jewish town. Papa Cassidy had married a pornographer’s model, Delia St. John. He laundered Mafia money. He’d tried to have Isaac killed, and had become the treasurer of Isaac’s campaign. That’s how alliances were made in New York. Judah Bellow was the wealthiest of the barons. He’d started with towers of black glass and then returned to the brick and stone of his master, Emeric Gray. But Judah’s buildings were dull masterpieces, without Emeric’s desire to delight. Their elegance weighed upon you, their ornamentation was much too announced. Isaac despised every single Judah Bellow, but he liked the man.
Judah drank his grapefruit juice. “I made a bet that you wouldn’t show. You’ve been scarce, Mr. Mayor.”
“Ah,” Isaac said, “you’re my favorite pharaohs.”
They were looking for tax abatements, to build their towers with Isaac’s help. But they didn’t mention any towers.
“Isaac, we’re worried,” Jason said. “About Schyler Knott.” Schyler was president of the Christy Mathewsons, a bunch of baseball antiquarians. He was also an investment banker, but how could he harm the three barons? And then Isaac realized what the hell the breakfast was about. Schyler Knott had a passion for old buildings. He was chairman of the Landmarks Preservation Commission, and Isaac’s barons were the only three realtors on that commission.
“He’s incompetent,” Jason said.
“A turkey,” Papa said.
“He’s a dangerous man,” said Judah. “He wants to landmark everything.”
“That’s his privilege,” Isaac said. “That’s his point of view.”
“Then how are we supposed to build?” asked Papa Cassidy.
“I don’t know.”
“The tax structure will fall to shit.”
“Come on,” Isaac said. “You have meetings. You fight a little. Schyler’s no fucking dictator.”
“He’s worse than that,” said Judah Bellow. “He’ll destroy us all.”
“How?”
“We have a parcel of land.”
“The three of you?”
“Yes,” Papa said. “On Fifty-sixth and Third. And there’s a matchbox sitting on it, a sixty-year-old monster with rats in the cellar.”
“Who designed your matchbox?”
“Emeric Gray.”
“Judah,” Isaac said, “you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Emeric was your master.”
“It’s still a matchbox. I wouldn’t touch one of his classics. It’s an undistinguished building.”
“A tenement, Mr. Mayor, with cockroaches,” said Jason Figgs. “We could put up a beauty. Coca-Cola will take a couple of floors. We could show you Judah’s designs. It would mean a lot to the City, Mr. Mayor. Millions.”
“You’re all geniuses,” Isaac said. “Couldn’t you find another parcel?”
“We’d lose six months. Coca-Cola will walk.”
“Boys,” Isaac said to the three barons. “Build on top of Emeric’s castle, secure the air rights.”
“Schyler’s against it. He says it will hurt the contours of the building, invalidate the roof. He’s out of his mind, Mr. Mayor.”
“No. He’s Schyler Knott. I can’t help you, boys.”
Jason tried to bully Isaac. “We could go to the governor.”
“Be my guest.”
“He controls the purse.”
“I agree,” Isaac said. “We’re paupers. But if he interferes with my Landmarks Commission, I’ll break his leg.”
Isaac abandoned the three barons. He started singing to himself until he had a vision of Margaret Tolstoy in one of her red wigs. Ah, if only he were eighty-six. He might not think of Margaret so much if his sexual powers ever waned. But he wouldn’t want to get crushed under the wheels of a trolley, like Emeric Gray. And then Isaac recalled that there were no more trolley cars in Manhattan.
He visited with Rebecca Karp, who sat on the porch at Gracie Mansion, in her rocking chair. She’d grown paranoid about the City of New York, wouldn’t venture into the streets, but she was Isaac’s main advisor, his secret secretary of state.
“Appearances, Isaac. You have to look like a maven.”
“Me a maven? I can hardly put on my pants.”
“That’s because your gun is too heavy.”
Mayors weren’t supposed to carry guns, but the new Commish had let him keep his permit. Isaac and Sweets both had Glocks, guns with plastic noses.
“Becky,” Isaac said with a grin, “I’m not wearing my Glock today. I just came out of retreat at the Seventh Avenue Armory.”
“Cocksucker,” she said, “you haven’t even been sworn in and you start taking advantage of the homeless. Do you want to sink us? I’ll lose my rocking chair if you’re impeached.”
“Come on. I had to feel what it was like to live inside a shelter.”
“The homeless can’t save you, Isaac. They never vote. And you have more important projects. You’ll need a first deputy mayor. I have a candidate. Malik.”
Isaac started to groan. Martin Malik was the trials commissioner at One Police Plaza. Isaac had picked him. Malik was a Moslem and a Turk whose ancestors had been mathematicians in Istanbul. He was a hanging judge who stripped cops of their pensions. The Republicans were grooming him as the next governor. He’d been dating Delia St. John until Papa Ca
ssidy wooed her into his marriage bed.
“Malik’s my enemy,” Isaac said. “He thinks I was Papa Cassidy’s pimp, that I took Delia away from him. He’ll never join my administration. He’s too ambitious.”
“He’ll join a man who got ninety percent of the vote.”
“Eighty-six,” Isaac had to declare. “Don’t exaggerate.”
“Malik will keep the minorities off your back. And he won’t let the barons bite your ass.”
“I had breakfast with them,” Isaac said. “Papa, Judah, and Jason Figgs. They want me to muzzle Schyler Knott, kick him off the Landmarks Commission.”
“They’re right,” Rebecca said.
“You appointed him.”
“He’s been intransigent, Isaac. We have to side with the builders. They’re our bread and butter.”
Montezuma's Man (The Isaac Sidel Novels) Page 24