Six Easy Pieces er-8

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Six Easy Pieces er-8 Page 1

by Walter Mosley




  Six Easy Pieces

  ( Easy Rawlins - 8 )

  Walter Mosley

  Also by Walter Mosley

  FICTION

  Gone Fishin’

  Devil in a Blue Dress

  A Red Death

  White Butterfly

  Black Betty

  A Little Yellow Dog

  Always Outnumbered, Always Outgunned

  Bad Boy Brawly Brown

  Walkin’ the Dog

  Fearless Jones

  Blue Light

  RL’s Dream

  Futureland

  NONFICTION

  Workin’ on the Chain Gang

  1230 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10020

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2003 by Walter Mosley

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

  For information address Atria Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  ISBN: 0-7434-5161-9

  ATRIA BOOKS is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  “Smoke” first published in the 2002 Washington Square Press edition of Gone Fishin’.

  “Crimson Stain” first published in the 2002 Washington Square Press edition of Devil in a Blue Dress.

  “Silver Lining” first published in the 2002 Washington Square Press edition of A Red Death.

  “Lavender” first published in the 2002 Washington Square Press edition of White Butterfly.

  “Gator Green” first published in the 2002 Washington Square Press edition of Black Betty.

  “Gray-Eyed Death” first published in the 2002 Washington Square Press edition of A Little Yellow Dog.

  Visit us on the World Wide Web:

  http://www.SimonSays.com

  For Walter Bernstein

  Contents

  Smoke

  Crimson Stain

  Silver Lining

  Lavender

  Gator Green

  Gray-Eyed Death

  Amber Gate

  Smoke

  EASY,” SHE SAID, and then the phone rang. Or maybe it was the other way around. Maybe the phone rang, and then Bonnie called my name.

  Bright sun shone in the window, and the skies were clear as far as I could see. There was a beautiful woman of the Caribbean lying next to me. From the living room, early morning cartoons were squeaking softly while Feather giggled as quietly as she could. Somewhere below the blue skies, Jesus was hammering away, building a single mast sail that he intended to navigate toward some deep unknown dream.

  It was one of the most perfect mornings of my life. I had a steady job, a nice house with a garden in the backyard, and a loving family.

  But I was nowhere near happy.

  The phone rang again.

  “Easy,” Bonnie said.

  “I hear it.”

  “Daddy, phone,” Feather yelled from her TV post.

  Her dog, Frenchie, growled in anger just to hear her say something to me.

  Jesus stopped his hammering.

  The phone rang again.

  “Honey,” Bonnie insisted.

  I almost said something sharp, but instead I grabbed the receiver off the night table.

  “Yeah?”

  “Ezekiel?”

  Ezekiel is my given name but I never use it. So when that deep voice came out of the phone, I stalled a moment, wondering if it was asking for someone else.

  “Ezekiel?” the voice said again.

  “Who is this?”

  “I’m lookin’ for Raymond,” the near-bass voice said.

  “Mouse is dead.”

  I sat up, pulling the blankets from Bonnie’s side of the bed. She didn’t reach for the sheets to cover her naked body. I liked that. I might have even smiled.

  “Oh no,” the voice assured me. “He ain’t dead.”

  “What?”

  “No.” The voice was almost an echo. There was a click and I knew that the connection had been broken.

  “Easy?” Bonnie said.

  I put the phone back into its cradle.

  “Easy, who was it?”

  Bonnie pressed her warm body against my back. The memory of Raymond’s death brought about the slight nausea of guilt. Add that to the heat of the woman I loved and I had to pull away. I went to the window.

  Down in the backyard I saw the frame of Jesus’s small boat on orange crates and sawhorses in the middle of the lawn.

  “It was…a woman I think. Deep voice.”

  “What did she want?”

  “Mouse.”

  “Oh. She didn’t know he was dead,” Bonnie said in that way she had of making everything okay with just a few words.

  “She said he was alive.”

  “What?”

  “I don’t think she knew. It was more like she was certain that he couldn’t be dead.”

  “That’s just the way people think about him,” Bonnie said.

  “No. It was something else.”

  “What do you mean?”

  I went back to the bed and took Bonnie’s hands in mine. “Do you have to leave today?” I asked her.

  “Sorry.”

  Jesus’s hammer started its monotonous beat again.

  Feather turned up the volume on Crusader Rabbit now that she knew we were awake.

  “I know you got to go,” I said. “But…”

  “What?”

  “I dreamt about my father last night.”

  She reached out and touched my cheek with her palm. Bonnie had work-woman hands, not callused, but hard from a long life of doing for herself and others.

  “What did he say?” she asked me.

  That was her superstitious streak. She believed that the dead could speak through dreams.

  “He didn’t say a thing,” I said. “Just sat there in a chair on a raft in the water. I called out to him four or five times before he looked up. But just then the current started pullin’ the raft downstream. I think he saw me but before he could say anything he was too far away.”

  Bonnie took my head in her arms and held on tight. I didn’t try to pull away.

  WE SAT DOWN TO BREAKFAST at nine o’clock, two hours after I was supposed to be at work. Jesus had taken Feather to school. After that he was going to work four hours as a box boy at Tolucca Market on Robertson. In the late afternoon he’d come back home and read to me from Treasure Island. That was our deal: he’d read out loud to me for forty-five minutes and then discuss what he had read for three quarters of an hour more. He did that every day, and I agreed to let him drop out of high school.

  Jesus wasn’t interested in a public school education, and there was nothing I could do to light a fire under him. He was smart about things he cared for. He knew everything about grocery stores because of his job. He worked there and did gardening around our neighborhood to afford his boat dreams. He liked carpentry and running. He loved to cook and explore the beaches up and down the coast around L.A.

  “What are you thinking about?” Bonnie asked.

  We were holding hands under the table like schoolchildren going steady.

  “Juice,” I said. “He’s doin’ pretty good.”

  “Then why do you look so sad?”

  “I don’t know. Maybe it’s that phone call.”

  Bonnie leaned closer and squeezed my hand. “I’m going to be gone longer than usual,” she said.

  “How long?”

  “Maybe three or four weeks. Air France is having a special junket around western Afri
ca with black political leaders and some European corporate heads. They need a French-speaking black stewardess who can also speak English. They’ll need me on call for special flights.”

  “Oh. Yeah.” It felt like she was punishing me for feeling bad.

  “I told you that I’d have to be gone sometimes,” she said sweetly.

  “That’s okay,” I said. “Just don’t go believin’ it when one’a those men says that he wants to make you his queen.”

  HUNDREDS OF CHILDREN were assembled in front of Sojourner Truth Junior High School when I arrived—three and a half hours late.

  “Mr. Rawlins,” Archie “Ace” Muldoon said, greeting me on the granite stair of the main building. Short and balding, the little white man doffed his White Sox baseball cap in deference to his boss—me.

  “Hey, Ace. What’s happenin’ here?”

  “Fire in the metal shop bungalow.”

  “But that’s down on the lower campus. Why they wanna evacuate up here?”

  “Mr. Newgate.” That’s all he needed to say. Our principal, Hiram Newgate, was the source of all discord and wasted energy.

  “Rawlins, I want to talk to you,” Newgate said from the entrance hall. It was as if Archie conjured him up by saying his name.

  “What about, Hiram?” I called back.

  Newgate’s lip curled into a snarl at my disrespectful tone.

  He was tall and scarecrow-thin with cheekbones that were almost as high as his eyes. He would have been ugly if he didn’t have perfect grooming, bright white and immaculate teeth, and clothes bought only in the finest Beverly Hills stores. That day he was wearing a shark-gray jacket and slender-cut black slacks.

  He was looking good but I had outdone him. I was dressed in one of my best suits; off-white linen with felt buff shoes, brown argyle socks and tan shirt that I kept open at the collar due to the nature of my job, which was supervising senior head custodian.

  I liked dressing up because of my background, which was poor and secondhand. But it also gave me a secret pleasure to see Newgate look me up and down, comparing my clothes to his.

  “Where have you been?” the jade-eyed principal asked me.

  I shrugged, not having enough respect for the man to lie.

  “That’s not an acceptable answer.”

  “What’s the fire report, Archie?” I asked my custodian.

  “Fire captain’s down in the yard,” the small man said.

  “Mr. Rawlins,” Principal Newgate sputtered. “I’m speaking to you.”

  “Sorry, Hiram,” I said as I walked away. “But I’m late and there’s going to be a lot of paperwork around this fire.”

  “What?” he exclaimed. He probably said a lot more, but I touched Archie’s arm and we went quickly toward the stairway that led down to the lower campus.

  * * *

  THE METAL SHOP bungalow was slightly scorched when the firemen arrived. They had reduced the building to splinters by the time they were through.

  It was a strange vision for me. A burnt and shattered building surrounded by white men dressed in red. They were all young and grinning. Outside the nearby chain-link fence were dozens of men and women among the displaced students—all of them black or brown—staring wide-eyed at the demolition. I could feel my heart thumping and my hands getting hot.

  A fireman approached us. He was hatless and haggard, no older than I, but he looked to be ready for retirement. He was making his way toward us with a deliberate and tired gait.

  “You the principal?” the old-looking fireman asked. His gray pupils were watery, almost white.

  “No,” I said. “My name is Rawlins. I’m the plant supervisor.”

  “Where’s the principal?”

  “Mosta the kids’re on the upper campus. He’s makin’ like a general on his horse up there, keepin’ the troops from deserting.”

  That got a laugh from the fire captain. He reached out to shake my hand.

  “Gregson,” he said. “I’m the shift commander. Looks like you got a problem here.”

  I glanced at the poor colored people looking in at those uniformed marauders. I wondered if Gregson and I saw the same problems.

  “It’s arson,” the fireman continued. “We found a scorched gasoline can under the building. It’s a pretty sophisticated incendiary smoke bomb.”

  “They set it off with people in there?”

  “Weren’t you here?” Gregson asked me.

  “I was late today.”

  “Oh. Well, somebody pulled the fire alarm and then set off the device, or maybe they set it off and then pulled the alarm. Maybe someone else saw the smoke but I doubt it; the people in the classroom hadn’t even seen it yet. They pulled the alarm on the wall of the janitors’ bungalow.”

  I BORROWED SOME LINED PAPER and a pencil from one of the students, through the fence, and took down all the information: Gregson’s phone number, the police number to call to give information to the arson squad, and the names and numbers of the forms I had to fill out. He told me that an inspector would show up in the afternoon. All the while the firemen prowled around the shattered building, using their axes just in case some embers still burned.

  I went up to Principal Newgate’s office after that. I detested the man but he was still my boss.

  “I’ll buzz him, Mr. Rawlins,” Kathy Langer said.

  Everything about her was brown except for her skin: eyes, hair, dress, and shoes. She was a young white woman, a new transfer to Truth. Hiram’s secretaries were always new, because they never lasted very long. He was always complaining about how they filed or typed. The last one left because he yelled at her for forgetting to put three sugar cubes into his coffee.

  “It’s Mr. Rawlins,” she said into the phone. Then she looked up at me and said, “Just a minute. He’s finishing a call.” She smiled when she saw me looking at her drab clothes. It was the kind of smile that had gotten many young black men hung down South.

  “Police?”

  “No,” she said as she inclined her head, showing me her throat. “Some guy who’s been calling. I think it’s personal business.”

  A moment later the buzzer sounded and she said, “You can go in now.”

  I hadn’t been in Newgate’s office for a few weeks and was surprised at the change in decor. I suppose the shock showed on my face.

  “What?” Newgate said. He was sitting behind a beat-up ash-blond desk.

  “What happened to all your fancy furniture?”

  When Newgate became principal, he had brought expensive ebony wood and teak furniture with him. Along with the carpeting, his office had looked like a rich man’s den. Now the floors were bare, the desk looked to be due for disposal, and his books and papers were in stacks along the walls.

  “I bought a new house,” he said. “I took the furniture for the living room.”

  “Why didn’t you tell me? I coulda come up with a decent desk and some shelves.” I knew the answer to my question before I finished asking it. He didn’t want to ask me for anything. I was too uppity and confident for him to request my help. It’s not that he had a problem with my color; Newgate wanted everybody to treat him like the master.

  “What do you have on the fire?” he asked.

  “Arson.”

  The principal paled visibly. “While the students were in class? They could have been killed.” He was talking to himself more than to me. “That’s, that’s horrible.”

  “I don’t think anybody coulda been killed,” I said. “Fire captain told me that even though they used a gasoline can it was pretty much just a smoke bomb.”

  “A kid’s prank?”

  “Naw. He said the bomb was very professional-looking.”

  Newgate and I stared at each other for a moment. “What do you think, Mr. Rawlins?”

  What I thought was that Hiram Newgate had never asked me what I thought about anything. But what I said was, “I hope that it’s just a one-time thing. Not some kind of craziness.”

  “What
do you mean?”

  “I wish I knew.”

  “Well,” he said, still shaken. “I’m sure that it’s just some kid with a problem. If he does something like this again we’ll find him.”

  “I hope you’re right.”

  “I have a doctor’s appointment at noon so I’ll be out midday. If the police come you give them what they need.”

  THE REST OF THE DAY was pretty noneventful. No more fires or fire alarms. No plumbing or electrical disasters. It was actually a good day because Newgate wasn’t around looking into everybody’s business. He bothered the teachers as much as he did the custodial staff. He often walked into classrooms unannounced to make surprise evaluations. That might have been a good idea, but Newgate was rude and rough. He loved Truth more than anyone, but not a soul there cared for him.

  * * *

  THAT AFTERNOON I was out inspecting the lower yard when First Wentworth called me. First was a small boy, thirteen at the time. Like many of the young children, he spent his summers hanging around the schoolyard, taking advantage of the facilities we offered for daycare. He played caroms and tetherball from ten, when the playground opened, until two, when it closed. After that I let him work with me, moving desks out of the classrooms so that my custodians could strip the floors and seal them for the new school year.

  “Mr. Rawlins,” he called from halfway down the eighty-seven stairs leading to the upper, older, campus. At least I think he said my name. I just heard his voice and saw him running down the granite steps.

  While he ran I continued my inspection, looking into the trash cans on the yard. In one can I found a beaded white sweater that some child had discarded. It was a nice sweater, one hundred percent cotton. It represented a few days’ labor out of a poor woman’s pay, I knew. But clothes for children are like skin on snakes: to be shed now and then, allowing the new child to emerge.

  “Mr. Rawlins,” First said when he reached me.

  I put the sweater under my arm. “Hey, Number One.”

  “I don’t know what he was doin’ over there.” First was talking as if we were already in the middle of a conversation. “But I saw him.”

  “Who?”

  “That white man.”

 

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