I went to two meetings a day every day that week. When I got home Friday evening, Luke Fontenot was waiting for me in the bait shop.
He sat at a table in the corner, in the gloom, a cup of coffee in front of him. Batist was mopping down the counter when I came in. He looked back at me and shrugged, then dropped his rag in a bucket and went outside and lit a cigar on the dock.
“Aint Bertie got rid of her lawyer and signed a quit... what d’ you call it?” Luke said.
“A quitclaim?”
“Yeah, that’s it.”
He looked smaller if I the weak light through the screened windows. His hair grew in small ringlets on the back of his neck.
“They give her twenty-five t’ousand dollars,” he said.
“Does she feel okay with that?”
“She don’t want nothing to happen to me or Ruthie Jean.”
His eyes didn’t meet mine. His face was empty, his mouth audibly dry when he spoke, like that of a person who’s just experienced a moment for which he has little preparation.
“That lawyer from Lafayette, the one use to work for Sweet Pea Chaisson, Jason Darbonne, and some men from New Orleans come out to the place last night,” he said. “They was standing by the gum trees, where the graves use to be, pointing out toward the train track. I went outside and ax them what they want. They say we got to be gone in thirty days, that strip of houses ain’t gonna be nothing but broken bo’rds and tore-up water pipe.
“I tole them I ain’t heard Moleen Bertrand tell me that, and the last I heard Moleen Bertrand own this plantation.
“One of them men from New Orleans say, “We was gonna copy you on all the documents, boy, but we didn’t have your address.”
“I said, ‘Moleen Bertrand tole my aunt she can stay on long as she likes.’
“They didn’t even hear me. They went on talking like I wasn’t there, talking about pouring a foundation, cutting roads down to the train track, doing something with electric transformers. Then one guy stops the others and looks at me. “Here’s twenty dollars. Go down to the sto’ and get us some cold beer. Keep a six-pack for yourself.”
“You know what I said? “I ain’t got my car.” That’s all the words I could find, like I didn’t have no other kind of words, except to make an excuse for not running their errands.
“So the guy say, “Then go on in the house. You got no bidness out here.”
“I said, “Moleen Bertrand done already talked to Aint Bertie. Tall wasn’t there, so maybe y’all don’t know about it.”
“Then the same guy, he walked real close to me, right up in my face, he was a big, blond guy with hair tonic on and muscles about to bust out of his shirt, he say, like we was the only two people on the earth and he knew exactly who he was talking to, he say, “Listen, you dumb nigger, you open your mouth again and you’re gonna crawl back up those steps on your hands and knees.”
Luke raised his coffee cup, then set it back down without drinking from it. He looked through the screen window at the line of cypress trees across the bayou, at the sky above it that was like a crimson-streaked ink wash. His face had the lifeless quality of tallow.
“But that’s not it, is it?” I asked.
“What ain’t?”
“You’ve known white men like that before. You were stand-up even in the death house, Luke.”
“I called Moleen Bertrand at his office this morning. His secretary say he’s in conference. I waited till eleven o’clock and called again. This time she say let me get your number. At three o’clock he still ain’t called back. The next time I tried, she say he done gone for the day. I axed if he gone home. She waited a long time, then she say, No, he playing racquetball over in Lafayette.
“I knew where he play at. I was going in the front door when him and three other men was coming out, carrying canvas bags on their shoulders, their hair wet and combed, all of them smiling and stepping aside to let a lady pass.
“Moleen Bertrand shook hands with me and gone right on by. Just like that. Just like I was some black guy maybe he seen around once in a while.”
I got up from the table and turned on the string of lights over the dock. I heard Batist folding up the Cinzano umbrellas over the spool tables. Luke opened and closed his hand on a fifty-cent piece in his palm. Its edges left a circular print almost like an incision in his gold skin. I sat back down across from him.
“I don’t think Moleen is in control of his life,” I said.
“He saved me from the electric chair. Didn’t have nothing to gain for it, either. How come he start lying now?”
“He’s involved with evil men, Luke. Get away from him.”
“I ain’t worried about me.”
“I know you’re not,” I said. Then I said, “Where is she?”
“Out at the house, packing her new clothes, talking about some place in the Islands they’re going to, pretending everything all right with Aint Bertie, pretending he fixing to come by anytime now.”
“I wish I had an answer for you.”
“I ain’t ax you for one. I just wanted you to know something befo’hand. It ain’t gonna end like Moleen want it to.”
“You’d better explain that.”
“You don’t know Ruthie Jean, suh. Nobody do. Specially not Moleen Bertrand.”
He went out the screen door and walked down the dock under the string of light bulbs. I picked up the fifty-cent piece he had left for the coffee. It felt warm and moist from the pressure of his hand.
Saturday morning I was reading the newspaper on the front steps when Helen Soileau’s cruiser came up the dirt road and turned in my drive.
She closed the car door behind her and walked through the shade like a soldier on a mission, her dark blue slacks and starched white shirt, badge and black gunbelt and spit-shined black shoes and nickel-plated revolver as unmistakable a martial warning as the flat stare and the thick upper arms that rolled like a man’s.
“Who’s the in-your-face bitch-woman at your office?” she said.
“Beg your pardon?”
“You heard me, the one with the mouth on her.”
“Clete hired her. She didn’t strike me that way, though.”
“Well, tell her to pull the splinters out of her ass or learn how to talk on the telephone.”
“How’s life?” I said, hoping the subject would change.
“I’m working a double homicide with Rufus Arceneaux. I never quite appreciated the expression ‘dirt sandwich’ before.”
“It sounds like you really got a jump start on the day. You want breakfast?”
She hooked one thumb in her gunbelt and thought about it. Then she winked. “You’re a sweetie,” she said.
I fixed coffee and hot milk and bowls of Grape-Nuts and blueberries for us on the picnic table in the backyard.
“There’s something weird going on with Fart, Barf, and Itch,” she said. “The RAG in New Orleans called me yesterday and asked if I’d heard anything about Sonny Boy Marsallus. I said, “Yeah, he’s dead.” He says, “We think that, too, but his body’s never washed up. The tide was coming in when he got it.”
“I say, “Think?”
“This guy is a real comedian. He says, “You remember that army-surplus character you bent out of round with your baton? Guy with a haircut like a white bowling ball, always chewing gum, Tommy Carrol? Somebody found him working late in his store last night and fried his mush.”
“Sorry, I don’t remember a baton,” I say.
“He thought that was real funny. He says, “Tommy Carrol did more than sell khaki underwear. He was mixed up with Noriega and some dope operations in Panama. After the ME dug him out of the ashes and opened him up, he found a nine-millimeter slug in what was left of his brain.”