We smiled at each other and slapped backs. Mouse bought me a drink in Myrtle’s and I bought him another. We traded back and forth like that until Myrtle locked us in and went up to bed. She said, “Leave the money fo’ what you’all drink under the counter. Do’ lock itself on the way out.”
“ ’Member that shit wit’ my stepdaddy, Ease?” Mouse asked when we were alone.
“Yeah,” I said softly. It was early morning and empty in the bar but I still looked around the room; murder should never be discussed out loud, but Mouse didn’t know it. He had killed his stepfather five years earlier and blamed it on another man. But if the law ever found out the true circumstances he’d have been hanging in a week.
“His real son, Navrochet, come lookin’ fo’ me last year. He din’t think that boy Clifton done it even though the law said he did.” Mouse poured a drink and knocked it back. Then he poured another one. “You get any white pussy in the war?” he asked.
“All they got is white girls. What you think?”
Mouse grinned and sat back, rubbing his crotch. “Shit!” he said. “That might be worf a couple’a potshots, huh?” And he slapped my knee like in the old days when we were partners, before the war.
We were drinking for an hour before he got back to Navrochet. Mouse said, “Man come down here, right in this saloon, and come up on me wit’ his high boots on. You know I had t’look straight up t’see that boy. He had on a nice suit wit’ them boots, so I jus’ slipped down my zipper when he walk in. He says he wanna talk. He say les step outside. And I go. You might call me a fool but I go. And the minute I get out there and turn around he got a pistol pointed at my fo’head. Can you imagine that? So I play like I’m scared. Then ole Navro wanna know where he could fine you…”
“Me!” I said.
“Yeah, Easy! He heard you was wit’ me so he gonna kill you too. But I’as workin’ my stomach in and out and you know I had some beer in me. I’as actin’ like I’as scared and had Navro thinkin’ he so bad ’cause I’m shakin’… Then I pulls out Peter and open up the dam. Heh, heh. Piss all over his boots. You know Navrochet like t’jump three feet.” The grin faded from his lips and he said, “I shot him four times ’fore he hit the floor. Same amount’a lead I put in his fuckin’ son-of-a-whore daddy.”
I had seen a lot of death in the war but Navrochet’s dying seemed more real and more terrible; it was so useless. Back in Texas, in Fifth Ward, Houston, men would kill over a dime wager or a rash word. And it was always the evil ones that would kill the good or the stupid. If anyone should have died in that bar it should have been Mouse. If there was any kind of justice he should have been the one.
“He caught me one in the chest though, Ease,” Mouse said, as if he could read my mind. “You know I was layin’ up against the wall wit’ no feelin’ in my arms or legs. Everything was kinda fuzzy an’ I hear this voice and I see this white face over me.” He sounded almost like a prayer. “And that white face told me that he was death an’ wasn’t I scared. And you know what I told him?”
“What?” I asked, and at that same moment I resolved to leave Texas forever.
“I tole’im that I had a man beat me four ways from sundown my whole life and I sent him t’hell. I say, ‘I sent his son after’im, so Satan stay wit’ me and I whip yo’ ass too.’”
Mouse laughed softly, laid his head on the bar, and went to sleep. I pulled out my wallet, quietly as if I were afraid to waken the dead, left two bills, and went down to the hotel. I was on a bus for Los Angeles before the sun came up.
But it seemed like a lifetime had passed since then. I was a landowner that night and I was working for my mortgage.
“Junior,” I said. “Many white girls been in here lately?”
“Why? You lookin’ fo’ one?” Junior was naturally suspicious.
“Well… kinda.”
“You kinda lookin’ fo’ one! When you gonna find out?”
“You see, uh, I heard about this girl. Um… Delia or Dahlia or sumpin’. I know it starts with a ‘D.’ Anyway she has blond hair and blue eyes and I been told that she was worth lookin’ at.”
“Cain’t say I remember, man. I mean some white girls come in on the weekends, you know, but they don’t never come alone. And I lose my job wolfin’ after some other brother’s date.”
I had the notion that Junior was lying to me. Even if he knew the answer to my question he would have kept it quiet. Junior hated anybody who he thought was doing better than he was. Junior hated everybody.
“Yeah, well, I guess I’ll see her if she comes in.” I looked around the room. “There’s a chair over there next to the band, think I’ll grab it.”
I knew Junior was watching me as if I left him but I didn’t care. He wouldn’t help me and I didn’t give a damn about him.
Chapter 5
I found a chair next to my friend Odell Jones.
Odell was a quiet man and a religious man. His head was the color and shape of a red pecan. And even though he was a God-fearing man he’d find his way down to John’s about three or four times a week. He’d sit there until midnight nursing a bottle of beer, not saying a word unless somebody spoke to him.
Odell was soaking up all the excitement so he could carry it around with him on his job as a janitor at the Pleasant Street school. Odell always wore an old gray tweed jacket and threadbare brown woolen pants.
“Hey, Odell,” I greeted him.
“Easy.”
“How’s it going tonight?”
“Well,” he said slowly, thinking it over. “It’s goin’ alright. It sure is goin’.”
I laughed and slapped Odell on the shoulder. He was so slight that the force pushed him to the side but he just smiled and sat back up. Odell was older than most of my friends by twenty years or more; I think he was almost fifty then. To this day he’s outlived two wives and three out of four children.
“What’s it look like tonight, Odell?”
“ ’Bout two hours ago,” he said while he scratched his left ear, “Fat Wilma Johnson come in with Toupelo and danced up a storm. She jump up in the air and come down so hard this whole room like t’shook.”
“That Wilma like to dance,” I said.
“Don’t know how she keep that much heft, hard as she work and hard as she play.”
“She probably eat hard too.”
That tickled Odell.
I asked him to hold a seat for me while I went around saying hello.
I made the rounds shaking hands and asking people if they had seen a white girl, Delia or Dahlia or something. I didn’t use her real name because I didn’t want anybody to connect me with her if Mr. Albright turned out to be wrong and there was trouble. But no one had seen her. I would have even asked Frank Green but he was gone by the time I worked my way to the bar.
When I got back to my table Odell was still there and smiling.
“Hilda Redd come in,” he said to me.
“Yeah?”
“Lloyd try to make a little time an’ she hit him in that fat gut so hard he a’most went down.” Odell acted out Lloyd’s part, puffing his cheeks and bulging his eyes.
We were still laughing when I heard a shout that was so loud even Lips looked up from his horn.
“Easy!”
Odell looked up.
“Easy Rawlins, is that you?”
A big man walked into the room. A big man in a white suit with blue pinstripes and a ten-gallon hat. A big black man with a wide white grin who moved across the crowded room like a cloudburst, raining hellos and howyadoin’s on the people he passed as he waded to our little table.
“Easy!” he laughed. “You ain’t jumped outta no windahs yet?”
“Not yet, Dupree.”
“You know Coretta, right?”