“That’s fine,” Jackson said.
11
They turned on 125th Street and walked toward Seventh Avenue. Neon lights from the bars and stores threw multicolored rays on the multicolored people trudging down the sloppy walk, turning their complexions into strange metallic shades. Colored men passed, bundled against the cold, some in new checked overcoats, others in GI rubber slickers, gabardines, coats that looked as though they’d been made from blankets. Colored women switched by, sporting coats of such unlikely fur as horse, bear, buffalo, cow, dog, cat and even bat. Other colored people were dressed in cashmere, melton, mink and muskrat. They drove past in big new cars, looking prosperous.
A Sister of Mercy emerged from the shadows.
“Give to the Lawd. Give to the poor.”
Jackson reached for his roll, but Gus stopped him.
“Keep you money hidden, Jackson. I have some change.”
He dropped a half-dollar into the box.
“ ‘Ye have found the Spirit,’ ” the Sister of Mercy misquoted. “ ‘He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit sayeth.’ ”
“Amen,” Jackson said.
Near the intersection of Seventh Avenue they turned into the Palm Café. The bartenders wore starched white jackets, and the high-yellow waitresses plying between the tables and booths were dressed in green-and-yellow uniforms. A three-piece combo beat out hot rhythms on the raised bandstand.
The customers were the hepped-cats who lived by their wits — smooth Harlem hustlers with shiny straightened hair, dressed in lurid elegance, along with their tightly draped queens, chorus girls and models — which meant anything — sparkling with iridescent glass jewelry, rolling dark mascaraed eyes, flashing crimson fingernails, smiling with pearl-white teeth encircled by purple-red lips, exhibiting the hot excitement that money could buy.
Gus pushed to the bar and drew Jackson in beside him.
“This is the kind of place I like,” he said. “I like culture. Good food. Fine wine. Prosperous men. Beautiful women. Cosmopolitan atmosphere. Only trouble is, it takes money, Jackson, money.”
“Well, I got the money,” Jackson said, beckoning to the bartender. “What are you drinking?”
Both ordered Scotch.
Then Gus said, “Not your kind of money, Jackson. You haven’t got enough money to keep up this kind of life. I mean real money. You take your little money. If you’re not careful it’ll be gone inside of six months. What I mean is money that don’t have any end.”
“I know what you mean,” Jackson said. “As soon as my woman buys herself a fur coat and I get myself some new clothes and we get ourselves a car, a Buick or something like that, we’ll be stone broke. But where’s a man going to get money that don’t have any end?”
“Jackson, you impress me as being an honest man.”
“I try to be, but honesty don’t always pay.”
“Yes, it does, Jackson. You’ve just got to know how to make it pay.”
“I sure wish I knew.”
“Jackson, I’ve a good mind to let you in on something good. A deal that will make you some real money. The kind of money I’m talking about. The only thing is, I’ve got to be sure I can trust you to keep quiet about it.”
“Oh, I can keep quiet. If there’s any way I can make some real money I can keep so quiet they’ll call me oyster-mouth.”
“Come on, Jackson, let’s go back here where we can talk privately,” Gus said suddenly, taking Jackson by the arm and steering him to a table in the rear. “I’m going to buy you a dinner and as soon as this girl takes our order I’m going to show you something.”
The waitress came over and stood beside their table, looking off in another direction.
“Are you waiting on us or just waiting on us to get up and leave?” Gus asked.
She gave him a scornful look. “Just state your order and we’ll fill it.”
Gus looked her over, beginning at her feet. “Bring us some steaks, girlie, and be sure they’re not as tough as you are, and take the lip away.”
“Two steak dinners,” she said angrily, switching away.
“Lean this way,” Gus said to Jackson, and drew a sheaf of stock certificates decorated with gold seals and Latin scripts from his inside coat pocket. He spread them out beneath the edge of the table for Jackson to get a better view.
“You see these, Jackson? They’re shares in a Mexican gold mine. They’re going to make me rich.”
Jackson stretched his eyes as wide as possible. “A gold mine, you say?”
“A real eighteen-carat gold mine, Jackson. And the richest mine in this half of the world. A colored man discovered it, and a colored man has formed a corporation to operate it, and they’re selling stock just to us colored people like you and me. It’s a closed corporation. You can’t beat that.”
The waitress brought the steak dinners, but Jackson couldn’t eat very much. He had eaten not long before, but Gus thought it was due to excitement.
“Don’t get so excited you can’t eat, Jackson. You can’t enjoy your money if you’re dead.”
“I know that’s true, but I was just thinking. I sure would like to invest my money in some of those shares, Mr. Parsons.”
“Just call me Gus, Jackson,” Gus said. “You don’t have to shine up to me. I can’t sell you any shares. You have to see Mr. Morgan, the financier who’s organizing the corporation. He’s the man who sells the stock. All I can do is recommend you. If they don’t think you’re worthy to own stock in the corporation, he won’t sell you any. You can bet on that. He only wants respectable people to own shares in his corporation.”
“Will you recommend me, Gus? If you have any doubts about me, I can get a letter from my minister.”
“That won’t be necessary, Jackson. I can tell that you are an honest upright citizen. I pride myself on being a good judge of character. A man in my business — the real-estate business — has got to be a good judge of character or he won’t be in business long. How much do you want to invest, Jackson?”
“All of it,” Jackson said. “The whole ten thousand.”
“In that case I’ll take you to see Mr. Morgan right now. They’ll be working all night tonight, clearing up business here so tomorrow they can go on to Philadelphia and let a few good citizens there buy shares too. They want to give worthy colored people from all over the country a chance to share in the profits that will come from this mine.”
“I can understand that,” Jackson said.
When they left the Palm Café the same Sister of Mercy who had accosted them before was shuffling past, and turned to give them a saintly smile.
“Give to the Lawd. Give to the poor. Pave your way to heaven with charitable coins. Think of the unfortunate.”
Gus fished out another half-dollar. “I got it, Jackson.”
“Sister Gabriel blesses you, brother. ‘And the Lord of the spirits of the prophets sent his angel to show unto his servants the things which must shortly come to pass. And behold, we come quickly. Blessed is he that keepeth the word of the prophecy.’ ”
Gus turned away impatiently.
Goldy winked at Jackson and formed words with his lips. “You dig me, Bruzz?”
“Amen,” Jackson said.
“I’m suspicious about those nuns,” Gus said as he led Jackson toward his car. “Has it ever occurred to you that they might be working a racket?”
“How can you think that about Sisters of Mercy?” Jackson protested quickly. He didn’t want Gus to start suspecting Goldy before the trap was sprung. “They’re the most holy people in Harlem.”
Gus laughed apologetically. “In my business — the real-estate business — so many people try crooked dealings a man gets to be suspicious. Then I’m naturally a skeptic to begin with. I don’t believe in anything until I know it’s for sure. That’s the way I felt about this gold mine. I had to be sure about it before I invested my money. But I can see that you’re a church man, Jackson.”