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She blinked three times and then turned her head.

“Peter. Peter, it’s some man named Lancer.”

She turned back to me and looked me up and down. I was wearing the same work clothes I had on when I went down to Nola’s neighborhood. Realizing this set off a chain reaction of thoughts. First I thought that I needed a bath and a shave as soon as possible. Then I wondered why I hadn’t even yawned, when I’d been up and moving for well over twenty-four hours. I also realized that I hadn’t spoken to Bonnie since leaving with Mouse. Thinking of Bonnie reminded me of Juanda. Luckily, before I could go too far down that road a man appeared out of the mist of the Rhones’ screen door.

There was a deep cut on the left side of his swollen lower lip, a knot over his right eye, and two fingers of his left hand were taped together.

“Yes?” he asked affably in spite of his obvious discomfort.

“Peter Rhone?”

“Yes. And you are?”

“My name is John Lancer.”

“Oh. Do I know you?”

“I think you might have met my cousin Nola when you were down on Grape Street a few days ago.”

“I think so,” he said. “She was the neighbor of the people that took me in.”

Mrs. Rhone was paying close attention to our lies.

“Yeah,” I said. “That’s what she said. Anyway, Mr. Rhone, I have something very important to discuss with you. I’m sorry but it has to be private.”

“I told him that you were sick, Peter,” his wife said.

“That’s okay, Theda,” he told her. “You know I owe these people something. Mr. Lancer, there’s a park just a few blocks down from here. We could go sit on a bench there for a while.”

I smiled and nodded.

“Peter,” Mrs. Rhone said.

“It’s okay, honey.”

He pulled the screen door open and said, “It’s just a few blocks. We can walk.”

We walked out of the flowery yard and turned right onto Castle Heights.

Peter Rhone was a tall man and good-looking in a boyish kind of way. He was lean and fair with blond hair and blue eyes—just the kind of man who had no business in Watts when there was a riot going on.

I noticed that he limped slightly when he walked.

“Looks like it’s cooling down a bit,” he said as we strolled toward the corner.

“Yeah. But the heat’s still here,” I replied.

“I like a hot day,” he said. “It’ll be cold enough, long enough later on.”

We were at the corner.

“So tell me what happened when you were at Nola’s,” I said.

“What do you mean?”

“I mean—what happened?”

“Are you her husband?” he asked then. That was the first moment I had an inkling that the situation was much more complex than I had even suspected.

“Nola’s dead,” I said.

Peter stopped walking. He grabbed me by the forearm.

“What? What happened?” There were already tears in his eyes. “What happened?”

“That’s what I wanted to ask you.”

Peter glanced back toward his house. I did too.

Theda Rhone was standing on the sidewalk, looking at us.

“Come on,” Rhone said. “Let’s keep walking.”

He turned and started moving at a fast pace.

I kept up with him. Walking is what I did all day long at Sojourner Truth. There was both an upper and a lower campus and space enough for over thirty-five hundred students. Some days I didn’t sit at all.

As we walked he kept asking what happened. Finally I told him about Nola and Geneva and her claims.

At the end of the third block we came to a small park. It had four or five trees and two benches. Peter sat and started rocking.

“Who could have done such a thing?” he said. “Who?”

“Everybody I’ve talked to has got their money on you.”

“Me? Why would I? She saved my life.”

“Maybe she wanted something you couldn’t give,” I suggested.

“Like what?”

“Maybe she was going to call your wife.”

“Why would she? I was going to leave Theda. I told Nola that.”

“Come again?”

“I loved your cousin. Didn’t she tell you that?”

“Well,” I said. “I have to admit that I misled you, Mr. Rhone. My name is Easy Rawlins and the first time I saw Nola was on a coroner’s slab.”

“I, I don’t understand. What do you have to do with her . . .” His words trailed off because he didn’t want to call her dead.

“The police are stepping lightly around this murder —”

“Murder,” he repeated the word.

“Yeah. Anyway, the cops called on me because I know people around the neighborhood and I can ask questions without arousing too much attention. You know public attention to her murder could set off the riots all over again.”

“I don’t understand, Mr. Rawlins. Who would want to kill Nola?”

There we were again. By now I was more than half convinced that he hadn’t killed her. Rhone wasn’t trying to hide anything from me. He was frightened but not for himself. Nola was still alive in this man’s heart.

“Do you own a gun, Peter?”

“A twenty-five-caliber pistol.”

“Where is it?”

“In my house. In the dresser.”

It was a beautiful day. Low eighties and fairly clear. There was a robin singing somewhere and the traffic was sparse.

“Why don’t you tell me what happened, Peter? Then maybe I can help make some sense out of it all.”

21

I don’t understand, Mr. Rawlins,” Peter Rhone said. “Are you with the police department?”

“No. Not with them. If I was, I would have turned you in the minute I got your name. But they asked me to help them solve Nola’s murder before the newspapers got hold of it because they want to keep a lid on Watts.”

“So you’re a detective?”

“Think of me as a concerned citizen who has the ear of the police and you have a good idea of what I’m doing here.”

“I don’t know,” he said. “Maybe I shouldn’t be talking to you.”

“Fine,” I said. “But when I give the police your address they’ll have you in jail and up on charges before you can explain to your wife what you were doing down there in a black woman’s arms.”

Peter Rhone was staring deeply into my eyes. His face was quivering and his fingers were more jittery than those of a two-year-old who’s just eaten a chocolate bar.

“The news hasn’t said anything about Nola . . . There were no reports.”

“She was strangled and then she was shot. Beaten too,” I said.

It was no proof but it broke the man down emotionally. His head lowered nearly to his knees.

“I wondered why she wasn’t home,” he said. “I’ve been calling every chance I get. She didn’t come in to work either.”

“She’s dead,” I said again.

“What did you want to know?” he asked.

“Did you kill Nola?”

“No. No.”

“Did you have sex with her on Tuesday night?”

His forehead touched his left knee.

“Yes,” he said.

“She was willing?”

“Very much. Very much. She was so happy that I was there and, and . . . she kissed me. That’s what started it. She kissed me.”

“Why did you go to her house in the first place?”

“I had driven down to Grape Street looking for her.”

“You already knew her?”

“Yes. Didn’t you know? She works in the office where I do on Wilshire. Nola’s the daytime switchboard operator at Trevor Enterprises.”

“What do you do there?”

“I broker advertising deals. You see, people come to us to find out where they should advertise. We have contacts throughout the southland, so people, especially companies with out-of-town staffs, rely on us for intelligence.”

“And how well did you know Nola?” I asked.

“The operator’s room is next to my office,” he said. “And somehow we started bringing in coffee for each other every other day. Usually it was just a drop-off but sometimes we’d gab a little bit before getting to work. At first, you know, I was just nice to her because the operator is the most important job at Trevor Ent.”