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“Sure,” I said.

I watched her concentrate on the lettuce and bread. She ate all of the greens, except for the beans, and then used her bread to mop up the dressing.

Albert must have been watching because as soon as she was through he brought the entrée. It was chicken breasts stuffed with ham and white cheese, accompanied by mashed potatoes under a Cognac sauce.

“Is this to your liking, miss?” he asked Juanda.

“It’s great,” she said.

This elicited a big smile from the round Persian. His hairline was receding and his eyes were cunning but Albert was a man I knew that I could trust.

When he left, Juanda said, “I don’t know if I should tell you about Piedmont.”

“Why not?”

“Because then you might not call me no more.”

She gazed into my eyes and I froze, realizing that what she said was true.

“I live with a woman,” I said.

“Will you kiss me one time?”

“I have two kids,” I continued, “three if you count one that left with her mother eleven years ago.”

“Just one kiss and you have to promise that you will call me one more time at least.”

I wasn’t thinking about Nola or Geneva or Bonnie right then. I leaned over to give Juanda a chaste kiss on the lips but when her fingers caressed my neck I lingered and even drifted to plant a gentle peck on her throat.

When I leaned back Juanda was smiling.

“He live on Croesus only a couple’a blocks from the corner where you met me,” she said. “I don’t know the number but it’s this big ugly red house that got a bright orange door.”

Albert brought crème brûlée for dessert and Juanda was in heaven.

WHEN WE GOT to the car I unlocked her door and opened it.

“You see?” she said. “You’d open the door for me even after we’ve had a dozen kids.”

ON THE RIDE back to her home Juanda talked about her experience in high school. She had gone to Jordan High and got good grades until halfway through the eleventh grade.

“. . . then I messed up,” she said.

“What happened?”

“I met this boy. His name was Dean and he was fiiiiine. Uh. He’d already dropped out but he’d sneak into the schoolyard and stand outside my homeroom door waitin’ for the passin’ period. I’d tell him that I had to go to class but he put his hand on my waist and I couldn’t say no. They finally expelled me.”

“Expelled you? Why?”

“’Cause I wouldn’t listen,” she said. “’Cause I thought I was a woman and they couldn’t treat me like a child no more.”

The riots and Nola Payne’s death and Juanda’s heaving chest were pumping in my veins. I was happy when we got to her block.

I pulled to the curb. She turned to me and touched my forearm.

“You gonna call me again, right?” she asked.

“Yes.”

“When?”

“No more than two days.”

“You still got my number?”

I recited it from memory. That made Juanda grin. She jumped out and I sped off. In the rearview mirror I could see her waving.

23

I knocked on the bright orange door. Then I knocked again. I don’t know how long I stood there. I was in no hurry. I had death and sex and race on the brain. No matter which way I turned in my mind, there was one of those vast problems.

“That’s the problem with most’a you black mens, Easy,” Jackson Blue had once said to me. “White people think we stupid but it’s the other way around. We got so much on our minds all the time that we ain’t got no time for little things like exactly what time it is or the rent. Shit. Here he askin’ you about long division and you thinkin’ ’bout Lisa Langly’s long legs, who you gonna have to fight to get next to her, and why this ugly white man think anything he say gonna make a bit’a difference to you when you get out in the street.”

I smiled remembering the cowardly genius’s glib words. Jackson was the smartest man I had ever known. I thought that maybe I should talk to him about the riots when I was finished with my official work.

The orange door came open. A tall man in a crimson minister’s suit was standing there before me.

“Yes?” he asked.

“Are you Piedmont?”

“No. My name is Lister, Reverend Lister. Who are you?”

“My name is Easy Rawlins, Reverend. And I need to have a conversation with a man named Piedmont.”

“Brother Piedmont isn’t here right now,” the minister said with a paper-thin smile on his sculpted lips. “What is your business with him?”

Lister was the color of tanned leather that had been left out in the sun too long. He wasn’t light skinned but he was lighter than he had once been. All of his facial features were small but well arranged. His hands were weak and he had big bare feet. His shoulders were small but he carried them with authority so I decided to treat him with the respect he demanded.

“Mr. Piedmont gave a man a ride the other night. That man is in some trouble and Piedmont is the only person who might clear him.”

The cherry-frocked minister pondered me for quite a while and then he smiled and nodded.

“Come in, Brother Rawlins,” he said. “We can wait for Harley together.”

We entered a large room. It must have been almost the whole first floor of the three-story house. The pine floor and walls and ceiling were painted bright red. This chamber was bare except for a twelve-foot gray couch against the far wall with a small raised dais set opposite.

This room, I was sure, was Lister’s church. When the congregation was having a service, they would come out with folding chairs for his acolytes.

We walked to the long gray couch and Lister gestured for me to sit. After I was situated he sat a few feet away. As soon as he was comfortable a woman wearing a wraparound purple dress came in. She had a glass in each hand and a yellow cloth wrapped around her head.

She stopped a few feet from Lister and nodded.

“Lemonade?” she said.

“Yes, Vica,” Lister said. “Mr. Rawlins?”

“Sure.”

The woman, girl really, served the minister first and then handed me a glass. She looked directly at me and smiled. Her earnestness called up a moment’s shyness in me, so I looked down. It was then I noticed that she too was barefoot.

“Vica,” Lister said.

“Yes, Reverend?”

“When Brother Piedmont comes in will you tell him that there’s a Mr. Rawlins here to see him?”

“Yes, Reverend.”

She left the room.

“Won’t Brother Piedmont be coming through the front door?” I asked.

Instead of answering me Lister asked, “What is his name?”

“Who?”

“The man that needs Harley’s help.”

“DeFranco,” I said easily. “Bobby DeFranco. He’s a white boy.”

“I see.”

“Do the bare feet mean something?” I asked.

“Jesus went barefoot in the world,” Lister said. “So did our ancestors under the African sun.”

I wondered if Africa was all that barefooted but I didn’t want to argue. I wanted to keep the minister talking so as not to have to tell him too many lies.

I took a sip of the lemonade. It was sweet for my taste but fresh-squeezed.

“What about Vica?” I asked.

“What about her?”

“She work for you?”

“She works for our master, as we all do, brother.”

There was a minor strain of fanaticism in the minister’s tone. But I didn’t care. I once heard that extreme times call for extreme measures. Living in Watts was extreme three hundred and sixty-five days a year.

“Twenty-three adults live here among us, Brother Rawlins,” Lister said. “The women serve and raise children while the men work to pay for our bread.”

“I don’t hear any kids.”

“The school is in the basement.” He smiled and then added, “I thought that you had come to join us.”