Lee said, “Goose, that’s my granddaughter you’re talking to.”
“And I don’t mean nothing but respect,” Goose said.
“Where’s Sunset?” Clyde asked.
“She went to the town meeting,” Marilyn said. “They’re talking about removing her.”
“Ain’t this the perfect day?” Clyde said.
29
Marilyn hadn’t offered her house for the meeting this time, so it was held at the church. Marilyn said she’d go with Sunset, thought she could wield some power, but Sunset asked her not to. She wanted to go alone, had some things to say.
Sunset got out of the car, shifted her holster until it was comfortable, stood in the shadow of the leaning church cross for a time, watched a crow on one end of it drop its load onto the church roof. She took a deep breath of sawmill stench, went inside the church.
It was stuffy in there, and Henry Shelby and the town elders were sitting in a pew at the front. A stout man wearing a bowler hat and a nice gray suit was up front leaning on the preacher’s podium, looking bored. She had never seen him before. He was maybe sixty, almost good-looking. Still solid, had a thick mustache and was red-skinned and robust. His hands were draped over the top of the podium and they looked like two huge white spiders resting. When he lifted his head and looked at her, she felt as if she had been dual stabbed all the way through to the back of her head. And when his eyes moved, she felt those stabs in the groin.
As she came in, the men in the pews turned their heads and looked at her, watched her carefully as she walked down the aisle.
“We didn’t think you’d come,” Henry said. “We thought you’d send your mother-in-law to talk for you.”
When she was standing at the pew, Sunset said, “Henry. You and me, we need to talk. Alone.”
“There’s nothing to be said, Sunset,” Henry said. “This is a formality. We’re removing you.”
“We need to talk alone.”
“You said that.”
“I want to talk to you about some land with oil on it. A big pool of oil.”
Henry just looked at her.
“This land has a house on it, and the oil on the land is the same that was on Jimmie Jo.”
The big man behind the podium laughed.
The elders looked at Henry. Henry’s face had lost its color.
“All right,” Henry said. “Maybe me and her should talk alone. It’s important, I’ll let you know.”
The elders looked at one another. One said, “Henry, this isn’t the way we do things-”
“It is today. Y’all wait outside for a while. Go over to the store, get something to drink.” He dug in his wallet, gave one of the men a few bills. “It’s on me.”
“What about him?” Sunset said, nodding toward the man leaning on the podium.
“He don’t want a Coke. He doesn’t go.”
“Henry,” said one of the elders, “are you sure?”
“I’m sure.”
They were slow about it, but the elders got up and went out. McBride came out from behind the podium, sat in the same pew with Henry, crossed his legs, leaned back as if waiting for someone to serve lunch.
Henry studied Sunset, said, “This had better be good.”
“I think you already know it’s good. But not for you.”
“This sounds like some kind of blackmail.”
“Maybe.”
“It didn’t work for Pete and Jimmie Jo, it ain’t gonna work for you.”
She tried to figure what Henry was talking about, sort of got it. Pete and Jimmie Jo had tried to outflank Henry and this guy, but it hadn’t worked.
Another thing hit her. If they were stealing Zendo’s land, there were probably others. Plenty of blacks who couldn’t read, or could and wouldn’t say anything for fear of sticking to tar and feathers, dangling at the end of a rope, becoming a gasoline-soaked torch for white sheets to dance by.
“Me and Pete are different,” Sunset said.
“I can tell that,” Henry said. “Any man can tell that.”
“Hear, hear,” McBride said.
“You’re different, all right,” Henry said. “You’re different from other women. You’re a looker, Sunset. And you’re a tramp. Pete married you because you’re a tramp. Then he found himself a bigger and a better tramp.”
“You don’t know anything about me,” Sunset said.
“I know a tramp when I see one.”
“And I know a thief when I see one.”
“You’re a tramp pretending to be a man, going around with a gun on your hip. Does that gun make you feel like you got something you don’t got? You know, a Johnson?”
“Henry, my guess is, even with me not having a Johnson, mine’s bigger than yours.”
McBride laughed again. Henry looked at him, then back at Sunset. “Get on with it.”
“Sure you want this fella to know what I’m going to say? Not that I care. It’ll all come out soon enough.”
“He knows lots of things already. You say what you got to say, little lady. And I use the term lady loosely.”
“Most of it don’t need to be said. You’re cheating Zendo out of his land, you and the mayor were, before he went off-he didn’t go off, did he?”
“He’s not here,” Henry said.
Sunset looked at McBride. “That’s why you brought this guy in, isn’t it? To get rid of the mayor? Strong-arm people. Keep you out of it.”
“I didn’t say that.”
“Mayor’s probably in some hole somewhere, like Jimmie Jo and her baby.” Sunset studied McBride. “But you know about that, don’t you?”
“I don’t put people in holes,” McBride said. “I don’t like digging. And I don’t like babies hurt.”
“Who is this guy, anyway?” Sunset asked Henry.
“McBride,” McBride said.
“He’s an associate,” Henry said. “From Chicago. I knew him through a fella.”
“Weren’t there enough thugs around here?”
“Listen here, Sunset,” Henry said. “I don’t like you. But I tell you what, I’ll cut you in for what Pete was gonna get, you hadn’t shot him.”
“What was Jimmie Jo’s share? A dose of oil and a thirty-eight slug in the back of the head?”
“A thirty-eight slug?” McBride said.
Sunset worked up a fierce gaze. “The baby was cut out. That’s as low as it gets. That your work, McBride?”
“I didn’t know she had one in the oven,” McBride said. “That’s a bad break for the kid, that being done. I didn’t know about the kid.”
Sunset thought McBride looked surprisingly sincere.
“Don’t say so much,” Henry said to McBride.
“Nothing’s been said that matters,” McBride said.
Henry looked at Sunset, said, “No one really cares about a nigger’s land, Sunset. Not really. We could cut you in for a share of it. Hell, you’re such a nigger lover, you can give Zendo part of your share, all of it. The truth is, a nigger ain’t got the sense to run a piece of oil land, and don’t deserve the money.”
“But you do?”
“Oh, yeah.”
“How much does he get?”
“I’m a full partner,” McBride said.
“Did you start that way?” Sunset said. “You a full partner from the start? Bet not. Bet you got the mayor’s share. Where is the mayor, McBride?”
McBride grinned at her. “All I know, he gave up his job when he disappeared. I think Henry here is going to be running for that position.”
“That’s right,” Henry said. “They got the town council filling in until the emergency election, next month. Then I’ll run. I think I’ve got a good chance.”
“Not if the council knows about this.”
“Frankly, you’re just a fly on the end of my dick, Sunset. A third of the council is Klan, and I don’t know any of the others got much love for niggers.”
“Thing is,” Sunset said, “bet they’ll all want their little share, though, won’t they? That’ll split up your prize considerable, won’t it?”
Sunset was fishing, but she could tell from the look on Henry’s face he had thought about that, and didn’t like the idea. McBride looked like he had before. A happy green-eyed guy. A guy used to things turning out his way.