He limped forward, his heavy body moving sluggishly, and put his hands on the counter.
“What can I do for you, madame?” he said in the voice of a baritone singer. His diction was good and his enunciation distinct.
Sister Heavenly was past being surprised by anything.
“I want a quiet room with a safe lock,” she said.
“All of our rooms are quiet,” he said. “And you are as safe here as in the lap of Jesus.”
“You have a vacancy?”
“Yes, madame, we have vacancies all the time.”
“I’ll bet you do,” she said. “Just a minute while I go get my luggage.”
She went out and paid off her chauffeur and took the dog by the leash and her bundle by the string. When she returned, the proprietor was waiting at the foot of the stairs.
He had an atrophied leg, evidently from polio, and he looked like a spider climbing the stairs. Sister Heavenly followed patiently behind him.
From behind a door on the second floor came loud voices raised in argument: “Who you talking to, you blue-gum nigger!”
“You better shut up, you piss-colored whore.…”
From behind another came the sound of pots and pans banging around and the smell of boiling ham hocks and cabbage.
From a third the sound of bodies crashing against furniture, objects falling to the floor, feet scuffling, panting grunts and a woman’s voice shrilling, “Just wait ’til I get loose-”
The proprietor limped slowly ahead without giving the slightest notice as though he were stone-deaf.
They ascended slowly to the third floor and he opened a door with one of the ten-cent skeleton keys and said, “Here you are, madame, the quietest room in the house.”
A window looked down on 125th Street. It was the rush hour. The roar of the traffic poured in. Directly below was a White Rose bar. A jukebox was blasting and the loud strident voice of Screaming Jay Hawkins was raised in song. From the room next door came the blaring of a radio tuned up so loud the sound was frayed.
The room contained a single bed, straight-backed chair, chest of drawers, six eight-penny nails driven into a board on the inner wall to serve as a clothes closet, a chamber pot, and a washbasin with two taps.
Sister Heavenly went across the room and tried the taps. The cold water ran but the hot water tap was dry.
“Who wants hot water in this weather?” the proprietor said, carefully touching his face with a dirty handkerchief.
“I’ll take it,” Sister Heavenly said, tossing her bundle onto the bed.
“That will be three dollars, please,” the proprietor said.
She gave him three dollars in small change.
He thanked her and snapped the inside bolt back and forth suggestively and limped off.
She closed the door, locked it on the inside, and snapped the bolt. Then she laid her bag and parasol on the bed beside the bundle, removed her hat and wig, sat on the side of the bed and took off her shoes and stockings. When she stood up she was baldheaded and barefooted.
The dog began to whine again.
“In just a moment, honey,” she said.
She took out her pipe, loaded it with the finely ground stems of marijuana and lit it with her gold-plated lighter. The dog laid its head in her lap and she stroked it gently as she sucked the smoke deep into her lungs.
Someone knocked on the door and a slick, ingratiating voice said, “Hey Jack, I hears you, man. Leave me blow a little with you. This is old Playboy.”
Sister Heavenly ignored him. After a while the disgruntled voice said, “I hopes the man catches you, stingy mother-raper.”
Sister Heavenly finished her pipe and put it away. Then she rolled up her skirt, exposing her thin bird’s legs, and pinned it above her knees. She peeled off her silk gloves and put on the rubber ones; and hooked the long rubber apron over her head and fastened it securely behind.
She took the package of cotton, the bottle of chloroform and the chair and sat in front of the open window.
“Here, Sheba,” she called.
The dog came and nuzzled her bare feet. She hooked the handle of the leash onto the lower half of the sash lock, tore off a swab of cotton, saturated it with chloroform and held it to the dog’s nose. The dog reared back and broke off the lock. She chased it across the room and stuck the saturated cotton inside the nose of the muzzle. The dog gave a long pitiful howl and broke for the window. She grabbed the end of the chain leash and swung the dog around just before it jumped, then quickly she grabbed the open bottle of chloroform and poured it over the dog’s nose. The howling stopped. The dog gasped for breath and settled slowly to the floor, legs extended stiffly front and back. Its lips drew back, exposing clenched teeth, its eyes became fixed; it shuddered violently and lay still.
Quickly she spread the rubber sheet in the center of the floor and placed the enamel basin on it. She dragged the dog and laid its head in the basin and cut its throat with the scalpel. Then she lifted it by the rear legs and let it bleed.
She dumped the blood into the washbasin, turned on the water and left it running. She brought the enamel basin back and began to disembowel the carcass.
It was bloody, dirty, filthy work. She opened the stomach and split the intestines. She was nauseated beyond description. Twice she vomited into the filth. But she kept on.
Down below, the jukebox blasted; next door the radio blared. Strident voices sounded from the street; horns blared in the jammed traffic. Colored people swarmed up and down the sidewalks; the bars were packed; people stood in line in front of the cafeteria across the street.
The hot poisonous air inside of the room, stinking of blood, chloroform and dog-gut, was enough to suffocate the average person. But Sister Heavenly stood it. There wasn’t anything she wouldn’t do for money.
When finally she had convinced herself there wasn’t anything inside of the dog but blood and filth, she threw the scalpel into the carcass and said, “Well, that’s lovely.”
She crawled to the window, put her arms on the ledge, and sucked in the hot, stinking outside air.
Then she stood up, took off the bloody apron and spread it over the bloody carcass, peeled off her gloves and dropped them beside it. The rubber sheet was covered with blood and filth and some had run off onto the linoleum floor.
It ain’t any worse than some of the tricks I’ve turned, she thought.
She went to the basin and washed her hands, arms and feet. She took a fresh handkerchief from her bag, saturated it with pertume, and wiped her bald head, face, neck and arms, and feet. She remade her face, put on her gray wig and black straw hat, sat on the bed and put on her shoes and stockings, put down her skirt, picked up her beaded bag and parasol, and left the room, locking the door behind her and taking the key along.
The proprietor was coming in from the street as she went out.
“You left your dog,” he said.
“I’m coming back.”
“Will she be quiet while you’re gone?”
For the first time in more than thirty years Sister Heavenly felt slightly hysterical.
“She’s the quietest dog in the city,” she said.
19
First, Coffin Ed and the youth called Wop had driven out to the Bronx and looked at the remains of Sister Heavenly’s house. A police barricade had been thrown about it and experts from the safe and loft squad were still digging in the wreckage. One look had been enough for Coffin Ed.
Afterwards, employing Wop as his guide, he made a junkie’s tour of Harlem. Wop was known to all the landprops as Daddy Haddy’s runner and had the entree. Coffin Ed had the persuader.
Pushing Wop in front of him to ring the doorbells and give the passwords, with the muzzle of Grave Digger’s pistol poking in his spine, he had crashed all the notorious shooting galleries in Harlem, the joints where the addicts met to take their kicks and greet their chicks; where the skinpoppers and the schmeckers (those who used the needle and those who sniffed the powder), the pushers and the weedheads gathered for sex circuses and to listen to the real cool jive.