SIXTEEN
Strange stood on a landing in an apartment building on 15th Street, located across the road from Malcolm X Park. He made a fist and prepared to knock on the door before him. He hesitated, knowing he could still go back down the stairs. Knowing he was wrong. There were many ways a young man could ruin things with a good woman, and this was the most thoughtless. But he was here, right now, and he had come here deliem" w weberately and with determination. Later, if confronted, he would make excuses, but there weren’t any valid ones, none for real. He wanted what he wanted. He had been thinking on it since the woman had walked into his office, swinging her hips.
Strange recalled the day he had sat at the Three-Star Diner when his father, Darius, was still alive and working the grill. Seeing a moment pass between his father and the Three-Star’s longtime waitress, Ella. Recognizing the familiar look between them that suggested intimacy and maybe even love. He had always thought that his mother and father had shared an unbreakable, sacred bond. To realize, at that moment, that his father had cheated, and had done so, perhaps, for many years, had dropped Strange’s heart. But it hadn’t ruined Darius in Strange’s eyes.
Much as he loved his mother, Strange couldn’t bring himself to righteous anger or to hate his father for his transgression. Yes, he was disappointed. Also, he understood. His father, like all mortals, was a sinner, fallible. In matters of the flesh he was downright weak.
I am my father, thought Strange, as he knocked on Maybelline Walker’s door. No better than any other man. Just a man.
Vaughn bought a ticket at the Lincoln box office and went through the lobby to the auditorium. The 5:30 show was about to begin. Buck and the Preacher had been held over, but first the projectionist was running a reel of trailers for the current features playing at other District Theaters, a chain whose bookers programmed films for black audiences in black neighborhoods. Vaughn let his eyes adjust and watched the promo for The Legend of Nigger Charley, currently running down at the Booker T. How the West Was Rewritten, thought Vaughn, as he spotted Martina in one of the middle rows and made his way to a seat beside him.
“Just got your message, baby,” said Vaughn, leaning close to Martina so he could keep his voice low and still be heard.
“You weren’t followed or nothin, were you?” Martina was wearing a dress, heels, and red lipstick.
“No. This about Red Jones? ’Cause I already know about the Sylvester Ward robbery.”
“That’s not why I called you.”
“I gotta find Red. Get me his location and I’ll make it worth your while.”
“Money,” said Martina huskily, with a dismissive wave of his hand. “Cash ain’t gonna do nothing for me unless you got a lot of it.”
“Tell me what’s going on.”
In the light coming from the screen, Martina’s features were angular, masculine, and troubled.
“Tell me,” said Vaughn.
“Hitter name of Clarence Bowman came into the diner earlier today. Was talkin to Gina Marie.”
“I know Gina.”
“Many do. Bowman had Gina Marie call some woman up on the phone and theinaask her when her man was gonna be home tonight. I had the impression that Bowman was about to put work in.”
“What man?”
“A prosecutor. Cotch-somethin.”
“Cochnar?”
“That’s what it was.”
Vaughn wrapped a hand around Martina’s forearm, hard as wood. “What’s Bowman look like?”
“Tall, dark, and cut. Like that actor, used to be an athlete.”
Vaughn looked at the screen, saw Fred Williamson, and said, “Him?”
“Nah, one of them Olympic dudes.”
“I gotta get out of here.”
“Wait a minute, Frank.”
“We’ll settle up later.”
“It’s not about that,” said Martina, looking at him straight on. “I’m scared.”
“Keep it together,” said Vaughn. “I’ll work it out. You’ll be fine.”
Vaughn rose abruptly and rushed up the auditorium aisle. Martina’s head jerked birdlike around the house. He was trying to see if anyone had been watching or listening to their conversation. Half-believing that they had not been observed, Martina slouched in his seat and got low.
Derek Strange sat in a big cushiony armchair in the living room of Maybelline Walker’s apartment, the last of the day’s sun coming in through her west-wall windows. Maybelline sat on a matching sofa, so close to him that her bare knee almost touched his. She was in her strapless dress and she had removed her shoes. Her big natural was lifted by the wind of a floor fan set near the furniture. It was warm running to hot in her pad. Both of them were drinking Miller High Lifes out of bottles. Beads of sweat had formed on Maybelline’s forehead and across her chest, where the tops of her breasts were exposed. Strange could smell her perspiration and that sweet strawberry scent he remembered from the time she had visited his office.
Maybelline had put the Staple Singers’ Be Altitude: Respect Yourself, their new one on the Stax label, on her compact system, and Mavis was belting out “This Old Town (People in This Town),” the last track on side one.
Strange and Maybelline were deep into their conversation. It had become a confession for her. She claimed it felt good to get it out. Now that the horse had been let out the barn, Maybelline had begun to drop her finishing-school manner of speech, and her G’s.
“Hallie Young phoned me just after you gave her a call,” said Maybelline, giving Strange a wicked eye, “askin for references.”
“That was kind of lame of me,” said Strange. “And then I really messed up when I met that Rosen gal. Told her I was looking for a tutoingidth="27r for my ten-year-old daughter.”
“Your look doesn’t say ‘devoted father.’ Or husband.”
“I’m too young,” said Strange. “Ain’t nobody gonna tie me down to a marriage. Not yet.”
They both sipped at their beers.
“How’d you find the ring?” said Strange.
Maybelline wiped a bit of foam from her full mouth. “Dayna Rosen used to leave me with her son alone in that house for, like, two hours at a time.”
“She barely knew you.”
“Derek, she didn’t know me at all. But white folks like her, they just overdo that ‘I feel for your people’ thing. Tryin so hard to be right. Like, Look at me, I got an actual black person in my home, and I’m gonna trust her enough to leave her there with my child while I run errands around town. If I had a kid, I wouldn’t leave it with a stranger, would you?”
“We already established I don’t have one, so I can’t answer that.”
“Dayna used to call me girl, sister, all that jive. Shoot, she was no kin to me.”
Strange, trying to redirect her, said, “Back to the ring.”
“Dayna had showed it to me, and then I saw it again in a jewelry box in their master bedroom one day while she had gone out and Zachary had disappeared. I was always having to go and look for him. Boy couldn’t sit still and work on math to save his life.”
“Six years old, he’s not supposed to sit still.”
“I didn’t steal that ring,” said Maybelline.
“I know,” said Strange. “Bobby Odum did.”
Maybelline’s eyes went to the beer bottle in her hand. “I had got to know Bobby. Used to go into Cobb’s for my fish sandwich, and he’d come out from the kitchen every time he saw me walk through the door. We went out for a drink, and he mentioned his history…”
“Odum was a second-story man, among other things. You put him up to the burglary, right?”
“Yes,” she said, turning her face away suddenly, like an actress in a silent film. “He volunteered to steal it, once I told him about the ring.”
“Why would he do that?”