Harry Rex raised his eyebrows and smiled at Jake. They watched the stairs and listened.
“My boss, who happens to be your boss, said I could dress like this.”
“But you forgot something, didn’t you?”
“Jake said I could forget it. He told me you hadn’t worn a bra in twenty years. He said most of the women in Clanton go braless, so I left mine at home.”
“He what?” Ethel screamed with arms crossed over her chest.
“Is he upstairs?” Ellen asked coolly.
“Yes, I’ll call him.”
“Don’t bother.”
Jake and Harry Rex retreated into the big office
and waited for the law clerk. She entered carrying a large briefcase.
“Good morning, Row Ark,” Jake said. “I want you to meet a good friend, Harry Rex Vonner.”
Harry Rex shook her hand and stared at her shirt. “Nice to meet you. What was your first name?”
“Ellen.”
“Just call her Row Ark,” Jake said. “She’ll clerk here until Hailey’s over.”
“That’s nice,” said Harry Rex, still staring.
“Harry Rex is a local lawyer, Row Ark, and one of the many you cannot trust.”
“What’d you hire a female law clerk for, Jake?” he asked bluntly.
“Row Ark’s a genius in criminal law, like most third-year law students. And she works very cheap.”
“You have something against females, sir?” Ellen asked.
“No ma’am. I love females. I’ve married four of them.”
“Harry Rex is the meanest divorce lawyer in Ford County,” Jake explained. “In fact, he’s the meanest lawyer, period. Come to think of it, he’s the meanest man I know.”
“Thanks,” said Harry Rex. He had stopped staring at her.
She looked at his huge, dirty, scuffed, worn wingtips, his ribbed nylon socks that had drooped into thick wads around his ankles, his soiled and battered khaki pants, his frayed navy blazer, his brilliant pink wool tie that fell eight inches above his belt, and she said, “I think he’s cute.”
“I might make you wife number five,” Harry Rex said.
“The attraction is purely physical,” she said.
“Watch it,” Jake said. “There’s been no sex in this office since Lucien left.”
“A lot of things left with Lucien,” said Harry Rex.
“Who’s Lucien?”
Jake and Harry Rex looked at each other. “You’ll meet him soon enough,” Jake explained.
“Your secretary is very sweet,” Ellen said.
“I knew y’all would hit it off. She’s really a doll once you get to know her.”
“How long does that take?”
“I’ve known her for twenty years,” said Harry Rex, “and I’m still waiting.”
“How’s the research coming?” Jake asked.
“Slow. There are dozens of M’Naghten cases, and they are all very long. I’m about half through. I planned to work on it all day here; that is, if that pit bull downstairs doesn’t attack me.”
“I’ll take care of her,” Jake said.
Harry Rex headed for the door. “Nice meetin’ you, Row Ark. I’ll see you around.”
“Thanks, Harry Rex,” said Jake. “See you Wednesday night.”
________
The dirt and gravel parking lot of Tank’s Tonk was full when Jake finally found it after dark. There had been no reason to visit Tank’s before, and he was not thrilled about seeing the place now. It was well hidden off a dirt road, six miles out of Clanton. He parked far away from the small cinder block building and toyed with the idea of leaving the engine running in case Tank was not there and a quick escape became necessary. But he quickly dismissed the stupid idea because he liked his car, and theft was not only likely but highly probable. He locked it, then double-checked it,
almost certain that all or part of it would be missing when he returned.
The juke box blasted from the open windows, and he thought he heard a bottle crash on the floor, or across a table or someone’s head. He hesitated beside his car and decided to leave. No, it was important. He sucked in his stomach, held his breath, and opened the ragged wooden door.
Forty sets of black eyes immediately focused on this poor lost white boy with a coat and tie who was squinting and trying to focus inside the vast blackness of their tonk. He stood there awkwardly, desperately searching for a friend. There were none. Michael Jackson conveniently finished his song on the juke box, and for an eternity the tonk was silent. Jake stayed close to the door. He nodded and smiled and tried to act like one of the gang. There were no other smiles.
Suddenly, there was movement at the bar and Jake’s knees began vibrating. “Jake! Jake!” someone shouted. It was the sweetest two words he had ever heard. From behind the bar he saw his friend Tank removing his apron and heading for him. They shook hands warmly.
“What brings you here?”
“I need to talk to you for a minute. Can we step outside?”
“Sure. What’s up?”
“Just business.”
Tank flipped on a light switch by the front door. “Say, everbody, this here is Carl Lee Hailey’s lawyer, Jake Brigance. A good friend of mine. Let’s hear it for him.”
The small room exploded in applause and bravos. Several of the boys at the bar grabbed Jake and shook his hand. Tank reached in a drawer under the bar and
pulled out a handful of Jake’s cards, which he passed out like candy. Jake was breathing again and the color returned to his face.
Outside, they leaned on the hood of Tank’s yellow Cadillac. Lionel Richie echoed through the windows and the crowd returned to normal. Jake handed Tank a copy of the list.
“Look at each name. See how many of these folks you know. Ask around and find out what you can.”
Tank held the list near his eyes. The light from the Michelob sign in the window glowed over his shoulder. “How many are black?”
“You tell me. That’s one reason I want you to look at it. Circle the black ones. If you’re not sure, find out. If you know any of the white folks, make a note.”
“I’ll be glad to, Jake. This ain’t illegal, is it?”
“Naw, but don’t tell anybody. I need it back by Wednesday morning.”
“You’re the boss.”
Tank got the last list, and Jake headed for the office. It was almost ten. Ethel had retyped the list from the initial one provided by Harry Rex, and a dozen copies had been hand-delivered to selected, trusted friends. Lucien, Stan Atcavage, Tank, Dell at the Coffee Shop, a lawyer in Karaway named Roland Isom, and a few others. Even Ozzie got a list.
________
Less than three miles from the tonk was a small, neat white-framed country house where Ethel and Bud Twitty had lived for almost forty years. It was a pleasant house with pleasant memories of raising children who were now scattered up North. The retarded son, the one who greatly resembled Lucien, lived in Miami for some reason. The house was quieter now. Bud
hadn’t worked in years, not since his first stroke in ’75. Then a heart attack, followed by two more major strokes and several small ones. His days were numbered, and he had long since accepted the fact that he would most likely catch the big one and die on his front porch shelling butterbeans. That’s what he hoped for, anyway.
Monday night he sat on the porch shelling butter-beans and listening to the Cardinals on the radio. Ethel was working in the kitchen. In the bottom of the eighth with the Cards at bat and two on, he heard a noise from the side of the house. He turned the volume down. Probably just a dog. Then another noise. He stood and walked to the end of the porch. Suddenly, a huge figure dressed in solid black with red, white, and black war paint smeared wickedly across his face jumped from the bushes, grabbed Bud and yanked him off the porch. Bud’s anguished cry was not heard in the kitchen. Another warrior joined in and they dragged the old man to the foot of the steps leading up to the front porch. One maneuvered him into a half-nelson while the other pounded his soft belly and bloodied his face. Within seconds, he was unconscious.
Ethel heard noises and scurried through the front door. She was grabbed by a third member of the gang, who twisted her arm tightly behind her and wrapped a huge arm around her throat. She couldn’t scream or talk or move, and was held there on the porch, terrified, watching below as the two thugs took turns with her husband. On the front sidewalk ten feet behind the violence stood three figures, each garbed in a full, flowing, white robe with red garnishment, each with a tall, white, pointed headdress from which fell a red and white mask that loosely covered each face. They
emerged from the darkness and watched over the scene as though they were the three wise men attending the manger.
After a long, agonizing minute, the beating grew monotonous. “Enough,” said the ruler in the middle. The three terrorists in black ran. Ethel rushed down the steps and slumped over her battered husband. The three in white disappeared.
________
Jake left the hospital after midnight with Bud still alive but everyone pessimistic. Along with the broken bones he had suffered another major heart attack. Ethel had made a scene and blamed it all on Jake.
“You said there was no danger!” she screamed. “Tell that to my husband! It’s all your fault!”
He had listened to her rant and rave, and the embarrassment turned to anger. He glanced around the small waiting room at the friends and relatives. All eyes were on him. Yes, they seemed to say, it was all his fault.
28
__________
G
wen called the office early Tuesday morning and the new secretary, Ellen Roark, answered the phone. She fumbled with the intercom until she broke it, then walked to the stairs and yelled: “Jake, it’s Mr. Hailey’s wife.”
He slammed a book shut and angrily picked up the receiver. “Hello.”
“Jake, are you busy?”
“Very. What’s on your mind?”
She started crying. “Jake, we need money. We’re broke, and the bills are past due. I haven’t paid the house note in two months and the mortgage company is callin’. I don’t know who else to turn to.”
“What about your family?”
“They’re poor folks, Jake, you know that. They’ll feed us and do what they can, but they can’t make our house notes and pay the utilities.”
“Have you talked to Carl Lee?”
“Not about money. Not lately. There’s not much he can do except worry, and Lord knows he’s got enough to worry about.”
“What about the churches?”
“Ain’t seen a dime.”
“How much do you need?”
“At least five hundred, just to catch up. I don’t know ’bout next month. I’ll guess I’ll worry then.”
Nine hundred minus five hundred left Jake with four hundred dollars for a capital murder defense. That had to be a record. Four hundred dollars! He had an idea.
“Can you be at my office at two this afternoon?”
“I’ll have to bring the kids.”
“That’s okay. Just be here.”
“I’ll be there.”
He hung up and quickly searched the phone book for Reverend Ollie Agee. He found him at the church. Jake fed him a line about meeting to discuss the Hailey trial and covering Agee’s testimony. Said the reverend would be an important witness. Agee said he would be there at two.
The Hailey clan arrived first, and Jake seated them around the conference table. The kids remembered the room from the press conference and were awed by the long table, thick swivel chairs, and impressive rows of books. When the reverend arrived he hugged Gwen and made a fuss over the kids, especially Tonya.
“I’ll be very brief, Reverend,” started Jake. “There are some things we need to discuss. For several weeks now, you and the other black ministers in this county have been raising money for the Haileys. And you’ve done a real good job. Over six thousand, I believe. I don’t know where the money is, and it’s none of my business. You offered the money to the NAACP lawyers to represent Carl Lee, but as you and I know, those lawyers won’t be involved in this case. I’m the lawyer, the only lawyer, and so far none of the money
has been offered to me. I don’t expect any of it. Evidently you don’t care about what kind of defense he gets if you can’t pick his lawyer. That’s fine. I can live with that. What really bothers me, Reverend, is the fact that none, and I repeat none, of the money has been given to the Haileys. Right, Gwen?”
The empty look on her face had turned to one of amazement, then disbelief, then anger as she glared at the reverend.
“Six thousand dollars,” she repeated.
“Over six thousand, at last reported count,” said Jake. “And the money is lying in some bank while Carl Lee sits in jail, Gwen’s not working, the bills are past due, the only food comes from friends, and foreclosure is a few days away. Now, tell us, Reverend, what’re your plans with the money?”
Agee smiled and said with an oily voice, “That’s none of your business.”
“But it’s my business!” Gwen said loudly. “You used my name and my family’s name when you raised that money, didn’t you, Reverend. I heard it myself. Told all the church folk that the love offerin’, as you called it, was for my family. I figured you had done spent the money on lawyers’ fee or somethin’ like that. And now, today, I find out you’ve got it stuck in the bank. I guess you plan to keep it.”
Agee was unmoved. “Now wait a minute, Gwen. We thought the money could best be spent on Carl Lee. He declined the money when he refused to hire the NAACP lawyers. So I asked Mr. Reinfeld, the head lawyer, what to do with the money. He told me to save it because Carl Lee will need it for his appeal.”
Jake cocked his head sideways and clenched his teeth. He started to rebuke this ignorant fool, but realized
Agee did not understand what he was saying. Jake bit his lip.
“I don’t understand,” said Gwen.
“It’s simple,” said the reverend with an accommodating smile. “Mr. Reinfeld said that Carl Lee would be convicted because he didn’t hire him. So then we’ve got to appeal, right? And after Jake here loses the trial, you and Carl Lee will of course be lookin’ for another lawyer who can save his life. That’s when we’ll need Reinfeld and that’s when we’ll need the money. So you see, it’s all for Carl Lee.”
Jake shook his head and silently cursed. He cursed Reinfeld more than Agee.
Gwen’s eyes flooded and she clenched her fists. “I don’t understand all that, and I don’t want to understand it. All I know is that I’m tired of beggin’ for food, tired of dependin’ on others, and tired of worryin’ about losin’ my house.”