Little Scarlet (20 page)

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Authors: Walter Mosley

Tags: #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Private investigators, #Mystery & Detective, #Political, #Rawlins; Easy (Fictitious character), #General, #Mystery fiction, #African American, #Fiction, #Private investigators - California - Los Angeles, #African American men

BOOK: Little Scarlet
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“You’re crying,” she said.

I didn’t even know that.

Somehow I was sitting on my desk. Juanda was standing next to me, holding me like the young mother she dreamt of becoming. My tears stopped. But the rage was still singing inside me.

“How did you know where I was?” I asked her.

“Phone book,” she said simply. “I needed to see you.”

“Somebody after you?”

“Naw,” she said. “I’m after you.”

I took a deep breath. My heart was pounding and I had an erection that I was sure she could see through my pants. My mind was tuning in and out like a radio receiver ranging over all of the things I was feeling and the things I had to do.

I wanted sex with that gorgeous young woman. Right there on the table with no foreplay or pretense. I wanted to be as blunt as she was, grunting out the anger in my body.

But that brought my fine tuner back to Harold. That was Harold running my mind, making me just like him.

“I love my girlfriend, Juanda,” I said.

“That’s okay. I don’t mind.”

I pulled her arms from around my neck, standing up as I did so. I ran my hands down to her elbows and walked her toward the chair where Detective Suggs last sat.

“I’m just not that young anymore, baby,” I said. “If I was in the bed with you, then I’d have to give up something.”

“I ain’t askin’ for that.”

“But I would,” I said. “You know I would. That’s why you’re here. You can read me like a first-grade primer.”

She cracked a grin and pushed her shoulder in my direction.

“That’s why I like you,” she said. “’Cause you so smart. I bet you read all those books on that shelf over there.”

“Yeah,” I said. “Just about.”

I moved back to my chair. She crossed her legs and my heart thrummed. I needed a woman so much right then that I would have probably gotten excited over her picking her nose.

“You know a guy used to live in a cardboard shelter in a vacant lot over there on Grape?” I asked her.

“Oh yeah,” she said. “Harold.”

“He killed Nola Payne and a whole lotta other women.”

“What?”

“Killed her. Dead. He’s been killin’ black women for years. Any time one of them gets in with a man looks white to Harold, he kills ’em.”

“No.”

“Yes.”

Juanda had learned from a long line of tough black women to show a hard face even when she was laughing. But the crime I suggested wiped all that away. She uncrossed her legs and sat forward.

“For real?”

“Can you tell me anything about him?” I replied.

“No. Not me. All he ever said was good mornin’ to me. He really killed Nola?”

“Yeah.”

“How do you know? Nobody done said she dead.”

“Listen, Juanda. This is a serious thing here. Harold is a dangerous man. I don’t want you talkin’ about it because if he knows you and if he thinks you know about him he will kill you without thinking twice. You hear me?”

“Uh-huh. Yeah.”

“He’s a killer and I’m gonna take him down.”

“Nola’s dead?”

“Yeah. Her aunt Geneva found her and called the cops. They thought that it was a white guy did it, so they brought me in to help because they couldn’t work too well so soon after the riots. But it wasn’t that white man. It was Harold. He’s been killin’ black women around here for years.”

“He has? Why didn’t somebody stop him?”

“Because nobody cares about black women bein’ killed,” I said harshly. “Nobody cares about you, girl. A man could cut your throat and throw you in the river and if a cop see you floatin’ by he wouldn’t even drag you in because he might get his shoes wet.”

I experienced a vicious satisfaction hurting Juanda like that. It was wrong but I was angry.

“Can you drive me home, Mr. Rawlins?”

“Sure I can,” I said. “I’m going to give you my number here too. If you get scared or find out something you call me. I got an answering machine now and I’ll be sure to get the message.”

I walked her down to my car and then drove her home.

On the way she didn’t chatter about her relatives and the events of her life. She pulled close to me and put her head on my shoulder.

I don’t think I ever wanted to be with a woman more in all my life. I wanted to lick the tears from her face.

 

35

 

I came back to my office after dropping Juanda off at her auntie’s house. We were halfway to Grape Street when she decided that she didn’t want to be around where Harold had just been living. We kissed when she got out but that was just reassurance. She was scared.

I knew that by warning Juanda I ran the risk of people starting to talk about Harold and running him into hiding but I had no other choice. Juanda was a woman and there was a woman killer in her neighborhood. No secret was worth her life.

 

 

TANYA BRYANT,
Bill Bryant, Joseph, Martin, JaneAnne, Penelope, and Felicia all lived in colored neighborhoods. I called their numbers asking for Harold. Not one of them knew a Harold with their last name. At least none of them admitted to it. There were two H. Bryant listings. Harvey and Helena.

Only Tom Lakely of the phone book Lakelys lived in a Negro community. But he didn’t answer his phone.

There were no Ostenbergs anywhere near SouthCentral L.A.

I knew that Harold didn’t have a phone, but he did have a relative. I tried to think about Harold. We only spoke for a few minutes the day I was snooping around Jackie Jay’s neighborhood. He talked about having the flu, about the police arresting him. About Jackie. He said that he didn’t know her at first but then he said… he said that his mother’s name started with a “J.” What was her name?

I was forty-five that year and my memory, though still pretty strong, had begun to drop certain details. Names of relatives and friends from long ago slowly floated away. Numbers and sequences blended together. I remembered the smelly Harold telling me that Jackie’s name started with a “J” just like his mother’s. But the name was… the name was…

I finally decided that it didn’t matter. I had the first letter. That would have to be enough.

I pulled out my phone book, and starting with the Brown listings, I called every “J” in our neighborhood. Janes and Joes answered most often. There was a Jeanette, a Julia, a Jules, and a Jay. One woman answered and I asked her if she had a son named Harold.

“No, mister,” she said. “Are you sure he said Jocelyn Brown was his mama?”

Jocelyn!

“Yes ma’am,” I said. “Thank you, ma’am.”

I spent the rest of the afternoon going through the Smiths. I called until the tip of my pointer finger was sore from dialing.

I made a few notes about people who sounded cagey, but no one seemed to be a good prospect.

Once when I hung up, the phone rang.

“Hello?”

“Hi, baby,” Bonnie said. “Are you still looking for that man?”

“Uh-huh.”

“I’ve been trying to call you for hours but the phone line was always busy.”

“I think I might know the killer’s last name,” I said. “I’ve been calling all day trying to get a line on my guy Harold.”

“Do you need some help?”

I was born as poor as it gets in America. No running water, no heat, and only internal organ meat to eat once or twice a week if we were lucky. I never owned a new article of clothing until I was sixteen and already on my own for seven years. In my mind I still had that home to return to but I was no longer poor. Bonnie’s offer and Juanda’s embrace were gifts many a rich man could never claim. I was saved by the love of black women. Harold wouldn’t live to see 1966.

“Well,” I said, “I’ve only been calling in the Negro neighborhoods. I figure that his mother would be around here. But maybe they’re in the valley or down around Santa Monica. Maybe you could call those numbers.”

“Sure,” she said happily.

“You can’t give your name or anything else,” I said. “You can’t sound like there’s any problem at all.”

“Okay.”

I gave her the last names and Jocelyn. She took a deep breath and told me that she loved me.

I hung up the phone, wondering how long my perfect life could last.

The phone rang again.

“They call, Easy?” he asked even before I could say hello.

“Yeah, Jackson, they sure did. And I hope you plan to do right by these people and Jewelle.”

“What they say, man?”

“I only talked to the banker,” I said. “He gave me his home number. He said that they wanted to hire you for a responsible position. I told him that you were trustworthy and good. I hope you don’t make me a liar.”

“Easy, he don’t even know who you is, brother. It’s not like you put your name on the line.”

“It’s just like that, man. It’s just like that.”

“Well, don’t you worry, brother. I know them machines better’n the men who made ’em and I haven’t even seen one yet.”

Of all his failings, one thing Jackson didn’t suffer from was false pride. If he said that he was good at something, he was most probably the best. And if he said he was the best, then all the masters had better run and hide.

“I got somethin’ for ya, Ease,” he said.

“What’s that?”

“Boy name’a Harold. He cranky and mean and been livin’ in the street since he lost his job in nineteen fifty-six.”

“Where?”

“He been stayin’ at a mission over on Imperial Highway. They serve two meals a day there and let people stay as long as they don’t cause no trouble.”

“Did you get Harold’s last name?”

“Brown,” Jackson said. “Harold Brown.”

I held my breath. My luck was incredible. All I had to do was sit at my desk and whatever I wanted — sex or love or information — just poured in over my phone and through the door.

“I don’t get it, Jackson. Where’d you find all’a this?”

“Axed around, man. Axed around. You know, Easy, you takin’ care’a me. I sure in hell better make sure that you doin’ fine.”

“Who did you ask?”

“I got to keep my secrets now, Ease.”

“This is no time to play with me, Jackson.”

“There’s a sister work for the Congress of Negro Baptist Churches used to like me some,” he said. “I called and asked her if she knew how I could get a line on a man that’s homeless. I told her that his son just died. You know when you tell a woman about the death of a man’s son she’s all upset. Anyway, she give me a list of missions and I just called until I found the man meet your needs.”

“They just told you who he was?”

“I reeled out a story, Easy. You not the only one can do that. I told ’em that a man from their place, a big boy named Harold, had found my wallet and give it back to me wit’ all the money in it. I said that I wanted to reward him. You know wit’ a success story like that they was ready to let me spend a night with one’a their sisters.”

I could almost hear his grin.

“You a good man, Jackson,” I said. “You’re a dog but you’re a good man.”

 

36

 

If the Watts Community Men’s Shelter was on public school grounds it would have been called a gymnasium. It was a large empty space like an airplane hangar with pitted pine floors. The walls were thirty feet high and the only windows lined the ceiling. On one side there were rows of canvas cots and on the other, rows of tables with benches along them. There must have been five dozen men in the room. The smell of mayonnaise and body odor was overwhelming.

“Can I help you?” a young man asked.

He was black but his hair was straight, not straightened. His words were clear and well articulated but there was a whisper of Spanish somewhere.

“I’m lookin’ for Harold Brown,” I said.

The young man, who was slender and well groomed, hesitated. I knew then that I was going to have trouble finding my quarry.

“This isn’t a hotel, sir,” he said. “People come here for food and shelter. There’s no entertaining here.”

“It’s very important that I see Harold Brown,” I said. “Extremely important.”

“A lacerated foot or a chest infection,” he said. “Those are the things important around here. A good night’s sleep is what we strive for.”

I looked out over the crowd of brown and black men. Some of them were probably made homeless by the riots but the majority were permanent inhabitants of the streets of L.A., San Diego, San Francisco, and every other stop along the rails. Their clothes, no matter the original color, mostly tended toward gray and their shoulders stooped under the almost metaphorical weight of poverty.

“So you not gonna help me?” I asked the prissy gatekeeper.

“If you needed a place to stay I would,” he said.

But it was too late for that.

I took two steps past his desk.

“Sir,” he said, rising to his feet.

I ignored him, walking further toward the gang of lost souls.

“Bernard, Teddy,” the young man said.

To my left I saw two brawny black men straighten up. They wore makeshift uniforms of yellow T-shirts and black slacks.

They were large and young but still I contemplated going up against them. Maybe if they were closer I would have thrown myself into it. But they were ten paces away. By the time they’d taken six steps my common sense kicked in.

“All right,” I said to one. “I’m goin’.”

I walked out of the front door onto Imperial Highway. I was mad at myself. If somebody told Harold I was looking for him he’d run and I might never find him again.

There was a phone booth across the street. I decided to call Suggs and wait at the entrance hoping that there wasn’t a back exit that Harold would decide to use. For a moment I thought about calling Raymond, to get him to guard the back door. But I knew better than to get the cops and Mouse working on the same job. If he decided to kill Harold he might take a few policemen along with him.

“Hey, mister,” someone said. “Mister.”

He was a small man. Smaller than Jackson Blue and lighter skinned than Mouse. He was young and hunched over. He wore stained blue coveralls and yellow rubber flip-flops on bare feet that a man of sixty could have called his own.

“What?”

“You lookin’ for Harold Brown?”

“Uh-huh. You know him?”

“Yes sir. I sure do.”

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