The Governor's Sons (33 page)

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Authors: Maria McKenzie

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“Do you think it could have been a—a secret love?”

“You mean—like a white trash girl—or a foreigner?” Lillian Ann replied snidely.
 
“Oh, Charlene, who knows?
 
So—Ash told you that he’d been in love—and the girl died?”

“He didn’t really
choose
to tell me.
 
But when we first met—I could tell something happened—that devastated him and caused some type of trauma.
 
After I wouldn’t let the subject drop—he told me.
 
Besides the bare facts, I don’t know anything else, and he doesn’t want to talk about it.
 
I guess you could say curiosity’s gotten the better of me,” Charlene said, then thought to herself, along with the onset of menopause, insecurity about my marriage, and my fading looks.

“Well…” Lillian Ann looked thoughtful for a moment.
 
“You know, Charlene, now that you mention--a young girl dying—
before
he met you—I do remember something.”

“What?”
 
Charlene was eager to hear, but Lillian Ann didn’t say anything right away.
 
Instead she smiled crookedly with one eyebrow raised.

“There was a girl that worked for his family one summer.”
 
Lillian Ann paused a bit longer than necessary. “She ended up dying the next year.”

“Oh,” Charlene said uncomfortably.

Lillian Ann leaned close to Charlene. Tobacco and alcohol laced her breath. “Talk was--she was raped—and
died
having the rapist’s child.”

Charlene’s eyes widened.
 
“That’s horrible.”

“It
was
horrible, especially from what I remember hearing—from the
Neegroes
.”

Charlene’s eyes widened, and she couldn’t speak for a moment.
 
“So—the girl that died—the one—
you’re
talking about—was a Negro?”

“Yes,” Lillian Ann sharply.

“What was her name?”

Lillian Ann laughed.
 
“Charlene, that happened a million years ago.
 
I can hardly recall the names of the temporary help that worked in my own home back then.
 
But if I do remember—I’ll let you know.”
 
Lillian Ann paused, gazing behind Charlene.

Charlene glanced over her shoulder to see why. Ash was walking down the steps from the French doors.

“There’s your husband,” Lillian Ann said.
  
“He’s probably looking for you.
 
Now, if you’ll excuse me.”
 
She left Charlene alone and walked in Ash’s direction.
 

As Lillian Ann moved toward him, Charlene watched.
 
Lillian Ann appeared to sway her broadly encased hips and thrust her shoulders back, perhaps in an effort to entice Ash with the large sagging bosom she’d piled into her all in one undergarment.

“Your mother’s having a
lovely
party,” Charlene heard Lillian Ann say to Ash.
 
“And I just had a
lovely
chat with your wife.”

“I’m glad you’re enjoying yourself, Lillian Ann.”
 
Ash was polite.
 
“Now, go help yourself to some punch and lay off the alcohol.”

Lillian Ann threw her head back and stalked off.
 
Meanwhile, Ash headed for Charlene.
 
He smiled while approaching her. “Here you are.”

Charlene didn’t say anything, but only pursed her lips.

“What’s wrong?”
 
He squeezed her arm gently.
 
“You look worried.
 
Is everything okay?”

Charlene quickly unknit her brows and tried to look pleasant.
 
“I’m fine.”
 
She nervously clasped her hands.
 
“It’s—it’s nothing.”

Ash lightly touched her cheek as he said, “I was wondering where you disappeared to.”
 
He glanced back toward the house.

Lillian Ann stood in the entranceway of the French doors.
 
When she noticed Ash gazing in her vicinity, Charlene observed her hold tight to her young stud, as though trying to make Ash jealous.
 
But Ash ignored Lillian Ann and turned back to his wife.

“Why were you out here talking to that lush?”

Charlene only smiled as she grabbed his arm and began walking.
 
“It’s not important.
 
Let’s us just go back inside.”

****

Charlene tried to suppress a yawn as she spoke with Mikki on the sofa in the living room.
 
It was near midnight, and the last of the guests were leaving.
 
However, before Lillian Ann said her goodbyes, she asked to see Charlene, then steered her to a quiet corner in the large foyer.
 
A new cigarette flared bright orange in the long black stem that dangled from her hot pink mouth.
 

“Kitty,” Lillian Ann said.

“Pardon me?” Charlene asked.

Lillian Ann removed the cigarette from her lips and held it between brightly polished hot pink fingers.
 
“Kitty.
 
That was the Negro girl’s name.”
 
A nasty gleam lit her reddened emerald eyes.
 
“At least that’s what Ash called her.”

“Oh,” Charlene said softly.

“Why don’t you ask Ash about her?
 
He can tell you more than I can, that is—if you care to know anything else.”
 
Lillian Ann’s husband sauntered toward her and draped a white silk shawl around her shoulders.

That beautiful hunk of beef cake was quite attentive to his meal ticket, Charlene thought, then scolded herself for being so catty.

“Goodnight, Charlene,” Lillian Ann said.

“Goodnight, Lillian Ann.”
 
Charlene nodded toward Lillian Ann’s husband and said goodnight to him as well.

Lillian Ann inhaled deeply from her cigarette. “Charlene, darling,” smoke rolled from her lips, “I just can’t tell you how
nice
it was to see you again—and I so
enjoyed
our chat.”

Chapter 21

The greasy smell of hamburgers and frozen French fries from dinner still lingered in the carriage house.
 
Otis sipped on a can of Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer and gazed over at Libby.
 
She’d been fidgety all evening.
 
Distracted, she’d hardly been able to eat anything.
 
And now while they sat on the couch watching the late night movie, she couldn’t even focus on it.
 
For the third time, Libby cleaned her glasses.
 
But pretty soon, she’d probably start tearing into her cuticles again.

It was the Organization, Otis suspected.
 
Maybe she should pull out.
 
The stress was getting to her.
 
Of course, if he said this, she’d disagree, not to mention lose her temper, and he certainly didn’t want to make her angry.

Whatever was going on probably involved another task for him.
 
The tasks had been exciting.
 
Libby appreciated his talent and he’d received praise from the Organization.
 
Otis knew what he was doing was wrong—but he hadn’t hurt anyone.
 
That’s how he’d tried to justify things to himself.

“Otis,” Libby said, as she turned away from the T.V. to look at him.

“Yes, honey.”

“Do you mind if we turn the movie off?”
 
Otis shook his head.
 
“I can’t seem to pay attention, anyway,” Libby said, shutting off the television.
 
Although smiling, Libby appeared uncomfortable. “Otis, you have such beautiful eyes; so trusting, so brown.
 
Now, honey—you’ve done everything I’ve asked you to, and I appreciate that.
 
But this time--what I need is a lot more than anything I’ve ever asked before.”
 
She hesitated briefly.
 
“Look—I--I won’t beat around the bush.
 
I’m just gonna lay it out straight, darlin’.”

Libby took a deep breath. “Our operatives told me that Harland Hall’s moving his office from Atlanta, to right here in Clarkstown.”

So, Otis thought, that’s what’s got her all up in arms.
 
“Well, he’s quite the—uh--force to be reckoned with.”
 
He smiled.
 
“That is—I guess—anyway.
 
Now, honey, just who is he exactly?”

“You know who Martin Luther King, Jr. is, right?”

Otis nodded.
 
He could tell by Libby’s tone that she was annoyed.

“Well, Hall is almost just as bad!
 
He works right alongside King and organizes those damned so-called peaceful demonstrations and protest marches that stir up all kinds of trouble!”

“Oh…so, he
is
somethin’, isn’t he?”
 
Otis tried to sound as worked up as Libby.

“Yeah--and he’s gotta be stopped.”

“What can be done to stop him from moving here?”

Libby looked at him intensely.
 
“Otis—lots can be done once he gets here.”

“So—once he’s here, we can scare him some, right?
 
Do some things like we’ve been doing.”

Libby bit into her upper lip. “We want to do more than scare him.”

“Well, what can we do to just make him stay in Atlanta and not come here?”

“We
want
him to come here!
 
The Atlanta operatives want him out of Georgia.
 
They don’t want his blood on their hands.
 
The FBI’s closing in on them so they have to be careful.”

“‘Blood on their hands?’”

“He’s too powerful just to threaten!”

“Libby, what are you trying to say?”

“Harland Hall has got to be stopped—for good!”

“Well look, honey—when I made those bombs and set ‘em off at the synagogue, the paper and the NAACP, they got results.”

Libby banged her fist into the back of the couch.
 
“Temporary results!
 
No one was killed in those explosions, and the damage to the property was minimal!
 
People quieted down for a few days—so what?!”

Otis slightly edged away from her.
 
“I’m not out to kill anybody.”

“If he’s not killed,” Libby leaned close to him, “he could at least be maimed!
 
That would shut him up.
 
Otis, you can make a mail bomb. Blowing off his hands and face might be an even more powerful statement than killing him!”

Otis stood from the couch.
 
“Libby—you’re sounding like a lunatic!”

She sprang to her feet to face him.
 
“I am not a LU-NA-TIC!
 
Otis, you’re playing with the big boys now, and they’re expecting me—us—to do this!”

“Libby—I can’t go hurt somebody like that.”

“Harland Hall isn’t
just somebody
!”
 
She poked her bony finger into his chest.
 
“He’s a puppet—a Communist pawn—and an evil tool of the Jews!”
 
She continued poking him to punctuate each point.
 
“He’s a threat—and one that’s hard to control.
 
But worst of all, Otis, he’s nothing but a Negro!
 
I’ve seen him interviewed on television more than once.
 
He’s respected—people listen to him!
 
The T.V. reporters treat
him
better than they’d ever treat you!”

Otis took a few steps away from her.
 
“Libby—I’m not gonna hurt him!
 
You think it matters a hoot to me how I’d get treated by a T.V. reporter?”

“Otis,” she sidled up to him, then seductively put her scrawny arms around him.
 
As she kissed him, he almost lost his senses.
 
“You like what I do for you,” she said softly and began unbuckling his belt.
 
“We can do what you really like—right now.
 
But you have to promise to help me.”

“Libby…”
 
Otis swallowed hard, as she unzipped his pants.
 
He removed her hands when she tried to slip them inside, then backed away from her as though she’d turned into a water moccasin.
 
 

“Libby,” Otis zipped his trousers quickly, “when I—I came on board—I made it clear—I wouldn’t hurt anybody.
 
I—I haven’t changed my mind,” he stammered. “I can’t be a part of this anymore.”

Libby’s eyes flashed angrily.
 
“What!”

“We can’t go turning into folks like that other group that killed Willie Cane and his wife and child.”

“We
are
that group!
 
We’re one and the same!
 
I didn’t tell you because I thought I could make you to see things as clearly as I do!”

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