I CALLED THE number on the Upper West Side the next morning. Louis picked up.
“You still coming down here?”
“Uh-huh. Be down in a couple of days.”
“How’s Angel?”
“Quiet. How you doin’?”
“Same old same old.”
“That bad?”
I had just spoken to Rachel. Hearing her voice had made me feel alone and had renewed my concern for her now that she was so far away.
“I have a favor to ask,” I said.
“Ask away. Askin’ is free.”
“You know someone who could stay with Rachel for a while, at least until I get back?”
“She ain’t goin’ to like it.”
“Maybe you could send someone who wouldn’t care.”
There was a silence as he considered the problem. When he eventually spoke, I could almost hear him smile.
“You know, I got just the guy.”
• • •
I spent the morning making calls, then drove up to Wateree and spoke to one of the Richland county deputies who had been first on the scene the night Marianne Larousse was killed. It was a pretty short conversation. He confirmed the details in his report but it was clear that he believed Atys Jones was guilty and that I was trying to pervert the course of justice by even speaking to him about the case.
I then headed on up to Columbia and spent some time speaking with a special agent named Richard Brewer at the headquarters of SLED. It was SLED special agents that had investigated the murder, as they did all homicides committed in the state of South Carolina, with the occasional exception of those that occurred within the jurisdiction of the Charleston PD.
“They like to think of themselves as independent down there,” said Brewer. “We call it the Republic of Charleston.”
Brewer was about my age, with straw-colored hair and a jock’s build. He wore standard issue SLED gear: green combats, a black T-shirt with “SLED” in green letters on the back, and a Glock 40 on his belt. He was one of the team of agents that had worked the case. He was a little more forthcoming than the deputy but could add little to what I already knew. Atys Jones was virtually alone in the world, he said, with only a few distant relatives left alive. He had a job packing shelves at a Piggly Wiggly and lived in a small one-bed walk-up in Kingville that was now occupied by a family of Ukrainian immigrants.
“That boy,” he said, shaking his head. “He had few people in this world to care about him before this, and he has a whole lot fewer now.”
“You think he did it?”
“Jury will decide that. Off the record, I don’t see no other candidates on the horizon.”
“And it was you that spoke to the Larousses?” Their statements were among the material Elliot had passed on to me.
“Father and son, plus the staff at their house. They all had alibis. We’re pretty professional here, Mr. Parker. We covered all the bases. I don’t think you’ll find too many holes in them there reports.”
I thanked him and he gave me his card in case I had any other questions.
“You got yourself a hard job, Mr. Parker,” he said as I stood to leave. “I reckon you’re going to be about as popular as shit in summertime.”
“It’ll be a new experience for me.”
He raised a skeptical eyebrow.
“You know, I find that hard to believe.”
Back at my hotel, I spoke to the people at the Pine Point Co-op about Bear, and they confirmed that he had arrived on time the day before and had worked about as hard as a man could be expected to work. They still sounded a little nervous, so I asked them to put Bear on the line.
“How you doing, Bear?”
“Okay.” He reconsidered. “Good, I’m doing good. I like it here. I get to work on boats.”
“Glad to hear it. Listen, Bear, I have to say this: you screw this up, or cause these people any trouble, and I’ll personally hunt you down and drag you to the cops, you understand.”
“Sure.” He didn’t sound aggrieved or hurt. I figured Bear was used to people warning him not to screw up. It was just a question of whether or not he took it in.
“Okay, then,” I said.
“I won’t screw up,” he confirmed. “I like these people.”
After I hung up on Bear, I spent an hour in the hotel gym followed by as many lengths of the pool as I could manage without cramping and drowning. Afterward, I showered and reread those sections of the case file that Elliot and I had discussed the night before. I kept coming back to two items: the story, photocopied from an out-of-print local history, of the death of the trunk minder Henry; and the disappearance, two decades before, of Atys Jones’s mother and aunt. Their pictures stared out at me from the newspaper clippings, two women forever frozen in their late teens and vanished from a world that had largely forgotten about them, until now.
As evening approached, I left the hotel and had coffee and a muffin in the Pinckney Café. While I waited for Elliot to arrive, I leafed through a copy of the Post and Courier that somebody had abandoned. One story in particular caught my eye: a warrant had been issued for the arrest of a former prison guard named Landron Mobley after he had missed a hearing of the Corrections Committee in connection with allegations of “improper relationships” with female prisoners. The only reason the story attracted my attention was because Landron Mobley had hired one Elliot Norton to represent him at both the hearing and what was expected to be a subsequent rape trial. I mentioned the case to Elliot when he arrived fifteen minutes later.
“Old Landron’s a piece of work,” said Elliot. “He’ll turn up, eventually.”
“Doesn’t seem like a high-class client,” I commented.
Elliot glanced at the story, then pushed it away although he still seemed to feel that some further explanation was necessary.
“I knew him when I was younger, so I guess that’s why he came to me. And, hey, every man is entitled to representation, doesn’t matter how guilty he is.”
He raised his finger to the waitress for the check, but there was something about the movement, something too hurried, that indicated Landron Mobley had just ceased to be a welcome topic of conversation between us.
“Let’s go,” he said. “Least I know where one of my clients is at.”
• • •
The Richland County Detention Center stood at the end of John Mark Dial Road, about one hundred miles northwest of Charleston, the approach marked by the offices of bondsmen and attorneys. It was a complex of low redbrick buildings surrounded by two rows of fencing topped with razor wire. Its windows were long and narrow, overlooking the parking lot and the woods beyond on one side. The inner fence was electrified.
There wasn’t a great deal that we could do to prevent the knowledge of Atys Jones’s impending release from reaching the media, so it wasn’t too much of a surprise to find a camera crew and a handful of journalists and photographers in the parking lot, drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes. I had gone on ahead of Elliot and had been watching them for about fifteen minutes by the time Elliot’s car appeared. Nothing exciting had happened to either them or me in the interim, apart from one brief flurry of domestic theater when an unhappy wife, a small, dainty woman in high heels and a blue dress, arrived to collect her husband after he’d spent some time cooling his heels in a cell. He had blood on his shirt and beer stains on his pants as he emerged blinking into the fading light of the early evening, at which point his wife slapped him once across the head and gave him the benefit of her wide and pretty profane vocabulary. He looked like he wanted to run back to jail and lock himself in his cell, especially when he saw all the cameras and thought, for one brief moment, that they’d come for him.
The media pounced on Elliot as soon as he stepped from his car, then tried to block his way again when he came out twenty minutes later through the wired tunnel that led into the jail’s reception area, his arm around the shoulders of a young man with light brown skin who kept his head low and his baseball cap pulled down almost to the bridge of his nose. Elliot didn’t even dignify them with a “No comment.” Instead, he thrust the young man into the car and they drove away, speeding. The more sensationalist members of the fourth estate raced to their vehicles to follow him.
I was already in place. I waited until Elliot had passed me, then kept close behind him as far as the exit road, at which point I gave the wheel a good spin and managed to block both lanes before stepping from the car. The TV van ground to a halt a few feet from my door and a cameraman in jungle fatigues opened the driver’s door and started screaming at me to get out of his way.
I examined my nails. They were nice and short. I tried to keep them neat. Neatness was a very underrated virtue.
“You hear me? Get the fuck out of the way,” yelled Combat Man. His face was turning a bright shade of red. Behind his van I could see more media types congregating as they tried to figure out what all the fuss was about. A small group of young black males in low-slung jeans and Wu Wear shirts emerged from a bondsman’s office and wandered down to enjoy the show.
Combat Man, tired of shouting and achieving no result, stormed toward me. He was overweight and in his late forties. His clothing looked kind of ludicrous on him. The black guys started in on him almost immediately.
“Yo, GI Joe, where the war at?”
“Vietnam over, man. You gotta let it go. You can’t be livin’ in the past.”
Combat Man shot them a look of pure hatred. He stopped about a foot from me and leaned in until our noses were almost touching.
“The fuck are you doing?” he asked.
“Blocking the road.”
“I can see that. Why?”
“So you can’t get through.”
“Don’t get smart with me. You move your car or I’ll drive my van through it.”
Over his shoulder I could see some prison guards emerging from the lockup, probably on their way to find out what the fuss was about. It was time to go. By the time the reporters got on to the main road, it would be too late for them to find Elliot and Atys. Even if they did find the car, their quarry would not be in it.
“Okay,” I told Combat Man. “You win.”
He seemed a little taken aback.
“That’s it?”
“Sure.”
He shook his head in frustration.
“By the way—”
He looked up at me.
“Those kids are stealing stuff from the back of your van.”
• • •
I let the media convoy get well ahead of me, then drove along Bluff Road, past the Zion Mill Creek Baptist Church and the United Methodist, until I reached Campbell’s Country Corner at the intersection of Bluff and Pineview. The bar had a corrugated roof and barred windows and didn’t look a whole lot different in principle from the county lockup, except that you could order a drink and walk away any time you wanted. It advertised “cold beer at low prices,” held a turkey shoot Fridays and Saturdays, and was a popular stopping-off point for those enjoying their first alcoholic taste of freedom. A hand-lettered sign warned patrons against bringing in their own beer.
I turned onto Pineview, past the side of the bar and a yellow lockup storage garage, and saw a shack standing in the middle of an overgrown yard. Behind the shack a white GMC 4x4 was waiting, into which Elliot and Atys had been transferred before Elliot’s own car, now being driven by another man, had continued on its way. The white GMC pulled out as I appeared, and I stayed a few cars behind it as it headed along Bluff toward 26. The plan was that we would drive Jones straight into Charleston and take him to the safe house. It was kind of a surprise, then, to see Elliot make a left into the lot of Betty’s Diner before he even reached the highway, open the passenger door, and allow Jones to walk ahead of him into the restaurant. I parked the Neon in back then followed them inside, trying to look casual and unconcerned.
Betty’s Diner was a small room with a counter to the left of the door, behind which two black women took orders while two men worked the grills. It was furnished with plastic garden tables and chairs, and the windows were obscured by both blinds and bars. Two TVs played simultaneously and the air was thick with the smell of fried foods and oil. Elliot and Jones were sitting at a table at the back of the room.
“Do you want to tell me what you’re doing?” I asked when I reached them.
Elliot looked embarrassed.
“He said he needed to eat,” he stammered. “He was cramping. Said he was going to collapse on me if he didn’t eat. He even threatened to jump from the car.”
“Elliot, step outside and you can still hear the echo of his cell door closing. Any closer and he’d be eating prison food again.”
Atys Jones spoke for the first time. His voice was higher than I expected, as if it had broken only recently instead of over half a decade before.
“Fuck you, man, I gots to eat,” he said.
He had a thin face, so light in color as to be almost Hispanic, and nervous, darting eyes. His head stayed low when he spoke, and he looked up at me from under his cap. Despite his bluster, his spirit had been broken. Atys Jones was about as tough as a piñata. Hit him hard enough and candy would come out his ass. Still, it didn’t make his manners any easier to take.
“You were right,” I told Elliot. “He’s quite the charmer. You couldn’t have picked someone a little less irritating to save?”
“I tried, but the Little Orphan Annie case was already taken.”
“The fuck—”
Jones was about to launch into a predictable tirade. I raised a finger at him.
“Stop right now. You swear at me again and that salt shaker is as close as you’ll get to a meal.”
He backed down.
“I didn’t eat nothing in jail. I was scared.”
I felt a stab of guilt and shame. He was a frightened young man with a dead girlfriend and the memory of her blood on his hands. His fate was in the hands of two white men and a jury that would most likely redefine the word “hostile.” All things considered, he was doing well just to be sitting upright with dry eyes.
“Please, man,” he said. “Just let me eat.”
I sighed. From the window where we sat I could see the road, the 4x4 and anybody approaching on foot. Even if somebody had taken it into his mind to hurt Jones, he wasn’t going to do it in Betty’s Diner. Elliot and I were the only white folk in the place, and the handful of people at the other tables were very deliberately ignoring our presence. If we saw any journalists, I could take him out the back way, assuming Betty’s had a back way. Maybe I was overreacting.
“Whatever,” I conceded. “Just be quick about it.”
It was pretty obvious that Jones hadn’t eaten much during his time in jail. His cheeks were hollow, his eyes sunken, and spots and boils had erupted on his face and neck. He devoured a plate of smothered porkchops with rice, green beans, and macaroni and cheese, then followed it with a slice of strawberry cream cake. Elliot nibbled at some fries while I stuck with coffee from the Mr. Coffee machine on the counter. When we were done, Elliot left Jones with me and went to pay the check.
Jones’s left hand lay flat upon the table, its only adornment a cheap Timex. His right hung on the stainless steel cross around his neck. It was T-shaped, and both its vertical and horizontal shafts appeared hollow. I reached out to touch it, but he drew back and there was something in his eyes that I didn’t like.
“What you doin’?”
“I just wanted to take a look at your cross.”
“It’s mine. I don’t want nobody else touchin’ it.”
“Atys,” I said softly. “Let me see the cross.”
He held onto it for a moment longer, then uttered a long “Shiiiit.” He lifted the cross from around his neck and let it fall gently into the palm of my hand. I dangled it from my fingers, then gave the shaft an experimental twist. It came loose in my hand. I let it fall to the table, exposing a two inch length of sharpened steel. I clasped the T in the palm of my hand, closed my fist and left the point sticking out between my middle and ring fingers.
“Where did you get this?”
The sunlight danced on the blade, reflecting in Jones’s eyes and face. He was reluctant to answer.
“Atys,” I said, “I don’t know you, but you’re already starting to bug me. Answer the question.”
He did some theatrical head shaking before he answered.
“Preacher gave it to me.”
“The chaplain?”
Jones shook his head. “No, one of the ministers comes to the jail. Tole me he was a prisoner too, once, ’cept the Lord set him free.”
“Did he say why he was giving this to you?”
“Tole me he knowed I was in trouble, knowed there was people tryin’ to kill me. Tole me that it would protect me.”
“He give you his name?”
“Tereus.”
“What did he look like?”
Jones met my eyes for the first time since I had taken the cross.
“He looked like me,” he replied, simply. “He looked like a man seen trouble.”
I replaced the shaft, covered the blade, then after a moment’s hesitation handed it back to him. He looked surprised, then nodded at me once in acknowledgment.
“If we do this right, then you won’t need it,” I said. “And if we screw up, maybe you’ll be glad of it.”
With that, Elliot returned and we left. Neither of us mentioned the knife to him. This time, there were no more stops, and nobody followed us as we made our way to Charleston and the East Side.
The East Side neighborhood was one of the original developments outside the old walled city, and had always been unsegregated. Blacks and whites shared the warren of streets bordered by Meeting and East Bay to the west and east, and the Crosstown Expressway and Mary Street to the north and south, although even in the mid-nineteenth century the black population was higher than the white. Working-class blacks, whites, and immigrants continued to live together on the East Side until after World War II, when the whites moved to the suburbs west of the Ashley. From then on, the East Side became a place into which you didn’t want to stray if you were white. Poverty took root, bringing with it the seeds of violence and drug abuse.
But the East Side was changing once again. Areas south of Calhoun Street and Judith Street that had once been exclusively black were now nearly all white, and wealthily so, and the wave of urban renewal and gentrification was also breaking on the southern verges of the East Side. Six years before, the average price of a house in the area was about $18,000. Now there were houses on Mary Street making $250,000, and even homes on Columbus and Amherst, close to the small park where the drug dealers congregated and within sight of the brownstone projects and yellow and orange public housing, were selling for two or three times what they were worth only half a decade before. But this was still, for the present, a black neighborhood, the houses painted in faded pastels, relics of the days without air-conditioning. The Piggly Wiggly grocery store at Columbia and Meeting, the yellow Money Man pawn shop across from it, the cut-rate liquor store nearby all spoke of lives far removed from those of the wealthy whites returning to the old streets.
The faces of the young men at the corners and the old people on their porches regarded us warily as we drove: a black man and a white man in one car, being tailed by a white man in a second car. We might not have been Five-O, but whatever we were we were still bad news. At the corner of American and Reid, on the side of a two-room house erected as some kind of art exhibit, someone had written the following lines:
THE AFRO-AMERICAN HAS BEEN HEIR TO THE MYTHS THAT IT IS BETTER TO BE POOR THAN RICH, LOWER-CLASS RATHER THAN MIDDLE OR UPPER, EASYGOING RATHER THAN INDUSTRIOUS, EXTRAVAGANT RATHER THAN THRIFTY AND ATHLETIC RATHER THAN ACADEMIC.
I didn’t know the source of the quotation, and neither did Elliot when I asked him about it later. Atys had apparently just looked blankly at the words on the wall. I guess he probably already knew all that it said from experience. Around us, hydrangeas were in bloom, and heavenly bamboo grew by the front steps of a neat two-story house on Drake Street, midway between a ruined building at the junction of Drake and Amherst and the Fraser Elementary at the corner of Columbus. It was painted white with yellow trim, and there were shutters drawn on both the upper and lower floors, slatted on the top floor to let the air in. A bay window faced out onto the street from beneath the porch, with the front doorway to the right, a mass-produced carved wood pattern above it for decoration. A flight of five stone steps led up to the door.
When he was certain the street was quiet, Elliot backed the GMC into the yard to the right of the doorway. I heard the sound of the doors opening, then footsteps as Atys and Elliot entered the house from the rear. Drake seemed largely empty apart from two small kids playing ball by the railings of the school. They remained there until it began to rain, the raindrops glittering in the glow of the street lamps that had just begun to shine, then ran for shelter. I waited ten minutes, the rain falling hard on the car, until I was certain that we hadn’t been followed, before I too headed into the house.
Atys—I was forcing myself to think of him by his first name in an effort to establish some kind of connection with him—sat uncomfortably at a cheap pine kitchen table, Elliot beside him. By the sink, an elderly black woman with silver hair was pouring five glasses of lemonade. Her husband, who was a lot taller than she was, held the glasses as she poured, then passed them, one by one, to their guests. His shoulders were slightly stooped, but the strength of his deltoid and trapezius muscles was still apparent from their definition beneath his white shirt. He was well over sixty years old, but I guessed that he could have taken Atys easily in a straight fight. He could probably have taken me.
“Devil and wife fighting,” he said, as I shook the rain from my jacket. I must have looked puzzled, because he repeated himself then pointed out the window at the rain and sunlight mingling.
“De wedduh,” he said. “Een yah cuh, seh-down.”
Elliot grinned at the incomprehension on my face. “Gullah,” he explained. “Gullah” was the term commonly used to describe the language and the people of the coastal islands, many of them the descendants of slaves who had been given island land and abandoned rice fields to settle in the aftermath of the Civil War.
“Ginnie and Albert used to live out on Yonges Island, but then Ginnie got sick and one of their sons, Samuel, the one who’s taking care of my car, insisted they move back to Charleston. They’ve been here ten years now, and I still don’t get some of what they say, but they’re good people. They know what they’re doing. He’s asking you to come in and sit down.”
I accepted the lemonade, thanked them, then took Atys by the shoulder into the small living room. Elliot seemed like he was about to follow me, but I indicated that I wanted a minute or two alone with his client. Elliot didn’t look too happy about it, but he stayed where he was.
Atys sat down on the very edge of the sofa, as if he were preparing to make a break for the door at any moment. He wouldn’t meet my eye. I sat opposite him in an overstuffed armchair.
“You know why I’m here?” I asked.
He shrugged. “’Cause you bein’ paid to be here.”
I smiled. “There’s that. Mostly, I’m here because Elliot doesn’t believe that you killed Marianne Larousse. A lot of other people do, though, so it’s going to be my job to maybe find evidence to prove them wrong. I can only do that if you help me.”
He licked his lips. There was sweat beading on his forehead. “They goan kill me,” he said.
“Who’s going to kill you?”
“Larousses. Don’t matter if they do it theyselves or get the state to do it, they still goan kill me.”
“Not if we can prove them wrong.”
“Yeah, and how you goan do that?”
I hadn’t figured that out yet, but talking to this young man was a first step.
“How did you meet Marianne Larousse?” I asked.
He sank back heavily into the sofa, resigned now to speaking of what had occurred.
“She was a student in Columbia.”
“I don’t see you as the student type, Atys.”
“Shit, no. I sold weed to them motherfuckers. They like to score.”
“Did she know who you were?”
“No, she didn’t know shit about me.”
“But you knew who she was?”
“’S right.”
“You know about your past, about the problems between your family and the Larousses.”
“That’s old shit.”
“But you know about it.”
“Yeah, I know.”
“She come on to you, or did you come on to her?”
He blushed and his face broke into a shit-eating grin. “Oh man, y’know, she was smokin’ and I was smokin’ and, ’s like, shit happened.”
“When did this start?”
“January, maybe February.”
“And you were with her all that time?”
“I was with her some. She went away in June. I didn’t see her from end of May until week, maybe two weeks before…” His voice trailed off.
“Did her family know she was seeing you?”
“Maybe. She didn’t tell them nothin’, but shit gets out.”
“Why were you with her?”
He didn’t answer.
“Because she was pretty? Because she was white? Because she was a Larousse?”
There was just a shrug in reply.
“Maybe all three?”
“I guess.”
“Did you like her?”
A muscle trembled in his cheek.
“Yeah, I liked her.”
I let it rest. “What happened on the night she died?”
Atys’s face seemed to fall, all of the confidence and front disappearing from it like a mask yanked away to reveal the true expression beneath. I knew then for certain that he hadn’t killed her for the pain was too real, and I guessed that what might have started out as a means of getting back at some half-sensed enemy had developed, at least on his side, into affection, and perhaps something more.
“We was screwing around in my car, out at the Swamp Rat by Congaree. Folks there don’t give a shit what you do, ’long as you got money and you ain’t a cop.”
“You had sex?”
“Yeah, we had sex.”
“Protected?”
“She was on the pill and, like, I been tested and shit but, yeah, she still like me to use a rubber.”
“Did that bother you?”
“What are you, man, stupid? You ever fucked with a rubber? It ain’t the same. It’s like…“ He struggled for the comparison.
“Wearing your shoes in the bathtub.”
For the first time he smiled and a little of the ice broke.
“Yeah, ’cept I ain’t never had a bath that good.”
“Go on.”
“We started arguing.”
“About what?”
“About how maybe she was ashamed of me, didn’t want to be seen with me. Y’know, we was always fuckin’ in cars, or in my crib if she got drunk enough not to care. Rest of the time, she drift by me like I don’t exist.”
“Did this argument turn violent?”
“No, I never touched her. Ever. But she start screamin’ and shoutin’ and, next thing I know, she’s runnin’ away. I was goan just let her go, m’sayin, let her cool off and shit? Then I went after her, callin’ her name.
“Then I found her.”
He swallowed and placed his hands behind his head. His lips narrowed. He seemed on the verge of tears.
“What did you see?”
“Her face, man, it was all busted in. Her nose… there was just blood. I tried to lift her, tried to brush away her hair from her face, but she was gone. There was nothin’ I could do for her. She was gone.”
And now he was crying, his right knee pumping up and down like a piston with the grief and rage that he was still suppressing.
“We’re nearly done,” I said.
He nodded and wiped away his tears with a sharp, embarrassed jerk of his arm.
“Did you see anybody, anyone at all, who might have done this to her?”
And for the first time, he lied. I watched his eyes, saw them look up and away from me for an instant before he answered.
“You sure?”
“Yeah, I’m sure.”
“I don’t believe you.”
He was about to give me outraged when I reached across and raised a finger in warning before him.
“What did you see?”
His mouth opened and closed twice without producing any sound, then: “I thought I saw something, but I’m not sure.”
“Tell me.”
He nodded, more to himself than to me.
“I thought I saw a woman. She was all in white, and movin’ away into the trees. But when I looked closer, there was nothin’ there. It could have been the river, I guess, with the light shinin’ on it.”
“Did you tell the police?” There had been no mention of a woman in the reports.
“They said I was lyin’.”
And he was still lying. Even now, he was holding back, but I knew I was going to get nothing more from him for the present. I sat back in the chair, then passed him the police reports. We went through them for a time, but he could find nothing to question beyond their implicit assumption of his guilt.
He stood as I placed the reports back in their file. “We done?”
“For now.”
He moved a couple of steps, then stopped before he reached the door.
“They took me past the death house,” he said softly.
“What?”
“When they was takin’ me to Richland, they drove me to Broad River and they showed me the death house.”
The state’s capital punishment facility was located at the Broad River Correctional Institution in Columbia, close by the reception and evaluation center. In a move that combined psychological torture with democracy, prisoners convicted of capital crimes prior to 1995 were allowed to choose between electrocution and lethal injection as their final punishment. All others were executed by injection, as Atys Jones would be if the state succeeded in its efforts to convict him of Marianne’s murder.
“They tole me I was goan be strapped down and then they was goan inject poisons into me, and that I’d be dying inside but I wouldn’t be able to move or cry out none. They tole me it be like suffocatin’ slow.”
There was nothing I could say.
“I didn’t kill Marianne,” he said.
“I know you didn’t.”
“But they goan kill me for it anyhow.”
His resignation made me feel cold inside.
“We can stop that from happening, if you help us.”
But he just shook his head and loped back to the kitchen. Elliot entered the room seconds later.
“What do you think?” he asked in a whisper.
“He’s holding something back,” I replied. “He’ll give it to us, in time.”
“We don’t have that kind of time,” snapped Elliot.
As I followed him into the kitchen, I could see the muscles bunched beneath his shirt, and his hands flexing and unflexing by his sides. He turned his attention to Albert.
“You need anything?”
“Us hab ’nuff bittle,” said Albert.
“I don’t mean just food. You need more money? A gun?”
The woman slammed her glass down on the table and shook her finger at Elliot.
“Don’ pit mout’ on us,” she said firmly.
“They think having a gun in the house will bring them bad luck,” Elliot said.
“They may be right. What do they do if there’s trouble?”
“Samuel lives with them, and I suspect he has less trouble with guns than they have. I’ve given them all our numbers. If anything goes wrong, they’ll call one of us. Just make sure you keep your phone with you.”
I thanked them both for the lemonade, then followed Elliot to the door.
“You leavin’ me here?” cried Atys. “With these two?”
“Dat boy ent hab no mannus,” scolded the old woman. “Dat boy gwi’ punish fuh ’e wickitty.” She poked at Atys with her finger. “Debblement weh dat chile lib.”
“Get off me,” he retorted, but he looked kind of worried.
“Be good, Atys,” said Elliot. “Watch some TV, get some sleep. Mr. Parker will check on you tomorrow.”
Atys raised his eyes to mine in a last, desperate plea.
“Shit,” he said, “by tomorrow these two probably have eaten me.”
When we left him, the old woman had just started poking him again. Outside, we passed their son, Samuel, on the way back to the house. He was a tall, handsome man, my age or a little younger, with large brown eyes. Elliot introduced us and we shook hands.
“Any trouble?” asked Elliot.
“None,” Samuel confirmed. “I parked outside your office. Keys are on top of the right rear wheel.”
Elliot thanked him and he headed toward the house.
“You sure he’ll be okay with them?” I asked Elliot.
“They’re smart, like their boy, and the folks round here look out for them. Any strangers come sniffing down this street and half the young bucks will be following them before they have a chance to get their shoes dirty. As long as he’s here, and no-one finds out about it, he’ll be safe.”
The same faces watched us leave their streets and I thought that maybe Elliot was right. Maybe they would take account of strangers coming into their neighborhood.
I just wasn’t sure that it would be enough to keep Atys Jones safe from harm.