BILL breakfasted with Isabelle in their room the next morning, kissed her goodbye and took the elevator down into the lobby. In all his being he felt the new day. He walked across a spotless rug, past the bellboys, looking about him with confident eyes. He had changed into a single-breasted brown suit, a white shirt, a green tie and a brown felt hat. His jaws gleamed from his shave.
He swung through the hotel door and out on Forty-Second Street. Thousands of people were legging it east to Lexington and Third Avenues, and west to Madison and Fifth. As if on escalators, they passed endlessly before Bill. He stepped over to the cab rank on the curb, nodded at the driver in the first cab, guessing automatically at the driver’s race — he was an Italian — and said, “One Hundred Twenty-Fifth Street and Lenox.”
“Okay,” said the driver.
Bill got into the leather interior of the cab which wheeled west to Madison Avenue. After the coming-and-going atmosphere of Forty-Second Street, Madison with its luggage shops and hotels almost seemed like a quiet back alley. He lit a cigarette. He wasn’t thinking of Isabelle, of Hayden or even of Big Boy Bose. He was finished burning up energy on useless speculations. Finished. The traffic was heavy and the cab turned east to Third Avenue. The sunlit streets streaked into Bill’s vision. A horse and wagon galloped ahead of the cab. Bill looked out on miles of storefronts, at faces glimpsed on the sidewalks and vanishing as the cab travelled north. It was a city of foreigners, he thought as the cab slanted west again, rolling onto Fifth Avenue at One Hundred and Tenth Street. The people he saw now were dark-faced Porto Ricans, small brown men in suits with padded shoulders, a neighborhood whose plateglass lettering was in a foreign language. The bodegas, the carnicerias petered out before fish-fry places, bar-b-q’s, drug stores, merging with a township of Negroes, men in shirts without jackets and wearing wide-brimmed hats like western stetsons, boys in zoot suits, narrow at the ankle, bagging at the knee, black and bronze women in spring dresses, chatting in front of the markets.
He paid off the driver on One Hundred and Twenty-Fifth Street and Lenox Avenue, omitting the tip because the cab had travelled needlessly to the east and out of his way when they had first set out. He walked two blocks to the north, swerved into a sidestreet. The night before, the street had been like a tunnel but now in the bright eleven o’clock hour it was alive with Negroes on the stoops. The windows swayed the furnished room signs, and tiny gardens grew in the flower pots on the window sills. Big Boy’s address was a three-story brownstone with a narrow vestibule. There were four tarnished letter boxes but only one of them had a name: J. Bose. Bill pressed the black rubber button below the name and waited as he had the night before for somebody to come down. Through the glass of the vestibule door, he peered at a flight of stairs covered with green worn carpeting. He pressed the button again.
Somebody was coming down the stairs. A Negro woman waddled over towards Bill, her broad face frowning. She flung the door open. “Come on in,” she invited him grudgingly. “You the man last night, ain’t you? Big Boy’s waitin’ for you.”
You black bastard, he thought. But at least he had gotten inside the house today. He followed her up the flight to the landing. “Where is Big Boy?”
“That door there. That one.” The woman pointed one black square finger to the rear and left him. He was alone in a corridor whose walls had once been painted oyster white but were now smudged as if patterned over by a hundred dirty hand prints. Up front, there were two adjoining doors and two doors in the rear. His nostrils dilated as he inhaled the musty tenement smell. Nigger stink, he thought, hurrying to the door the woman had pointed out. He knocked, waited for an answer, knocked again, waited again and then tried the knob. The door was open.
He entered the first box room of a rear flat. But where the hell was Big Boy? Maybe that nigger woman’d been mistaken. He strode through a kitchen with a chipped sink and a brand new frigidaire, white and gleaming and surprising in this flat. Beyond the kitchen there was an empty hall bedroom, a shut blue-painted door. He guessed that Big Boy was behind that door and raised his fist to knock and a sudden vindictive smile twisted his lips. Why the hell should he knock? Just because Dent advised politeness? Dent and all the other nigger-lovers who’d heel a nigger ought to be tarred and feathered. He shoved the blue door open.
“Who’s that?” a voice rattled at him. A huge black man was sitting in a brown leather chair. He shot an appraising glance at Bill and then folded up the tabloid he’d been reading as if the pages were made of stone. He was wearing a dark grey suit, the jacket opened on a grey silk shirt. His necktie was grey and green, attached to the shirt by a gold pin. Bill had seen big-shot Negroes before but never anyone like this man with his massive slow movements, his conservative clothes, his black bulldog jowls. Big Boy’s head was a round ball, slightly oversized like the head of a snowman. “You Dent’s man?”
“Yes. You’re Big Boy Bose?”
“Nobody else but.” A Turkish rug covered most of the warped tenement floor boards. A radio as new as the frigidaire in the kitchen glistened on a rickety table that might have been picked up in a junk yard. Big Boy shifted his bulk. “Dent didn’t say what you want to see me about.” He took a pigskin cigar container out of his jacket, selected a cigar and bit off the end which he spat out on the rug. The cigar was a deep brown in color, several shades lighter than the stubby fingers that held it.
Bill searched for a chair. There was a wooden one against the wall. He lifted it over, nearer to Big Boy and sat down. “Now my business,” Bill said, smiling. “I think you’ll be interested.”
Big Boy puffed on his cigar. “Where’re you from? Atlanta?”
“Atlanta? No. I was born in the north.”
“I got a hunch on you guys. You, South. Dent, now, he ain’t South. He just money, that man.”
Bill laughed, fumbled for a cigarette and the Big Boy report that Hayden’d read to him yesterday flipped over in his consciousness like a page in a book. A sudden clear instinct about Hayden signaled through him. Dent was no chance fixer, Big Boy no chance racketeer, and he himself no chance operative; all of them were pieces, he thought in Hayden’s bloody jig-saw puzzle; that damn jig-saw puzzle the super-brain’d crapped about at dinner.
“How long you know Dent?” Big Boy asked.
“Not so long.”
“He give me what you look like good as a fly-ass dick,” Big Boy said. “Scar across the corner of your lip.”
“Is there any ash tray here?”
“Drop ‘em on the floor. Now, I ain’t got all day.”
“Neither have I. I think you’ll be interested. It ties in with the killing of Randolph by that Jew cop — ”
Big Boy’s broad lips parted and his moon face glared. “That bastard. They’ll get a dose of their own lead. The bastards,” he panted, his chest heaving. “All them white bastards. We more’n they but they the boss man. It’s gonna stop some day. We colored’ll wipe ‘em off the face of the earth. What they do to us, we’ll do to them.”
Again the Big Boy report whirred through Bill’s brain but no report could’ve told him what he’d learned now. Big Boy was really crazy on the subject of the white man. He knew from his prohibition-time experience that sometimes a mobster went in for defending his race; he had heard of an Italian beer king who regularly dispatched strongarms to beat up Irish gangsters terrorizing Italian storekeepers; of a Jewish gambler who had privately found out the identities of a synagogue-wrecking bunch of hoodlums and had paid a gang who went in for assault and battery for their systematic punishment. But these cases were exceptional and Bill was positive that the Italian beer king and the Jewish gambler didn’t get too emotionally involved. They weren’t fanatics but hard-headed businessmen. But Big Boy was also a businessman, one of the best in Harlem, and it was incredible to realize that he could get hot with the zeal of a cotton belt preacher.
“The business I have in mind,” Bill said quickly, “ties in with that Jew cop. There’s a kike synagogue here in Harlem on One Hundred and Fifteenth Street. I want that synagogue taken care of. It’s Saturday now. I want it taken care of this Monday night. They’ve got kike bibles in that synagogue. They’re written by hand and the kikes think they’re holy. I want those bibles cut to pieces.” He took a breath, his eyes on Big Boy. He had outlined the first job.
“The idea’s to hurt ‘em in their religion?”
“Cut those bibles to pieces. Use their Jew church for a toilet. But the bibles’re the main thing. Why, the God damn Jews hold a regular funeral every time one of those bibles are ripped. They bury them as if they were dead people.”
“The Jews’ll holler for an investigation,” Big Boy said.
“Let ‘em holler. They’ll never find out who did the job. They won’t suspect you. The cops’ll think Harlem got sore at Miller and took it out on the synagogue.” He studied the big black face eagerly, ready to bargain, to set a price for the job. He discounted Big Boy’s experience at bargaining with night club owners, with detectives, with syndicates who wanted to start up whorehouses. He felt himself a match for the Harlem kingpin, more than a match, because of the glimpse, naked and fearful and baleful that he’d had of Big Boy’s inner spirit. Big Boy? Big Boy was just another nigger afraid that the white man’d slap him down some day and take away his bank accounts.
“You ain’t the first who’s come to me about the Jews,” Big Boy said. “Outfit a couple years ago before the war, they come to me. Call themself the Christian Destiny Party. Man, they hated the Jews. You one of ‘em?”
“No.”
“You somebody like this Christian Destiny?”
Bill hesitated. What could he say to that? “Yes. The kikes’ve got this country into war. It’s a Jew war, that’s all it is. No Christian’ll get anything out of it. That goes for the colored people.”
“It’s a white man’s war,” Big Boy said slowly. “Those leaflets people given out, they say the truth.”
“Yes, but it’s a kike war. That’s what it is. How much do you want for the job?”
“I didn’t say if I take that job.”
“If you took it, how much?”
“Need five, six boys to bust in and do it right. Need to fix the job right so it don’t touch my skirt. Need a deal of money.”
“How much?”
“Eight hundred bucks.”
“That’s too much.”
“Take it or leave it.”
Bill lowered his eyes. “You’ve been hit by the cop raids, haven’t you?”
“What that to you?”
“If you take the job, the publicity’ll shift away from you. That ought to be worth something. You said yourself the Jews’d holler for an investigation. You know and I know that you’ve been raided by the cops because your white competition’s getting stronger. They’re out to raid you and the other colored big boys out of the numbers business. They’re out to make numbers a white man’s proposition. This job’ll do both of us good. And it’s only one job. I got two others lined up. I’ve got three jobs for you — ”
“You’re worse’n a Jew. You want a cut-rate.”
Bill smiled. “Don’t you want to hear what the other jobs are?”
Big Boy grunted.
Bill said. “On Tuesday I want your boys to hit every wop bar and grill in Harlem. All they have to do is raise a holler about wops not employing colored help.”
“Go on.”
“There are one hundred forty-eight Italian bars here in Harlem. I’d like to hit every one of them but I’m afraid your price’ll be too high. Half of them, seventy-five or eighty ought to be enough. All your boys have to do is — ”
“Holler,” Big Boy broke in.
Bill nodded but not so confident any more. It was easy for Hayden to spiel off; wreck the Jewish synagogue on Monday, begin anti-Italian agitation on Tuesday, liquidate the Jewish policeman Miller on Wednesday; easy in the A.R.A. office to spiel orders, big-shot to little-shot, to mouth easy formulas about utilizing Negroes against the Negro cause, to blandly analyze Big Boy’s anti-white phobia. It was more complex out in the field, meeting not names, not reports but the flesh and blood individuals themselves; it had been a queer shocking sensation when Big Boy had cursed Miller and the whole white race; he had felt then like a man who after rowing on a shallow creek suddenly finds himself on a fathomless depth. This room, itself, was disturbing as if it, too, were part of the depth, menacing and unnatural with its broken table and expensive radio, its slum sink and de luxe frigidaire in the kitchen. It, too, pointed to a Big Boy not easily deciphered. “Feeling must be high against that kike cop,” Bill said, uncertain now of himself.
Big Boy just stared at him.
“If I was a Negro I’d be sore.”
“Ain’t the first cop to think he’s Jesus Christ in Harlem. You ain’t no colored man. What’s all this jive you give me. You South.”
“This Miller’s a kike and I’m against the kikes. So are you. He killed one of your people. Maybe we can get together on him? How much do you want to get rid of Miller?”
“I figured that was coming. That’s your parlay. Their church and then the cop.”
“And the wop bars. How much do you want?”
Big Boy was silent, smoking his cigar. Finally, he spoke. “Four hundred for the church. Double for the ginmills and double that for the cop. The Jew son-of-a-bitch.”
Bill was compelled to grin. Big Boy had set a price as if making a series of bets at a racetrack, doubling up each time. “Twenty eight hundred. Hell. That’s too much. You ought to do the Jew for nothing.”
“What do you do for nothin’?”
“He shot down Randolph in cold blood.”
“And you’re the lil feller worryin’ your head off about a nigger. Who sent you here?”
“Dent.”
“You ain’t answered me. You, the Klan.”
“No, I’m not.”
“How I know?”
“Dent’ll speak up for me. He’ll tell you — ”
“Lots of white folks tell you. I don’t trust no tell you.” His eyes rolled furiously and so swiftly he didn’t seem fat any more. “Okay, cop. Get the hell out of my place before I phone my lawyers about this lousy frame.”
Bill blinked, speechless. “What? I’m no cop. This is no frame.”
Big Boy heaved himself out of the leather chair and walked to the edge of the rug. He dropped his cigar down on the floor board and crushed the red coal under his shoe. Over his rounded shoulder, he looked at Bill. “I was just pullin’ your G string. I know you ain’t a cop. But I’m no sucker, white man, whoever you are. You aim trouble here in Harlem. A boycott on the wops, huh. Hurt the Jew in his religion. Kill the son-of-a-bitch copper. That’s no lil trouble. That’s big trouble. You say Dent send you here. That was good enough couple years ago but no more. How I know Dent ain’t sold me out to the whites? How I know you ain’t working for the white numbers? You come here to my place and give me a deal like you was a black man. You got plenty money — ”
“It’s cash on the line.”
“I got cash. You the Destiny outfit, ain’t you?”
“No.”
“Mister white man, I’m a law ‘biding citizen. I don’t want no part of no race riot.”
For the first time Bill felt sick. He wasn’t going to make out with Big Boy after all; he’d have to phone Dent.
“This here Sunday,” Big Boy continued, “all them church colored, all them Councilman Vincent people, they meetin’ in the Silver Trumpet Ballroom to go protest this Randolph killing. They get that ballroom rent free. Maybe I got something to do with that rent free, maybe I ain’t but they get it rent free. They mad as me, maybe madder — ”
“Do you own the Silver Trumpet — ”
“I don’t own nothin’ but the clothes on my back,” Big Boy hunched his shoulders and shook his head like a beaten old Negro. “And I’m thankful to the good Lawd for that.”
Again, Bill was compelled to grin. It was startling how well Big Boy’d imitated “a good nigger.”
“Since when are you a church Negro?” Bill demanded. “Did you get where you are by going to church? By praying? Or did you fight your way up? You think the cops’re going to stop killing colored people because of that meeting? They need a dose of their own lead like you said yourself.”
“No.”
“You can’t mean it. I’ll pay you what you want.”
“No.”
Bill sighed. “If I prove you can trust me — Let me make a call to Dent.”
Big Boy waved his cigar at the telephone on the floor in the corner. Bill walked over and dialed Dent’s insurance office. When he was connected with Dent he said. “This is about that Harlem insurance. Yes. I’m at his place now. He won’t do business. No confidence.”
Dent said, “Ask him if Aden comes over to okay you, will that fix it? Aden’ll be by in an hour unless he’s out. If he’s out I’ll ring you back in ten minutes.”
Bill turned to Big Boy. “If Aden vouches for me, would that fix it?”
Big Boy stared. “Lemme talk to Dent.” He pulled himself out of his chair and took the phone from Bill. Aden, Bill thought; the name was familiar, Aden? Aden? Ahmed Aden. The report flashed in his memory; there was a line in it about Big Boy speaking favorably of anti-white leaders; there was the name of some pro-Jap Negro imprisoned by the Government; there was Ahmed Aden. Christ, what an organization. How could they ever lose? He glanced at Big Boy still talking with Dent and the joy of making the numbers king toe the line poured in him like champagne. But only for a brief moment. Christ, he lamented; he’d been forced to phone Dent for help. He was finished. The bloody nigger’d balloxed him.
Big Boy returned to his chair, picking up the tabloid from the rug. “We got to wait,” he said.
The damn nigger, Bill thought. He was finished. He’d never be assistant exec. now. He should’ve stayed in the South. In the South, where you only met with white men on nigger business. Whoever heard of gabbing with niggers as if they were as good as white men? His years in the South rose in him like a big white cloud and the cloud shaped into a white hooded figure.
It was almost one o’clock when the Negro woman who had admitted him into the house, came into the room. “Big Boy,” she said. “Dey’s a man to see you downstairs, that man Aden.”
“I’ll go down myself,” Big Boy answered. “You wait here for me.” He left the room. Bill stepped over to the tabloid where it was lying in front of the leather chair. The newspaper was folded open on a story about Harlem’s marihuana dens. Bill picked up the newspaper and read:
“A cesspool of crime and vice where lurid passions run their course throughout the night, only to end when the sun glints on the water of the Harlem River — these are the marihuana dens where youth is tempted to its ruin, and bodies both white and black are systematically degraded, bought and sold like the reefers themselves. Marihuana dens, bodies and reefers are all translated into cash and Big Boy Bose, Harlem’s Vice Lord, pockets the cash….” Bill dropped into the chair. Out of the tabloid’s pages, the faces of two white prostitutes and one Negro prostitute looked at him The three women had been arrested by the police in a marihuana den. Absorbed by the story, Bill didn’t hear Big Boy returning.
“Hello,” Big Boy said. “You readin’ the press about me? The sons-bitches plasterin’ me all over their papers. Don’t jump up. I made up my mind. I’m cuttin’ the price for you. Four hundred for the Jew church. Four hundred for the wops. I’m giving you a break on them. Some of ‘em connect with the white numbers crowd. This is how I got it figured. I do the grills on Monday instead of Tuesday. Tuesday, I do the Jew church.”
“Why the change?”
“The grills is the big job. The big job, I like to do first. It ain’t much difference to you.”
“All right. How many grills will you hit?”
“Seventy about. I’ll need thirty boys. Two grills to a boy. I’ll pay five bucks a man. There’s no buck in it for me. Some of ‘em’ll be pulled in for disorderly conduct but I won’t charge you for that. They’re going to begin Monday afternoon and hit them grills right through midnight.”
“Don’t you think there’d be less chance of arrests if they hit the wops at one clip?”
“You’re right but what’ll the dicks think? They think a big guy’s behind those boys. This way, the boys scatter out all over Monday afternoon and night — it look like it runnin’ itself and I keep my skirt clear. You see that paper? They after me all the time.”
“How much do you want for the cop?”
“Two hundred. One grand for the three jobs. That’s dirt cheap. I want it now.”
Bill smiled. “Of course.” He counted out the thousand dollars and Big Boy took them, saying:
“I want another grand. Not for me but for Aden. He need money all the time for his fight.”
“One grand. I haven’t got it on me.”
“You bring it here tomorrow at eleven o’clock.”
“Why that much? I’ll split it with you.”
“You split nothin’. One grand.” He yawned and swooped up the tabloid. “One grand tomorrow.”