DR08 - Burning Angel by James Lee Burke


  ”We've got Patsy Dapolito in lockup,“ he said.

  ”That seems like a good place for him.“

  ”He says somebody stole the tip he left in the motel restaurant. He made quite a scene. Scared the shit out of everybody in the place.

  This guy is probably as close to Freddy Kruger as New Iberia will ever get.“

  I drew the sandpaper along the grain of the wood and brushed the dust out into the sunlight.

  21)

  ”It doesn't concern you anymore, huh?“ the sheriff said.

  ”Not unless he comes around here.“

  ”I wish I could tell you it's that easy, Dave.“

  I started sanding again, my eyes on his.

  ”The FBI called yesterday. They thought you were still with us.“ He shrugged off the discomfort of his own remark. ”They've got a tap on some of Johnny Carp's people. Your name came up in a conversation.“

  ”I'm not a player anymore, Sheriff. Maybe it's time you and the Feds got the word out.“

  ”The grease balls think you know something you shouldn't. Or you're trying to queer their action over here.“

  ”They're wrong.“

  ”One of them said, “Let the Rambo fucks take care of it.” They laughed, and another guy said, “Yeah, let 'em send in Charlie.” Does that mean something to you?“

  ”Yeah, it does. I was fired. Y'all clean up your own mess.“

  ”I don't think anger will help us, Dave.“

  ”When a drunk gets eighty-sixed out of a bar, he's not supposed to buy drinks for the people still inside. You want a cup of coffee, Sheriff?“

  Clete came by at noon, drank a beer under the awning on the dock, then insisted I drive into New Iberia with him.

  ”I've got to work,“ I said.

  ”That's my point,“ he said, crushing his beer can, his porkpie hat cocked over his scarred eyebrow, his face full of fun.

  We drove down East Main, past the old Burke home and the Steamboat House, into the shade of live oaks, past the city library and the stone grotto dedicated to Christ's mother, which was the only remnant of the old Catholic elementary school and which in antebellum days had been the home of George Washington Cable, past the law offices of Moleen Bertrand and the Shadows into the full sunlight and practicality of the business district.

  Clete parked by the side of a small office on the corner. The backs of the buildings were old, redbrick, still marked with nineteenth-century lettering. Fifty yards away a tugboat moved down Bayou Teche toward the drawbridge.

  Two men in tennis shoes who were too slight to be professional movers were carrying furniture from a U-Haul van into the office.

  ”Clete?“ I said.

  ”Your licenses will be a breeze. Till we get the paperwork done, I'll put you down as my associate or some bullshit like that.“

  ”You should have asked before you did this.“

  ”I did. You weren't listening,“ he said.

  ”Who're these guys?“

  ”Uh, a package deal from Nig Rosewater Bail Bonds. Nig owes me for a couple of skips I ran down, in fact, it was these two guys right here, and the guys owe Nig for their bonds, so Nig threw in some furniture and everybody wins.“

  ”Clete, I really appreciate this but-“

  ”It's a done deal, big mon. Tell the guys where you want your desk and file cabinets. Make sure they don't walk out of here with any keys, either.“ He looked at his watch, then glanced up the street. ”Here she comes. Look, take my car back to your house when you get finished, okay? Helen's taking me to lunch.“

  He saw the look in my eyes.

  ”So she bats from both sides of the plate. Who's perfect?“ he said.

  The two of them drove away, waving out the windows as I stood on the sidewalk between Clete's junker Caddy and an office window that had already been lettered with the words ROBICHEAUX, PURCEL,

  AND ASSOCIATES INVESTIGATIVE AGENCY.

  At twilight I drove out to the Bertrand plantation and parked by the grove of gum trees. I didn't have permission to be there, and didn't care. I had wanted to believe my involvement with Sonny Boy, Julia and Moleen, Luke and Ruthie Jean and Bertie Fontenot was over. But I knew better. Even Sweet Pea Chaisson did.

  This piece of land was our original sin, except we had found no baptismal rite to expunge it from our lives. That green-purple field of new cane was rooted in rib cage and eye socket. But what of the others whose lives had begun here and ended in other places? The ones who became prostitutes in cribs on Hopkins Street in New Iberia and Jane's Alley in New Orleans, sliced their hands open with oyster knives, laid bare their shin bones with the cane sickle, learned the twelve-string blues on the Red Hat gang and in the camps at Angola with Leadbelly and Hogman Matthew Maxey, were virtually cooked alive in the cast-iron sweat boxes of Camp A, and rode Jim Crow trains North, as in a biblical exodus, to southside Chicago and the magic of 1925 Harlem, where they filled the air with the music of the South and the smell of cornbread and greens and pork chops fixed in sweet potatoes, as though they were still willing to forgive if we would only acknowledge their capacity for forgiveness.

  Tolstoy asked how much land did a man need.

  Just enough to let him feel the pull of the earth on his ankles and the claim it lays on the quick as well as the dead.

  Chapter 23

  THOUGH MY name was on the window, I didn't go to the office and, in fact, didn't formally accept the partnership, even though Bootsie and I needed the income.

  Not until three days later, when Clete called the bait shop.

  ”Check this. Johnny Carp says he wants another sit-down. Eleven o'clock, our office,“ he said.

  ”Tell him to stay out of town.“

  ”Not smart, big mon.“

  ”Don't try to negotiate with these guys.“

  ”The guy's rattled about something.“

  ”Who cares?“ I said.

  ”Wake up, Dave. You got no radar anymore. You read the street while you got the chance or it eats you.“

  I waited until almost eleven, then drove into New Iberia. John Polycarp Giacano's white stretch limo with the charcoal-tinted windows was double-parked in front of the office. A back window was partially lowered and two women with bleached hair and Frankenstein makeup were smoking on the backseat, looking straight ahead, bored, oblivious to each other. Three of Johnny's crew, wearing shades and boxed haircuts, stood on the sidewalk, looking up and down the street as though they were Secret Service agents.

  I parked around the corner and walked back to the front door. One of them looked at me from behind his glasses, his expression flat, his hands folded in front of him. He chewed on a paper match in the corner of his mouth, nodding, stepping back to let me pass.

  ”Is that you, Frankie?“ I said.

  ”Yeah. How you doing, Mr. Robicheaux?“ he answered.

  ”I thought you were away for a while.“

  ”This broad's conscience started bothering her and she changed her testimony. What're you gonna do?“ He shrugged his shoulders as though a great metaphysical mystery had been placed on them.

  ”It might be a good idea to move the limo, Frankie.“

  ”Yeah, I was just going to tell the chauffeur that. Thanks.“

  ”When did Charlie start working with you guys?“ I asked.

  He held the tips of his fingers in the air, touched his cheek, gestured with his fingers again.

  ”Who?“ he said. His mouth pursed into a small O the size of a Life Saver.

  Inside the office, Clete sat behind an army-surplus metal desk, his hands hooked behind his neck. Johnny Carp sat across from him, his arms and legs set at stiff angles, his eyes filled with a black light, his knurled brow like ridges on a washboard. He wore a yellow shirt with the purple letter G embroidered on the pocket and a gray suit with dark stripes in it, a yellow handkerchief in the pocket. His shoes were dug into the floor like a man about to leap from a building.

  ”Dave, help me convince Johnny of somethi
ng here,“ Clete said. He smiled good-naturedly.

  ”What's happening, Johnny?“ I said, and sat down on the edge of another metal desk.

  ”You guys tried to cowboy Patsy Bones,“ he said.

  ”Wrong,“ I said.

  ”Somebody put a nine-millimeter round six inches from his head. He thinks it come from me,“ Johnny said.

  ”I can see that would be a problem,“ I said.

  ”Don't crack wise with me, Dave.“

  ”I always treated you with respect, Johnny. But I'm out of the game now. You've got the wrong guy.“

  ”Hear what I'm saying.“ His close-set eyes and mouth and nose seemed to shrink into an even smaller area in the center of his face. ”Don't try to scam us. You want something, you got a hard-on, bring it to the table. But you lay off this voodoo bullshit or whatever it is. I'm talking about Sonny here.“

  I looked at Clete. He shook his head and turned up his palms.

  ”You've lost me, Johnny,“ I said.

  ”A hooker says she saw him going by on the streetcar. Last night Frankie and Marco out there swear either him or his twin brother was walking into Louis Armstrong Park. What white person goes into Louis Armstrong Park at night? Then my wife tells me a redheaded guy was standing in our side yard, looking through our window.“ A smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. ”What, y'all hire an actor or something?“

  Then his eyes clicked away from mine.

  ”Nope,“ I said.

  He wiped the front of his teeth with his index finger, rubbed it dry on his knee. His gaze roved around the room.

  ”This place is a shithole,“ he said.

  ”Sonny's dead,“ Clete said. ”You put the whack out, you ought to know, John.“

  ”You're a Magazine Street mick, Purcel, it ain't your fault you always got your foot up your own ass, so I don't take offense,“ Johnny said.

  ”But, Dave, you got a brain. I'm asking you, no, I'm begging you, if you guys are trying to cowboy Patsy, or fuck with me, or fuck with anybody in my crew, stop it now. I'm in legitimate business. We put a lot of the old ways behind us, but don't provoke me.“

  His words were those of a man in control. But I could smell a peculiar odor on his breath, like sour baby formula laced with booze.

  ”It's not us,“ I said.

  ”The guy was a disease. Nobody else cared about him,“ he said.

  ”Sonny was stand-up, Johnny. He took his own bounce and he didn't need Scotch and milk and a couple of chippies to get him through the morning,“ I said.

  Clete lit a cigarette with his Zippo, his broad shoulders hunched, seemingly unconcerned about the drift of the conversation, but through the smoke his eyes were fastened on Johnny's neck.

  ”You've developed a bad mouth, Dave. I'm here for accommodation, you don't want to listen, fuck you. Just don't try to run no games on me,“

  Johnny said.

  ”The problem's inside you, John. It's not with me or Clete.“

  ”You got an office and some furniture Nig Rosewater couldn't give away in colored town and you're a shrink now?“

  ”You've got blood on your hands. It doesn't wash off easily,“ I said.

  He rose from his chair, slipped two twenty-dollar bills out of his wallet, and laid them on Clete's desk.

  ”Yall go up the street, have a nice lunch,“ he said, and walked out into the sunlight.

  Clete tipped his cigarette ashes in the tray. Then he scratched his eyebrow with his thumbnail, as though he didn't know which thought in his head to express first. ”You nailed him on that stuff about his chippies. He pays them a hundred bucks to blow him so he won't get AIDS,“ he said. He tilted back in his swivel chair and stared at the wall. ”I can't believe this, the first person in our office is a psychotic grease ball He mashed out his cigarette and went outside with the two twenties wadded in his fist.

  He caught the limo just as it was leaving the curb and knocked with his ring on the charcoal-tinted glass. Johnny Carp was bent forward on the seat when he rolled down the window, a smear of milk on his mouth.

  “Hey, John, give this to your broads for their oral hygiene,” Clete said, and bounced the bills like soiled green Kleenex off Johnny Carp's face.

  I cut the engine on the outboard and Alafair and I drift on the wake into a sandbar, then walk toward a line of willow and cypress trees.

  The sun is white, straight overhead, in a blue, cloudless sky. Behind the lacy movement of the trees, in a trapped pool of water, is the rusted, purple outline of a wrecked tow barge. I set up a cardboard box at the end of the sandbar, walk back to the boat, and unzip the carrying case from the Beretta nine-millimeter.

  Once again, I show her the safeties and how the trigger mechanism disengages from the hammer, let her work the slide; then I take it from her and slip an empty magazine into the butt.

  “Okay, what's the rule, Alf?” I say.

  “Never assume a gun is unloaded. But never assume it's loaded, either.”

  “You've got it. Do you remember how to clear the action?”

  She pushes the release button on the butt, drops the magazine, works the slide twice, then peers into the empty chamber.

  “Terrific,” I say.

  This time I give her a loaded magazine. I stand behind her while she chambers a round and takes aim with both hands. She fires once and throws sand in the air by the side of the cardboard box.

  “Aim a little higher and to your right, Alf.”

  She misses twice and the rounds whang into the barge back in the trees.

  But the next round leaves a hole the size of a pencil in the cardboard.

  She starts to lower the pistol.

  “Keep shooting till you're empty, Alf.”

  The Beretta spits the empty casings into the sunlight, pow, pow, pow, each report echoes across the water. The breech locks open; a tongue of cotton white smoke rises from the chamber. The box is tilted sideways now, its clean surfaces peppered with black holes.

  When Alafair smiles at me, I wonder if I have given away a knowledge that should never belong to a child.

  She wants to reload.

  It rained in the predawn hours this morning and the trees in the swamp were gray and shaggy with mist. Then the sun rose out of the steam and broke against the seal of clouds like a flattened rose. I drop into the office on Main, a sojourner, still not quite accepting the reality of being a fired cop. The door is open to let in the clean smell of the rain tumbling out of the sunlight.

  Clete is hooking paper clips in a chain on his desk blotter. I can feel his eyes flicking back and forth between his preoccupation and the side of my face.

  “When you chase skips, you've got latitude no cop does,” he says. “You can cross state lines, bust in doors without a warrant, pick up one perp to squeeze another. The Supreme Court will get a hand on it eventually, but right now it's kind of like being on point in a free-fire zone.”

  He knows I'm not listening, but he continues anyway.

  “We'll have a secretary in here tomorrow. I'm transferring some of the business from the New Orleans office. It just takes a while to make things come together,” he says.

  I nod absently, try to avoid looking at my watch.

  “You bother me, big mon,” he says.

  “Don't start it, Clete.”

  “It's not Sonny's death. It's not getting canned from your department, either. Even though that's what you want me to think.”

  “I'm not up to it.” I splay my fingers in the air.

  “The big problem is one that won't go away, Dave. You can't accept change. That's why you always got a firestorm inside you, that's why you ripped up Patsy Dap. You got to ease up, noble mon. You don't have a shield anymore. You smoke the wrong dude, you go down on a murder beef. Take it from a cat who's been there.”

  “I think I'll go back to the bait shop now,” I say.

  “Yeah, I guess you better.”

  “I apologize for my attitude. You've been a real friend about this par
tnership.”

  “No big deal. My business in New Orleans is going down the drain, anyway.”

  Outside, the rain is blowing in the sunlight. When I look back through the office window, Clete is drinking coffee, staring at nothing, alone in the silence, a new, virtually unused white telephone on his army surplus desk.

  I feel a pain in my chest and go back inside the office. Together, we walk down Main to Victor's for lunch.

  Johnny Carp had made a pilgrimage to New Iberia, his second attempt at reconciliation. He was a mercurial head case a functioning drunk, a physiological caricature, a libidinous nightmare whose sexual habits you tried never to think about, but, most important, Johnny, like all drunks, was driven by a self-centered fear that made his kind see blood in tap water and dead men walking out of the surf.

  I called Helen Soileau at the sheriff's department.

  “What's the deal on Patsy Dapolito?” I asked.

  “He has a rental dump by a pipe yard on the Jeanerette Road. Somebody popped one right through his bedroom window.”

  “It was a nine-millimeter?”

  “Or a .38. It was pretty beat up. Why?”

  “Johnny Carp thinks Sonny was the shooter.”

  “Big reach from the salt.” She paused. “Sorry,” she said.

  “Sonny's nine-millimeter is still in Possessions, isn't it?” I said.

  “I hate to admit this, but I asked that question myself. No.”

  “What happened to it?”

  “We didn't charge him with carrying a concealed weapon because we busted him in Orleans Parish. So when he skated on the murder beef, he was home free and got his nine back. A Smith & Wesson, right?”

  “What's the status on Dapolito?”

  “We painted his doorknobs with roach paste so he can't go outside. Come on, Dave, what status? Even New Orleans doesn't know how to deal with this guy. We get three or four calls a day on him. He took a leak in the washbasin at Mulate's.”

  “Thanks for your help, Helen.”

  “It's not right what the old man did. I told him what I thought, too.”

  “You shouldn't take my weight.”

  She was quiet, as if she was deciding something, perhaps a choice about trust, which was always Helen's most difficult moment.

 
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