"Raisins in it?"
"A few; you can separate them out."
"I believe I've already had my fill."
"I'm feeling awfully tired," Cecily said with a small yawn. "You wouldn't care if I went upstairs now?"
"I'd call it a night myself, but I've got at least an hour's reading. Tort law."
"You know how proud I am of you," she said, getting up to put dishes in the sink. "Working so hard and going to night school besides. My husband's going to practice law!" She caressed Bobby, her hand lingering on the side of his face. "Couldn't you read in bed tonight, Perry Mason? Because I want you next to me while I go to sleep." She lowered her eyes in that sharpie way of hers that indicated she wanted sex to happen. Although she was too shy to directly say so.
Bobby was tired too, but he never got so tired to resist being drawn, weightlessly, into the spell of her glisten.
"Let me call Dispatch, and I'll follow you on up. Wherever Alex is, poolroom or just riding circles around the courthouse, I want Tuff or Terry Ray to see that he gets his butt home pronto."
"T
hey called my husband William 'Highpockets,'" Mally said to Alex. "'Cause that's what he was, all arms and 'specially legs."
She tapped a forefinger on one of a wall of framed photos: the team picture of the 1939 Memphis Red Sox.
"William played short and batted cleanup for the Red Sox. That was before the war. Marty Marionâare you a St. Louie fan?âsaw William play a couple times. He said William had the range and arm to be a big-leaguer. But that was years before Jackie Robinson, Campanella, and that boy Doby plays for Cleveland now."
They were in the front room of the small house that William and his brother Cal had built fifty yards deep into the hollow behind the rib shack on Highway 19 that William had tried to make a go of the last two and a half years of his life. Playing days over with, he'd come back from the Pacific with only two and a half fingers and a thumb stub left on his throwing hand.
Mally explained that to Alex, who was sitting on the bamboo sofa Mally had paid eight dollars for at a yard sale and made over with bright slipcovers. His hair was nearly dry after his meager bath; both wash water and flush water were getting scarce at her house, so she'd had him do his business in the seldom-used privy out back and handed him a bucket of water to use in her own bathtub. He had put on the pants and shirt Mally had pulled from a trunk of things she would never part withâWilliam's letters home from the Pacific, his baseball spikes and dowdy old fielder's glove that enclosed a baseball with frayed stitching autographed by Satchel Paige. The alternative was to have an unfamiliar white boy sitting in her parlor in a too-small towel because he couldn't put filthy clothes back on after a washing-up. Mally had no neighbors to tell malicious stories, but still it would have been an uncomfortable thing.
Highpockets' plaid shirt hung to Alex's knees, and the boy had rolled up half a foot of cotton trousers on each skinny, tanned leg. He was drinking from a tall bottle of Nehi orange pop, sugar a hypo to his store of nervous energy, foot tapping the floor.
Mally had learned that even though he couldn't speak, he did a good deal of talking with his eyes and head motions when he wanted to be understood. Now he was looking at the centerpiece photo of William so handsome and dashingly proud in his Navy dress whites.
"Were you too little to know what was going on in the war?" Mally asked, fingers trailing along a series of photos on the image wall, stopping at a picture of a Navy destroyer. Alex shrugged. "Well, this was William's ship, the USS
Taneycomo
. William was one of the first colored ensigns commissioned by the Navy. At the battle for Okinawa, what I believe was the last big battle of the Pacific war, the
Taneycomo
took a direct hit from a Japanese
kamikaze
. That was their name for suicide pilots. When the magazines blew up all at once, the
Taneycomo
was sheared in half. Went down real fast. William and maybe two dozen of his shipmates found themselves in the flaming sea. Blood in the water, Lord, and sharks everywhere. William hurt bad and just clinging to some flotsam. Hours, it must've been, before he was rescued. Terrible things going on around him. Burned men screaming."
Alex flinched, trembled. He looked down.
She'd told it too strong, Mally thought; he was just a kid, after all.
"But William did come back from Okinawa. Spent some months in the Navy hospital in California, being treated because he couldn't get out of his mind, like a lot of them who suffered in the war, all he'd seen and heard. William tried his best, and IâI tried hard for him too, but in the end he just couldn't shake it."
Her next thought came with barely a pause: her half-mad, will-o'-the-wisp mother and her betrayed, emotionally benumbed father; she might have been speaking to herself.
"Sometimes I think it's my fate to suffer for haunted men."
Alex put his soda bottle down, more or less bolted from the sofa and went outside on the porch, where he stood looking at the stars through the tall pine trees. When she followed and touched his shoulder he looked back at her with sore-looking saddened eyes.
"Didn't mean to upset you. I don't get to talk about William to anybody much anymore, but it's good for me not to keep him shut up inside my mind. Was there somebody close in your family didn't make it home from the war?"
Alex shook his head.
"Then what is it has you in such a state, flapping around on your bike after dark, jumping under trains?"
After a few moments, Alex put his head down again.
Like an ol' lop-ear mule
, Mally thought. Suddenly she felt very tired and aching in spirit and wanted this day over with.
"You want to write down where I'm supposed to take you, then we best get started; it's going on ten-thirty already."
A
s soon as she saw the house on West Hatchie Road they were going to, Mally knew immediately a lot more about Alex and understood his reaction to her tale of the ill-fated USS
Taneycomo
. Her aunt, Rhoda Jenks, worked days there as housekeeper; afflicted with the dooms of their subjugated race, Rhoda moved through her daily chores like a bus in heavy traffic, humming moodily to herself.
So the Alex she had in the backseat of her car had to be Bobby Gambier's brother, called "Twig" when he was little. Bobby was undersheriff to Sheriff Luther Tebbetts, and Bobby's own father had been high sheriff of Evening Shade for better than twenty years before Luther, until the Gambier house burned down with Robert Senior unable to escape in time.
Mally had hoped to leave Alex and his damaged bicycle off without having to offer an explanation of what they were doing together this time of night, but no such luck. Porch lights were on and Bobby Gambier was outside having a smoke, wearing only pajama bottoms, chest hair like finely shaved copper. Not tall but put together just fine, wide shoulders making him look shorter than he actually was.
When she pulled into the drive next to the brick house and he saw that it was a woman driving, one he knew on sight, he had the courtesy to go inside and put on a robe.
"Aren't you Mally Shaw?"
"Yes, sir."
"Reckon I know who that is with you," he said with a vexed grin.
"Yes, I've brought your brother home," Mally said, employing the fine art of speaking to a white man she barely knew without looking him directly in the face but also not appearing to avoid his gaze.
Bobby's grin got bigger, and he seemed truly amused when he saw Alex climb out of the backseat in clothing way too big for him.
"What did you do, ride your bike into the Yella Dog?"
Alex looked at Mally, who said, "He had a little accident, Mr. Gambier. Gone too fast, I reckon. Messed up his bike some. It's there in the trunk of my car."
"Where'd those clothes come from, church barrel?"
"No, sir. They were some things of my late husband William's I had around the house. Your brother's clothes was too dirty for him to wear, so I put them in with my wash."
"Where did he have this accident, out by your place? That's way out, isn't it, Highway 19?" Alex standing right there at the bottom of the porch steps, but Bobby, aside from a couple of quick glances, paid his attention to Mally. Alex watched her too, with uneasy eyes, probably afraid of all she could tell although she'd made it plain, to put him at ease on the ride home, that she wouldn't let on about the
Dixie Traveler
"Yes, sir. It wasn't far down the road where I am, and I just happen to come along about then."
"So you weren't anywhere near himâin your carâwhen he had this accident?"
"I didn't run into him, if that's what you're asking, Mr. Gambier." Alex was shaking his head vehemently. Bobby looked from one to the other and made up his mind he was hearing at least some of the truth.
"See you got some scrapes and bruises," he said to Alex and made a rotating, over-and-under motion with his fists.
Over the handlebars?
Alex nodded, looking sheepish.
"I put some iodine on the worst of those scrapes after he had his bath," Mally said.
"That's right, you're a nurse. At your place?"
"It was close by. Like I said, Mr. Gambier, I'm washing his clothes, and I'll have them ironed and ready to leave off in the morning, if that's all right."
"Real kind of you, Mally. And thanks for taking care. Alex, help me get that bike out of Mally's car. Then you can go on in. But keep it quiet: Everybody's asleep. Mally, if you'd stay around just another minute?"
It wasn't exactly a request, but Mally wasn't bothered. What she knew about Bobby Gambier as a lawman was, he didn't go out of his way to make trouble for her people. That had been his daddy's philosophy as well. Luther Tebbetts, he was a different sort.
While she stood by admiring some trellised morning glories and climbing roses, no expression, but a headache beginning like wasp buzz behind her eyes, the two brothers hauled the bicycle up to the porch and Bobby looked over the damage.
"Nothing we can't fix ourselves," he told Alex, putting an arm around the boy's shoulders. Alex held still for about four seconds, then shrugged off the arm and opened the screen door. Bobby looked at him with a slight grimace and said, "There's half a ham in the Frigidaire. Buttermilk. If you want something before bed."
"Good night, Alex," Mally said as he was going into the house. He paused momentarily but didn't look around at her. The steel ID bracelet he wore caught light as he closed the screen door. She saw both of his hands and noticed that the man's ring he'd been wearing earlier wasn't there.
Bobby came down into the yard, Mally waiting beside her old Dodge that needed repainting. There were a Plymouth coupe and a spiffy Packard Six station wagon parked on the double strips of concrete ahead of her own car.
"Mally, it's not to my credit I never let you know how bad I felt about William's passing."
"That's all right, Mr. Gambier."
"Daddy always swore 'Highpockets' was one of the best infielders ever played the game. I saw him myself when the Bob Feller All-Stars took on the Memphis Red Sox in an exhibition game at the Memphis Chicks' ballpark. William could slug, too: drove in two runs with a triple that day. Daddy had a keen eye for baseball talent. He was a part-time scout for the Cubs."
"I never knew that."
"Sad news about Priest Howard. We heard from Rhoda how good you were about looking after him in his last days."
"It was going on seven months that he lingered. Poor suffering soul."
"So are you back in Evening Shade for good?"
"I really can't say, Mr. Gambier."
"All right, then. Nice seeing you again, Mally. Appreciate you dropping Twig off." He looked at her with a half smile, eyes resting on her casually but alert with the intuition good lawmen develop early. "Someday you might want to tell me what it really was Alex got up to tonight. Knowing Alex."
"Was pretty much the way I told it to you already." And she added, realizing she probably ought to just keep her opinions to herself, "From what little I've come to know, he's a good boy."
"I hope you're right. He's reached an age now where he'sâhard for me to understand."
"Mr. Gambier, pardon me for asking, please, but was he born that way, not able to talk?"
"No. He talked early and talked a streak after that; you couldn't get him to shut up. He could make up the tallest tales, but they were always worth a listen." There was a faint yearning within Bobby's smile. "Now he scribbles them down but won't let anybody see what he's writing. Anyhow, diphtheria did a lot of damage to his voice box when he was four. For three years, either Mama or Daddy had him down to Memphis or up to Nashville, St. Louis a couple times, consulting with specialists. Alex had speech therapists too, and after a lot of hard work, Mama would write to meâI was in the Army thenâthat he might relearn how to talk. But"âBobby felt around in the pockets of his robe as if he wanted to smoke, but came up empty-handedâ"then the fire took both our parents away from us and Alex shut up again, for good I'm afraid."