The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter (49 page)

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Authors: Kia Corthron

Tags: #race, #class, #socioeconomic, #novel, #literary, #history, #NAACP, #civil rights movement, #Maryland, #Baltimore, #Alabama, #family, #brothers, #coming of age, #growing up

BOOK: The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter
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She considers his question, looking for the answer on the table, the walls. “Would you? Tamper?”

He runs his finger through a puddle of water in the rind. Sighs silently.

“Guess I could never bring myself to do it. Some faith ingrained in me, the American court system was designed for justice and, eventually, justice will prevail. Guess that'd be the last words I told my strapped-in trembling innocent client before they flipped the switch.”

They put the room service tray outside the door and slide under the sheets. He caresses her most private areas which she has generously shared with him, kissing her from there up through her belly, her breasts, her throat, where her sweat-beaded smiling face awaits him. When it's over they lie on their backs, his arm around her. She looks at him, the picture of tranquillity, his eyelids falling in a distant sleepy fashion, and now he is the one fixated on the turning ceiling fan. She points her finger. “Tell me what you're thinking.”

What he is thinking is why in the hell Will found it necessary to take Andi out for an after-work drink tonight. Yes, she had had a hard day, but here was Will, a married man, and Andi in a very vulnerable emotional place. Winston had negotiated, telling stressed Andi to go home and rest, then return at her leisure over the weekend for a few hours to finish up the work. Eliot and Didi were only a few steps behind, but in the elevator Andi and Will only seemed to see each other, appearing like a very attractive couple, she looking easily a decade less than her early forties and he all of his forty-six, her Chinese delivery tucked under her arm for later, and through eyes still moist she looked up at him with her sad smile. He pulled the gate over and, as the door was falling closed, Will had gently, tenderly, touched her upper arm.

Eliot turns to Didi, delicately stroking her breast. “I was thinking I'd better run to Woolworth's in the morning for a new toilet scrubber, my old one's worn out.” She slaps his arm and rolls on top of him, both of them laughing, she more easily than he.

 

 

13

Eliot flips over the page of his day calendar: Tuesday, October 4th. He has not been to the office during regular hours since Sam Daughtery's trial began Monday a week ago, stopping by only in the evenings after court. In that time he would occasionally find a late-working Beau or Will or Winston. Andi never. But he's here early now, Winston having left a memo yesterday to let him know there would be an all-office meeting at 9 a.m. The boss had promised to keep things brief, plenty of time for Eliot to get to court by eleven, the start time of today's proceedings.

As he scratches notes, he gradually becomes aware of how frequently he has glanced at his telephone. It has remained equally silent when he has been here in the evenings, as has his home number. And Didi knows what his schedule is like these days, at what times she can reach him.

Saturday of their weekend together had even surpassed the high standards set Friday in the hotel. As planned they had met for lunch—she carrying a shopping bag from her morning tasks—but right after she took him to a shoe store. He said his six-month-old wingtips were fine, but she replied they weren't buying, that the game was to select their “dream” shoes no matter how expensive and to walk around the store in them. He said he found window shopping dull and expressed his concern that this would waste the clerk's time, she called him a worrywart and then they were in the store. As the merchandise was segregated by gender they divided, and twenty minutes later she walked up to him wearing four-inch heels, leopard or faux leopard. He told her in his opinion they were exceedingly ugly, that he hoped they
were
faux because killing an animal for the sake of high fashion disgusted him, and at any rate they hardly appeared comfortable given she had hobbled just the thirty steps from the women's side of the store to the men's. She smiled through his little diatribe, then said she agreed on every count but they were the most expensive ladies' shoes in the place and therefore her dream selection. She was not surprised to see he had gone the dull conventional route, wingtips again and moderately priced at that, with all those posh styles staring him in the face. He countered that this was the pair he liked best in terms of fashion, comfort, and, yes, cost, because his dream shoes were those that suited both his aesthetics
and
his wallet. In fact, he'd decided he would purchase them to be ready for when his current pair wore out. Nope, she declared, putting them back into the box, it was a window-shopping game, no buying allowed, prompting the white balding clerk to glare at her as they walked out. They spent the next couple of hours at the Art Association of Indianapolis gazing at paintings mostly by Europeans, sometimes seriously discussing, sometimes whisper-giggling. They went to a diner for a leisurely coffee before she announced she would go off alone to change for dinner. After the evening meal they went back to his place where she surprised him, presenting him with the wingtips. Luckily the same clerk was still there, as she would have felt a little bad giving the commission to someone else. “He snarled when I first walked in, but as he rang up the sale he was beaming. ‘Please, come back again!'”

On Sunday they arrived sleepy-eyed at the depot, twenty minutes early for her nine a.m. departure, the only Indy-to-Chicago daily. Her train was delayed, allowing their farewell kissing to drag out a half-hour more. They planned for him to drive to her town the following weekend, though he would've returned crack of dawn Sunday to prepare for the Daughtery trial starting Monday.

But now, sixteen days later, he tries to suppress the needling worry that, since her night at his place, whatever communication had occurred between them had been initiated by him. When he'd brought up the planned Chicago visit she'd sighed and apologized, they would have to postpone as her first week with the firm was outrageously busy and she would probably have to work Saturday. Being in the middle of court the following weekend, the one just past, he couldn't leave town, and activity at her office was again much too hectic for her to consider coming out to him. She sounded tired. If what she said was all true, her caseload and his combined could certainly be a damper on their future time together. But the more nagging concern was what if it wasn't all true. If after such an intense intimate weekend, she was now backing off. He reasons that a new job, her first real job, and a new relationship simultaneously
do
amount to a lot of emotional information for one person to sift through, so while he still calls periodically it is not as often as he'd like, giving her space, and warily he hopes for the best.

Today Sam Daughtery's mother, and likely Sam Daughtery himself, will take the stand. In the couple of weeks before his first jury trial began, Eliot had second-chaired a civil trial under Will in the magnificent Marion County Courthouse which, Eliot lamented, would soon be demolished to make way for the nondescript modern rectangular City-County Building being erected just behind it. In court with Will, Eliot had participated in a minimal way but was mainly there to learn, and during lunch hours had spent time observing other trials. Still on his first day in court in defense of Mr. Daughtery, Eliot had nervously hesitated to raise objections, and now would legally never be able to bring up those particular points, even in the case of an appeal. To make up for his initial reticence, on the second day he had objected to practically every sentence the prosecutor uttered, only to be nine times out of ten overruled by the judge and thus, he feared, pegged by the jury as a lunatic. He took a deep breath and, by Day Three, had begun to force his mind-set into a certain self-assurance or at least, for the sake of the jury, the outer appearance thereof.

By 8:45 everyone has arrived. Life at Winston Douglas had been mercifully less volatile. Beau, evidently warned by Winston and, Eliot would like to think, shamed by his own outburst, has been cordial to Andi, piling on less work and even thanking her when she brings him his coffee.

Eliot heads to the conference room himself for brew, on the way noticing Will and Andi chattering and laughing at reception. Having not glimpsed her the last week and a half, Eliot is ludicrously surprised and relieved to see she looks exactly the same. After drinks that terrible Friday, she and Will had made a pact to share an end-of-week liquid refreshment every Friday, three thus far. Eliot overhears Will asking her if they can reschedule this week's outing for this evening—family obligations presenting a conflict for the end of the week—and when Eliot comes out of the conference room he is startled when Will asks him if he would like to join them. He surmises Will had assumed he'd heard them planning and thought it would be rude not to include him. Eliot looks at Andi, who is not looking at him, her smiling face fixed on Will. This could mean she does not want him to come as he would be crashing in on their fun, or that she
does
want him to come because she has hope that a spark may still exist between them and thus is afraid to look at him, or that she does
not
want him to come for fear that a spark may still exist between them. Eliot politely declines the offer, explaining he is back in the office every evening after court catching up until seven or eight. “Next time,” Will says, and Eliot nods, certain the next time will not come unless Eliot invites himself, which he won't. Now Andi does turn to smile at him, a different smile from the one she shone at Will, and Eliot believes he detects in her eyes something like gratitude for his begging off. He goes to his office, closing the door for just a minute to settle his breath before the meeting. Finally he admits to himself that he is envious of Andi and Will's friendship. That he wishes to have both Didi as a lover and Andi as a friend, but that's fickleness and unfair. You can't have everything, and at the moment he seems to have nothing.

The meeting takes place in Winston's office. He announces that as of yesterday they had been assigned to help monitor the activities regarding Negro voter registration in a small Southern town. There were a couple of local NAACP officials, but they had asked for legal assistance as the anticipated large turnout would likely result in arrests and possible police violence. The mass gathering has been whispered to happen the penultimate registration day, Monday the 24th, twenty days hence. Winston details the traveling schedule before speaking a bit about the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and its recent offshoot the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Eliot eagerly waits for an opening to express his interest, but before he has a chance to do so Winston tells them that he has already decided who would be going down South in three weeks: Beau and Eliot. Beau seems to accept this news with perfect composure. By contrast, it is only with gargantuan effort that Eliot's eyes don't pop out of his head, and there appears to be similar strain in the faces of Andi and Will:
Beau and Eliot in close contact for six days?
The meeting ends, and Eliot stands to spend the last half-hour before he has to leave for court in his office, a little work and a little brooding. But after dismissing the others, Winston asks him to stay a few minutes.

“Did I ever tell you I knew Ida B. Wells?” Eliot, concerned that his voice may betray his irritation over the meeting, shakes his head. “Wonderful lady. Spunk! Once during Reconstruction she was traveling on a train. Bought her ticket and sat in the seat she had paid for, but the conductor walked by, telling her since she was colored she had to go back to the smoking car. She refused, which resulted in a little altercation, which resulted in her biting the conductor's hand! Another time. Women's suffrage parade in Washington, she was asked not to march with the others in the Chicago contingent, the
white
ladies, for fear it would offend the Southern onlookers in our nation's capital. The Negro women were slated to bring up the rear. So there stood Miss Wells on the sidelines with the spectators, and weren't they all surprised when the Chicago squad marched by and she jumped right in with em! Nothin they could do.”

“Hmm.” Eliot hears his boss's laughter while seeing himself in a car next to Beau, the latter driving the automobile as well as the conversation, no doubt a lecture related to the elder's vast experience and the younger's analogous deficiency.

“Of course Miss Wells,
Mrs.
Wells-
Barnett,
was most known for her tireless efforts toward the criminalization of lynching. I was fresh out of law school when she came to town to speak, The Avenue, the way it
was
,” and Winston gets that look of lament he always does when referring to Indiana Avenue, the once bustling cultural and business center of the black community with Madame C. J. Walker's Theatre at its nucleus, now declined to urban blight. “I was in awe, and I introduced myself. Over the next few months I stayed in touch, came to know her a bit, or, more importantly, she came to know
me,
enough that when a certain lynching transpired in Montana, two teenage boys tied to a railroad track and burnt to a crisp, I received a letter from her.

“Oh I was eager! Hot-footed out there to meet my man, Mr. Freddy McDonnell. Negro attorney, quarter-century my senior. A local colored family put us up, and in the kitchen we were left alone after supper, at which point he reiterated the particulars. The murdered boys had worked for a logging company, and one had allegedly smart-mouthed their despotic white supervisor who in turn allegedly broke the boy's jaw, then had the teen arrested as well as another of his workhorses, innocent bystander, the boss claiming both colored youths assaulted
him
. The young men were subsequently seized from their jail cells and the mob match lit. We were there for a potential civil lawsuit, a claim from the victims' families that their sons' civil rights had been violated by their murders, though we had little faith it would lead to anything. In truth, we were all yearning for something more substantial in the way of justice: someone going to prison. After the shoddy, indifferent work of the police, it was left to Freddy to undertake a thorough examination—to serve as detective as well as legal representative—grounded in the hope that he would be able to identify viable suspects, then pressure the police to arrest and the district attorney to prosecute. Given that lynching itself was not illegal, the culprits might be tried for the crime of kidnapping.

“That encompassed the first forty-five minutes of our introductory meeting. The subsequent hours were filled with Freddy's long-winded tales about his esteemed law career, his chutzpah: a
thousand
times more obstacles for Negro barristers in his day compared with the easy walk for
my
generation. Then
,
apropos of nothing, he began to recount the various sexual exploits of his lifetime, the sheer number of which would have been arithmetically impossible. This was a grandfather married to the same woman for decades, mind you.

“In the morning we went to question the local frightened Negroes who not surprisingly had little to contribute, and in the afternoon we spoke with the police captain and lieutenant. The authorities barely went through the motions of replying to our questions, and then.
Then
swaggering Freddy suddenly transformed. His shoulders drooping,
yes suh, no suh,
nodding like a dog. I was aghast! And said something that caused the white men's eyes to narrow onto me. Fortunately Freddy caught this before it escalated and put me outside fuming, pacing. Then Miss Hannah Casey, an elderly washerwoman, walks up to me. ‘Looky what I found in Mr. Aubrey's basement,' and there it was: photograph of four white men grinning in front of the just-slaughtered Negroes. At that moment Freddy comes out of the police station, seeming tired. I held up the picture. He looked at it, looked at me, snatched the photograph, muttering, ‘Stay out here,' and ran back inside. For a moment I was stupefied. Then ready to spit nails, I stormed in! And stopped short. There's Freddy all humble. And there's the captain and lieutenant looking at the photo.
Really
looking at the photo. Then they looked up at me, and this distaste crossed their faces, and Freddy mortified to see me standing there. As if a moment before they were seriously entertaining the possibility of acting upon the evidence, but my presence brought them back to their senses, now ready to discard the absurd idea, prosecuting lynchers. ‘Sorry,' I stammered. ‘Sorry,' and I backed out the door. Twenty minutes later Freddy walked out with the two officers, him in meek tow. The cops disappeared, and after an hour they returned—with two of the white brutes in handcuffs! They were convicted on kidnapping charges: two years for the ringleader, fourteen months for his sidekick. Outrageously lenient, and yet a victory,
miracle
it happened at all.”

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