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Chapter One
BLUES GOING UP
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Shortly, it began to seem that no one
had followed them. The man seemed to relax, a little anyway.
He looked his rescuers over carefully. What he saw was a pretty
white woman, about twenty-five (in his aging eyes,) with long blonde hair, wearing a
shapeless cotton dress that almost hid a busty figure and an essential slenderness. Some
kind of hippie, he thought, and assumed that accounted for her friend, whom he saw as a
slightly older black youth wearing shades, maybe as much as thirty. It looked to him like
the black man was stoned, nodding his head and muttering.
The man had known a lot of black people in his sixty-two years and
he had given up trying to estimate their ages. In fact, he had Tyrone's and Vera's ages
almost exactly reversed, but he wouldn't have been surpised; he'd dealt with too many
smooth-faced seventy-year-olds and gnarly-faced kids. He didn't think much of Tyrone, at
first sight: a long face with thin lips and a ridiculous, wispy beard. He wore his hair
long, not so much kinky as twisty, under a brocade or embroidered silk skullcap that had a
tassel.
The man didn't care for the cap, although it was distinctive,
because he didn't like black youths to be so assertive. And he didn't notice Tyrone's
thin, aristocratic Ethiopian features. The black fellow had a good voice, the man thought:
deep, articulate, well-modulated, sort of rhythmic somehow. But the nodding and muttering
annoyed him.
What Tyrone saw was an old white man with a blunt, tough face and
hair combed straight back, Polack fashion. Pure honky. An auto-worker, Tyrone thought,
except for the authoritative manner. That wasn't the way of a man who worked in a factory,
but he was dressed like they all dress in strange brownish-purplish-gray formless slacks.
He thought: Where do they get those pants, does that color have an actual name? Black
laced shop shoes with thick rubber soles, and a black short-sleeved polo shirt that had a
little animal on the breast. What was it, a snake or something? No, an alligator.
The man was stocky and looked overweight at first, but then Tyrone
noticed that he was really hard, muscular. He was intimidating with his little, hard blue
eyes and his thin, mean mouth.
Vera thought his mouth looked humorous, like a man's who told jokes
and laughed a lot; and the beady glitter of the eyes she saw as twinkles. He looked like
uncle Vance, a not very successful brother of her mother's, a man who had bankrupted two
auto dealerships. There was something about him, though. He looked familiar. And suddenly
she realized who he was. It thrilled her. "Are you ...? Aren't you Jimmy Hoffa?"
"You got something against Hoffa?" the man said, but he
seemed gratified to be recognized.
"No, no," Vera assured him.
Tyrone took off his glasses to get a better look and then said,
"Somebody after you, Mr. Hoffa?"
Hoffa was making a face, seemingly to deny Tyrone's suggestion, when
a large, gleaming maroon Cadillac turned off Telegraph and came along Thirteen Mile Road
at a slow pace. "Jeeziss!" Hoffa exclaimed and flopped down in the back. The car
cruised on past them.
"Who's after you?" Tyrone pursued.
"I don't know. Nobody," Hoffa said, rising barely enough
to peer over the front seat at the stately progress of the Cadillac.
"You must know," Tyrone said, "`cause you reckanized
that Caddy. Some gangsters on yo' case?"
"Whaddya talkin' about? I didn't see no gangsters."
"Look like gangsters to me," Tyrone said. He gazed
dispassionately at Hoffa, then shrugged. "Ain't no business of mine. Man wants to
pretend they ain't no gangsters on his case, that's cool with me. Well, nice meetin'
y'all, Mr. Hoffa. Can we drop you some place?"
"Yanh, take me back to the restaurant. Okay?" Hoffa
sounded much calmer, more polite. Perhaps it was the knowledge that they knew who he was.
"Don't worry, I'll pay you for your trouble."
"Don't worry about it, man," Tyrone said, waving away
Hoffa's hand, holding more than one bill. "But you sure you wanta go back there? I
thought somebody was after you."
Hoffa withdrew his hand and seemed to ponder. "Yanh, yer right.
I wasn't thinkin'. Sorry. Listen, how `bout you find me a telephone? I'll call a buddy a
mine. It won't take him ten minutes to get here, but I need for you to maybe stick around.
Okay?"
"Sure, man, sure."
They drove farther east on Thirteen Mile, careful not to overtake
the Cadillac, until they spotted a telephone booth. It stood on the edge of a paved
expanse belonging to a gas station. Hoffa wouldn't get out. He was edgy again.
"Check it out for me, will ya?" he asked Tyrone.
Tyrone didn't complain, didn't even make a face, just clambered out
of the front seat and stretched. It was still quite hot, a typical Detroit summer day,
humid. The sun was angling down, but had a ways to go before dark. Tyrone rubbed his nose
where his glasses had irritated the skin, then walked over to the phone. The door was
open. He stepped inside but didn't close the door. He picked up the receiver and he got a
hum, though not of course the dial tone that waited for a dime. He let the phone dangle
and went back to the car and leaned in the window. "I need a dime. You want me to
place the call for you?"
"That'd be great," Hoffa said eagerly, and provided a
number along with a handful of change.
"That gonna be a toll charge?" Tyrone asked, looking at
the change in his long, slender palm.
"Nah, I don't think so. You gotta `nuff," Hoffa assured
him. "Dial it. I got more if you need it."
Tyrone had just dialed the number, it was ringing -- not a toll
call, after all -- when a gleaming maroon Cadillac swept into the gas station and pulled
up by the Volkswagen. He squinted through the dirty glass of the phone booth at it. It
looked like the same Caddy that had spooked Hoffa earlier.
A heavy white man got out of the passenger side and approached the
van, then stopped when he took in Tyrone. His right arm dangled straight down, a huge
revolver in his hand, pointed at the ground casually. He seemed totally unconcerned about
nearby traffic, or the possibility that customers of the gas station or the help might
notice the revolver. He glanced at Vera, then at Tyrone, then back to the car. He walked
over to the rear of the Cadillac and a dark-tinted window rolled smoothly down. A pale
face shone in the interior. The man leaned to the window and spoke in an ordinary tone.
Tyrone could hear him quite clearly.
"It's just a spade, boss. He gotta white whore. You want me to
...?" He gestured slightly with the revolver. He leaned closer as the man inside
spoke. Tyrone could not hear what was said, but his blood ran cold as the big man
straightened up and turned to look at him, with his head tilted to listen to the voice
within the car.
The man regarded Tyrone for a long moment, his face blank, mouth
open tentatively, as if bemused. With his left hand he fingered the revolving chamber of
the pistol, slowly turning it. The oiled clicks were quite audible. Then he nodded, as if
to the speaker and his lips curled in strange smile. "You're in luck, Willie,"
the man called out, hefting the revolver meaningfully. "Hope you find a trick for
her." The man cupped his hand under his crotch and tugged. He nodded toward Vera and
then he got back into the car. It roared away.
"Hello? Hello?" a man's voice called distantly from the
telephone. Tyrone lifted it shakily to his ear. "Is that you Jimmy? You there?"
the man asked, anxiously. "F'chrissake, talk t'me!" Tyrone replaced the receiver
and almost staggered back to the car, his legs felt so weak.
He got in the front seat and closed the door and leaned his head
back against the headrest and closed his eyes. "Jesusfuckingchrist," he
breathed. "That motherfucker was about to ...."
Vera leaned anxiously across the console, embracing him, saying,
"Honey, honey, honey, don't, don't."
"Let's get the fuck outta here," came a muffled voice from
the rear. They both turned and looked. Hoffa was crouched on the floor, under some
blankets. "Get goin'. They might come back. Somebody mighta seen me get inta yer van.
Drive!"
"Right, right," Vera said. She got the van started and
they drove on east. They were almost calmed down when they saw the Cadillac parked on the
westbound shoulder next to another big car. The big man was out of the car talking and
gesturing to another man. He had put the pistol away, but when he recognized the
Volkswagen his left hand went to his crotch again and he laughed to the man next to him,
pointing at them as they cruised by, his right hand imitating a gun and his mouth silently
opening as if to say, "Pow!"
"Keep going, keep going," Hoffa said. "Don't slow
down, but don't speed. I don't wanta see no cops."
Tyrone craned around. "Why not?"
"Cops got radios, numbnuts. Even if a cop ain't on the pad,
they talk on the radios and other people got radios, too." Hoffa peeked out from the
blanket. "And out here, buddy, I don't know who's on the pad."
Tyrone looked at the man, cowering under a blanket. Then he looked
at Vera. She was driving with great concentration, trying not to look like she was about
to flip out. She looked brave, he thought, but he could see she was scared shitless.
Strangely enough, knowing she was scared made him feel stronger. He smiled encouragingly
at her when she glanced at him.
"Just keep driving, sweetie," he said in as calm a voice
as he could manage. He turned back to their passenger. "Hoffa. We have to let you out
now. Not out here on the road, you understand, but on one of these side roads. You
dig?"
"Not on your life, buddy," Hoffa said. He showed Tyrone
the barrel of a nickel-plated revolver. "You drop me off out here and those birds'll
be on me like crows on a roadkill `possum."
Tyrone nodded his head. He supposed the man was right, though he had
no idea why Jimmy Hoffa should be afraid of gangsters -- wasn't he a gangster himself? But
a lifetime of coping with gangsters in Detroit had left Tyrone with the feeling that their
activities were as inexplicable and unpredictable as wild animals. It was better to give
them a wide berth and not waste time figuring out what they were up to. "So what do
you want to do?" he asked.
"Take me into the city," Hoffa said. "Where do you
guys live?"
"The city's a long ways," Tyrone said. "We're living
in a motel, right now, clear back in Highland Park." This was not true and he was
glad that Vera did not react. Usually she was so stuffy about telling the absolute truth
that she would not have let such a falsehood pass. "Must be some place we can drop
you. `Cause man, it ain't cool ridin' around out here like this."
Hoffa nodded. The thinking was sound, he felt. They were a
conspicuous couple. With the men in the Cadillac that had actually protected him, but it
didn't do to attract attention. A suburban cop might pull this van over for any excuse --
a broken taillight, perhaps -- and then search the van for drugs. The trouble was, he
couldn't think of any place that would be safe. The men in the Caddy knew his ways too
well and they were vicious. He was worried about his wife, Jo, but he believed that while
they would certainly be keeping an eye on the house, they wouldn't bother her. It was him
they were after.
He shook his head. "I don't know."
Tyrone looked at him. "You don't know? You ain't got no place
to go? Woman," he turned to Vera, "shift!" She had pulled away from a light
and, as often happened, had forgotten to shift into fourth gear.
"Listen Jim," Tyrone said, turning back. "We can't be
out here all night. You got any money? Lemme see." A hand grabbed his guts when Hoffa
dumped out the briefcase: a pile of bills in neat little packets. "How much is
that?" he asked, deeply impressed.
"That's a couple hunnert," Hoffa said, "less about
fifty bucks."
"That's more than a couple hundred," Tyrone said.
"A couple hunnert thous'n," Hoffa said, almost smiling.
"Sorry. I thought you'd see that. The point is, Henry, it don't mean shit if that
Caddy comes after us again. I got this," he brandished the revolver, "but I
gotta admit, I ain't famous for no shootin'. I shoot with my mouth, as my old lady says.
So if you can figure out some safe place for me and this bread, here, Henry, I'm sure we
can work out some kinda appropriate remuneration, if you get my drift."
"The name ain't Henry. It's ... Ty-yyyaylor. An' this here is
my wife, Alma." Tyrone had no idea where "Alma" had come from; it had just
popped into his head. Vera glanced at him and grimaced. If he hadn't been so stressed he
might have laughed. In fact, he was feeling so damn stressed that he was afraid that if he
ever started laughing he'd make like a hyena and never quit.
"Taylor? Is that your first name or your last? Never mind.
Okay, Taylor. Any ideas?"
Tyrone thought. "Well, we could go to my uncle Lonzo's, in the
Thumb. Uncle Lonzo ain't there. But I know where the key is. Nobody be there. Nobody
bother us."
"Your Uncle Lonzo lives up in the Thumb? Whereabouts?"
"It's a resort. A black resort. It's called Turtle Lake. You
ever hear of it?"
Hoffa had heard of it. It was also called "Nigger Heaven."
It was one of a few such strictly Negro resorts in upstate Michigan. There was a larger
"Nigger Heaven" farther up the Lake Michigan shore, near Baldwin. But this
Turtle Lake was older, closer to Detroit. It struck him as an absolutely ideal hideout. No
mob goon would dream of entering the gates of Nigger Heaven.
"You know a colored fella named Books?" Hoffa asked.
"I don't remember his last name. Little guy, kind of dapper. He's a kind of fixer, a
bagman. I think he's s'posed ta have a cabin on Turtle Lake."
"I know him," Tyrone said. "He's over the other side
of the lake from Lonzo's, by the golf course."
"I don't want to see him," Hoffa said. "I don't want
to see nobody. And I don' want Books to see me. Nobody sees Hoffa. Got it? And no phone
calls. Got it? You don't tell nobody that Jimmy Hoffa is staying over to your uncle
Lonzo's. I'll keep inna house. A couple days and this'll blow over and Hoffa'll be outta
yer hair. And you'll have a coupla grand. That sound like a deal, Taylor?"
"A coupla grand! You gotta be shuckin', Jim. Ahmo lay my ass on
the line for a coupla grand? Shee-it!"
"Awright," Hoffa responded readily, "make it ten
grand."
"Twenny be more like it," Tyrone popped back.
"So, make it twenny," Hoffa readily agreed.
"Hey, it's a deal, Jim." Tyrone hoped that his voice
didn't sound as false as Hoffa's. Once you'd seen two-hundred grand, twenty big ones
didn't look so big, all of a sudden, especially when you were just talking twenty, not
holding twenty. "You get some sleep. It's at least an hour, maybe more on them back
roads. You feelin' all right?"
"Tell ya the troot, Taylor, I'm kinda wheezy. You know? How you
doin' for gas? When we get out a ways you can stop for gas." He handed Tyrone a
couple of fifties. "Get me some Pepto, or Di-Gel, somethin' like that. I'll be all
right. Just a little wheezy. Too much coffee or somethin'."
Tyrone nodded. Soon he was humming, staring into the darkness of the
country road they'd turned onto and patting out an interesting rhythm on the dash.
"Oman," he sang, softly, "omanwitta, gunwittagun." He reached over and
squeezed Vera's leg and grinned at her. She smiled back, happy as a bird in a bush.
Suddenly she gasped, her face stricken. "Oh my God! We forgot
Janney!"
"Jeesus!" Tyrone exclaimed. Obviously, he had just as
completely forgotten the projected meeting. But almost immediately he was suffused with a
certain gladness. As liberated as he might be, he had hated the idea of carrying his wife
to a meeting with Janney that would almost certainly have involved her being, in a sense,
"sold" to another man. "Oh, well," he said, blithely, "fuck it.
Fuck Janney."
He glanced at his wife. She smiled and squeezed his hand. And they
both felt very good. |