The sergeant got to his feet and reached across the desk for the receiver.

'Ratigan,' he bellowed. 'Shoot!'

The sound of the harsh voice, metallic and indistinct, poured into the dense, listening silence, punctuated by Ratigan saying, 'Yeah… Yeah… Well, that's that…'

He hung up the receiver and said to his assistants, 'Let's go.'

3

A dilapidated moving van, minus the name of the owner or any identifying inscription save for a license plate almost obliterated by dirt, drew up in front of a four-storied brick tenement on 118th Street. The block was parallel to the one on 117th Street where the baptism had taken place a short time before.

Two big overall-clad colored men, one of whom had been driving, and a small, white-haired Jew, wearing a black suit and a brown felt hat, got out.

'Hey, auntie,' the Jew called to a big black woman leaning from a first-floor window. 'What floor does Rufus Wright live on?'

The woman gave him an evil look. 'If you means Alberta Wright, she lives on the top floor.'

The Jew's eyebrows shot upward, but he didn't reply.

'If Rufus has brought in a woman, we won't touch it,' he said to his helpers as they climbed the smelly stairs.

The helpers said nothing.

On the fourth floor, a slick-looking Negro with straightened hair beckoned from the rear door and said, 'Psst.' He was wearing a pink sport shirt, a green silk suit and yellow linen shoes, and he had a wide, confidential grin.

The Jew and his helpers entered the parlor of a two-room flat.

The Negro closed the door and locked it, then said, 'All right, daddy-O, let's get on.'

The Jew looked about suspiciously. 'You're alone, ain't you?' He had been around colored people so long he talked like one.

'Ain't I always?' the Negro countered.

'You know I got to get it straight.'

'All right, set up your alibis.'

The Jew frowned. 'That's a bad word,' he said, but the Negro didn't argue the point. The Jew asked, 'Your name is Rufus Wright, ain't it?'

'Right,' Rufus said.

The helpers, standing just inside the doorway, sniggered. Every time the Jew bought anything from Rufus, he went through the same act.

'This Is your place, ain't it?'

'Right.'

'You own the furniture, don't you?'

'Right.'

'Who is this woman, Alberta Wright?' the Jew threw in suddenly.

'Her? She's my wife,' Rufus said, without batting an eye.

'Why didn't you stick to being a bachelor?' the Jew complained. 'That was safer.'

'Well, you see, daddy-O, this time it's different,' Rufus said. 'This time it's on her account that I got to sell my furniture.'

'What's wrong with her?'

'Nothing wrong with her. She's dead is all. That's why I got to raise some money on a Sunday. I got to pay the undertaker some money in advance so he'll go down to the morgue and get her body.'

The Jew grinned at his helpers to show he appreciated the story. 'Well, that's all right,' he conceded, relaxing. 'Now we got everything straight.' He turned again to his helpers and called them to witness. 'You boys heard what Mr. Wright said.'

They nodded.

'All right, Rufus boy, let's get down to business. Is that the set you want to sell?' he asked, pointing toward a huge blond-oak television set on a gate-legged table.

'I've decided to sell all of my furniture,' Rufus said. 'This funeral is going to be expensive, and I got to make a down payment of five hundred dollars.'

'For that much, you had ought to got the whole Blumstein's department store,' the Jew said drily.

'There's a lot of good stuff here,' Rufus contended.

The Jew looked over the room, and his expression went sour. The room was jammed with a motley collection of worn-out furnishings arranged about a potbeilied stove like molting chickens about a mother hen: threadbare rugs; moth-eaten overstuffed chairs and a sofa, broken-legged tables; clocks without works; ceramic statuettes that had been through the Inquisition; a stuffed pheasant with a bald patch on its back; a set of scarred antlers mounted on the wall, flanked by faded lithographs of English hunting scenes; cutout photos of Negro blues singers hanging beside reproductions of the Virgin Mother and Child, The Last Supper and The Crucifixion cut from calendars given out by undertaker H. Exodus Clay.

'Do you call this furniture?' the Jew asked.

'These are mostly antiques in this room,' Rufus said. 'But there's a brand new set of furniture in the bedroom.'

'Your wife couldn't say no to her white folks, could she?' the Jew cracked. 'She must have brought everything home that they left for the trash man.'

'She couldn't throw nothing away neither,' Rufus added.

Grinning, the Jew took a notebook and stylo from his inside coat pocket and went to work. Rapidly and with scarcely a look, he itemized the furnishings, allowing $50 for the television set and $19 for everything else.

'I can't use the stove,' he said. 'Sixty-nine bucks for the lot. Okay.'

'You mean that's all you want to pay for everything in this room?' Rufus asked incredulously.

'That's more than it's worth,' the Jew said, adding with a grin. 'I wouldn't pay it if it wasn't for your wife needing a decent funeral.'

With an abrupt motion, Rufus opened his mouth and stuck it in front of the Jew's face. 'Here, take my teeth too and have it done with,' he blubbered.

The Jew looked into his mouth with interest. 'Holy Mackerel, you got a red tongue, blue gums and white teeth,' he observed. 'If anybody calls you a Communist, you just open your mouth and show them the national colors.'

Rufus closed his mouth and looked sheepish. 'All right, sixty-nine bucks; if I got to, I got to.'

The helpers started to move the furniture but the Jew stopped them. 'Wait till I get it down legal,' he cautioned.

In the bedroom the bureau drawers and the dressing table still contained Alberta's personal effects, lingerie and toilette articles as she had left them that morning, and the bed was made up and covered with a pink rayon spread.

'Get these drawers cleaned out,' the Jew said.

Rufus began piling the contents helter-skelter in a corner of the room. The Jew went about his business of assessing the furniture without paying him the slightest attention.

When he had thrown off the bed linen to examine the mattress, the Jew said sharply, 'This has been damaged.'

The seams of the mattress on all four sides, both top and bottom, had been opened with a knife wide enough to permit a hand.

'I had to open it to put in some bug powder,' Rufus said. 'We been bothered with the bugs. But all it needs is sewing up a little and it'll look like new.'

The Jew wasn't listening. He was sticking his arm through the openings and probing the padding with his

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