Lorette, eyebrows raised in question. Lorette said something to her in a slurred tone. Cathy scooped up the sheets and towels and with one swift and unreadable glance at me, went out and pulled the door shut. I heard the fading jingle of the service cart as she trundled it away.

Lorette came over and sat on the bottom corner of the bed, facing me, studying me. Small and pretty brown face, coffee with double cream, with no highlights at all on the smooth matte skin, with eyes so dark the pupils and irises merged. She fished cigarettes and matches from her skirt pocket, lit one, crossed slender legs as she exhaled a long plume. There was challenge and appraisal in her stare.

'Black turn you off, man?'

'Not at all. Suspicion does, though. It's an ugly emotion.'

'And ugly living with it or having to live with it. Maybe you don't want it from Cathy on account of it would hurt your chance of making it with me, you think.'

'How did you ever guess? I forced poor Cathy to drink that doctored gin, and I arranged to have the nurse killed, just so you and I could meet right here and arrange the whole thing. Take a choice of places, honey. Guatemala City? Paris? Montevideo? Where do I send your ticket?'

She was simultaneously angry and amused. Amusement won. Finally she said, 'There's just one last thing I got to be sure of. Tell me, are you any kind of law at all? Any kind?'

'Not any kind at all, Lorette.'

She shrugged, sighed, and said, 'Well, here I go. Out

where the nurse lived there's a white woman in number

sixty, pretty close by. She's got her a Monday-Thursday

cleaning woman, half days. Last Monday the cleaning

woman got there and found a note from the woman she'd

be away a week, don't come Thursday. The woman

works in an office job. The cleaning woman didn't work

Thursday and went there yesterday, Monday, like always.

She can tell the woman that lives there isn't back yet, but

somebody has been in there. Friend, maybe; Somebody

lay on the bed a time. One person. Left a head mark in

the pillow, wrinkled the spread. Something was spilled,

and somebody used her mop, pail, things like that, and

didn't put them back exactly the same. Scrubbed up part

of the kitchen floor, part of the bathroom floor, and

burned up something in the little fireplace those apartments have got, and she said to her it looked like ashes from burning cloth, and she couldn't find some of her cleaning rags anyplace. Don't know what good it is to you. Maybe something or nothing.'

'I suppose she cleaned the place as usual and swept out the fireplace?'

'That's what she did. She told me the name of that woman, but I plain dumb forgot it.'

'Never mind. I can find out.'

'The cleaning woman, she said it's not far from the kitchen door of that place to the kitchen door of the nurse place. Down the walk and around a corner, behind a fence the whole way, a big high pretty fence with little gates in it to little private yards.'

'Thanks. Did you get anything else?'

'There's a lot of people in Southtown who plain wouldn't tell anybody anything, black or white. Or they tell a little and hold back some if they think you want to know bad enough to lay a little bread on them. It isn't on account of being mean. Somehow there's never enough money to even get by on. Maybe if...'

I worked my wallet out of my hip pocket and flipped it over onto the bed by her hip. With the half-cigarette dangling from the corner of her mouth, head aslant to keep the smoke out of her eyes, she opened it and thumbed the corners of the bills. 'Take what you think you might need.'

'And if I just take it all, man?'

'It would be because you need it.'

Bright animosity again. 'Never come into your mind I was cheating you?'

'Mrs. Walker, there's seven hundred and something in there. I've got to go along with the value you put on yourself, and you've got to go along with the value I put on myself.'

She stared at me, then shook her head. 'You some kind of other thing for sure. Look. I got two hundred. Okay? Bring you change, prob'ly.'

She started to get up, undoubtedly to bring the wallet back to me, but then out of some prideful and defiant impulse, she settled back and flipped it at me. I picked it out of the air about six inches in front of my nose, and slipped it back into the hip pocket. She folded the bills and undid one button of the high-collared uniform blouse and tucked the money down into the invisible, creamy, compacted cleft between those outsized breasts. She re- buttoned and gave herself a little pat.

She made a rueful mouth. 'Talk to you so long out in the back, and now I've been in here with the door shut too long, and I tell you that everybody working here keeps close track.'

She got up and took the ashtray she had used into the bathroom and brought it back, shining clean, and put it on the bedside table.

'Going to make me some nice problem,' she muttered.

'Problem?'

'Nothing I can't handle. I'm kind of boss girl, right after Miz Imber. Up to me to keep them all working right. Lot of them may be older, but nobody can match me for mean. Can't tell them why I spent all this time in here with you alone. So they're going to slack off on me, thinking that on account of I suddenly start banging white, I lost my place. Oh, they'll try me for sure. But they'll find out they're going to get more mean than they can handle from ol' Fifty Pound.'

'Fifty pound?'

Even with that dusky skin her sudden furious blush was apparent. 'It's nothing, mister. Anyplace like this, sooner or later somebody'll give the boss gal some kind of special name. The one they give me, it comes from the way I'm built, that's all. Somebody saw me walk by and said, `There she go. Ninety pound of mean. Forty pound of gal and fifty pound of boobs.' So it's Fifty Pound. Used to fuss me, but I don't mind now.'

'See what you can find out, Lorette, about a man who works for the sheriff. Dave Broon.'

She looked as if she wanted to spit. 'Now, that one is all mean. Mr. Holton, he's part-time mean. Mr. Broon, he wants to know something, maybe a deputy picks up some boy out in Southtown and then Mr. Broon visits with him. When they bring the boy back, he walks old and he talks old, and he keeps his head down. But he doesn't say a thing about Mr. Broon. One thing I know, he's rich. Big rich. It's in other names but he owns maybe forty houses in Southtown. Rains through the roof. Porch steps fall off. Three families drawing water from one spigot, but the rent never goes down. It goes up. Cardboard paper on the busted windows. Tax goes up on other places, never goes up on Mr. Broon's houses.'

'You told me that the Holtons couldn't get domestic help because of Holton's attitude toward your people. I know that Mr. Pike and Miss Pearson have been trying to get somebody to look after Mrs. Pike. I noticed they have the yard work done by a white man. Any special reason for that?'

She stood by the door and all expression had left her face. 'It's something went on long ago, three years, maybe more, just after that house was built and him new married. Had a live-in couple quartered over the boat-house. Young couple. Good pay. They drank some kind of poison stuff that you spray on the groves. Para... para...'

'Parathion?'

'Sounds right. Both died in the hospital. Mr. Pike paid for a nice funeral.'

'Accident?'

'Not with the bag right there on the floor next to the table and the powder still stuck to the spoon. Put it in red wine and drank it. Must have seen it in the movies, because they busted the glasses, threw them at the wall.'

'So?'

'So the man had been in Southtown three days before. Quiet boy. Got stinking smashed pig drunk. Cried and cried and cried. So drunk nobody could hardly understand him. Something about signing a paper so they wouldn't have to go to jail. Something about some nasty thing somebody was making his wife do on account of they signed the paper. And about not being able to stand it. Nobody knows the right and wrong of it. Nobody knows what happened.'

'But the Pikes can't get any help out there?'

'They maybe could have. People were thinking on it. Then just before they let Mr. Pike get out of the broker business instead of putting the law on him, he was trying to learn to play golf, and he hit a colored caddy with a golf stick. Laid his head open. Mr. Pike give up trying the game after that. Gave Danny a hundred dollars and paid the hospital. Nobody else seen it. Mr. Pike said Danny walked the wrong way at the wrong time.'

'Into his backswing?'

'That's what it was, the way they said it. Danny said he had a cold and he sneezed and Mr. Pike missed the ball entire and come at him with his eyes bugged out, making crazy little crying sounds, and Danny turned to run and he knows Mr. Pike couldn't run that fast, so he figures Mr. Pike

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