Stillson wrench. He glanced at Sam. “Now, who are you?”
“Sam Simoneaux.” He pointed to his hat. “Third mate.”
Captain Stewart stared at him, deadpan. “Remind me, son.”
“Elsie Weller asked you to hire me.”
He nodded. “Yes, that’s right. Walk the boat and meet everyone. Every last man. Keep your hat clean and drink your coffee.” He turned away when the smudged fellow carrying the wrench walked up and began complaining about his salary.
Since he was already on the roof he stepped up into the gingerbread wheelhouse, curious to meet this lady pilot. He was surprised to see Nellie Benton, the woman he’d delivered the horses to in town, standing behind the steering tillers wearing a navy polka-dot dress, a whorl of gray hair flowing from under a pilot’s cap.
“Well,” she said, “it’s the wagon master.”
He swallowed hard and knew he must be showing his surprise. “Hello, ma’am.”
“Hello yourself. I saw you wandering around down there. You ever see a lady pilot?”
“No, ma’am, I guess not.”
“Well, now that your curiosity’s settled, get on down to the engine room and ask Bit Benton-that’s the engineer on watch now-if he’s finished working on the steering engine. If he is, tell him to let me know through the speaking tube.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Sam, is it?”
“That’s right.”
“I heard you kind of backed into the steamboat business.”
“I seem to back into most things.”
“Don’t your wife feed you?”
He looked down at his stomach. “I like being light on my feet.”
“Well, if you’re a real steamboat man likely the kitchen’ll fat you up.”
He went down to give the message to a testy and red-faced Bit, and coming out of the engine-room door he bumped into Charlie Duggs. “Hey. I’ll see you later. I’m supposed to be introducing myself around.”
“Pleased to meet you,” Duggs said to Sam’s back.
He met busboys and waiters on the second deck, several members of a large black orchestra, the concessions master, the chief cook, the head steward, two white musicians standing around listening to the black men practice, and the Wellers, who were coming down the starboard staircase from the Texas deck. With them was a big- shouldered boy of about fifteen, composed, wearing a sport coat, one hand in a pocket. They walked together to the end of the enormous dance floor. Sam looked back over the glossy planks. “How’s it going?”
Ted Weller pulled a handkerchief and mopped his head. “Not so good. The captain let most of the white orchestra go and picked up the black fellows over there to play the main night trips. He said he had to go with what the dancers liked.”
Sam looked back toward the bandstand. Earlier that year, he’d heard, Captain Quincy had taken the
“Captain says if we hit some towns that won’t listen to colored music, we can slap together about seven boys for a dance trip. But the whites will only play the afternoon runs when nobody dances much anyway.”
Elsie settled one hip against a bulkhead. “Ted can play piano for the black band if the captain lets him. He’s figured how they cut the melody loose from the time signature.”
“What’ll you do?”
She shrugged. “I could sing with the day band, you know, and even with a black band if it was okay. I’d sing with them steady if it was up to me, but in some of these towns, you know how it is. Nowadays I’m doing laundry and setting out tablecloths on deck three.” She put a hand on the top of the boy’s head. “Our son here plays a mean alto sax, but now he’s in the boiler galley passing coal.”
At the mention of his name, the boy stuck out his hand. “Hiya. My name’s August.”
“Hey, bud. Stay away from those boilers.” Sam looked in the boy’s eyes and saw that he was smart, maybe the kind of kid who breathed in knowledge and exhaled accomplishment.
“Aw, I’ll be up on the bandstand again someday.” He ran a hand over his slicked-back blond hair.
“You play with the big orchestra?”
“They’ve let me sit in a few times a week. I can sight-read real well.”
Sam raised an eyebrow. “In your spare time maybe you can teach me.”
At the midship bandstand the orchestra struck up an embroidered rendition of “Frankie and Johnny,” mostly in a straight dance rhythm but with the beat and melody disconnecting in the repeat. The music was good. Sam could feel the notes ride up his shinbones into his hips. It made him think of the barrel houses next to Storyville, which more than once he’d stopped into for a beer and a lookaround. The band warmed up like an engine, getting better at what they were doing with each measure, the big piano holding everything together. “Some stuff. Kind of snappy for the excursion trade.”
A boat whistle sounded in the canal and Ted pulled out his watch. “Nowadays most dancers like whatever’s hot stuff. Ten years ago it was ragtime and cakewalks. Makes you wonder what they’ll like in fifty years.”
August’s eyes lit up. He reached over and popped his father’s left gallus. “It’ll sound like a thunderstorm in an oil drum.”
THE ENGINEER was warming up the machinery on a slow bell, the paddlewheel treading water, the boat doing a dreamy two-degree wallow at the dock. Then a big deep groan of the whistle rattled the dance-floor windows, the lines were cast off, and the
The boat’s advertising had announced the point of departure for the night’s trip, a hard-to-reach landing instead of the more popular wharf at the foot of Canal Street. The captain had called it a shakedown, a trip to make sure the machinery was up to the big river.
Sam was sent down to watch the first customers hustle up the wide stage plank. The captain drew him aside on the main deck around six o’clock.
“Son, these New Orleans crowds aren’t so bad. It’s a good-time town. But if someone tries to come on with a baseball bat, a belt knife, or you spot a pistol in someone’s waistband, you tell them you’ve got to borrow it until we land again.”
“What if they won’t turn it in?”
“Then you kick the son of a bitch into the river.”
“What about if I see someone bringing on liquor?”
The captain leaned close, frowning. “Hell, son. That’s what we sell setups for. Once we leave the bank we’re sort of a separate country.”
“I got it. Anything else?”
“Keep a lookout for that woman.”
“What woman? Aw, you think she’d be crazy enough to show up?”
The captain looked away. “You don’t think she’s crazy to begin with? Stealing kids and all? Maybe crazy and stupid to boot.”
“I’m kind of forgetting what she looks like, already. I just saw her for a couple seconds.”
“Keep your eyeballs rollin’.”
And he did, trying his best to remember the old woman in the fitting room, fixing the brief observation in his mind, the missing tooth and unwashed hair, the shears poised over the child’s scalp. He had to remind himself that