“He was going to the Elite to have dinner, and when he passed by the alley to park he saw Arch Ferrell and Bert Fuller talking to Mr. Patterson. He said he parked on the other side of the street and was listening to the end of a radio show out of Montgomery, some kind of gospel hour, and because it was June he had the windows down.”
“He heard the shots?”
“
“I bet.”
“He see any other witnesses?”
“He mentioned that big ole black car Ross Gibson saw. He thinks it was a Lincoln. Said a man and a woman were in the front seat, parked right at the mouth of the alley.”
The waitress came over and set down our plates and heated up our coffee. I smiled and thanked her. Britton craned his neck over the table and waited for me to finish, not even noticing her or the food.
“Did he see them run away?”
“He said he saw Fuller. Ferrell must’ve ducked back through the alley.”
“Where Quinnie saw him.”
“It fits.”
“Did he see them arguing?”
“He said it looked like they were just talking and didn’t think nothing of it until he heard the shots.”
“And so what does this mean?”
“John says it will be enough for Sykes. He knows he’s gonna have a battle with Reuben’s record. He said the defense will shred his character on the stand. But I’m just glad he wasn’t caught for half the things he’s done. Can you pass the ketchup?”
I lifted my hand out.
“But he was there.”
“Yes, sir.”
He handed me the bottle.
“When does he go before the grand jury?”
“Today.”
“And that’s when all hell will break loose.”
“He won’t remain out of my sight. He’s moved in the jail permanent. I got his boy to bring over some fresh clothes. I got him some cigarettes and magazines. He’s already got to be real friendly with some of the women down there.”
“The prostitutes?”
I nodded.
“He’s always had a way with them.”
SINCE BERT FULLER’S BOND HAD BEEN REVOKED, HE’D spent the weeks at the Russell County Jail reading Zane Grey,
The Jews were nothing but homesteaders with redmen all around them, trying to take what was promised to them by the Lord Almighty. Today, he read a book Georgia had brought him called
All Fuller wanted to know is if Georgiana had big tits like his Georgia. Zane was really letting him down with this one. He introduced two women, and Fuller still didn’t know what they looked like. He thumbed through the pages, waiting for the gunslinger or bounty hunter or sheriff to enter the picture and give those two Yankee spinsters what they’d been needin’.
He put the book down and walked to the corner of his brick cell to take a leak and then went back and lay down on his bunk. The light was hard coming through the cell window, and he laid a forearm across his eyes. Some men were talking down the way, and he recognized one of their voices, wasn’t unusual for some bootlegger or clip joint operator to finally get picked up on warrant, and Fuller would call down to them and ask them how was business, as some kind of joke.
Frog Jones had just spent last week two cells down, and they’d shared some good stories about the days during the Border Wars and some of the women they’d known out at Cliff’s and where everybody had all been scattered about.
About two hours later, he saw an old nigger card dealer he knew push a mop bucket down the hall. He’d been there since Fuller had first been arrested on that vote-fraud joke charge, and sometimes the boy would smuggle him in some fresh biscuits and candy bars.
“What you got for me today, boy?” he asked.
“What you want?”
“Who’s that down the hall? I know that voice.”
“That’s Mr. Reuben.”
“They picked up every club owner in town.”
“He ain’t in here for that. He’s a witness. They figured he better be kept in a cage.”
“Who’s he testifying against?”
The old card dealer leaned against the mop handle and smiled big at him, a big old Amos-and-Andy smile, and said: “He’s testifyin’ ’gainst you and Mr. Arch. Ain’t you heard nothin’?”
Fuller jumped from the bunk and reached his hands around the bars, grabbing the old man by the throat, and shook him, rattling the entire cage. The old nigger on the other side of the bars didn’t do nothing but laugh and laugh.
“Go ahead and grin it up, nigger,” Fuller said. “Judgment Day will come soon enough.”
“I ain’t scareda you no more,” the man said.
“But you’ll still work for that dollar.”
“Bet your ass.”
Fuller let go of the man and walked back to the bunk, where he tore the title page out from
“You call this number here and you repeat what you just told me. There’s twenty dollars in it for you.”
“Sez who?”
“It’s an honest bet on just a goddamn dime.”
I LOANED REUBEN AN OLD SUNDAY SUIT BEFORE HE GAVE his testimony to the grand jury that afternoon, with Bernard Sykes leading him – no kind of cross-examination – and with me waiting for him in the courthouse hall when he got done. The suit was brown with wide lapels, and his shirtsleeves cuffed well into the palm of his hand. He nodded to me, and we walked together down the hallway.
“This the best you could do?”
“I didn’t have time to get you a tailor.”
“I look like a corpse.”
“You did real good today,” I said.
“I bet your daddy is finally proud of you now,” Reuben said. “I remember how much he hated you bein’ a