goes,’ he went on, beginning to ramble, his voice slurred. ‘Like he say, “Hey, now, ain’t that the way it is?” And you got to say, “Yes sir, that’s the way, sir, just like you said, sir.”’ The light in his eyes swam in and out rhythmically. ‘Got to say, “Yes, sir, you right, sir.”’
Ben could see the stupor coming on him, and he raced forward to find out what he could before the old man was gone entirely.
‘Did you take Doreen home Sunday afternoon?’ he asked.
Gilroy shook his head. ‘I was gone by then.’ He looked up slightly, his large eyes now deeply hooded by dark lids. ‘I was gone way ‘fore supper.’
‘Was Mr Davenport there when you left?’ Ben asked.
Gilroy nodded shakily.
‘Anyone else?’
‘Just him, just ole Massa,’ Gilroy said. He smiled grimly. ‘He say, “Jacob, what you think ’bout all this what’s going on downtown?” I say, “Well, I guess they’s something to it.”’ Gilroy’s voice deepened mournfully. ‘And he look at me like I ain’t nothing, and he say, “Pack up, Jacob. I ain’t having no agitators in this house.”’
‘So you were fired?’ Ben asked.
‘’Cause I said they was something to it,’ Gilroy told him. His eyes drifted toward the small window to his right. ‘My sister, she say I crazy for saying anything. She say I lose my job over nothing.’ He nodded clumsily, his head shifting heavily to the left. ‘I can’t say she wrong.’
‘What do you know about Doreen?’ Ben asked.
Gilroy shrugged. ‘I come and get her. I take her home.’ He gazed at Ben helplessly. ‘She deaf, like I said. Ain’t much talking to her.’ He glanced down at the bottle. His fingers tightened around its neck. ‘I ain’t saying what these folks is doing is a good thing,’ he protested. ‘I just say they’s something to it.’ He gazed at Ben pleadingly. ‘I ain’t never marched or nothing. I just say they’s maybe something to it, that’s all.’
‘Did you see anyone else in the house on Sunday?’ Ben asked.
‘Just ole Massa,’ Gilroy told him. The Missus, she gone someplace. She not around when he ask me.’ He brought the bottle up slowly and took another drink.
‘Do you think he took Doreen home?’
Gilroy dropped the bottle to his side suddenly, and some of the liquor sloshed up out of the bottle and onto his fist. Gilroy licked it off quickly, then lifted his eyes slowly toward Ben. They think it’s me that done it?’ he asked.
Ben said nothing.
‘They think it’s me, don’t they?’ Gilroy repeated earnestly. A sudden steely terror infused his eyes. ‘They think somehow I kilt that little girl.’
‘No,’ Ben told him. ‘I don’t think so.’
The old man’s eyes grew wild in panic. ‘They send the Black Cat boys, that’s what,’ he cried. ‘They send the Black Cat boys for ole Jacob.’
Ben lifted his hand toward him. ‘No,’ he said emphatically.
Tears welled up in the old man’s eyes, then ran down his face. ‘That’s what they do when they got you,’ he cried. His whole face was trembling violently, ‘They gone send the Twins for ole Jacob.’ The bottle slid from his hand and crashed onto the floor. A wave of whiskey swept out over the broken glass, then disappeared between the cracks in the floor.
Ben stepped toward him quickly. ‘Nobody’s sending the Twins anywhere,’ he said insistently.
The old man stared at him in wide-eyed disbelief. ‘They gone whip ole Jacob, that’s what,’ he wailed. ‘Maybe gone shoot him in the head.’
‘No,’ Ben repeated.
The old man’s body slid out of the chair. ‘Naw, naw, naw,’ he moaned.
‘Get up,’ Ben said desperately.
Gilroy slumped forward at his feet. ‘Naw, naw, naw,’ he begged.
‘Stop it.’
The old man’s body curled inward, as his lean brown arms wrapped around Ben’s legs. ‘Don’t let them shoot ole Jacob,’ he whimpered just before he passed out.
Ben marched directly into Luther’s office and closed the door behind him.
‘I want to ask you something, Captain,’ he said.
Luther looked up from an enormous gray ledger. ‘Ask me something?’ he said. He swept his large pink hand out over the book. ‘You see this, Ben?’ he said. ‘This is the Police Department Budget. Now I look at what we got, and I think about all the extra shit we’ve been having to do since all these demonstrations started, and I ask myself a question. I say, “Luther, how the hell you going to pay for all this?”’
Ben stared at him resolutely. ‘I want to know what the Langleys have been doing in Bearmatch.’
Luther’s face stiffened. ‘What are you talking about?’
‘I was questioning this old man about the murder,’ Ben said. ‘He was drunk, I admit it, but he got to thinking about the Langleys, about how they might just come and get him, and it just about tore him up.’
Luther leaned back slightly. Sheets of rain continued to sweep against the large window at his back. ‘You think a scared old colored boy is worth my time, Ben?’
Ben stared at him evenly.
Luther folded his arms over his chest. ‘The Langleys? That’s what’s bothering you? Well, the only thing I know for sure about those two boys is that one of them is a whole lot smarter than the other one.’ He glared at Ben hotly. ‘Now get on out of here,’ he said as he returned to the ledger.
Ben did not move, and after a moment Luther’s eyes snapped back toward him.
‘Did you hear me, Ben?’ he demanded.
‘I never saw a person more scared than that old man,’ Ben said.
Luther smiled thinly. ‘They’re a little rough, the Lang-leys,’ he said. ‘Everybody knows that. They’ve put the squeeze on a few things.’
Ben said nothing.
‘But you got to be a little rough to work Bearmatch,’ Luther added. ‘If you don’t beat it, it’ll beat you. Look what happened to Kelly Ryan.’
‘Can they just do anything?’ Ben asked. ‘Don’t they answer to anybody?’
Luther looked at him squarely. ‘And what are you saying they’ve done, Ben?’
Ben did not answer.
‘Are you saying they had something to do with killing that little girl?’
Ben said nothing.
‘Huh?’ Luther demanded. ‘Is that what you’re saying?’ He did not wait for an answer before rushing on. ‘Do you have one little tiny piece of evidence that connects the Langleys to that girl’s murder?’
Ben shook his head helplessly. ‘No.’
Luther went back to the ledger. ‘Well, if you ever do, let me know.’
Ben walked over to his desk and leaned into it. ‘I want to see your face when you tell me that,’ he said.
Luther looked up. His voice was absolutely resolute when he spoke. ‘If you ever find anything on the Lang- leys, let me know.’
Ben nodded quickly and turned back toward the door.
Luther took a deep, weary breath. ‘Look, Ben, after this business with Kelly, the department figured Bearmatch needed a certain kind of people to keep an eye on it.’
‘Like the Langleys.’
‘That’s right.’
‘Who decided that?’
Luther laughed. ‘Who do you think?’
‘The Chief?’
‘He hires the police,’ Luther said, as if he were explaining the facts of life to a child. ‘He hires the firemen. He is the Commissioner of Public Safety.’
‘So they answer to him,’ Ben said.
‘Everybody but Jesus answers to the Chief,’ Luther said. There was a troubled weariness in his voice. ‘And