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Authors: Esi Edugyan

Half-Blood Blues (31 page)

BOOK: Half-Blood Blues
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I looked up at that.

The kid seem confused a second, like he a actor done wander onstage at the wrong cue. He stood staring at her, then shrugged. Turning his face, he seen me in the corner.

‘Aw, I ain’t so thirsty,’ he mumbled to her.

‘On the house,’ she said. ‘Whenever you’re ready for it.’

Hell. Why everyone got to be so damn
nice
to him all the time?

Hiero seen the graveness of my face, and stopped where he stood. I was thinking bout Delilah’s words. Thinking, you can be damn young and not be a kid. You can stop being a kid at any age, it ain’t got nothing to do with years. And Hiero, hell.

‘You a fraud,’ I said, sort of soft-like. ‘You a damn fraud. You hear me?’

‘Sid?’ he said.

I spat on the Bug’s filthy floorboards.

But then his expression, hell. I wanted to take back all of it. I ain’t never seen a jack look so crushed. You could see it in his face, something inside was wilting, a slow closing over. His eyes gone real dark.

‘Aw, I kiddin Hiero.’ I kicked out the chair across from me. ‘Come on, bring you ass on over here and split this drink.’

He just stood there a second more, looking at me with a hardened face.

‘Hiero,’ I called out angrily.

He just turn and walk on out of that shop and into the street, the door banging behind him.

The Bug watched me with a sour twist of her mouth, but she ain’t said nothing.

And so that dreamlike winter began.

Even awake I was sleeping. Dumped in a foreign city, where I ain’t known hardly a soul, the language a constant door in my face. It weighed on me, the loneliness, the jealousy. I took to avoiding Delilah when I could, leaving late or early, eating in strange cafés no gate like to turn up in. I blocked out the kid entire. I ain’t certain he even notice.

The streets of Paris turned white as mould under the cold blare of gas lamps.

The kid and Chip, they gone out at strange hours, the kid dragging Armstrong’s old horn with him as they went. I just turned over in my blankets, stared at the wall with dulled eyes in the darkness. I ain’t asked after the record. They ain’t said. Armstrong grown sick again, grown healthy. He vanished for a time to tour in some other country and then he was back and they was working again. That venom in my gut ain’t eased none.

What surprised me was how easily time begun to pass. A week gone by, then a second, a third. Christmas come and gone without celebration. I marked January by the vanishing of red bows, of tree-shaped sweets from patisserie windows.

It was a damn dark winter, made darker by nothing to do. I took to spending my afternoons walking all of Paris, my toes smarting from the cold, and in my head, over and over, the ugly beauty of Hiero’s horn.

..........

 

One other thing happened that dreamlike season.

It was noontime, the sky entirely white. I’d just stumbled across Pont de la Concorde, my hands shoved deep in my pockets, when I felt a shadow cross my path. I looked up, and there he was again. Louis goddamn Armstrong. Standing in front of me, holding a bag of groceries, his breath clouding the air.

I flushed.

‘Griffiths,’ he said in that rich crunching voice. ‘You goin this way?’

‘How the disc comin?’ I said.

‘Oh, slow. Real slow. We just feelin our way in the dark.’

I wasn’t sure what to say to that. We started walking over the snow.

Armstrong give me a sidelong look. ‘Delilah been worried bout you. You alright?’

‘She tell you that?’

He nodded.

‘We ain’t together no more,’ I said. ‘She tell you that, too?’

‘I heard.’

‘She ain’t even talkin to me. I come in a room, she go out of it. She tell you that too?’

Armstrong jostled his bag of groceries into the elbow of one arm, put a soft gloved hand on my back as we walked. ‘I know how it is, when it ends like that. I know how it hurt the heart.’

I was still half-cut from the gin that morning and I sort of swayed back, give him a funny look. ‘I ain’t
got
no heart,’ I said bitterly. ‘Ain’t that why I ain’t worth a damn on my axe?’

There was a old man sitting riverside, his pole drifting in the current. I reckoned it was too damn cold to catch anything. But there he was.

Armstrong’s voice got real gravelly, real deep and soft, like a pelt carpet. ‘There is a whole lot of talents, Sid. You a mighty fine rhythm boy.’

‘But I ain’t got the stuff.’

‘You know what you got. Ain’t no one tell you otherwise.’

I shook my head in disgust.

‘It don’t matter much bout all that anyway,’ Armstrong added. ‘You think it do, but it don’t. A man ain’t just his one talent. Little Louis needs you. And Jones look to you like you his brother. You got the talent of making others your kin, your blood. But music, well it’s different. I reckon it got its own worth. But it ain’t a man’s whole life.’

Aw, hell, Louis
, I thought.
Ain’t nothin else I want.

Something gone out of me, after that. Some of that fury I been feeling. The hurt just sort of evaporated off, and I felt lighter, sadder, but less alone. I ain’t saying we started being friendly again, not like that. But we circled each other, me, Chip and the kid, with a kind of restful grace. Every morning I watched them shuffle out to cut that record, and every night I seen them return home dog tired, and it seemed with each coming and going I began to feel less bitter. Like I finally understood we was in this life together.

Delilah, hell, I still couldn’t look at her without feeling brutally sick. But I wasn’t angry at anyone, not no more.

And the Phony War continued. One night in February I was ankling home when I seen the sky flash like a camera, then die again into stillness. The silence was frightening. In the morning Lilah translated from the paper that it been one of the Frogs’ own shells, crashing down across the river, in the Fifth, near the Censier station on Rue Mirbel. Punched a hole a foot and a half wide, wrecked a café. Two janes died. A jack got his leg cut right off. There ain’t even been a damn siren.

Then the restrictions begun. Bread was cut back, twists forbidden, only basic loaves and croissants permitted. Some days the butcher shops closed. Other days, no candy. What gnawed at us, though, was Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays, days when the liquor was corked up, and a jack couldn’t find a hard shout to drink for all the damn francs in the city.

But even that ain’t woke us up. We just brought our own rot when we gone out, toting the bottles along with us like we going on a damn picnic. It was a hazy age we slept through, and slowly it passed.

In the spring, with the rains, come the war.

3

It arrived in Paris on a bright morning in May. The air was warm, the Seine beginning to stink in the rising heat, the trees on the boulevards greener. Pigeons hobbled all about the cobblestones.

I was already drinking gin with Chip in the Coup, neither of us talking. We was both heavy-lidded from a damn air siren that morning, and the punch of tracers from battery guns in the dawn sky. It been the first daylight raid we could think of. I’d got to thinking maybe the good life was over. Maybe these years of being a gate, of late nights and women and grand friendships and, damn, that
music
, maybe it was done. Maybe fate was telling me,
Brother you get on out now.

All winter Chip and the kid had slunk in late most nights after working on the disc, their shoulders drooping. But it been weeks now since Louis left to tour down south, and that record still wasn’t finished, far as I could tell. I known it wasn’t depression I was seeing in them, just a kind of weariness, the long exhaustion of working on a thing you believe in but can’t see the end of.

Café Coup was crowded at that hour. All a sudden some jack twist up the dial on the wireless, damn thing crackling so loud some janes put fingers to their ears. With smoke still streaming from their cigs their hair looked on fire. It was all in Frog, the talk, we ain’t understood a damn word of it. But we could see in the strained faces, the shocked grunts, the sudden sobering silence that something real dark was coming.

‘What you reckon?’ I said to Chip.

He just shrugged. ‘
La guerre, la guerre
,’ he muttered.

But the gent beside us grabbed my arm, shushed us. The radio was still broadcasting. Then all a sudden it was like everyone just come to, just snapped out of it, and the crowd start shuffling and muttering. A jane in the corner stood up from her table, started shrieking some damn gibberish. Folks begun pushing in at the doorway, hollering for what they couldn’t hear. Whole damn café felt like a crowd waiting for a parade to appear round the corner, filled with a dread and excitement out of all proportion.

Someone broke a bottle in the roar. Then another. Folks was pressing up against our table, jostling us.

Chip smiled tiredly, raised his glass of gin. ‘To the end of the world, brother.’

We drank.

It was the beginning of the western offensive. The Krauts hurtled through Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg. Every hour the lines of the map was changing. Day after the Coup, Lilah reported to us the British ain’t got a government, that some damn joker named Churchill taken over. Then the Frogs sent their armies north, and the Limeys opened a front against the Krauts. Then it was the Krauts landing parachutists in behind our lines. Hell. Every night the air-raid sirens rung out, searchlights scarring the darkness. We’d bustle on down into the cellar to lean cold and weary against the walls.

A few days later we got news of the Krauts bombing Rotterdam, burning twenty-five thousand civilians in the streets. All of Paris gone mad hearing that, everyone’s faces pale like they already dead. It was happening quick and startling as lightning. One day Holland fell. We could hear bombs thumping in the background, listening to the RAF correspondent broadcasting from Flanders. Next day word come that the Limeys run a bombing raid in the Ruhr.

Day after that we heard the French armies was in retreat, fleeing Belgium, and the Krauts marched into Brussels. Next night British bombers struck Hamburg. The Reeperbahn was chewed to mulch. I thought of Ernst. Then I tried not to. The entire damn French 9th Army was captured in Le Cateau, and Antwerp fell. And just like that the Krauts was swimming along the Channel coast, washing off their boots in the cold salt, and in a panic the Limeys start sailing away from Dunkirk by the thousands.

And then our own war begun.

It was a Tuesday morning when Delilah come bursting into the flat, dragging Hiero by the wrist. She rushed to the big windows, wrenched back the curtains, and turned to stare round the flat like she looking for something particular.

‘What you doin now, girl?’ said Chip, all irritable. He lift up his head from the sofa where he been sleeping.

I rolled over, crushed the pillow over my damn face. That sun was
bright
.

‘They’ve been rounding up the Germans in the city,’ she said. The curtains fell back; a cool darkness descended. ‘Who knows Hiero’s living here?’

‘Ask Sid,’ said Chip, yawning.

I give a sullen shrug from where I lay on the floor. ‘No one. Just us gates.’

‘The Bug knows it,’ said Chip, rubbing his jaw. ‘But she ain’t goin tell.’

Delilah set to brooding over that. The kid ain’t said nothing.

‘What bout the rest of the building?’ I said. ‘Ain’t they like to remember him? He been goin to the cellar every damn night there a siren.’

She frowned. ‘They’ll think he’s Senegalese,’ she said, after a moment. ‘I’ll tell them he’s Senegalese.’

I felt a soft tremor run under my skin, just real soft, like I taken a hit of the rot straight. Cause it was the first time Delilah spoken to me directly in weeks. Hell. When it bite you, them teeth go deep.

‘What they doin with them?’ said Chip.

‘Who?’

‘The Krauts. They arrestin them? Deportin them? What?’

She shook her head. ‘I don’t know. But they’re being asked to report to the stadium at Montrouge.’

Hiero splayed his gangly legs out before him, his arms crossed glumly against his chest. Lilah turned at the window, staring toward where he sat, brooding.

‘Well, ain’t that the party,’ said Chip, with that tiredness in his voice. Something done happen to him these last months. All that fire and brutality, the sharp words and surgical instinct – it had all dimmed in him. He sat up in his blankets, shirtless, his hairy back looking rolled and muscular.

Delilah turned to him, her green eyes dark. ‘Did you see this?’ She lifted a corner of the curtains, the dust drifting off them like pollen. She gestured out the window. We could see a vein of black smoke rising from the Quai d’Orsay. The sky above it grey as lead, plume after plume of tar-dark wisps feeding the shadow. It was like I could smell them, their awful char.

‘They’re burning documents,’ she said. ‘Germans have crossed the Meuse. They’re on their way here.’

After some seconds, Chip said, ‘
Now?

‘Now, in three weeks, in three months.’ She shrugged. ‘Half the city’s in a panic. I suppose the other half just hasn’t heard yet. Paris is going to be a war zone. They say the fighting will go street to street.’

‘It goin be a massacre.’

She said nothing.

‘Krauts are comin,’ I said to Hiero.

He just nodded darkly, started picking at his long fingers.

‘Lucky old Louis,’ Chip said in a bitter voice. ‘Wish to hell
I
was tourin down south right now.’ He grabbed a tangle of his sheets, held it tight at his waist. Standing, he crossed to the window.

Frowning, Delilah took a seat beside the kid. ‘We’ve got to get visas, get out of France,’ she said.

‘What bout old Louis?’ Chip turned from the window. ‘You goin leave him down south?’

‘It’s not Louis I’m worried about.’

I shook my head. ‘Ain’t no way, girl. Everybody tryin. And the kid is a damn
Kraut
.’ I looked at Hiero. ‘Lilah sayin she goin get us visas. To get out.’

BOOK: Half-Blood Blues
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