The Right To Sing the Blues (19 page)

BOOK: The Right To Sing the Blues
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“I assume you’re still in New Orleans, or you’d be here in the flesh to bring to bear the full force of your personality behind your request. What specifically do you want to know?”

“Nothing specifically,” Nudger said. “I want your feeling on the Billy Weep murder.”

“You mean Benjamin Harrison Jefferson?”

“You know who I mean,” Nudger said.

“My feeling, huh?” Hammersmith understood what Nudger was requesting.

Nudger heard the labored wheezing sounds of Hammer-smith lighting a cigar and was glad that over six hundred miles separated them. Even at that he considered glancing out the window to check wind direction.

“We found a gram of heroin hidden in Weep’s apartment, Nudge,” Hammersmith said.

“I thought you searched his apartment and came up with nothing.”

“This was wrapped in a cut-off prophylactic and tucked down into a light socket with a bulb screwed in on top of it. Would you have found it?”

“No,” Nudger said, letting Hammersmith extract his price for whatever information he was going to divulge, making a resolution not to take burned-out light bulbs for granted. They and burned-out people could surprise.

“The most likely theory is that someone knew Weep had the junk hidden in the apartment and killed him for it but didn’t find it.” Hammersmith couldn’t quite make himself sound as if he believed that theory.

“How would they know he had it or how much it was?”

“Could be they saw him get it from his supplier and followed him home.”

Nudger remembered the wasted Billy Weep slouched in his chair in the shadows. It was hard to imagine him having the strength even to go out and score for a fix. And it wasn’t easy to find a supplier who delivered heroin like pizza to go. Something softer, maybe, but not heroin. “Was there evidence of heroin in his blood?” Nudger asked.

“No. There was a two-point-five alcohol reading and there were traces of THC in him. Marijuana. He was on two kinds of high when he was killed.”

“Maybe not,” Nudger said. “THC stays around in the body for a long time, and when I talked to him just before his death, Billy told me he wasn’t drinking.”

“That may or may not be true about the drinking, Nudge. The ME says his liver was about gone and he’d have probably died within six months on his own if somebody hadn’t helped him across.”

“How about needle tracks?” Nudger asked. “Did the ME find any on Billy’s body?”

Hammersmith smacked his lips and puffed on his cigar; over the phone he sounded like a locomotive in heat. “How astute of you to ask, Nudge. No needle-entry signs, not under the tongue or between the toes or anywhere else.”

“Do you know what was used to beat him to death?”

“No. It could have been a number of things. He actually died of asphyxiation.”

“Asphyxiation?” Nudger repeated. “Somebody choked him?”

“Whatever was used on him hit him in the throat, crushed his larynx and windpipe cartilage, made it impossible for him to get air.”

Nudger couldn’t help it; he imagined for a moment how it would be, the final, horrible panic: thrashing around wildly on the floor, struggling futilely to suck in oxygen, feeling your heart sledgehammer against your ribs, your entire body about to crumple inward around its internal air-less ruins. The rage. The terror.

Hammersmith surprised Nudger. “I’m sorry, Nudge. Was he a pretty good friend?”

“To a lot of music lovers,” Nudger said. “You haven’t answered my question, Jack.”

“I know. I’m not sure how I feel about this one. Could be the obvious—old junkie followed home and killed for his stash.”

“Or it could be that somebody planted the heroin to make it look that way.”

“A guy that clever,” Hammersmith said, “he’s smart enough to buy a plane ticket south. All the way to New Orleans.” Slurp, wheeze on the cigar. “You see any connection down there with Weep’s death?”

“Nothing firm. Hollister maybe, but I checked him out. He didn’t have a chance to leave town and get back here the night Billy was murdered. The times don’t quite fit.”

“My clothes don’t quite fit, either,” Hammersmith said, “but I wear them.” Which was a lie; the obese Hammersmith had most of his clothes tailored to his sleek bulk. “Maybe Hollister found a way.”

“That would be like a thirty-eight short on you,” Nudger said.

Hammersmith said something that sounded like a growl.

“I’ll let you know if anything down here does gel,” Nudger told him.

“Do that,” Hammersmith said. He made another disgusting airy slurping sound with the cigar. “In the meantime, I’ll be here standing tall between the citizens and the savages.”

“How do you know who’s who?” Nudger asked, but a dial tone hit him in the ear. Hammersmith, who had a thing about getting in the last word on the phone, had hung up.

That was okay. He couldn’t have answered Nudger’s question anyway. Nobody could. That was the world’s and Nudger’s problem.

XXI
V

ho’s he working for?” Hollister asked. “I don’t know. He won’t say.” Ineida didn’t tell Hollister that she’d offered Nudger money to pull away from whatever his business was in New Orleans. Whatever his interest was in her and Willy.

They were in the Croissant Bar in the French Quarter, where they often shared breakfast in a back booth. Neither was eating today. A blueberry croissant with one small bite out of it lay growing stale on a napkin next to Hollister’s steaming coffee cup. There was nothing but an untouched glass of orange juice on the table in front of Ineida. She wasn’t feeling well this morning.

“It doesn’t matter who he is or who he’s working for,” Ineida said. “We’re not doing anything illegal; he can’t do anything about us or to us. We can ignore him.” She sounded as if she were trying to convince herself more than Hollister.

After a lot of thought, Hollister had decided on this one last attempt to learn more about Nudger. He wasn’t surprised Ineida had failed to do so. But she was right;
they weren’t breaking any laws. No one could be arrested for what they were thinking, or for the pain to be.

Long after his mother’s death, he had learned to play the blues, the music of the lost. The very core of suffering. He’d learned to draw on the emptiness brought about by his mother dying and the years that followed. He had thought a lot about pain. In school in Illinois. Later in New York. His mother had loved him, and his father had told him after her death how much she had been loved by both of them. Had told him over and over again. Willy had sensed the fear in his father, and the agony. He’d played his father’s pain and it had worked; it had permeated his music in the little New York clubs he’d played, then in the blues cities of the Mid
west. And when his father died, Hollister found that he could no longer draw on that pain. It didn’t matter, he discovered. His own pain worked even better. So much better. But he needed a fix now and then to sustain him. Like a masochist, though he knew he wasn’t that; just the opposite. Like a vampire. Just like a vampire. Hollister shuddered. He didn’t like the comparison.

“You look tired,” Ineida was telling him. “You okay, babe?”

“Didn’t sleep much last night,” he said. He smiled at her. “I’m not sure why. Thinking of you, maybe. Wishing you were with me even while my mind was working on every other thing that drifted into it.”

She touched his hand, returned the smile. She really was a beautiful woman, he thought. He was lucky. The need rose powerfully in him, the terrible need and the regret. Looking into her unknowing eyes, he was pulled in every direction, while something small but wise seemed to walk around the inside of his skull, understanding what it was all about, stage-directing his thoughts and longings.

“Nothing matters to us but us,” Ineida said fiercely to him.

Which was almost true, Hollister realized. Almost. He could, if he chose, spend the rest of his life with this woman. He did love her. He looked into her eyes again and told her so.

He could hear the music, now, beckoning him, urging him. But it would be slightly different this time. It would be better.

He closed his eyes for a moment, listening inside himself.

It was time, he knew. In music, timing was everything.

XX
V

udger thought he’d feel stronger after breakfast. Instead he was slightly nauseated and weaker. Maybe his conversation with Hammersmith had done that to him; maybe the cigar had worked psychologi
cally, even over the phone and all that distance.

When he stood up, a wave of dizziness almost forced him to sit back down. He managed to push the cart with the breakfast dishes outside into the hall, hang the “Do Not Disturb” sign on the doorknob, then lock himself in his room and walk to the bed.

Tired. He hadn’t realized how tired he was. Everything that had happened recently seemed to be catching up, enveloping him now. Or was he seeking escape into sleep? Escape from this entire mad business. There were plenty of maybes that might apply. Nudger couldn’t figure out exactly why he was suddenly exhausted, but he was; that he knew for sure. He half fell onto the bed and lay on his stomach.

He slept until early evening, then got up in the quiet dusk and staggered into the bathroom to switch on the light and lean over the toilet bowl. He noted with satisfaction
that his urine wasn’t quite so red. Gee, how could a guy see that and not feel that everything was right with the world?

Nudger knew how, even given as he was to baseless optimism. The pain was back, threatening to get really vicious, so he went back to the bed and lay down, went immediately to sleep again, and slept until nine-twenty the next morning. Time sure flew when you weren’t having fun.

Déjà vu seemed to play a prominent role in Nudger’s life, he reflected, wondering if it was like that with every
one. This morning was a repeat of yesterday morning, only without Sandra Reckoner. The hot needle shower to ease aches and stiffness, the clean, unwrinkled clothes, the eggs, juice, and coffee served up by the gawky young bellhop who rolled the car in and looked around for Ineida, his protruding Adam’s apple bobbing frantically like some kind of carnal radar.

“She’s not here,” Nudger said.

“Yes, sir,” the bellhop answered, leaving the tray in front of the blue chair again. “I can see that.” It was as if Nudger had diabolically dictated that Ineida disappear. The kid seemed to hold it against him, so Nudger tipped him a mere dollar and watched him sulk and disappear himself.

Plenty of appetite this morning, and nothing to spoil it. Nudger forked down the omelet, ate every crumb of the toast, and drained his orange juice glass. Then he sat and leisurely sipped two cups of coffee, realizing with hope and satisfaction that he felt tolerably well today. Some pain was still present, but he could tune it out enough to coexist with it. He could be Nudger again, and not merely a thing that lay motionless and ached.

Still moving stiffly, but not nearly as slowly as his creeping pace of yesterday, he gingerly labored into his sport jacket and straightened his open shirt collar. Then he left the hotel and walked through golden-molasses sunshine to Fat Jack’s club.

Fat Jack was in his office this morning, at his desk studying a folder full of sheet music with a sketchy and faded look to the notes. He had his suit coat off and was wearing a pristine white shirt with the sleeves rolled up to reveal forearms like fleshy hams.

“Hey, high tech,” Fat Jack said. He gave a little offhand wave.

“Hi,” Nudger said, somewhat confused. Had Fat Jack said “tech,” or had he greeted him as “Tex”?

“Guy set me some blues numbers written by his computer,” Fat Jack explained. Tech. “Wants me to have the band play them some night. Trouble is, the computer doesn’t writ e like W. C. Handy, it writes like IBM. Can you believe it, one of the numbers here is called ‘Dot Matrix Momma of Mine.’ ”

“Catchy.”

“So’s syphilis.”

Nudger guessed Fat Jack didn’t like the dot matrix number.

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