Walter Mosley - Bad Boy Brawly Brown

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Bad Boy Brawly Brown: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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For the first time in six years, Easy Rawlins is back working a case on the streets of Los Angeles, looking for justice and sometimes managing to create his own.
Easy Rawlins’s old friend John shows up at his door one morning, looking for the kind of help only Easy can provide. John’s stepson, Brawly Brown, has left home and John has reason to think this well-meaning boy is caught up in a situation that’s more dangerous than he knows. It doesn’t take Easy long to find Brawly and to learn that John is right — but getting Brawly to see things that way is another matter.
Brawly has joined a political group that he believes is out to make things better for the residents of Compton. With years of seeing how things really work, Easy recognizes that young Brawly is just a pawn in a battle between forces as old and hard as the city’s streets.
Through it all, Easy’s old friend Mouse is there to help him — even though the last time Easy saw Mouse he was lying still and cold, and Easy is certain he’s dead. Still, the memory and reputation of Mouse accompany Easy everywhere, earning him second looks from beautiful women and respect from hardened men. And in a world where logic is only a small element in life-or-death calculations, it is something Mouse once said to him that could help Easy save Brawly’s life — without costing him his own.
The worldliness, relentlessness, and passion of Easy Rawlins have been sorely missed from the world of fiction. This thriller is proof that Walter Mosley is one of the masters of crime fiction, and as original a voice as any writing in America today.

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“Mr. Rawlins, are you awake?”

“There’s a doughnut shop on Central at Florence,” I said. “It’s an all-night place that they use for the Goodyear tire plant down there.”

“I know it.”

“Be there in forty minutes,” I said, and then I hung up.

I turned on my back and took a deep breath. Graveyards and blue skies. The phrase ran through my mind. It was a good title for a jet-age blues song.

— 19 —

I put on work clothes so that I’d blend in with the crowd at Mariah’s Doughnuts and Deli.

I made it in twenty-five minutes, my car rattling now and again along the way.

Strong wasn’t there when I arrived. But the large room was half filled with workmen and — women smoking cigarettes and downing coffee.

It was way down in the black neighborhood, but the room was filled with all the races of L.A. Black and white, yellow and brown. All sitting together and talking. Norwegian, Nigerian, and Nipponese derivatives all speaking the same language and getting along just fine.

“Coffee,” I said to Bingham, the nighttime counterman at Mariah’s.

“How you want it, Easy?”

“Black as it gets.”

He went to fill my order and I let my eyes roll over the three dozen or so late-night workers. The nearby Goodyear plant ran twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year. The people who worked there had simple, straight-ahead lives. They got up an hour and a half before they were supposed to be at work, then they worked eight hours, and maybe a little overtime. They were citizens of a nation that had won the major wars of the century and now they were enjoying the fruits of the victors: mindless labor and enough of anything they wanted to buy.

Everyone in the room looked as though they belonged there. No one was looking at me, and no one was looking away.

I sat at a small table near the cash register and guzzled the strong coffee. Every word spoken or cup banged down exploded in my ears. My fingertips were numb, and if I moved my head too fast, my vision shook a bit.

After my third cup of coffee things began to settle down. Strong came in the front door at 4:19 and strode up to my table. He had tried to dress for the occasion, wearing black slacks and a square-cut dark blue shirt with orange circles around the hem. But his head was too elegant for the clothes, and the clothes were too sporty for the twenty-four-hour diner.

Strong would have had a hard time fitting in anywhere he was not the center of attention.

“Coffee?” I asked him.

I gestured at Bingham, who called a waiter from the back to bring a plate of hot beignets and two fresh cups of coffee.

“You hung up on me,” Strong said.

“You woke me out of a sound sleep.”

The standoff lasted until after the young man had delivered our breakfast.

“I have to talk to you, Rawlins,” he said.

“That’s why I’m here.”

“But not here. There’s too many ears around here.”

“Here is where they ain’t gonna be listenin’, man,” I said, letting my country upbringing soak each word. “Here is where people mind their own business. They don’t care about us.”

Strong had a long face with deep, soulful eyes. He used those eyes on me.

“Are you a race man, Mr. Rawlins?”

“I can run if I have to,” I said.

“That’s not what I mean.”

“I know what you mean. You one’a them better-than-thou kinda Negroes tryin’ to explain everything by your own book. But I’m just a everyday black man, doin’ the best I can in a world where the white man’s de facto king. I got me a house with a tree growin’ in the front yard. It’s my tree; I could cut it down if I wanted to, but even still you cain’t call it a black man’s tree. It’s just pine.”

I had given him everything he needed to figure me out. If Strong was smart enough to read me, then I’d have to take him seriously; if not — well, I’d see.

His rubbed his fingers across his lips, digesting my words. He stared even more deeply into my eyes.

Then he smiled. Grinned.

“Okay,” he said. “I’m not trying to convert you. I just wanted to know where you stand in relation to the First Men.”

“Next question,” I said.

“What do you have to do with Brawly Brown?”

“I’m looking for him. For his mother, like I said.”

“Is that all?”

Strong was taller than I was and heavier by thirty pounds. His question had the hint of a threat in it. But I wasn’t afraid.

“This is a waste of time,” I said.

I sat back and bit into one of the best beignets I’d ever tasted.

“I’m worried about Brawly,” Strong said.

“How’s that?” I asked.

“I believe that he’s part of a radical fringe in Xavier’s group. Despite the name, the Urban Revolutionary Party is a cultural organization, Mr. Rawlins. They want to have better education for our children, to bring the proper nutrition and political clout to the neighborhood. But some of our youngsters aren’t patient with the process. They’re angry and want to lash out. I believe that Brawly is part of that element.”

“How’d you get my number, Mr. Strong?”

“I got it from Tina,” he said.

“I didn’t give Tina my number.”

“No, but you did give it to Clarissa. She went to Tina after you came to her house. She’s worried about Brawly, too.”

“She worried about his safety, and you worried ’bout what he might do to you.”

“Not to me, but to the group. You saw what the police did the other night. You know what they’re capable of. If we just get out in the street and urge people to vote, they break down our walls and put us in jail. What do you think they’d do if we formed into guerrilla squads armed to the teeth?”

“That’s what Brawly’s into?”

“I’m not sure,” Strong said with all the honesty of a hungry crocodile. “I know that they’re trying to raise money in order to buy weapons.”

“Maybe they want the money for the school,” I said.

“Don’t talk shit, man.”

“Okay. Okay,” I said. “You the one should know.”

“Why are you looking for Brawly Brown?” he asked.

“For his mother.”

In years past when I did favors for people, I lied all the time. Gave the wrong name, never admitted to what my true purposes were. As a rule, people believed my lies. This was the first time that I told the truth consistently and the result was that no one believed what I said.

“If that’s true,” Strong said, “then you had better get to Brawly and take him back home. Because the only thing he’s headed for is an early grave.”

“At least we agree on somethin’,” I said. “I would love nuthin’ better than to get Brawly into a room with his mother. But, you know, I seen that boy once — he threw me across the room and I don’t think he was even mad.”

“Maybe if I came along with you,” Strong said. “Maybe he’d listen to me.”

“You think so?”

“It’s worth a try. That Brawly’s a hothead. With him out of the picture, I might be able to reason with the rest of them. And with you there representing his mother, he just might turn around.”

From what I had seen, Brawly was more brute strength or blind hope — not so much a driving force. But what did I know? And even if my suspicions were right, that was no reason to disagree with Strong. If he was willing to help, then I was willing to let him.

“I know where he is,” Strong said.

“Where?”

“I could take you to him.”

He paid the tab and then walked me out to his car, which was parked across the street. It was an old Crown Victoria, as beautiful as the day it rolled off the production line. The radical leader was vain about his automobile. For some reason, that made me like him more.

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