Ace Atkins - Dark End of the Street

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The plan is simple. A favor really. All Nick Travers, a former professional football player turned professor, has to do is drive up Highway 61 from New Orleans to Memphis and track down the lost brother of one of his best friends. But as Travers knows, these simple jobs seldom turn out smoothly.
His friend’s brother is Clyde James, who, in 1968, was one of the finest soul singers Memphis had to offer. But when James’s wife and close friend were murdered, his life was shattered. He turned to the streets, where, decades ago, he disappeared.
Travers’s search for the singer soon leads him to the casinos in Tunica, Mississippi, and converges with the agenda of the Dixie Mafia, a zealot gubernatorial candidate linked to a neo-Confederacy movement, and an obsessed killer who thinks he has a true spiritual link to the late Elvis Presley.

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Abby shook her head. She fiddled with the old watch on her wrist. It was gold and tarnished and looked like it was made for a man.

Apparently, she never quite warmed up to Bubba Cotton. He’d kept Days of Our Lives cranked to volume eleven while she stared out his window and played a little with his cat. But U said Bubba didn’t mind. U said he’d only known Bubba to say a couple of sentences in the last ten years. Bubba grunted all he wanted you to know.

I looked over at U as he pushed away his bowl and smiled.

“Better than tofu?” I asked.

“Much. Although, a little teriyaki sauce can make a tire taste good.”

He stared over at Abby and then back at me. He nodded. Slowly, keeping eye contact. It was time.

“Abby, look, I know this is tough as hell. I can’t imagine what you went through at that casino. But we need to know about those folks.”

Abby kept on with the watch. She suddenly stopped, letting it hang loose, and pulled out a couple of sugar packets from a bin on the table. She poured them into a small mountain before her and then raked through the mass with a fork. A tiny Zen garden on the table.

She never broke concentration as she shook pepper on the pure cane and mixed it through the white. She clenched her jaw as if grinding her teeth would stop whatever pain she’d endured.

“What was it?” I asked. I grabbed her hand and she pulled away. The Zen garden swept away under her hand and onto the floor.

U kept silent. He leaned back in the chair pretending not to pay attention.

“Can we walk?” she asked. “If I stay here another moment I’m going to puke. I need some air.”

“Sure,” I said, pulling out my wallet and dropping money on the table. She was already gone, through the restaurant and out the front doors to the mouth of Beale Street. I pushed through a couple of drunk businessmen in ties and plastic derbys and found her walking down a pathway. She was hugging herself. Head down.

Beale was the black business district that had recently become tourist central for the city. I loved the stories of the old sin dens, told by blues musicians who’d played Handy Park back in the day. Pool halls. Whiskey joints. Grocery stores. Pawnshops. Now the historic street was just a neon strip mall filled mainly with bars that exuded as much cultural importance as a Gap in Des Moines. Who came to Memphis to eat a burger at a Hard Rock Café? Like my old buddy Tad Pierson always says, people want to see the grit.

Funk pulsed from some no-name bar. Jazz floated from the open door of the next. A daiquiri stand advertised with a warped sheet metal sign like it was an old-time juke.

“Abby?” I yelled, finally catching her at the intersection of Rufus Thomas Boulevard. I grabbed her hand and pulled her out of the road as a horse-drawn carriage passed. “C’mon. Someone tried to kill both of us last night. Now they’re jerking me around and pretending like the whole thing was a joke. Please.”

“I need your help,” she said. “I need your word.”

“You got it.”

She was a head shorter than me and I could see the darkened roots of her hair, which was loosely parted in the middle and smelled of hotel soap. She didn’t wear makeup and her face was flushed with embarrassment like she was about to tell a dirty story that she’d begun but didn’t want anyone to hear.

“Will you go to Oxford with me?” she asked.

I nodded.

“I have a cousin,” she said, her teeth chattering. “And I can’t reach her.”

“You’re afraid they will?”

She nodded. A panhandler walked up to me and grabbed the edge of my jean jacket as a cold fall breeze shot down Beale like an icy river. He said he’d lost his bus fare and needed to see his sick wife. I didn’t turn to him but handed him a couple of bucks.

“What do they want?” I asked her.

“My parents were murdered. I left town and came back a few days ago to get some of my dad’s things. They were waiting for me.”

“Who was your dad?”

“A lawyer.”

“Why would they…?”

“I don’t know. I swear to you, I don’t know.” Her tired eyes grew larger as the din of the music down the street grew into a pulsing beat. The steady rhythm seemed to pick up energy and pace as a saxophonist played to an empty street.

I handed Abby my threadbare jacket.

She accepted it and pulled it onto her shivering body.

Chapter 22

PERFECT LEIGH LOVED good hotels. She loved the way they folded back your covers at night and left little mints beneath your pillow. She loved the smell of clean sheets and tiny hotel soaps. She liked room service and the list of services like massage or laundry or whatever kiss-ass kind of thing they could come up with. Basically, she loved being pampered, loved people tripping over themselves to please her. She wished the world could be one big luxury hotel, she thought, walking through the lobby of the Peabody. She wished everybody could just keep kissing her ass like they couldn’t get enough.

The air smelled cleaner here, like rich people didn’t fart as much as the farm trash who stayed down in Tunica. Smelled like hot coffee and potpourri and new shoes fresh from the box.

Today she was wearing a nice pair of knee-high brown boots with a tan suede skirt and white cotton shirt rolled to the elbows. Her hair shone a honey-colored blond. She smelled good, too. Smelled like body powder and Calvin Klein soap.

She felt so damned good that she even hated to touch the jive-talking bellhop who was handing baggage tickets to a Japanese couple. They were doing a lot of oohing and ahhing about the marble fountain in the middle of the lobby and all the gold trim and oriental rugs.

As soon as they left, she grabbed the bellhop’s hand. He was in his late forties or early fifties. Hard to tell with blacks. He had bloodshot eyes and reeked of body odor. Still she smiled, head back like her mama taught her to do in all those child beauty pageants.

“Hello,” she said, pulling him into a narrow hallway that led up to the banquet rooms. It was quiet and cold in there. Fresh paint and cigarettes.

“Hello yourself, miss. Can I get your car for you?”

She hugged him and began to cry. His nametag smashed into her eye. Renaldo.

“Renaldo, he’s gone.”

“He? He who?”

“My husband. Left with another woman. Left me with the kids.”

“Miss, I’m sorry and Lord, you are pretty and all. But-”

She hugged him tighter, getting a good smoosh of her breasts against his chest, letting him check out her cleavage and smell her Calvin Klein. This was too easy. She almost wanted to yawn.

“He’s a big fella. Black-and-gray hair. Has a scar down one eyebrow. Wears boots.”

He shook his head. Perfect released her grip and handed him fifty dollars.

“Find the man who checked him out of the hotel and he’ll get a hundred.”

“Lord, he musta done you real bad.”

“You have no idea, Renaldo. Please.”

Renaldo tipped his slanted green hat and disappeared. In a few minutes he returned with a small black man with ears that reminded her of the movie Gremlins. He had a big grin on his face and almost danced in front of her as he bounced from foot to foot.

“You’ve seen him?” she asked.

He looked back at Renaldo and then smiled at Perfect. She handed him the hundred.

“I seen him. Left with a young woman. Wasn’t as pretty as you, ma’am.”

Perfect finally yawned and pulled a long thread that had somehow attached itself to her suede boot. She ran her tongue over her teeth and made a quick smile that fell. “And?”

“That’s what I seen.”

“Where did he go?”

He shook his head and looked down at his hand.

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