Thomas Cook - Streets of Fire

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At the height of the Civil Rights movement, a young girl's murder stirs racial tensions in Birmingham, Alabama The grave on the football field is shallow, and easy to spot from a distance. It would have been found sooner, had most of the residents in the black half of Birmingham not been downtown, marching, singing, and being arrested alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. Police detective Ben Wellman is among them when he gets the call about the fresh grave. Under the loosely packed dirt, he finds a young black girl, her innocence taken and her life along with it.   His sergeant orders Wellman to investigate, but instructs him not to try too hard. In the summer of 1963, Birmingham is tense enough without a manhunt for the killers of a black child. Wellman digs for the truth in spite of skepticism from the black community and scorn from his fellow officers. What he finds is a secret that men from both sides of town would prefer stayed buried.

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Ben found Dawkins Road only a few minutes later. It was long and narrow, and it spiraled its way up a hillside thick with the full summer growth of brush and forest. About halfway up the hill, the black pavement ended in a sudden jagged line. After that, the road narrowed even further, finally becoming little more than two clay ruts cut out of the undergrowth. The twin yellow beams of the headlights jerked violently up and down as the car plunged forward along the pitted road, and in his rear-view mirror, Ben could see swirls of yellow dust rising in the hazy dawn light.

The gate to the gravel pit was fully open, and after pausing a moment at the entrance, Ben guided the car inside. A second narrow road led through the trees to a flat, unpaved parking area which had been blasted out of the side of the hill. A wall of jagged rock rose at the far end of the parking area, and Ben could see a small shed at its base. A large red sign warned that explosives were housed inside the shed, and that any unauthorized meddling with them was a federal offense.

Ben got out of the car quickly. For a moment he stared out over the edge of the hill. A few lights could be seen twinkling in the darkness, and far down below, the whistle of a freight train blew long and lean as it chugged toward Birmingham.

The whistle had entirely died away before Ben headed out across the parking lot. He kept his eyes on the wall of solid rock which rose above the small tin shed, but he’d already found what he was looking for. A wide swath of whitish-clay ground spread out from the base of the stone wall, and when he reached it, he bent down, scraped some of the clay onto his fingers and looked at it carefully.

The voice, when he heard it, seemed to slice him like a cleaver.

‘What you doing here, mister?’

Ben turned instantly, his breath locked in his throat.

The man was dressed in bib overalls and a shortsleeve plaid shirt. He cradled a twelve-gauge shotgun in his naked arms, its long black barrel nosed slightly upward, toward the top of Ben’s head.

‘This ain’t no lovers’ lane,’ the man added threateningly.

‘I know,’ Ben said softly.

‘So what are you doing here?’

‘I’m with the Birmingham police.’

‘You got any proof of that?’

‘Yes, I do.’

‘Well, let’s see it then,’ the man said coldly.

Ben lifted one hand into the air while the other crawled slowly beneath his jacket pocket and pulled out his identification.

‘Just hold it up,’ the man commanded.

Ben lifted it toward him and watched as the man peered at it for a moment, then stepped back.

‘You may be with the police,’ the man said, ‘but it still don’t tell me what business you got up here.’

‘I’m looking into a murder,’ Ben said. ‘It might have started here.’

‘In the chert pit?’ the man asked unbelievingly.

‘Yes,’ Ben said. ‘Are you here every night?’

The man shook his head. ‘Naw,’ he said. ‘Company just put me on. It’s my first night.’

‘Was anybody guarding the place before tonight?’

‘No. They just decided to put a guy on because they’s been a few little robberies.’

‘Robberies?’

The man laughed. ‘Yeah. It don’t look like they’s much to steal but rocks and dirt.’

‘What was stolen?’

‘Oh, this and that,’ the man said. ‘Nothing much. But the company gets real jumpy about it. You know how it is, they got to keep track of things.’

Ben forced a smile. ‘Yeah.’

The man shook his head. But murder – I ain’t heard nothing about that.’

‘You wouldn’t have heard anything about it,’ Ben told him.

‘Who got killed?’

‘A policeman.’

‘From Birmingham?’

‘Yeah.’

The man shook his head despairingly. ‘Well, don’t that beat all.’ He smiled again, lowered the barrel of the shotgun to the ground and tapped the pouch of his overalls. ‘You want a drank?’

‘No, thanks.’

‘’Cause you’re on duty?’

‘No, because I don’t want one,’ Ben said. He stepped away slightly. ‘I got to get back to Birmingham.’

‘Okay,’ the man said cheerfully. ‘Just wheel your car all the way around. You start backing up, you’ll hit them ruts on the side of the hill.’

‘Thanks,’ Ben told him.

The man was still standing in the middle of the lot as Ben began the wide turn out of the lot. He circled slowly, waving at him as he passed, then guided the car up near the face of the stone. He could hear the spray of the white clay slapping up underneath the car as he pressed down on the accelerator and made his way back toward Birmingham.

FORTY-ONE

The short gravel driveway in front of the Langleys’ trailer was empty, and because of that, Ben was surprised when Tod Langley opened the door, rubbing his red-rimmed eyes with his fists, his body clothed only in a pair of tattered Boxer shorts.

‘You come to get me?’ he asked groggily.

‘No.’

‘Ever-time I hear somebody knocking, I figure they’ve come to get me.’

‘Where’s your car?’ Ben asked.

‘Which one?’

‘Didn’t you drive a Chevy, a ’59?’

‘Yeah.’

‘Where is it?’

‘In the shop,’ Tod said. ‘Busted radiator. I guess it overheated.’

‘Which shop is it in?’

‘Gallager’s.’

‘How long’s it been there?’

‘Three days,’ Tod said. ‘Why, was you gonna take it?’

‘Take it?’

‘Like they did the Black Cat,’ Tod said. ‘They already took it away from us.’

‘When?’

‘Yesterday,’ Tod said. ‘They sent McCorkindale over here for it. He said Captain Starnes told him that since me and Teddy was both suspended, we didn’t have no right to ride around in it no more, and he wanted it back.’

‘Where’d McCorkindale take it?’

Tod shrugged. ‘I don’t know. To the police garage, I guess. They’ll probably scrape the paint off and make it look like a regular patrol car.’

‘Have you talked to Teddy?’

Tod shook his head, then looked at Ben worriedly. ‘They going to arrest me, too, Ben?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘They ain’t got nothing on me, have they?’

‘Not that I know of,’ Ben said.

‘It’s to please the niggers,’ Tod said emphatically. ‘That’s what Teddy says.’ He opened the rust-stained door of the trailer slightly. ‘You want to come in?’

Ben could smell the mingled odors of unwashed clothes and dirty dishes from inside the trailer. ‘No, thanks, Tod,’ he said quickly.

Tod looked at him almost pleadingly. ‘It ain’t right, Ben,’ he said. ‘Trying to pin that killing on us. We done what we was supposed to do in Bearmatch. We busted ass.’

Tod went on for a while after that, almost playfully relating the crap games he and Teddy had broken up, the shothouses they’d raided. There was an eerie delight in his eyes as he spoke of throwing men downstairs, or tossing them through windows, and as Ben listened, his mind drifted toward the other Bearmatch which must have helplessly stood by and watched all this from behind its hundreds of cracked windows.

‘We stirred them up,’ Tod concluded with a laugh. Then his face soured. ‘Maybe a little too much.’ He looked at Ben questioningly, his large, dull eyes blinking painfully against the harsh late-morning light. ‘That’s what Teddy says. He says they’re blaming us for stirring up the niggers.’

‘Who’s blaming you?’

‘The people downtown,’ Tod said. ‘The big wheels. Teddy says they’re mad at me and him for bringing this whole shit-storm down on them. He says that if we hadn’t kicked so much ass in Bearmatch, then the niggers would of stayed quiet.’ He looked at Ben intently. ‘You don’t believe that, do you, Ben?’

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