The investigation had gone nowhere since the night of Delia Landry’s murder. I had made a mistake and listened to Sonny Boy’s deprecation of the mob and his involvement with them. Sweet Pea Chaisson’s name had surfaced again, and Sweet Pea didn’t change toilet paper rolls without first seeking permission of the Giacano family. If the spaghetti heads had started to crash and burn back in the seventies, it was a secret to everyone except Sonny.
The heir to the old fat boy, Didoni Giacano, also known as Didi Gee, whose logo had been the bloodstained baseball bat that rode in the backseat of his Caddy convertible when he was a loan collector and who sometimes held down the hand of an adversary in an aquarium filled with piranhas, was his nephew, a businessman first, a gangster second, but with a bizarre talent for clicking psychotic episodes on and off at will—John Polycarp Giacano, also known as Johnny Carp and Polly Gee.
Friday morning I found him in his office out by a trash dump in Jefferson Parish. His eyes, nose, and guppy mouth were set unnaturally in the center of his face, compressed into an area the size of your palm. His high forehead was ridged and knurled even though he wasn’t frowning. His hair was liquid black, waved on the top and sides, like plastic that had been melted, molded, and then cooled again.
When I knew him in the First District, he had been a minor soldier in the organization, a fight fixer, and a Shylock with jockies out at Jefferson Downs and the Fairgrounds. Supposedly, as a kid, he had been the wheel man on a couple of hundred-dollar hits with the Calucci brothers; but for all his criminal history, he’d only been down once, a one-year bit for possession of stolen food stamps in the late sixties, and he did the time in a minimum security federal facility, where he had weekend furloughs and golf and tennis privileges.
Johnny Carp was smart; he went with the flow and gave people what they wanted, didn’t contend with the world or argue with the way things were. Celebrities had their picture taken with him. He lent money to cops with no vig and was never known to be rude. Those who saw his other side, his apologists maintained, had broken rules and earned their fate.
“You look great,” he said, tilting back in his swivel chair. Through the window behind him, seagulls were wheeling and dipping over mountains of garbage that were being systematically spread and buried and packed down in the landfill by bulldozers.
“When did you get into the trash business, Johnny?”
“Oh, I’m just out here a couple of days a week to make sure the Johns flush,” he said. He wore a beige suit with thin brown stripes in it, a purple shirt and brown knit tie, and a small rose in his lapel. He winked. “Hey, I know you don’t drink no more. Me, neither. I found a way around the problem. I ain’t putting you on: Watch.”
He opened a small icebox by the wall and took out an unopened quart bottle of milk. There were two inches of cream in the neck. Then he lifted a heavy black bottle of Scotch, with a red wax seal on it, from his bottom desk drawer. He poured four fingers into a thick water glass and added milk to it, smiling all the while. The Scotch ballooned and turned inside the milk and cream like soft licorice.
“I don’t get drunk, I don’t get ulcers, I don’t get hangovers, it’s great, Dave. You want a hit?”
“No thanks. You know why anybody would want to take down Sonny Boy Marsallus?”
“Maybe it’s mental health week. You know, help out your neighborhood, kill your local lunatic. The guy’s head glows in the dark.”
“How about Sweet Pea Chaisson?”
“Clip Sonny? Sweet Pea’s a marshmallow. Why you asking me this stuff, anyway?”
“You’re the man, Johnny.”
“Uncle Didi was the man. That’s the old days we’re talking about.”
“You have a lot of people’s respect, Johnny.”
“Yeah? The day I go broke I start being toe jam again. You want to know about Marsallus? He came out of the womb with a hard-on.”
“What’s that mean?”
“He’s read enough books to sound like he’s somebody he ain’t, but he’s got sperm on the brain. He uses broads like Kleenex. Don’t let that punk take you over the hurdles. He’d stand in line to fuck his mother ... I say something wrong?”
“No,” I said, my face blank.
He folded his hands, his elbows splayed, and leaned forward. “Serious,” he said, “somebody’s trying to whack out Sonny?”
“Maybe.”
He looked sideways out the window, thinking, his coat bunched up on his neck. “It ain’t anybody in the city. Look, Sonny wasn’t never a threat to anybody’s action, you understand what I’m saying? His problem is he thinks his shit don’t stink. He floats above the ground the rest of us got to walk on.”
“Well, it was good seeing you, Johnny.”
“Yeah, always a pleasure.”
I pulled on my earlobe as I got up to go.
“It’s funny you’d tell me Sonny uses women badly. That was never his reputation,” I said.
“People in the projects don’t work. What do you think they do all day, why you think they have all them kids? He’s a nickel-and-dime street mutt. The head he thinks with ain’t on his shoulders. I’m getting through here?”
“See you around, Johnny.”
He cocked one finger at me, drank from his glass of milk and Scotch, his compressed features almost disappearing behind his hand and wrist.
I don’t remember the psychological term for it, but cops and prosecutors know the mechanism well. It involves unintended acknowledgment of guilt through the expression of denial. When Lee Harvey Oswald was in custody after the assassination of President Kennedy, he seemed to answer truthfully many of the questions asked him by cops and newsmen. But he consistently denied ownership of the 6.5 millimeter rifle found on the sixth floor of the Texas Book Depository, the one piece of physical evidence to which he was unquestionably and inextricably linked.
Della Landry had been murdered, in all probability, because of her association with Sonny. The first remark out of Johnny’s mouth had been a slur about Sonny’s misuse of women, as if to say, perhaps, that the fate of those who involved themselves with him was Sonny’s responsibility and not anyone else’s.
But maybe I was simply in another cul-de-sac, looking for meaning where there was none.
As I got into my truck three of Johnny Carp’s hoods were standing by the back of his Lincoln. They wore slacks with knife creases, tasseled loafers, short-sleeve tropical shirts, gold chains on their necks, and lightly oiled boxed haircuts. But steroids had become fashionable with the mob, too, and their torsos and arms were thick with muscle like gnarled oak about to split the skin.
They were taking turns firing a .22 revolver at tin cans and the birds feeding along the dirt road that led between the trash heaps. They glanced at me briefly, then continued shooting.
“I’d like to drive out of here without getting shot,” I said.
There was no response. One man broke open the revolver, shucked out the hulls, and began reloading. He looked at me meaningfully.
“Thanks, I appreciate it,” I said.
I drove down the road, tapping my horn as cattle egrets on each side of me lifted into the air. In my rearview mirror I saw Johnny Carp walk out of his office and join his men, all of them looking at me now, I was sure, with the quiet and patient energies of creatures whose thoughts you never truly wish to know.
Friday night I went to the parish library and began to read about Jean Lafitte. Most of the material repeated in one form or another the traditional stories about the pirate who joined forces with Andrew Jackson to defeat the British at the Battle of New Orleans, the ships he robbed on the high seas, the gangs of cutthroats he lived with in Barataria and Galveston, his death somewhere in the Yucatan.
He had been considered a romantic and intriguing figure by New Orleans society, probably because none of them had been his victims. But also in the library was an article written by a local historian at the turn of the century that did not treat Lafitte as kindly. His cr
imes did not stop with piracy and murder. He had been a blackbirder and was transporting African slaves into the country after the prohibition of 1809. He sold his stolen goods as well as human cargo on the banks of the Teche.
Milton and Shakespeare both said lucidity and power lay in the world of dreams. For me, that has always meant that sleep and the unconscious can define what daylight and rationality cannot. That night, as a wind smelling of salt and wet sand and humus blew across the swamp, I dreamed of what Bayou Teche must have been like when the country was new, when the most severe tool or weapon was shaped from a stone, the forest floor covered with palmettos, the moss-hung canopy so thick and tall that in the suffused sunlight the trunks looked like towering gray columns in a Gothic cathedral.
In the dream the air was breathless, like steam caught under a glass bell, an autumnal yellow moon dissected with a single strip of black cloud overhead, and then I saw a long wood ship with furled masts being pulled up the bayou on ropes by Negroes who stumbled along the banks through the reeds and mud, their bodies rippling with sweat in the firelight. On the deck of the ship were their women and children, their cloth bundles gathered among them, their eyes peering ahead into the bayou’s darkness, as though an explanation for their fear and misery were somehow at hand.
The auction was held under the oaks at the foot of the old Voorhies property. The Negroes did not speak English, French, or Spanish, so indigenous histories were created for them. The other property did not offer as great a problem. The gold and silver plate, the trunks filled with European fashions, the bejeweled necklaces and swords and scrolled flintlocks, all had belonged to people whose final histories were written in water somewhere in the Caribbean.
In a generation or two the banks of Spanish Lake and Bayou Teche would be lined with plantations, and people would eat off gold plate whose origins were only an interesting curiosity. The slaves who worked the sawmills, cane fields, and the salt domes out in the wetlands would speak the language and use the names of their owners, and the day when a large sailing ship appeared innocuously on a river in western Africa, amidst a green world of birds and hummocks, would become the stuff of oral legend, confused with biblical history and allegory, and finally forgotten.
I believed the dream. I remembered the oak trees at the foot of the Voorhies property, when lengths of mooring chain, driven with huge spikes into the trunks, grew in and out of the bark like calcified rust-sheathed serpents. Over the years, the chains had been drawn deeper into the heart of the tree, like orange-encrusted iron cysts in the midst of living tissue or perhaps unacknowledged and unforgiven sins.
At breakfast Saturday morning Bootsie said, “Oh, I forgot, Dave, Julia Bertrand called last night. She invited us out to their camp at Pecan Island next Saturday.”
The kitchen window was open, and the sky was full of white clouds.
“What’d you tell her?” I said. “I thought it was a nice idea. We don’t see them often.”
“You told her we’d come?”
“No, I didn’t. I said I’d check to see if you had anything planned.”
“How about we let this one slide?”
“They’re nice people, Dave.”
“There’s something off-center out at Moleen’s plantation.”
“All right, I’ll call her back.” She tried to keep the disappointment out of her face. “Maybe it’s just me, Bootsie. I never got along well in that world.”
“That world?”
“They think they’re not accountable. Moleen always gives me the impression he lives in rarefied air.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Nothing. Call Julia up and tell her we’ll be out there.”
“Dave” she said, the exasperation climbing in her voice.
“Believe me, it’s part of a game. So we’ll check it out.”
“I think this is a good morning to work in the garden,” she said.
It rained hard that night, and when I fell asleep I thought I heard a motorboat pass by the dock. After the rain stopped, the air was damp and close and a layer of mist floated on the bayou as thick as cotton. Just after midnight the phone rang. I closed the bedroom door behind me and answered it in the living room. The house was dark and cool and water was dripping off the tin roof of the gallery.
“Mr. Robicheaux?” a man’s voice said.
“Yeah. Who is this?”
“Jack.”
“Jack?”
“You found a dog tag. We tried to get your friend out. You want to hear about it?” There was no accent, no emotional tone in the voice.
“What do you want, partner?”
“To explain some things you probably don’t understand.”
“Come to the office Monday. Don’t call my house again, either.”
“Look out your front window.”
I pulled aside the curtain and stared out into the darkness. I could see nothing except the mist floating on the bayou and a smudged red glow from a gas flare on an oil rig out in the swamp. Then, out on the dock, a tall, angular man in raincoat and hat flicked on a flashlight and shined it upward into his face. He held a cellular phone to his ear and the skin of his face was white and deeply lined, like papier-mâché that has started to crack. Then the light clicked off again. I picked the phone back up.
“You’re trespassing on my property. I want you off of it,” I said.
“Walk down to the dock.”
Don’t fall into it, I thought.
“Put the light back on your face and keep your hands away from your sides,” I said.
“That’s acceptable.”
“I’m going to hang up now. Then I’ll be down in about two minutes.”
“No. You don’t break the connection.”
I let the receiver clatter on the table and went back into the bedroom. I slipped on my khakis and loafers, and removed my holstered .45 automatic from the dresser drawer. Bootsie was sleeping with the pillow partially over her head. I closed the door quietly behind me, pulled back the slide on the .45 and chambered a round, eased the hammer back down, set the safety, then stuck the barrel inside the back of my belt.
I picked up the receiver.
“You still there, partner?” I said.
“Yes.”
“Turn on your flashlight.”
“What an excellent idea.”
I went out the front door and down the slope through the trees. He had moved out on the dirt road now and I could see him more clearly. He was well over six feet, with arms that seemed too thin for the sleeves of his raincoat, wide shoulders, a face as grooved and webbed with lines as dried putty. His left coat pocket sagged with the weight of the cellular phone and his left hand now held the flashlight. His lips were purple in the beam of the flashlight, like the skin of a plum. His eyes watched me with the squinted focus of someone staring through smoke.
“Put your right hand behind your neck,” I said.
“That’s not dignified.”
“Neither are jerk-off games involving the death of a brave soldier.”
“Your friend could still be alive.”
He raised his right hand, hooked it above his lapel, and let it rest there. I watched him and didn’t answer.
“Sonny Marsallus is a traitor,” he said.
“I think it’s time we look at your identification.”
“You don’t listen well.”
“You made a mistake coming here tonight.”
“I don’t think so. You have a distinguished war record. Marsallus doesn’t. He’s for sale.”
“I want you to turn around, walk back to the dock, and place your hands on the rail ... Just do it, partner. It’s not up for debate.”
But he didn’t move. I could feel sweat running down my sides like ants, but the face of the man named Jack, who wore a hat and coat, was as dry as parchment. His eyes remained riveted on mine, like brown agate with threads of gold in them.
Then I heard a sound out in the shadows.
&n
bsp; “Hey, Jack, what’s shakin’?” a voice said.
Jack twisted his head sideways and stared out into the darkness.
“It’s Sonny,” the voice said. “Hey, Dave, watch out for ole Jack there. He carries a sawed-down twelve-gauge on a bungee rope in his right armpit. Peel back your raincoat, Jack, and let Dave have a peek.”
But that was not in Jack’s plan. He dropped the flashlight to the ground and bolted past me up the road. Then I saw Sonny move out from under the overhang of a live oak, a Smith & Wesson nine-millimeter gripped at an upward angle with both hands.
“Get out of the way, Dave!” he shouted.
“Are you crazy? Put that down!”
But Sonny swung wide of me and aimed with both arms stretched straight out in front of him. Then he began firing, crack, crack, crack, crack, fire leaping out of the barrel, the empty brass cartridges clinking on the road.
He picked up the flashlight the man named Jack had dropped and shined it down the road.
“Look at the ground, Dave, right by that hole in the bushes,” he said. “I think Jack just sprung a leak.” Then he called out into the darkness, “Hey, Jack, how’s it feel?”
“Give me the gun, Sonny.”
“Sorry, Streak ... I’m sorry to do this to you, too ... No, no, don’t move. I’m just going to take your piece. Now, let’s walk over here to the dock and hook up.”
“You’re going across the line, Sonny.”
“There’s just one line that counts, Dave, the one between the good guys and the shit bags He worked a pair of open handcuffs from the back pocket of his blue jeans. “Put your hands on each side of the rail. You worried about procedure? That guy I just punched a drain hole in, dig this, you heard the Falangist joke down in Taco Tico country about the Flying Nun? This isn’t a shuck, either. Some of the junta fucks in Argentina wanted a couple of nuns, human rights types, turned into object lessons. The guy who threw them out of a Huey at a thousand feet was our man Jack.
“See you around, Streak. I’ll make sure you get your piece back.”
Then he disappeared through the broken bushes where the wounded man had fled. I raked the chain on the cuffs against the dock railing while mosquitoes droned around my head and my eyes stung with sweat and humiliation at my own failure and ineptitude.