The Bankses’ home was in the Cherry neighborhood, just southeast of I-277, Charlotte’s version of an inner beltway. Cherry, unlike many inner-city quartiers, had not enjoyed the renaissance experienced in recent years by Dilworth and Elizabeth to the west and north. While those neighborhoods had integrated and yuppified, Cherry’s fortunes had headed south. But the community held true to its ethnic roots. It started out black and remained so today.
Within minutes Slidell passed an Autobell car wash, turned left off Independence Boulevard onto a narrow street, then right onto another. Oaks and magnolias thirty, forty, a hundred years old threw shadows onto modest frame and brick houses. Laundry hung limp on clotheslines. Sprinklers ticked and whirred, or lay silent at the ends of garden hoses. Bicycles and Big Wheels dotted yards and walkways.
Slidell pulled to the curb halfway up the block, and jabbed a thumb at a small bungalow with dormer windows jutting from the roof. The siding was brown, the trim white.
“Beats the hell outta that rat’s nest where the kid got fried. Thought I’d catch scabies tossing that dump.”
“Scabies is caused by mites.” My voice was chillier than the car interior.
“Exactly. You wouldn’t have believed that shithole.”
“You should have worn gloves.”
“You got that right. And a respirator. These people—”
“What people would that be, Detective?”
“Some folks live like pigs.”
“Gideon Banks is a hardworking, decent man who raised six children largely on his own.”
“Wife beat feet?”
“Melba Banks died of breast cancer ten years ago.” There. I did know something about my coworker.
“Bum luck.”
The radio crackled some message that was lost on me.
“Still don’t excuse kids dropping their shorts with no regard for consequences. Get jammed up? No-o-o-o problem. Have an abortion.”
Slidell killed the engine and turned the Ray-Bans on me.
“Or worse.”
“There may be some explanation for Tamela Banks’s actions.”
I didn’t really believe that, had spent all morning taking the opposite position with Tim Larabee. But Slidell was so irritating I found myself playing devil’s advocate.
“Right. And the chamber of commerce will probably name her mother of the year.”
“Have you met Tamela?” I asked, forcing my voice level.
“No. Have you?”
No. I ignored Slidell’s question.
“Have you met any of the Banks family?”
“No, but I took statements from folks who were snorting lines in the next room while Tamela incinerated her kid.” Slidell pocketed the keys. “Excusez-moi if I haven’t dropped in for tea with the lady and her relations.”
“You’ve never had to deal with any of the Banks kids because they were raised with good, solid values. Gideon Banks is as straitlaced as—”
“The mutt Tamela’s screwing ain’t close to straight up.”
“The baby’s father?”
“Unless Miss Hot Pants was entertaining while Daddy was dealing.”
Easy! The man is a cockroach.
“Who is he?”
“His name is Darryl Tyree. Tamela was shacking up in Tyree’s little piece of heaven out on South Tryon.”
“Tyree sells drugs?”
“And we’re not talking the Eckerd’s pharmacy.” Slidell hit the door handle and got out.
I bit back a response. One hour. It’s over.
A stab of guilt. Over for me, but what about Gideon Banks? What about Tamela and her dead baby?
I joined Slidell on the sidewalk.
“Je-zus. It’s hot enough to burn a polar bear’s butt.”
“It’s August.”
“I should be at the beach.”
Yes, I thought. Under four tons of sand.
I followed Slidell up a narrow walk littered with fresh-mown grass to a small cement stoop. He pressed a thumb to a rusted button beside the front door, dug a hanky from his back pocket, and wiped his face.
No response.
Slidell knocked on a wooden portion of the screen door.
Nothing.
Slidell knocked again. His forehead glistened and his hair was separating into wet clumps.
“Police, Mr. Banks.”
Slidell banged with the heel of his hand. The screen door rattled in its frame.
“Gideon Banks!”
Condensation dripped from a window AC to the left of the door. A lawn mower whined in the distance. Hip-hop drifted from somewhere up the block.
Slidell banged again. A dark crescent winked from his gray polyester armpit.
“Anyone home?”
The AC’s compressor kicked on. A dog barked.
Slidell yanked the screen.
Whrrrrp!
Pounded on the wooden door.
Bam! Bam! Bam!
Released the screen. Barked his demand.
“Police! Anyone there?”
Across the street, a curtain flicked, dropped back into place.
Had I imagined it?
A drop of perspiration rolled down my back to join the others soaking my bra and waistband.
At that moment my cell phone rang.
I answered.
That call swept me into a vortex of events that ultimately led to my taking a life.
“TEMPE BRENNAN.”
“Pig pickin’!” My daughter gave a series of guttural snorts. “Barbecue!”
“Can’t talk now, Katy.”
I turned a shoulder to Slidell, pressing the cell phone tight to my ear to hear Katy over the static.
Slidell knocked again, this time with Gestapo force. “Mr. Banks!”
“I’ll pick you up at noon tomorrow,” Katy said.
“I know nothing about cigars,” I said, speaking as softly as I could. Katy wanted me to accompany her to a picnic given by the owner of a cigar and pipe store. I had no idea why.
“You eat barbecue.”
Bam! Bam! Bam! The screen door danced in its frame.
“Yes, bu—”
“You like bluegrass.” Katy could be persistent.
At that moment the inner door opened and a woman scowled through the screen. Though he had an inch on her in height, the woman had Slidell hands down in poundage.
“Is Gideon Banks at home?” Slidell barked.
“Who askin’?”
“Katy, I’ve got to go,” I whispered.
“Boyd’s looking forward to this. There’s something he wants to discuss with you.” Boyd is my estranged husband’s dog. Conversations with or about Boyd usually lead to trouble.
Slidell held his badge to the screen.
“Pick you up at noon?” My daughter could be as unrelenting as Skinny Slidell.
“All right,” I hissed, punching the “end” button.
The woman studied the badge, arms akimbo like a prison guard.
I pocketed the phone.
The woman’s eyes crawled from the badge to my companion, then to me.
“Daddy’s sleepin’.”
“I think it might be best to wake him,” I jumped in, hoping to defuse Slidell.
“This about Tamela?”
“Yes.”
“I’m Tamela’s sister. Geneva. Like Switzerland.” Her tone suggested she’d said that before.
Geneva backhanded the screen. This time the spring made a sound like piano keys.
Removing his shades, Slidell squeezed past her. I followed, into a small, dim living room. An archway opened onto a hall directly opposite our entry point. I could see a kitchen to the right with a closed door beyond, two closed doors to the left, a bath straight ahead at the end.
Six kids. I could only imagine the competition for shower and sink time.
Our hostess let the screen whrrrrppp to its frame, pushed the inner door shut, and turned to face us. Her skin was a deep, chocolate brown, the sclera of her eyes
the pale yellow of pine nuts. I guessed her age to be mid-twenties.
“Geneva is a beautiful name,” I said for lack of a better opening. “Have you been to Switzerland?”
Geneva looked at me a long time, face devoid of expression. Perspiration dotted the brow and temples from which her hair had been pulled straight back. The lone window unit apparently cooled another room.
“I get Daddy.”
She tipped her head toward a worn couch on the right wall of the living room. Curtains framing the open window above hung limp with heat and humidity.
“Wanna sit.” It was more a statement than a question.
“Thank you,” I said.
Geneva waddled toward the archway, shorts bunching between her thighs. A small, stiff ponytail stuck straight out from the back of her head.
As Slidell and I took opposite ends of the couch, I heard a door open, then the tinny sound of a gospel station. Seconds later the music was truncated.
I looked around.
The decorating was nouveau Wal-Mart. Linoleum. Vinyl recliner. Oak-laminate coffee and end tables. Plastic palms.
But a loving hand was clearly present.
The frilled curtains behind us smelled of laundry detergent and Downy. A rip on my armrest had been carefully darned. Every surface gleamed.
Bookshelves and tabletops overflowed with framed photos and crudely made objets d’art. A garishly painted clay bird. A ceramic plate with the impression of a tiny hand, the name Reggie arching below. A box constructed of Popsicle sticks. Dozens of cheap trophies. Shoulder pads and helmets encased forever in gold-coated plastic. A jump shot. A cut at a fastball.
I surveyed the snapshots closest to me. Christmas mornings. Birthday parties. Athletic teams. Each memory was preserved in a dime-store frame.
Slidell picked up a throw pillow, raised his brows, set it back between us. God is Love, embroidered in blue and green. Melba’s handiwork?
The sadness I’d been feeling all morning intensified as I thought of six children losing their mother. Of Tamela’s doomed infant.
The pillow. The photos. The school and team memorabilia. Save for the portrait of a black Jesus hanging above the archway, I could have been sitting in my childhood home in Beverly, on the south side of Chicago. Beverly was shade trees, and PTA bake sales, and morning papers lying on the porch. Our tiny brick bungalow was my Green Gables, my Ponderosa, my starship Enterprise until the age of seven. Until despair over her infant son’s death propelled my mother back to her beloved Carolina, husband and daughters following in her mournful wake.
I loved that house, felt loved and protected in it. I sensed those same feelings clinging to this place.
Slidell pulled out his hanky and mopped his face.
“Hope the old man scores the air-conditioned bedroom.” Spoken through one side of his mouth. “With six kids, I suppose he’d be lucky just to score a bedroom.”
I ignored him.
Heat magnified the smells inside the tiny house. Onions. Cooking oil. Wood polish. Whatever was used to scrub the linoleum.
Who scrubbed it? I wondered. Tamela? Geneva? Banks himself?
I studied the black Jesus. Same robe, same thorny crown, same open palms. Only the Afro and skin tones differed from the one that had hung over my mother’s bed.
Slidell sighed audibly, hooked his collar with a finger, and pulled it from his neck.
I looked at the linoleum. A pebble pattern, gray and white.
Like the bones and ash from the woodstove.
What will I say?
At that moment a door opened. A gospel group singing “Going On in the Name of the Lord.” The swish of padded soles on linoleum.
Gideon Banks looked smaller than I remembered, all bone and sinew. That was wrong, somehow. Backward. He should have seemed larger in his own space. King of the realm. Paterfamilias. Was my recall incorrect? Had age shriveled him? Or worry?
Banks hesitated in the archway, and his lids crimped behind their heavy lenses. Then he straightened, crossed to the recliner, and lowered himself, gnarled hands gripping the armrests.
Slidell leaned forward. I cut him off.
“Thank you for seeing us, Mr. Banks.”
Banks nodded. He was wearing Hush Puppies slippers, gray work pants, and an orange bowling shirt. His arms looked like twigs sprouting from the sleeves.
“Your home is lovely.”
“Thank you.”
“Have you lived here long?”
“Forty-seven years come November.”
“I couldn’t help noticing your pictures.” I indicated the photo collection. “You have a beautiful family.”
“It’s jus’ Geneva and me here now. Geneva my second oldest. She hep me out. Tamela my youngest. She lef’ a couple months ago.”
In the corner of my eye I noticed Geneva move into the archway.
“I think you know why we’re here, Mr. Banks.” I was flailing about for a way to begin.
“Yes’m, I do. You lookin’ for Tamela.”
Slidell did some “get on with it” throat clearing.
“I’m very sorry to have to tell you, Mr. Banks, but material recovered from Tamela’s living room stove—”
“Weren’t Tamela’s place,” Banks broke in.
“The property was rented to one Darryl Tyree,” Slidell said. “According to witnesses, your daughter’d been living with Mr. Tyree for approximately four months.”
Banks’s eyes never left my face. Eyes filled with pain.
“Weren’t Tamela’s place,” Banks repeated. His tone wasn’t angry or argumentative, more that of a man wanting the record correct.
My shirt felt sticky against my back, the cheap upholstery scratchy under my forearms. I took a deep breath, started again.
“Material recovered from the stove in that house included fragments of bone from a newborn baby.”
My words seemed to catch him off guard. I heard a sharp intake of breath, and noticed his chin cock up a fraction.
“Tamela only seventeen. She a good girl.”
“Yes, sir.”
“She weren’t with child.”
“Yes, sir, she was.”
“Who say that?”
“We have that information from more than one source.” Slidell.
Banks considered a moment. Then, “Why you go looking in someone’s stove?”
“An informant stated that an infant had been burned at that address. We investigate such reports.”
Slidell didn’t point out that the tip came from Harrison “Sonny” Pounder, a street-corner dopeman bargaining for favor after his recent bust.
“Who say that?”
“That’s not important.” Irritation sharpened Slidell’s tone. “We need to know Tamela’s whereabouts.”
Banks pushed to his feet and shuffled to the nearest bookshelf. Easing back into the recliner, he handed me a photo.
I looked at the girl in the picture, acutely conscious of Banks’s eyes on my face. And of his second oldest looming in the archway.
Tamela wore a short-skirted gold jumper with a black W on the front panel. She sat with one knee bent, one leg straight out behind her, hands on her hips, surrounded by a circle of gold and white pom-poms. Her smile was enormous, her eyes bright with happiness. Two barrettes sparkled in her short, curly hair.
“Your daughter was a cheerleader,” I said.
“Yes’m.”
“My daughter tried cheerleading when she was seven,” I said. “Pop Warner football, for the little kids. Decided she preferred playing on the team to cheering.”
“They all have their own mine, I guess.”
“Yes, sir. They do.”
Banks handed me a second photo, this one a Polaroid.
“That Mr. Darryl Tyree,” Banks said.
Tamela stood beside a tall, thin man wearing gold chains around his neck and a black do-rag on his head. One spidery arm was draped over Tamela’s shoulders. Though the girl was smiling, the fire was gone fro
m her eyes. Her face looked drawn, her whole body tense.
I handed the photos back.
“Do you know where Tamela is, Mr. Banks?” I asked softly.
“Tamela a grown girl now. She say I can’t axe.”
Silence.
“If we can just talk to her, perhaps there’s an explanation for all this.”
More silence, longer this time.
“Are you acquainted with Mr. Tyree?” Slidell asked.
“Tamela gonna finish high school, same’s Reggie, ’n’ Harley, ’n’ Jonah, ’n’ Sammy. Din’t have no problem with drugs or boys.”
We let that hang a moment. When Banks didn’t continue Slidell prodded.
“And then?”
“Then Darryl Tyree come along.” Banks practically spit the name, the first sign of anger I’d seen. “’Fore long she forget her books, spend all her time moonin’ over Tyree, worryin’ when he gonna show up.”
Banks looked from Slidell to me.
“She think I don’t know, but I heard about Darryl Tyree. I tole her he weren’t no fit company, tole her he weren’t to be comin’ round here no more.”
“Is that when she moved out?” I asked.
Banks nodded.
“When did that happen?”
“Roun’ Easter time. ’Bout four months back.”
Banks’s eyes glistened.
“I knew she had somethin’ on her mine. I thought it was jus’ Tyree. Sweet Jesus, I din’t know she was with child.”
“Did you know she was living with Mr. Tyree?”
“I didn’t axe, Lord forgive me. But I figured she’d went over to his place.”
“Do you have any idea why your daughter might have wanted to harm her baby?”
“No, ma’am. Tamela a good girl.”
“Might Mr. Tyree have placed pressure on your daughter because he didn’t want the child?”
“Weren’t like that.”
We all turned at the sound of Geneva’s voice.
She gazed at us dully, in her shapeless blouse and terrible shorts.
“What do you mean?”
“Tamela tells me things, you know what I’m sayin’?”
“She confides in you?” I said.
“Yeah. Confides in me. Tells me things she can’t tell Daddy.”
“What she can’t tell me?” Banks’s voice sounded high and wheedly.
“Lots of stuff, Daddy. She couldn’t talk to you about Darryl. You shouting at her, tryin’ to get her to pray all the time.”