“She says she might just turn herself in just so she won’t be associated with the coming slaughter,” Lackey said.
“She sure likes those words.”
“Which ones?”
“Slaughter. Extermination.”
“Got our attention.”
“Nobody’s coming in or getting out of this house,” Jones said. The wind tipped his hat, but Jones caught the brim, setting it back on his head, before he knocked out his pipe. “We’re well entrenched. Ready for those bastards.”
“Glad Hoover got us the guns.”
“You saw for yourself the kind of animal we’re dealing with. Hell, I hope Kelly runs up the steps with guns blazing, that’d save the taxpayers the cost of a trial.”
“That’s some rough talk.”
“You take exception?”
“People don’t lynch much anymore.”
“Maybe they should.”
“You don’t mean that,” Lackey said. “Rangers keep order.”
“Sometimes the Rangers looked the other way.”
Lackey reached into his coat pocket for a pack of gum. He chewed, resting his elbows on the ledge, searchlights crossing the sky and the front of the Federal Building. “The Shannons’ new counsel says he’s never been in touch with Kathryn Kelly,” Lackey said. “Said he was hired by a middleman, at his office in Enid.”
“Can we track the middleman?”
“Colvin’s on it,” Lackey said. “We got several men following the counselor.”
“Phone lines?”
“Sure. Of course.”
“Never ends, does it?”
“What’s that?”
“Thievery. Murder. You’d think we’d have advanced past the Old Testament.”
“I’m not in the mood to get all philosophical, Buster,” Lackey said, chomping on his Doublemint. “Let’s go back to the Skirvin and get a whiskey and a porterhouse.”
“Now you’re talking.”
The Venetian Room was on the top floor of the Skirvin Hotel, a swank place that boasted polished, inlaid pecan floors, white linen and silver service, and Bernie Cummins and the New Yorkers on the bandstand. They broadcast a hit parade every night after supper on Oklahoma City’s own WKY. But Jones would just as soon hear them on the radio than be interrupted during supper by a man in a tuxedo extolling the qualities of fig syrup to get your pipes running smooth.
Doc White joined Jones and Lackey, and the three men all ordered steaks and bourbon. Doc White rolled a cigarette after getting the T-bone clean and tapped the finger of his free hand in time with the song “Stormy Weather,” a big hit earlier that year for some popular colored singer.
They all wore summer-weight coats to hide their holstered pistols.
About halfway into their desserts, peach pie with ice cream, Jones looked up to see a short fella in a big suit really hamming it up on the dance floor with two fat woman in evening gowns. He was one of those men who looked as out of place wearing a suit as would a circus monkey. But he’d slicked back his hair and shaved, proving it with bits of toilet paper stuck on the cuts, and the back of his hair was barbered up two inches higher than his sunburned ears and neck. The man couldn’t have been much older than thirty but had a large bulbous nose and the reddened cheeks of an experienced drunk.
Doc White ashed his cigarette on a china saucer. “Doesn’t that son of a bitch know there’s a Depression?”
“Must be family money,” Joe Lackey said, a small grin.
There was a split second when the little man couldn’t figure out which woman to dance with during the slow part, so he just opened his drunk arms wide and clutched them both close, hands squeezing each of their large rumps. Jones laughed and shook his head, spotting Bruce Colvin walking in from the elevators and flicking his eyes around the Venetian Room. He leaned into Jones’s ear and told him that the Shannons’ go-between was here.
Jones set down his fork and pushed himself away from the table.
“Right here,” Colvin said, pointing to the weathered fella dancing with the two fat girls.
Jones craned his head around to Colvin and would’ve thought it was a joke had it not been Bruce Colvin. The young man seemed unable to find humor in most situations.
“What do we do?” Colvin whispered.
“Keep an eye out,” Jones said. “He resides in this hotel?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Follow his every step. Tap his phone.”
“Why don’t we just pull him in?” Colvin asked.
“So he can clam up like Bailey?” Jones asked. “You got to be patient, son.”
Jones finished his dessert. With coffee.
The next morning, hearing nothing from the tapped telephone lines but a slow and dull buzz, Jones rode the elevator to the eighth floor and pounded on the door to have a little talk with the fella. Two minutes later, the hotel manager opened the suite to find a mess of empty booze bottles and a huge pair of pink panties tossed across the headboard. Des Moines all over again.
Jones walked to the bed and reached for the big panties, pulling them wide enough to be hung from a flagpole. “Maybe your scientific detection can get us a lead off these?”
Colvin looked down at his neatly shined shoes without a word.
“Do we at least have a name?” Jones asked.
“Registered under Luther Arnold family.”
“Be too much to ask where he’s headed?” Jones said. “The director might like to be informed.”
GEORGE SNATCHED A WIDE SOMBRERO FROM THE STUCCOED wall of the Mexican restaurant and told the waiter to bring him an entire bottle of tequila with cut limes and salt. They’d been in San Antonio now for two days, renting a little apartment, where Kathryn had shared a room with George, Flossie Mae and Geraline in the second bedroom. She’d about had it with Flossie Mae, the woman doing nothing but complaining, complaining more in a “That’s fine” or “If you think that’s best” kind of way, never really speaking up but never appreciating the hospitality either, somehow thinking she deserved the Kelly family dime on account of what Luther was doing.
Luther’d driven back in her Chevy an hour earlier, and that’s when George decided on a big family meal at La Fonda, a short walk from the apartment. And it didn’t take but two shots of tequila before he called for that sombrero, throwing back another shot and tipping the mariachi band twenty dollars.
“Why don’t you put an ad in the paper?” Kathryn asked.
“Just having some fun, baby face,” he said. “Honey pie.”
Luther sat across from Kathryn, where he could lean over the table and discuss details of his big trip to Oklahoma City yesterday. Flossie Mae sat across from George, and Geraline was at the head of the table. The table was under a big oak in the center of an old courtyard, with banana plants growing wild under leaking pipes and white Christmas lights crisscrossed overhead like in an old Mexico plaza.
“The hat,” George said, touching the sombrero’s brim and throwing down another tequila. “Good disguise.”
Kathryn noticed Luther had bought a new suit, pin-striped and rumpled and about two sizes too big. He’d also bought a tie and maybe even shaved a couple days back. She guessed for when he’d met with the new attorney.
“Lawyer said the government mulled over your offer,” he said.
“Huh?” George asked, turning to Kathryn and winking again. He poured out a shot of tequila for Luther, but Luther shook him off, saying he just didn’t have the stomach for no alcohol. Luther looked wrung-out, sick, and exhausted from his journey back to San Antonio. At the head of the table, his daughter, wearing a crisp white dress, her hair in pink ribbons, clutched a huge menu in her tiny fists.
George finished off his drink and lit a cigarette, singing along with the mariachi.