“Prick!” the fat man said, brushing Father Willie’s ballpoint aside, taking a gold plated fountain pen from his inside coat pocket and leaning on the hood to study the ticket.
“It’s only a promise …”
“I know what the fuck it is!” the man interrupted. “What I’d like to know is why you tinhorns aren’t out catching criminals instead of harassing honest citizens, that’s what I’d like to know.”
The fat man scrawled his name across the ticket and turned his back on the two officers while Father Willie tore off the violator’s copy and handed it to him along with his driver’s license.
“I’ll see you in court!” Murray Fern sputtered as he snatched his copy and license from Father Willie’s hand. “I’ll have a lawyer. I’ll beat you. I’ll make you go to court on your day off and I’ll make you look like the dumb shit you are!”
He spun around and jammed the ticket, pen and license into his coat pocket. But when he jerked his hand out, a tiny.25 caliber automatic clattered to the pavement.
“Oh shit,” said Murray Fern bleakly as Spencer Van Moot quickly pulled and pointed his.38 at the fat man’s eyes.
“Who says there’s no God?” Father Willie grinned happily.
“I only carry a gun when I make bank deposits,” croaked Murray Fern. “I know it’s against the law but I’m a businessman! You’re not gonna put me in jail for something as petty as this?”
“Who says there’s no God?” Father Willie repeated as he drew his handcuffs.
By the time the two policemen obtained the booking approval and ran a record check on Murray Fern who had three drunk driving arrests, but no other criminal record, the fat man had threatened every officer at Wilshire Station with a lawsuit. It was 8:30 P.M. when they stood with Murray Fern in front of the booking officer, Elwood Banks, a fifty-year old black man and former partner of Spencer Van Moot.
“How’s the retail trade in Los Angeles holdin up?” he asked Spencer when they brought the prisoner inside the lockup.
“Fair to middling, Elwood,” Spencer answered. “Booking this guy for CCW.”
“Kinda old to be playin with guns, ain’t you, Dad?” commented Elwood Banks, looking up from his typewriter as he inserted a booking form.
“I’ll sue you too, you bastard,” Murray Fern warned. “Just one more smart remark and I’ll put you on the lawsuit.”
Sitting on a bench to the side of the booking cage, waiting to be fingerprinted, was a tall, once powerful derelict with a bloody wet bandage over one eye. He was forty-eight years old, looked sixty-five, and had fought with the officers who had arrested him for plain drunk. The assault on the officers made him a felon now, but his fourteen page rap sheet included fifty-four arrests for only plain drunk and vagrancy, so now he would be tried and sentenced as a misdemeanant.
Elwood Banks knew the derelict as Timothy “Clickety-clack” Reilly so called because his ill-fitting false teeth clicked together when he talked. Elwood Banks had booked Clickety-clack three times in the past, had never known him to be violent and rightly guessed that the young arresting officer, Roscoe Rules, had antagonized the derelict. His smashed nose and scarred eyes should have been a tip-off to Roscoe. Clickety-clack had once been a ranked heavyweight.
When Clickety-clack was brought inside the station by Roscoe he had merely said what he said to every arresting officer from Boston to Los Angeles: “I could whip you, Officer. In a fair fight I could whip you from here to East Fifth Street, know that?”
And most arresting officers answered something like: “Yeah, Clickety-clack, I know you could-in a fair fight. But if you try it, it ain’t gonna be a fair fight cause my partner and me and half the nightwatch are gonna work out on your gourd with our sticks and do the fandango on your kisser. But in a fair fight you’d kick my ass, that’s for sure.”
And Clickety-clack would be satisfied. But on this night when he made the same speech to Roscoe Rules, Roscoe replied, “Oh yeah, you’re gonna whip me, old man?”
And then in the corridor of Wilshire Station by the front desk in the presence of luscious Officer Reba Hadley whom he was trying to impress, Roscoe Rules took off his hat, slammed it on the desk, stood on the balls of his feet in front of the hulking derelict, put on his black gloves dramatically, both fists on his hips and said, “You think you can whip my ass, you wrinkled wart? You stinking tub a puke. Think you can whip me in a fair fight, huh?”
And Clickety-clack just said, “Yeah.” And from a corner of his all but destroyed brain, he found a memory, a rhythm, an instinct and sent a picture left hook whistling through the air. Roscoe Rules woke up three minutes later in the lap of luscious Officer Reba Hadley who said to him, “You dumb shit.”
Clickety-clack Reilly was of course buried by five of six blue uniforms and ended up with a badly cut lip and three more stitches in his eyes which made no difference at all to that caved in, monstrous face.
But now he sat, calm and secure and happy in the jail of Elwood Banks who knew exactly how to pacify him, thereby eliminating the possibility of further problems for himself.
“You okay Mister Reilly?” he asked when Spencer and Father Willie entered the jail with Murray Fern. “Mind if I book this prisoner for these officers so they can get back out on the street?”
“No, Officer, I don’t mind,” the derelict smiled painfully to the black jailor. He looked as though he would love to hear it again, that word applied to him so seldom in his bitter lonely life.
“Thanks a lot, Mister Reilly” Elwood Banks said. “We’ll just be a minute.”
“Glad to hear you quit eatin in those greasy spoons down on Jefferson,” Elwood Banks said to Spencer without even looking at Murray Fern. Then to Father Willie, “Once we was eatin in this soul kitchen and we caught a momma cockroach and three babies crawlin on his plate. Spencer just told them to fry it. It was free.”
“My tastes’ve changed since those days,” Spencer remarked.
“I knew you wasn’t the soul food type at heart, Spencer,” Elwood Banks said. Then he turned to Murray Fern and said, “Name?”
“Go to hell,” the arrestee answered.
“Man, your face is red as a bucket a blood,” Elwood Banks said. “Calm down, make it easy on yourself.”
“I’m including you in the lawsuit,” said Murray Fern.
“You’re sure lucky you got these easygoin officers here,” Elwood Banks said. “You was busted by an officer named Roscoe Rules he’d a been up side your head long ago. They’d a needed a sewing machine to put in the stitches.”
“I demand an attorney.”
“After you’re booked you can call one,” said Elwood Banks.
“I demand an MD. I’m on medication for a serious allergy.”
“Ain’t none here,” Elwood Banks said. “Boys can take you to the hospital if you want, right now before they book you.”
“That’ll take too long. I’m bailing out of here at once.”
“Then why do you want a doctor?”
“Because I do. I demand an MD be brought here.”
“Well there ain’t none here.”
“Then I demand an RN.”
“You keep this shit up and you’re gonna get an RIN,” the black jailor informed him.
“What’s that?” asked Murray Fern.
“A rap in the nuts. Now gimme your full name and address.”
“I refuse to answer.”
“That does it,” Elwood Banks said, his lip curling as he came out from behind the counter. “I usually search after booking but I’m gonna make an exception. Strip down.”
“What?” Murray Fern asked nervously “What are you gonna do?”
“Nothin. If you do like I say.” Elwood Banks wore crisp jail khakis, his LAPD badge was highly polished, his feet were spread as he stood before the fat white man whose courage and insolence were in direct proportion to what was on his body and in his pockets. Or as Elwood Banks often put it, “Strip em down and show em what they are: nothin!”