Motor City Burning (40 page)

Read Motor City Burning Online

Authors: Bill Morris

“Yeah, I see it,” Wes said.

“I see it,” Willie said.

What he saw was a dark silhouette—a woman in a dress—lit from behind. The silhouette wobbled and came to rest in the cross-hairs. Willie's face was wet and suddenly he felt cold. He waited. The shape didn't move. He could hear sirens in the distance, the chatter of automatic weapons fire. He felt for the trigger and held his breath, the way his brother had taught him to do in the woods outside Tuskegee.

“All right, muthafuckas,” Clarence said. “This is it. We takin the honky bitch down together. On the count a three. One . . .”

The woman moved half a step to her left and Willie's cross-hairs moved with her. He was steady as a stone.

“Two . . .”

A doubt entered Willie's mind. This was no Guardsman or cop in the cross-hairs. It was a civilian. A woman. Somebody's wife, maybe somebody's mother. At this distance it wasn't even possible to tell for sure if she was black or white. No—

“Three!”

Clarence's rifle went off first, a terrifying jolt. Then, a fraction of a second later, the gun to Willie's left boomed. In the instant he decided he was not going to squeeze the trigger, he felt the Remington kick into his shoulder. The woman had disappeared from the window. Willie felt sick. What just happened?

“I got the bitch!” Wes shouted over the ringing in Willie's ears. “I fuckin got the bitch!”

“The fuck you did,” Clarence shouted back. “
I
got the bitch!”

“Fuck you, nigger!”

“No, fuck
you
!”

As their ecstatic shouting went back and forth, Willie kept looking at the window through his scope. The woman was still gone. Suddenly the window went dark. Someone started shooting from inside the building, then tracer fire started pouring from the street into the building.

Peering over the edge of the roof, Clarence said, “Here comes a po-lice. Time to split, my brothers.”

They hustled down the dark stairs and into Wes's apartment. He drew the curtains and lit a candle and put it on the floor. Willie's hands were shaking as he wiped down the Remington and handed it to Wes and watched him tuck it into the duffel bag. Then he watched Wes wipe down Clarence's gun—a 7.62 millimeter Garand with a powerful Redfield scope that magnified objects to ten times their actual size. No wonder crazy drunk Clarence had been able to spot so many targets. Then Wes wiped down his own gun, a Winchester Model 70 with a Starlight infra-red scope. The murder weapon. When all three guns were zipped inside the duffel bag, Wes stowed the bag in the space he'd hollowed out under the linoleum floor in the kitchen.

And now, riding the bus out Woodward, Willie finally knew how his story ended. He got off the bus at Tuxedo Street and hurried toward Octavia's building. He flew down the sidewalk, so light he thought he might float away. He had gotten away with helping his brother get away with murder, and he didn't regret it. If Wes wasn't innocent, he was a long way from guilty. Willie had gotten rid of his pain and his shame and his rage—those things he could not live with—and the stone of guilt in his guts was finally gone. He hadn't wanted that woman to die, and he hadn't killed her. He was free for the first time in his life. He had no unpaid debts, he had no scores to settle, and he no longer had anything to fear from any man.

26

T
HE
W
ORLD
S
ERIES BETWEEN THE
T
IGERS AND THE
C
ARDINALS
opened on Oct. 2 in Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Late that morning Anthony Capriati, the dapper little Wayne County prosecutor with watered hair, red galluses, and a loud paisley necktie, told Doyle and Jimmy Robuck something they already knew. He, Capriati, was not going to press charges in the Helen Hull case, not even weapons charges.

“You boys haven't got shit and we all know it,” Capriati told them. “Even if you go drag Wes Bledsoe back from Saigon or Singapore or wherever the hell he is, you still haven't got enough to get him to cop to Man One because his fingerprints aren't on the murder weapon. They're on a beer can. Sure, you might be able to prove he sold the murder weapon, but that doesn't mean he was the one who fired the fatal shot. And he might tell you a completely different story from the one his brother told you about the rooftop—and be able to back it up. And you think there had to be a third person on the roof because you've got someone else's prints on the murder weapon, but we all know that a hundred people could've handled that gun in the fifteen months since the shooting took place.”

Doyle managed to get in two and a half words. “But Mayor Cav—”

“Don't start in about Jerry Cavanagh again. I don't give a rat's ass how bad Hizzoner wants this thing to go down. I'm up for re-election next month and I'm not taking on a sure loser. Especially not one with this much visibility. Thanks for stopping by, gentlemen.”

Doyle drove to the Harlan House because he wanted to break the news to Henry Hull in person. As always, the door to Room 450 was ajar. But instead of the familiar clutter, Doyle was surprised to find tidy stacks of cardboard boxes, bare walls and a spotless coffee table. There were two large suitcases in the corner by the little refrigerator. Henry was sitting alone on the sofa staring at the television set.

“This is terrible!” he moaned when Doyle knocked and entered the room.

“Listen, Mr. Hull. I just want you to know how sorry I—”

“The Cards just scored three runs off McLain—and Gibson's already struck out twelve of our guys!”

Doyle looked at the television set. The volume was turned all the way down and Ernie Harwell's voice was coming out of a transistor radio on the coffee table. The grass in sparkling new Busch Stadium looked even better than the lawn in front of Doyle's brother's house. He watched as Willie Horton let a called third strike zip past his kneecaps.

Ernie Harwell didn't even try to hide his disgust. “Willie just stood there like a house by the side of the road and watched that one go by. Thirteen strike-outs now for Gibson.”

“Thirteen!”
Henry cried.

“Mr. Hull. . . .”

“Have a seat, Frankie.” Henry patted the sofa, and Doyle sat next to him, facing the television set. “You don't gotta tell me how it went with the D.A. I had it figured out soon as you told me about having to let that Bledsoe fella go.”

Doyle told him about Capriati anyway. Then they watched the game for a while, not talking. The Tigers looked like a bunch of scared Little Leaguers—or maybe Bob Gibson really was that good. During the seventh-inning stretch Henry said, “Look in the fridge, Frankie. Should be some beer in there. Grab us a couple. I need one.”

Doyle opened the refrigerator. It contained half a bag of carrots and three cans of Budweiser. He took two. “Budweiser?” he said, wrinkling his nose as he handed a can to Henry and popped one for himself. “Isn't this swill from St. Louis?”

“Quit yer squawkin. It's beer and it's cold.” Doyle could tell he appreciated the ribbing. “Cheers,” Henry said. They tapped cans as Doyle returned to the sofa.

After a while Henry put his hand on Doyle's knee and said, “You did the best you could, Frankie, you and Jimmy both. The whole department did, and I want you to know how much I appreciate it. You never gave up. Now it's time to let it go. It wasn't meant to be. Case closed.”

“The file will stay open till the case is solved, Mr. Hull.” It would stay open and it would turn cold and eventually it would slip into the deep freeze. “We never stop working open cases.”

Doyle wondered if it was possible that the old bird was feeling the same thing he'd felt when he watched Willie Bledsoe walk out the front door of 1300, a free man. He wondered if it was possible that Henry was feeling a skewed sense of relief now too. No, Doyle told himself, I know more than Henry knows, and he lost his wife. No way Henry was feeling relief.

Yet Henry was willing to let it go. His wife didn't deserve to die, but Henry, like Doyle, seemed to believe that Willie Bledsoe didn't deserve many of the things he'd been through, things no white man in America would ever have to endure. Something had to give. Somebody was always having to pay for the things that went on, for the things that had been going on in this country for hundreds of years. If the cycle of vengeance was ever going to stop, it had to stop somewhere. Why not here? If Henry wasn't exactly relieved, Doyle told himself, maybe he agreed that some sick form of justice had prevailed. Somebody had to be the first one to step off the merry-go-round.

“I said let it go,” Henry repeated. He waved at the boxes. “If I can get on with my life, then you can get on with yours. It's time for me and you—and this whole city—to move on.”

“You coming back to the old neighborhood?”

“Afraid I can't. There's nothing for me there but memories, mostly bad ones, and I've still got a few good years left in me.”

“So what are you going to do?”

“My kid brother's got a place in the U.P., not far from Marquette. He says he needs someone to go fishing with him. His wife passed away last summer too.”

“Sounds like a plan.”

“How about you? What's next for you?”

“Let's see. I'm cooking dinner tonight for Jimmy and Flo and a gorgeous strawberry blonde. In the morning Jimmy and I'll go out looking for new killers.”

“Is it serious?”

“Killers are always serious, Mr. Hull.”

“No, I mean the strawberry blonde.”

“Yeah, I think it's safe to say we're falling in love.”

This perked Henry up. “Tell me about her.”

“Well, she's gorgeous and she's sexy and she knows a lot about art and she loved the lamb chops I cooked for her last—”

“Shit!”

Bob Gibson had struck out his fourteenth Tiger batter.

“I'm sorry, Frankie. You were saying about the lamb chops.”

“She likes my cooking almost as much as Jimmy does. I'm making chicken
cacciatore
for everyone tonight.”

“You say she knows a lot about art?”

“She's getting her master's in art history at Wayne State. She's writing her thesis on the way the Nazis looted art during the War.”

“Sounds like an interesting gal.”

“She is, she really is. And smart as hell.”

“You remember me telling you I was in Patton's Third Army during the war?”

“Yeah, I remember that picture of you in your uniform, the one behind the cash register at the market. Right next to the picture of you shaking hands with President Truman.”

“Well, my unit was the one that found the salt mine full of stolen art near Altaussee, Austria. Hitler was going to put the stuff in his museum in Linz after the war. There were hundreds of pieces.”

Doyle had forgotten that about Henry Hull, the way he was always surprising you with his stories. It was what made the Greenleaf Market such a lively place. This city was going to miss him.

“So what's your girl's name?” Henry said.

“Cecelia Cronin.”

“She from Detroit?”

“Hamtramck. But yeah, she's been here all her life except for a short spell in New York. She's going to move in with me to see, you know, how we work together.”

“Sounds pretty damn serious.”

“Yeah. . . .” Like any inveterate bachelor, Doyle was anxious about having Cecelia move into his big empty house. Surely her presence would cut down on his front porch chats with his father. And he knew that those buckets of rainwater in the master bedroom would seem romantic to her for only so long. He told himself that this might actually be a good thing, might force him to get off his ass and replace that sieve of a roof before the house fell down. Doyle was much less anxious about their travel plans. “We're hoping to go to Italy together in the spring. My mother made me promise I'd go see the Uffizi and the Sistine Chapel before I died.”

“You should go. Go while you can.” Henry glanced at the naked walls. “You never know when it's going to get yanked away from you.”

They sat there on the sofa like father and son and watched the rest of the game. It wasn't pretty. Bob Gibson broke Sandy Koufax's World Series record by striking out seventeen Detroit batters, and the Cardinals embarrassed the Tigers, 4-0.

When the game was over, Doyle asked Henry what he was planning to do with all the boxes, all the evidence and tips and dead-end leads he'd amassed so painstakingly over the past fifteen months.

“The guys on the motel staff are gonna toss it in the dumpster out back for me.”

“I was wondering, Mr. Hull . . . I've got my brother's pickup truck parked out back—had to pick up some topsoil yesterday—and I was wondering if you'd let me take this stuff with me.”

“Take it where?”

“Back to my house. For some strange reason I cleaned out my old bedroom last week. It's the only room upstairs that doesn't have any leaks in the roof. I'd like to spread everything out in there as a way of, you know, keeping the case warm.”

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