Authors: Belinda Alexandra
âWell, you can come back anytime,' he added, âsore knee or not.'
Next to Doctor Monfort's office was a store that sold bathroom accessories. As I passed the shop window I caught sight of my reflection in one of the cabinet mirrors. I stopped and gave myself a wink. Fooling Doctor Monfort had given me courage. Now I was ready for anything!
For my next performance as Jewel, I wore the black strapless dress and gloves I'd bought from Melody and teamed them with a silk turban and lace corset. The music I chose was Duke Ellington's âThe Mooche': its languorous, haunting beat enhanced my sinewy movements. Every time the clarinet and muted trumpet slipped down the scale, I slithered with them.
The men in the room seemed to hold their breath for my
entire number, and then let out a collective sigh when I'd finished. But none of them would be able to get close to me. I'd stipulated in my new agreement with Rolando that I wouldn't entertain customers off stage. It was necessary for me to remain aloof to maintain my Jewel persona.
Rolando congratulated me on my new stage presence. âThat was incredible, Ruby. It was class all the way.'
âJewel,' I reminded him. âThere is no Ruby in this club. Only Jewel.'
Back in my room in Chartres Street, while I was changing into my Ruby clothes, I suffered a splitting headache and had to lie down. The squeezing pain at my temples was so severe it almost blinded me. I thought of the racking pangs and nausea that Dr Jekyll suffered when he drank the potion that turned him into Mr Hyde. âWhat's happening to me?' I cried.
Then I calmed myself. Jewel was not an aberration of nature. She was a creation that allowed me to do what was unthinkable as Ruby in order to help Maman â or so I thought.
âWhat's up with you?' Mae asked, when she brought the camomile tea I'd requested to my bedroom. âYou've always been the healthy one. These strange hours you're keeping ain't doing you no good! What's going to happen if you get sick?'
âShh!' I said. Maman was asleep down the hall. Doctor Monfort had convinced her to return home. âI never see my patients do so well as when they're in the bosom of their family,' he'd told her. While it was easier on me financially now Mae had taken over nursing Maman, I was always on high alert because the need for secrecy was even greater. Mae knew that I worked at night, but not what I really did. Maman, on the other hand, had to be kept in the dark that I worked at all.
âHow long do you think we can keep this up?' Mae asked. âI got to pretend you're sleeping, or you're at Mrs de Pauger's home having a piano lesson. What are you going to do if your mama invites Mrs Pélissier to visit and requests you to play something?'
I bit my lip and tried to shut out the image of me performing a shaky rendition of âMoonlight Sonata' for Maman and Babette. Like Mae, I feared that at any moment things could come undone. âWe've got to keep going,' I told her. âWe have to be like soldiers in a war doing our duty. If I don't keep working, we're going to be out on the street with nothing but the clothes on our backs!'
She drew a breath and rubbed her forehead. âYou sure got some spirit in you, Miss Ruby. You're a fighter, that's for certain. All right then, I'll fight alongside you, seeing we don't have much of a choice.'
âI'm making good money, and we're saving more now Maman is back home. As soon as we pay the sanatorium bill and the mortgage, I'll stop working so hard. Life will be better then.'
Mae looked at me sceptically. She didn't excel at arithmetic or know exactly how much I was making, but she must have been able to figure out that the money we owed wasn't going to be paid back anytime soon. Some days I couldn't even bring myself to think about how long it was going to take to pay it all off.
âWhen you find yourself a nice man and get married, then life will be easier,' she said emphatically.
I smiled sweetly, but the irony of her comment was like a kick in the stomach. Now I was a burlesque dancer, no nice man would want me.
One night after I'd been performing as Jewel for a couple of months, one of the warm-up strippers told me there was someone in the club who wanted to see me.
âI don't mix with the customers any more,' I told her.
âOh, you don't say no to this one,' she said. âIt's Sam Coppola. He's got links with the Mancuso gambling family. His speciality is making people disappear without a trace. Rumour has it one of his suppliers got on the wrong side of him and ended up dissolved in a tub of lye and emptied into a swamp.'
Half of the entertainment business in New Orleans was run by the mob and I couldn't afford to get on the wrong side of them. I dressed, reapplied my lipstick and fixed my hair.
A waiter showed me to the table where Sam Coppola was sitting. I'd been expecting a stocky Sicilian with bad table manners and was surprised to see a good-looking Italian man in a white tuxedo and black bow tie beckoning to me and pointing to a bottle of Bollinger in a champagne bucket.
âWon't you join me, Miss Jewel?' he asked, standing. He had slicked-back hair and a tanned face. There was a slight lisp in his speech that might have been annoying in another man, but coming from his full lips was strangely sensual.
âThank you,' I said, placing myself in the chair he'd pulled out for me.
âDo you want something to eat?' he asked. âI wouldn't trust the food in this joint, but I can send for something from Antoine's?'
One thing that was clear in the first few minutes of meeting Sam Coppola was that he wasn't of peasant stock. His tastes were expensive.
I shook my head. âNo, I'm fine, thank you.'
He stared at me for a long time, as if sizing me up.
âDid you enjoy the show, Mr Coppola?' I asked, to break the ice.
âCall me Sam,' he said. âAnd to answer your question, yes, I did enjoy the show. But I expected I would. I've been hearing a lot about Jewel at the Havana Club, so I decided to come see what all the fuss is about.'
I was aware of something he wanted to say beneath the polite chit-chat. The way he looked me over made my stomach pitch. It was a fall to become a burlesque dancer, but I didn't intend to sink further and end up a gangster's moll, even for a man as debonair as Sam Coppola. If he made any sort of suggestion like that, I'd tell him I was engaged. Surely the mob had its own code of honour in that regard. I didn't want to end up in a tub of lye.
âHow much money do you make here?' he asked.
Why did he want to know? Was he going to offer me a role as a courier or drug runner? I shifted uneasily in my seat and he noticed. Sam Coppola never missed a thing.
âThe reason I'm asking is because whatever it is, I'll double it. I'm opening a new club on Bourbon Street and I want it to be class all the way. I'm looking for a local dancer to be the main act, rather than a string of out-of-towners. The act has to be pure glamour and not cheap striptease. I'm creating the sort of place that men would feel comfortable bringing their wives and girlfriends for dinner and a show. You interested?'
His offer was a good one. Rolando liked to change his acts around and that was going to be a problem for me. The other girls toured the country to perform at different venues, but I couldn't do that because of Maman. A permanent spot in New Orleans was what I needed, and what Sam was talking about was exactly the sort of burlesque dancer I wanted to be.
âI make five hundred dollars a week,' I told him, poker-faced. âSo it'll be one thousand dollars a week for me to come work for you.'
The frown lines on his forehead deepened. âOne thousand! Isn't that a little steep?'
âNo, I don't think so,' I said, managing not to fidget or avert my gaze. âYou said you wanted class and class doesn't come cheap.'
It was a risk to tell someone like Sam Coppola a lie, but I'd gone to see Tempest Storm perform at the 500 Club. It annoyed me she was making so much more money than me. She was very pretty and had an eye-popping figure, but she couldn't keep time to the music. When the drummer gave her a beat, she'd miss it. Her dancing was uncoordinated and her act â well, her act was a little tacky. One thousand dollars wasn't even half of what she earned.
âNow, Miss Jewel, don't you get smart with me,' Sam said. âI know you make one eighty a week and I'm willing to pay you five hundred â and provide your costumes.'
âThen why'd you ask me if you already know?' I said indignantly.
He rubbed his chin. âTo see how good you are at lying. Anyone who works for me has to be like a box with the lid shut tight. You focus on the job I'm paying you to do and nothing else. Anything you see and hear you keep to yourself. You don't even raise an eyebrow. You simply erase it from your mind like you never noticed it to begin with. As we say here in Louisiana, three can keep a secret if two are dead.'
My blood turned to ice. Was I prepared to work in a club owned by the mob? What if I accidentally witnessed something I wasn't supposed to see? But five hundred dollars a week and a long contract was too good to refuse. With that amount of money, I had a chance of getting our debts paid off faster than I'd ever dreamed.
I lifted my chin proudly. âWell, how did I do? Did I meet your criteria as a good liar, Sam?'
He grinned, and I noticed for the first time the scar on the inside of his lower lip that must have been the cause of the lisp. âYou did pretty good. But get rid of that phoney transatlantic
accent, will you. You're slipping in and out of it like a faulty radio. You're Creole, right? Well, speak with a French accent if you want to sound haughty. It will be a hundred times more convincing. And remember the most important point of disguising your voice: err on the safe side â talk low, talk slow, and don't say too much.'
âHow come you know so much about changing your voice?'
He chuckled but didn't answer the question. âNow come see me on Monday and we'll sign the contract.'
He poured the champagne and we clinked glasses. I had a feeling I was going to like Sam Coppola. As long as I stayed on the right side of him.
When I told Rolando I was leaving to work for Sam, he was pleased for me. âThat you were once Vivienne “Ruby” de Villeray is a secret I'll take to my grave,' he said, with his hand dramatically over his heart. âBut I hope if I ever need it, you'll put in a good word for Rolando.'