Charles Beaumont - Selected Stories - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"What, you stop in a museum on the way?" Paco said. Everybody laughed. Julio laughed.
"What are you talking? I ain't so late as all that.""Forty-five minutes is too late." Paco reached to the table and moved a bottle forward.
"Speech me," Julio said. "Speech me."
"Hey, listen, you guys! Listen. Julio's cracking wise."
"Who's cracking wise? Look, so I'm here, so what should I do?"
Danny was looking at his shoes.
Paco rubbed his face. It glistened with hot sweat and was inflamed where the light beard had caused irritations. "Got a hot job for Julio tonight," he said. "Know what it is?"
"How should I know?" Julio tried hard to keep his voice steady.
"Great kidders, you English," Paco said. "Hey, you guys, he don't know." He looked over at Danny Arriaga. "You didn't tell him?"
"For Chrissakes," Danny said.
"All right, all right, so. You still want in The Aces?"
Julio nodded.
"By which means you got to do whatever I say you got to do, no matter what, right? Okay."
Paco drank from the bottle and pa.s.sed it to Manuel Morales, who drank and gave the bottle to the younger of his brothers, who only wet his lips and gave it back.
Julio knew he'd have to wait, because he remembered Albert's initiation, and how Paco had stalled and watched to see how scared he got. They'd sent Albert to swipe a car that was owned by the manager of Pacific Fruit who always left the key in. That wasn't so bad, even if Albert did wreck the car the same night, driving it back to the club. Swiping a car would be all right.
But from the way Danny looked, it wasn't going to be anything like that. Paco had it in for him ever since he found out about his going to church. Though there must be more to it, because Julio knew that Hernando and Juan went to church, too.
Something deep and strange, hard to figure.
But strong.
"Pretty soon it's time," Paco said, leaning back in the chair. The others were smiling.
The boats rocked uneasily in the small currents, a short drifting.
Julio thought about Paco, about how he'd come to The Aces. It was Danny who joined first, long before, even before Julio was wearing jeans. Paco was later, a new guy on the street. Mr. Mendez was dead, and his mother worked in the Chinese grocery on Aliso Street with the dead cats in the window.
No organization to the club, then. Paco moved in and organized. He beat up Vincente Santa Cruz, who was the strongest guy in the Heights, and he introduced the guys to marijuana and showed them where to get it. He'd been booked three times at the jail and was seen with girls tagging after him, even though he wasn't good-looking, only strong and powerful. Danny admired Paco. Julio didn't, but he respected him.
"Charge up, kid." Paco opened a pill box which contained four crude cigarettes.
"Afterwards," Julio said.
"So okay. Afterwards." Paco grinned and winked at the others.
There was silence again: only the water slos.h.i.+ng against the boats and the painful creak of the wicker chair straining back and forth.
The room was very small. THE ACES was whitewashed on the walls, and initials were carved in various places. Except Julio's. His were not on any of the walls. That distinction would come only when he'd finished his job.
No one seemed prepared to break the quiet.
Julio thought, Danny knows. He knew all along, but he wouldn't tell me. Danny was a full-fledged member now. He'd had to break windows out of Major Jewelry and swipe enough watches for the gang.
A tough a.s.signment, because of the cops who prowled and wandered around all the time. It took nerve.
Julio had broken into a store himself, though--a tire shop--and so he knew he could do it again, although he remembered how afraid he had been.
Why wouldn't they tell him, for Chrissakes? Why stall? If they'd only tell him now, he'd go right out, he was sure. But, any later.
"Scared?" Paco asked, lighting another cigarette and taking off his jacket."Listen close--you'll hear me shaking," Julio said.
Danny smiled.
Paco frowned and brought his chair forward with a loud noise.
"What are you so c.o.c.ky--I'll give you in the mouth in a minute. I asked a question."
"No. I ain't scared."
"That's a crock of s.h.i.+t. Who are you trying to kid, anyway? Me?"
Suddenly Julio hated this leering, posturing Paco as he had never hated a person before. He looked at his friend Danny, but Danny was looking elsewhere.
"Mackerel snapper, isn't it, Julio?" Paco scratched his leg loudly. "What did you, go to confession today or was the priest busy in the back room?" He smiled.
Julio clenched his fists. "Gimme to do, already," he said; and, all at once, he thought of his father, Papa Velasquez. Papa would be working late right now, in the pharmacy, mixing sodas and prescriptions. Business was very good, with the new housing project and all the new trade.
Julio was going to be a pharmacist--everybody knew that, though no one believed it. No one but Father Laurent: he talked to Julio many times, softly, understandingly. And there were many times when Julio wanted to tell the priest what he had done--about the motorcycle or the time he helped the guys push tea--but he could never seem to get the words out.
He waited, hands tight together, listening to the breathing, and thinking: I could go right to the drugstore now, if I wanted. It was only a mile away . . .
He cleared his throat. Albert Dominguin was staring at him.
And now Danny Arriaga was getting sore, too: Julio could tell.
"You want to know, huh? Guys--think I should tell him?"
"Tell him already," Danny snapped, rising to his feet. He looked a lot bigger than Paco, suddenly.
"Now."
"Who asked for your mouth?" Paco said, glaring. He looked quickly away. "All right, Julio. But first you got to see this."
Paco reached in his pocket and took out a large bone-handled knife. Julio didn't move.
"Ever use one, kid?"
"Yeah."
"Hey, no s.h.i.+t? What do you think, guys--Julio's an expert!" Paco pressed a b.u.t.ton on the knife with his thumb. A long silver blade flashed out, glittering in the greenish light of the boathouse.
"So?"
"So you're going to use it tonight, Julio," Paco said, grinning broadly and rocking in the chair. The others crouched and held their cigarettes in their mouths.
Danny seemed about to speak up, but he held himself in check.
"On what?" Julio said.
"No, kid--not on _what_, on _who_." Paco flipped the knife toward Julio's foot, but it landed handle-down and slid to a corner. Julio picked it up, pressed the b.u.t.ton, folded back the blade and put the knife in his pocket.
"All right, who. On who?"
He remembered what the Kats had done to the old woman over on Pregunta. For eighty-three cents.
"A dirty son of a b.i.t.c.h that's got it coming," Paco said. He waited. "Hey, kid, what's wrong? You look sick."
"What are you talking, for Chrissakes? What do you want I should do?"
"Carry out a very important mission for our group, that's what. You're a very important man, Julio Velasquez. Know that?"
Near Cuernavaca, by the caverns of Cacahuamilpa, Grandfather had seen a man lying still in the bushes. The man was dead. But not only that--he had been dead for a long time. Grandfather used to sit after the coffee and tell about it; and it was always terrifying because Grandfather had a quiet way of talking, without emphasis, without excitement.-- "_Quien fue el hombre, Papa?_"
-- "_Quien Un hombre muy importante en el pueblo!_"
Always; theii the slow description, unrolling like one of Mama's stringb.a.l.l.s. The man had been a rich one of the village, influential and well liked, owner of a beautiful hacienda, over two thousand acres of land. Then one night he didn't come back when he should have, and the next night it was the same, and the next night, and after the searches, he was forgotten. It was Grandfather who found him. But the flies and the vultures had found him first.
-- "_Como murio el hombre?_" He had been murdered. The knife was still between his ribs and the flesh had softened and decayed around the knife.
Death . . .
Julio always thought of death as the rich man from Cuernavaca.
"What'd he do?" Julio asked. "This guy."
"He got to do something?" Paco said, laughing. Then: "Plenty. You know when we all went to the Orpheum the other night and you had to stay home on account of your old man or something?"
"Yeah. Sure."
"Okay. They got Billy Daniels and a picture that's supposed to be good, y'know? Okay, we start to pay when the chick at the window picks up the phone and says, 'Wait a minute.' Pretty soon the bra.s.s comes out and starts to look us over, real cool, see, like he had a bug up or something. I talk to him and it's all right--we go in. Five G.o.ddam dollars. So--the show stinks, the movie: it's cornball, and we go to get our loot back. Guy at the window now, no broad. He says 'Nooo.' I ask to see the manager, but he's gone. They won't give us back our loot. What do we do? What would _you_ do, Julio?"
"Raise a stink."
"You bet your sweet a.s.s. That's what we do, what happens? Big Jew punk comes barrelin' down the aisle, says he's the a.s.sistant manager. We got to blow, see. But no loot, no, man. Then he took Albert by the hair and kicked him. Right, Albert?"
Albert nodded.
"So naturally this isn't for The Aces. I didn't say nothing after that, except I let the schmuck know he'd get his, later on. So we just casually walked out. And here's the thing--" Paco's eyes narrowed dramatically. "That louse is still walking around, Julio, like he never done a thing to anybody, like he never insulted all of us. Know what he said? Know what he called us, Julio?"
"What'd he call you?"
"Pachooks. Wetbacks. Dirty Mex b.a.s.t.a.r.ds. c.r.a.pped his mouth off like that in front of everybody in the show."
"So you want him cut up?"
Paco rocked and smiled. "No, not just cut up. I want that liddle-Yiddle dead, where he can't c.r.a.p off any more. That's your a.s.signment, Julio. Bring back his ears."
Julio glanced at Danny, who was not smiling. The others were very quiet. They all looked at him.
"When's he get off?" Julio asked, finally.
"Ten-thirty. He walks down Los Angeles street, then he hits Third, down Third till he's around the junction. It's a break, Julio. We followed him for three nights, and there's never anybody around the junction. Get him when he's pa.s.sing the boon docks over to Alameda. n.o.body'll ever see you."
"How will I know him?"
"Fat slob. Big nose, big ears, curly brown hair. Carries something, maybe his lunch-pail--you might bring that back with you. Albert'll go along and point him out, in case he wants to try to give you trouble. He's big, but you can take him."
Julio felt the knife in his pocket. He nodded.
"All right, so this is it. You and Albert, take off in half an hour, wait and hang around the loading docks, but make sure n.o.body sees you. Then check the time and grab a spot behind the track next to Merchant Truck--you know where it is. He'll pa.s.s there around eleven. All right?"
Julio reached for the pill box and controlled his fingers as they removed the last cigarette. Paco grinned."So in the meantime, let's have our meeting. Whoever got what, lay it out on the floor."
The boys began reaching into the bags and parcels, and into their pockets, and taking out watches and rings and handfuls of money. These items they spread on the floor.
The rich man, Julio thought, lying still in the bushes, with his fat dead face, waiting for the flies, waiting, while a little Mexican boy with red wet hands runs away, fast, fast . . .
The grating sound of heavy machinery being pushed across cement came m.u.f.fled through the wooden doors of the freight dock. There were a few indistinct voices, and the distant hum of other machines that never stopped working.
The night was still airless. Julio and Albert Dominguin walked along the vacant land by the boxcar, clinging to the shadows and speaking little.
Finally Julio said, "This guy really do all that that Paco said?"
"He got smart," Albert said.
"Kick you?"
"You could call it that. Just as good."
"So what kind of stink you guys raise to cause all that?"
"Nothing."
"Nothing my a.s.s."