Wherever Barn and the fellas took off to, I’ll find 'em. And then we can talk about what’s left in the bottle.
Drink. That’s what he’s come to, Brand thinks. A man and his drink. All he needs is someone to take over for him, someone to play messenger boy for the gods. So long as the person can walk a line to a destination and listens good enough to know they shouldn’t tamper with the mail, well . . .
Brand sniffs and wipes a hand over his face. The jazzers are all quiet now, putting their horns away. The flappers are smoking and giggling, someone in there is almost cackling. And sounds from an upstairs window tell Brand that two people are having more fun than he’s had since who knows when.
Soon enough, everyone but the pair upstairs is spilling out of the Rising Sun and taking over the street outside. A couple of jazzers strike up a song and dance with a pair of flappers. They all fall down in a heap with a groan and a screech. Somebody’s hurt, but Brand isn’t paying attention to their pissing and moaning. He’s worried about Miss Farnsworth’s jazz man, what’s his name again . . .
Collins. Somebody named Collins. Brand tucks himself tighter against the tree and scans the crowd slowly filling the street. They’re all circling around the tangle of bodies on the ground. Someone in there is sobbing now. Brand thinks for a second he can help, and then remembers the weight like a lodestone in his pocket.
Conroy’s letter. And now one for Miss Farnsworth, too.
Then Brand sees him. Her jazz man.
Eddie Collins.
He’s got his horn in its case and he’s walking down the street. Stumbling down the street is more like it, Brand thinks as he watches Eddie fetch up against the side of the building with a thin, pale flapper trailing after him. She’s calling to him and pawing at his collar. Eddie turns around, plants a wet one on the flapper’s mouth and gets back as good as he gives. Brand waits it out while they have their fun. Soon enough the girl acts like she remembers where she is or who she’s supposed to be with. She turns away from Eddie and heads over to the circle of people in the street.
She gets there and disappears into the group, swallowed up like a shadow of a shadow until she’s just another pair of flapper’s legs in the mix of bodies. They’re all standing around the group that took a tumble, two men and two women, now huddled together like they’re sheltering from a storm.
Brand doesn’t see any blood on the faces or hands in the mix. But it’s dark as can be at this time of night, and it’s only shadows that Brand can see really.
Shadows and more shadows. Brand peers around the street, trying to remember why he’s standing there, and then he sees him. Miss Farnsworth’s jazz man is still trying to walk his silly drunk ass home. This is the guy Brand is going to trust with Miss Farnsworth’s letter?
What’d the gods think they were doing naming Conroy and Miss Farnsworth as the latest and greatest?
“Don’t you have someone else you can drape your laurels on?” Brand mumbles into his collar.
Nobody answers and Brand doesn’t bat an eye or lose a second wondering why not. They never do. He’s used to it now. The constant silence of New Orleans nights that never answer him.
He steps out of his hiding place, careful to stumble like a good little tramp, and ignores the cries of surprise that follow him from the group in the street. He staggers down the way, keeping Eddie Collins in his vision as best he can, and gets himself ready to jump in case Eddie Collins starts to slide into the street.
Sure enough, at the first intersection, Brand has to rush across the way and grab hold of Eddie. Brand hooks his hands under the black man’s arms and pulls for all he’s worth until Eddie’s legs come free of the mud with a sickening
Pop.
“Let’s get you home,” Brand says to the now sleeping jazz man. Brand lifts a hand and peels back the night, revealing a tunnel to the French Quarter. “I guess I’m stuck with this gig after all,” he says and then hauls Eddie Collins into the world behind the city.
~•~
Emma woke with a start when Eddie came home. He was covered in sweat and the stink of cigar smoke mixed with perfume and sweet wine, like a cocktail poured from the Devil’s own decanter. And his pants were covered in mud up to his knees.
“You ought to wash up, Eddie,” she said to him as he put his instrument case down on the love seat and flopped himself next to the case. He turned weary eyes to her, above a grin that was half wolf and half sloppy hound dog.
“Oh, Eddie,” Emma said, her voice falling to the floor. “You’re drunk.”
“C’mon here, Lov—” Eddie started to say and then spilled the night’s revelry into his lap. Emma reeled away from the scene and the sounds, flying from the chair and stepping fast down the hall. She closed the bedroom door behind her and leaned against it.
How many nights? How many times had she cleaned up after her father when he’d been on a tear with the men from the power plant? Or the mayor? Emma had lived a servant’s life around the men she’d grown up being told to admire. The petty yet powerful of Chicago City’s elite. Nothing but a gang of drunks at the end of the day. And Emma had been their cleaning lady.
May as well have been their nursemaid, cook, and mother while she was at it. Not half of them had wives at home. She’d taken that as a sign that no woman should stand by a man with one hand in hers while the other clutched tight to the neck of a bottle.
Now Eddie’s gone over the falls, too.
Emma stopped herself there. Had she really thought that about him? The man she’d risked her life to rescue from the lynch man’s noose. The man she’d set out with on this adventure in starting over. She had no delusions about life in New Orleans being easy, no matter what the city was called. But it wasn’t supposed to be like this. Eddie wasn’t supposed to wind up just as bad as the men she’d turned away from.
A grunt and the dull thud of his instrument case hitting the floor told Emma that Eddie was moving around the front parlor. Shuffling footsteps and thumps against the walls and floor signaled his slow progress to the washroom. Emma breathed a sigh of relief that she wouldn’t have to clean him up like she had her father for all those years.
~•~
The next morning, Emma stood outside the washroom. Eddie had slept in the bathtub. His clothes sat wadded up on the floor, reeking of his misery. Emma turned her head and breathed deep before going into the washroom and snatching up the soiled clothing. She fast-stepped down the hall to the auto-wash and tossed the whole mess into the basin.
Emma worked fast to get the machine ready. With a sniff of disgust, she hit the switch. The machine started up with a jerk and whirred into a steady rhythm.
In the kitchen, she made breakfast for herself and ate it in silence while Eddie snored and sometimes coughed in the bathtub. She thought about waking him, but figured he’d hate himself enough without the look she was bound to give him.
Outside, New Orleans slowly came to life. Emma washed the dishes, and still Eddie slept. She thought again about waking him up and had decided to do it when the wall beside the kitchen door shimmered and lifted away like a translucent drape, revealing Brand in his tattered coat and beat-up hat. He stepped into the kitchen, letting the gossamer wall fall into place behind him, making the kitchen whole once again.
Brand had the same weather-beaten look on his mug. His suspenders sagged lower than a gambler’s bottom lip after a bad day at the track, but his eyes were still bright as ever, alive and full of warning.
“You got a minute, Miss Farnsworth?”
“Looks that way, whether I like it or not. You don’t exactly give a girl a chance to tidy up for guests. Do you?”
“I’m sorry,” he said, taking off his hat and running the stained fingers of one hand through his now-thinning hair. “I’m doing this as a favor. If that makes you feel any better.”
“It doesn’t. So what’s it about this time, Brand? More hocus-pocus and abracadabra? I’m not saying I mind, but if it’s all the same to you, I don’t see what’s in it for me. All this talk about gods and—”
“That’s just it,” he said, as the hint of a smirk crept around his lips. He put his hat back on and motioned a hand to a chair by the kitchen table. “Okay if I sit?”
“Go ahead,” Emma said, standing back from the table a step farther. His stink wasn’t that bad, but he looked every type of dirty there was, and Emma’d had plenty with cleaning up after Eddie.
“So?” she said as Brand got settled. “What’s the scoop, Brand?”
“Your jazz man,” he said, tossing a look down the hall to the bathroom. “Got himself good and sauced last night, hey?”
“What business is that of yours? Look, I’m not up for chit-chat, so—”
“You want to hear this, Miss Farnsworth. You don’t have to like it and you probably won’t no matter how I tell it, but you’ll be thanking me when I’m done. Your good-time guy in the bathtub is only alive because of me, and I risked what’s left of my neck making sure he got home last night. If I hadn’t, he and Al Conroy would’ve been bunking together in the street. A couple of mud men with nothing better to do than hit the sauce and lie around waiting for the boss to call.”
Emma leaned back against the counter, finding the rim of the sink with her twitching fingers and holding on to the enameled metal with all her strength. A grimace worked its way across her mouth and up her face until she felt her eyes watering.
“What the hell is this, Brand? The gods followed us from Chicago City?”
“No, but you’d be better off if it was just them we had to worry about.
Industry
and his pals are still fighting the bad fight, or the good, depending which side you’re on.”
“Then what—?”
“The ones down here don’t care as much about taking over and making the world run by their rules.
Vice
,
Corruption
, even
Innocence
. They just take you in soon as they’ve got half a chance to do it. Last night,
Corruption
had her sights on your fella. Eddie nearly hit the street with a belly full of hooch and ten kinds of lady paint on his collar. He—”
“What?” Emma shouted, her tears forgotten. Now she felt nothing but a burning hatred. “Get out, Brand. Get the hell out!”
Brand stood up slow, but as she advanced on him he seemed to get the message. He stepped back to the kitchen door.
“I-I’m in a jam here, Miss Farnsworth. I did you a favor and figured you’d do me one back, hey?”
“A favor?” Emma said, hoping Brand felt the word stab him in the guts like she meant it to. “You call bringing Eddie back a favor? He should be out there making a hot mess of himself instead of making another mess for me to clean up in the house.”
“It’s the kid,” Brand said. “Conroy. He needs help, Miss Farnsworth, and his folks aren’t good for helping him anymore.”
Emma had another knife on her tongue, ready to stick in him, but the mention of Aiden put her back on her heels.
“What about the kid? What’s going on with him, and why does he need my help?”
Brand didn’t answer right away. He stuck a hand into his coat pocket and lifted it like he intended to bring his hand back out with something between his fingers.
“Before I show you this, you gotta promise me you’ll help him. He’s the only one I’ve got left out of the three of ‘em,” Brand said, choking up on the words. “My three newsboys. That damn monster the gods sent after us took care of Jenkins and Digs Gordon back in Chicago City. Conroy’s the only one left. I can’t let him down.”
“So why don’t you help him? You’ve got the magic tricks, Brand. What’s the matter?”
“I tried,” Brand said, sucking in the tears and wiping his face with his free hand. “Aiden . . . he didn’t want the kind of help I have to give.”
Brand pulled his other hand out of his pocket and Emma’s eyes went narrow with doubt when he held out two envelopes.
“Go on,” he said. “Please. I need to give it to somebody and the kid’s nowhere I can find him. I’ve looked.”
“Isn’t it your job to deliver the mail, Brand?” Emma reached for the letters and her fingers closed on them, but she didn’t tug like she wanted them yet. “What happens to me if I take these from you and I’m not the right person to read ‘em?”
“Just be sure you only read the one addressed to you and it’ll be jake,” Brand said, letting the letters go. In a flash, he’d lifted the curtain beside his head and stepped through it. Before Emma could holler at him to wait, the hallway dropped back into place and Brand was gone.
Emma’s eyes wanted to go every other way they could, but she forced herself to look at the letters.
INNOCENCE C/O AIDEN CONROY
VIGILANCE C/O EMMA FARNSWORTH
Emma put a hand to her brow and rubbed the knot of worry that formed between her eyes.
“The man’s got to be crazy,” she said.
Eddie stuck his head out of the bathroom then, his eyes bleary and weak, and his mouth hanging open like he’d just had another round of reliving last night’s fun and games.
“Get me some coffee on, Lovebird. Gotta—”
“Get it your own damn self,” she said, and stepped past him down the hall to the stairs, holding the letters to her side. She walked up the steps fighting to prevent her mind from lingering on memories of the lipstick and perfume that had decorated Eddie’s clothes.
Chapter 28
If his old boss was anywhere around the mud tunnels, Aiden had no idea how to find the man. He’d screamed until his throat felt raw and ragged, worse than the first time his pa handed him a slug of hooch and told him to drink it down in one go.
The mud didn’t stick as much now at least. And the tramps seemed to have forgotten about him. He saw only two behind him now. One of them stopped moving as Aiden looked at him. Then the man opened his mouth to speak. His voice came down the tunnel like rushing water.
“Figger . . . figger we losht . . . losht thish’n.”
Then the man’s partner pulled up and gave Aiden a hard look. He had words for Aiden, too, and they weren’t much better than what his pal had to say.