Read Fat Man Blues: A Hard-Boiled and Humorous Mystery (The Tubby Dubonnet Series Book 9) Online
Authors: Tony Dunbar
Tags: #mystery, #thriller, #suspense, #mystery series, #amateur sleuths, #P.I., #hard-boiled mystery, #humorous mystery, #murder, #legal, #organized crime, #New Orleans, #Big Easy
“Hair-Raising… Dunbar revels in the raffish charm and humor of his famously rambunctious city.”
—
The New York Times Book Review
“From the Bywater… to Uptown, Tubby eats and drinks his way through interrogations and rendezvous, and it’s all delicious. Packed with contemporary New Orleans culture and plenty of humor from the quirky characters.”
—
New Orleans Advocate
“…reminiscent of the best of Donald Westlake and Elmore Leonard.”
—
Booklist
“An enjoyable romp through a city that makes Los Angeles seem normal.”
—
San Francisco Chronicle
“The literary equivalent of a
film noir
— fast, tough, tense, and darkly funny… so deeply satisfying in the settling of the story’s several scores that a reader might well disturb the midnight silence with laughter.”
—
Los Angeles Times Book Review
FAT MAN BLUES
A Tubby Dubonnet Mystery
BY
TONY DUNBAR
booksBnimble Publishing
New Orleans, La.
Fat Man Blues
Copyright 2016 by Tony Dunbar
All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
eBook ISBN: 978-0-9973630-0-5
First booksBnimble electronic publication: August 2016
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Confirmed grump Eddie Valentino placed the ad. Hotshot twenty-something Talba Wallis knew exactly how to answer it. And thus was born the dynamic duo of New Orleans private detectives, one cynical, sixty-five-year-old Luddite white dude with street smarts, and one young, bright-eyed, Twenty-First century African-American female poet, performance artist, mistress of disguise, and computer jock extraordinaire. Think Queen Latifah and Danny DeVito in a hilariously rocky relationship— yet with enough detective chops between them to find Atlantis. |
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cette chanson est dédiée à celui que j’aime
Did you know that in 1919 New Orleans had an axe murderer? They say it’s true. He was never caught. It’s funny what you pick up when you’re Googling around on your phone and waiting for your trial to start, which was what “Fat Man” Spooner was doing.
They think the axe man, but it could have been a woman, killed seven or more people— across the river, Uptown, downtown, all around the town. That’s the end of the story because they never caught the killer. Some say he only murdered and threatened people who didn’t like jazz music, so maybe he favored that style. Personally, the Fat Man didn’t care for jazz.
Judge White called the case and handed him a year and a day at hard labor for armed robbery. Spooner had no priors.
The guards lifted his phone, never to be seen again, but the Fat Man was facing easy time. All of it would be spent at the B.B. “Sixty” Rayburn Correctional Center in Angie, and nine months later he’d be back on the streets of New Orleans.
That was what life was like for a fat man who had made a mistake. Just trying to get by, robbing people.
The time passed.
The two hoods had just gotten out of prison. Wearing baseball ball caps and shades, they cut through the little padlock on the Constance Street side of the Church of St. Howard and gained access to a long narrow alleyway between the church and the sidewalk. It was Saturday afternoon, almost time for Mass, but they didn’t know that. They were thinking about breaking into the church, or finding something lying around in the yard they could make off with, just in the hunt for targets of opportunity.
In the last rays of daylight flickering through the timeless live oak trees came a lady walking home from borrowing books at the children’s library on Napoleon Avenue. When she was abreast, the two hoods snatched her off the sidewalk and dragged into the alleyway. She might have seen them in time to protect herself had she not been absorbed in messages from her girlfriends on her iPhone. Forcing a sock into her mouth, the robbers— they weren’t after sex— stripped away her phone and the wallet in her purse. They left her the library books and pushed her to the concrete where she skinned her elbows and knees.
Her cries were muffled by the sock and by the bells of the church, which began at that moment loudly sounding the evening mass.
“You just shut up, and nothing will happen,” the smaller one shouted, over the cacophony of the bells. Holding their meager loot, he took off fast, followed by his borderline-obese partner who waddled after him toward the street.
High above, there was the loud crack of an old oaken timber. One of the great iron bells broke free from its ancient binding and sailed through the sky. Guided by an unseen hand toward a deserving target, it made a direct hit on the smaller robber in front and flattened him. The bell showed no signs of damage, but the legs sticking out from under it didn’t even have enough life left in them to twitch.
The robbery victim staggered to her feet, spat out the sock and cheered. The surviving crook backed away from the scene and began running awkwardly into the neighborhood.
From the rear of the church a priest rushed out to see what had happened. He stooped to console the woman. Suddenly he noticed the legs nearby protruding from within the cast iron chime, and he fainted. Passersby, also attracted by the thunderous crash, assembled and peered anxiously down the alleyway. Blood pooled around the pitted iron lip of the noble gong.
In a very short time the crushed robber’s family found a lawyer (but not Tubby Dubonnet) who was happy to bring a wrongful death suit against the diocese for this unfortunate accident.
* * *
Instead, Tubby Dubonnet was stuck with defending a crack-smoking, but sweetheart, mother of three named Carrie Mae Sunshine. She was charged with a crime against nature, accused of offering oral sex to a man in a car, who was unfortunately an undercover cop. Tubby thought she was a nice enough lady, but obviously not exceptionally astute when it came to knowing where her best interests lay. A friend of his, Janie Caragliano, owner of the Monkey Business Bar and a sometimes client of Tubby’s, had asked him to take the case. Janie and Ms. Sunshine were distantly related in some way.
Unfortunately, this was not his client’s first offense for a crime of this sort, and she was facing “boxcars,” as in twenty years at “hard labor,” in St. Gabriel’s Women’s Correctional Institute halfway upriver toward Baton Rouge. Had she been charged with simple prostitution, which was for regular heterosexual sex, the downside would have been more like thirty days’ probation. This was but one of the quirks of Title 14, Louisiana’s Criminal Law.
The arresting policeman was Y.A. Tuttle, and he was on the witness stand. The courtroom was mostly empty, since all of the defendants in other cases had pleaded guilty and had already been disposed of by being sent back to jail. A young Assistant District Attorney was slowly walking the officer through his testimony. Tubby was impatient, having had no lunch. Instead, before the trial he had been worriedly waiting in the hall for his bailed-out client to show up, and the microwave snacks at the convenience store across Tulane Avenue held no allure.
“Then what happened?” the Assistant District Attorney asked Officer Tuttle.
“I rolled down the window, and she said, ‘Hey!’” the officer replied earnestly.
“Was it the defendant who said, ‘Hey’?”
“Objection, leading,” Tubby chimed in.
The judge, Jasper-Johnson, roused up to say, “Sustained.”
Contented, Tubby sat back down. His client gazed at him with worried doleful eyes. Her black eyelashes were a little akilter.
“OK, Your Honor,” the ADA conceded with poor grace. “Rephrasing. Who was outside the window?”
“The defendant, right there.” Officer Tuttle pointed at Tubby’s client, who bowed her head in shame. The policeman in his rumpled blue uniform was thick of body and slow of speech. After twenty-six years on the force, he was extremely wary of courtrooms.
“At that time, what was said?”
Tubby thought about objecting again, but didn’t.
“She said she would do ‘the act’ for $40.”
“Did you reply?”
“Yeah, I invited her to get into the car. And when she did I placed her under arrest.”
“Did you give her the warnings?”
“Yes, ma’am. That’s what we do.”
“Did she thereafter speak?”
“Not really. She just cried and went on about how she had three kids. I brought her to the station.”
The ADA was satisfied. “Okay,” she said. “I’m finished with Officer Tuttle.”
Tubby pulled himself up. He cut an imposing figure, big and solid in a three-piece suit. Blond-haired and blue-eyed, he was well known around these environs. But he was mystified when trying to remember what had provoked him to take this case to trial. His client was not exactly a young innocent. Maybe it was because the best he had been offered for a guilty plea was seven years on probation. There was no way Sunshine would stay out of trouble for seven years. Maybe he was just hoping for a miracle, such as the cop not showing up. But, unfortunately, here he was.