The Devil May Dance Jake Tapper (the best electronic book reader txt) đ
- Author: Jake Tapper
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âFrank âOne Eyeâ DeSimone,â said Street.
âRight, so One Eye is trying to frame Momo for killing a Sinatra rival?â Charlie asked. âBut why?â
Street shrugged. âMaybe One Eye is losing control of his territoryâmaybe he wants to show some muscle.â He turned to Margaret. âI told Charlie earlier over drinks, before you joined us, I tried visiting Winston at the Tombs, but they wouldnât let me see him.â
âWhy not?â
âThey claimed he was in the infirmary and too ill to have visitors. I phoned Governor Rockefeller, but he wouldnât take my call.â
Charlieâs heart sank as he again imagined his once indomitable father alone and hopeless. âWe need to get something to the AG aboutââ He gestured toward Sinatra, who was in the midst of the intro to âLuck Be a Lady.â
âThey wonât even let Charlie talk to him on the phone,â Margaret said.
âThey really seem to relish being bastards, the Kennedys,â Charlie said. âThe good news is, the prison doctors told me they donât think it was a heart attack after all.â
âIf it wasnât a heart attack, then what was it?â Street asked.
âI donât know; they donât know,â Charlie said. âNothing life-threatening, they donât think. They also ruled out a stroke. But he isnât talking.â They all sat sadly at the table.
âWhy is he at the Tombs anywayâisnât that a city jail?â Street asked.
âFeds have a wing,â Charlie said. âAnd the AG gets a lot of leeway.â
âIâm amazed itâs stayed under wraps,â Street said.
âNot really in anyoneâs interest to have it out there,â Margaret said. âKennedy doesnât want to be seen as punishing political enemies, and Winston doesnât want the public humiliation.â
âMight be the only thing theyâve ever agreed on,â Charlie said.
âLuck, let a gentleman seeâŠâ Every time Sinatra began a new verse, he was interrupted by a slurred quip from Martin.
âDoes Dean pretend to be drunk or is he actually drunk?â Street asked.
âBoth,â said Charlie. As if on cue, Sinatra turned to the audience, cocked his head toward Martin, and mimed knocking back a drink. More laughter from the adoring crowd.
âI just had a bowl of bourbon and some crackers,â Martin protested.
A young cocktail waitress breezed past them, drawing wolf whistles from a tableful of old men to Margaretâs right. She frowned, thinking of Violet. Her sister had been ecstatic to hear that her daughter was alive, less so when she heard the details of Itchy Meyer and Violetâs stupefied state. Margaret had promised she would find her and save her.
âItâs too bad the presence of Momo and Handsome Johnny here tonight isnât enough for the AG,â Street said.
âI wish we were anywhere close to finding out what the favor was,â said Charlie. âMomoâs ask.â
âAnd how are you planning to go about that?â Street asked.
âWeâre working on it,â Margaret said, snapping back to attention. âCharlie stopped John Wayne from rearranging Frankâs face, so he likes us now. Weâre hoping weâll get an invite to Sinatraâs place in Rancho Mirage, hang out at the pool, let the liquor flow.â
âLoose lips sink ships,â said Charlie.
âYou know, I might have an in with these guys too,â Street said.
Davis was starting to walk off the stage; Sinatra and Martin were singing âBoysâ Night Out,â arms around each otherâs shoulders, swaying jokily.
âHey there, mister, build a fence âround your sister, itâs the boysâ night out,â the two sang.
âBetter keep smiling, Sammy, so everybody knows where you are,â Sinatra said. Riotous laughter.
Suddenly, Street seemed irritated; Margaret asked him why. They were speaking in hushed voices, but a woman at an adjacent table turned around and shot them a peevish look. âSsshh!â she said.
âThat whole Stepin Fetchit routine they have Sammy doing, itâs bullshit,â said Street, lowering his voice even more. âI hate that they make him do that Buckwheat schtick. Especially after everything Sammyâs been through.â
âBeen through?â asked Margaret.
âThat flat nose he has,â Street said. âThatâs from all the beatings he took during basic at Fort Warren.â
Charlie shook his head in disgust. He couldnât imagine what it must have been like for Black soldiers before Truman integrated the military. Or after, for that matter.
âOne time, a bunch of privates covered him with white paint, wrote nigger on his chest, coon on his forehead,â Street said. âHe could have gotten them court-martialed, but he wouldnât give up their names.â
âJesus,â said Charlie.
âHow do you know all this?â Margaret asked.
âI met him at a bar back in Chicago, I think around â51,â Street recalled. âThis was before I met Renee, so donât ask me why I was out drinking, Margaret!â
Margaret batted Streetâs arm lightly as the woman at the adjacent table glared at them again. Street returned her look with stony indifference, and she turned away, flustered.
âHe was touring with his dad and uncle, the Will Mastin Trio,â Street said. âThey were performing at Chez Paree, and I recognized him from articles in the Chicago Defenderâthatâs the Black paper. You should get a subscription, Margaret. Langston Hughes writes a column for them.â
âI will,â she said, blushing. Street was always trying to appeal to Margaret as a fellow progressive, which embarrassed her establishment Republican husband, as did Streetâs oft-stated belief that she had at least twenty-five IQ points on her lesser half.
âOkay, okay,â said Charlie. âBack to when you met Sammy Davis?â
âIt wasnât anything cinematic,â Street said. âAfter the show, he was sitting at the bar by himself; I donât think anyone else recognized him. I bought him a drink, and we traded war stories. I fought Jerry in Europe, he fought yokels in Wyoming. Special Services, entertaining the troops. The way he said it, he was trying to warm the hearts of racist NCOs, trying to make them, at the very least, appreciate his talent. Seems like thatâs become a mission for him.â Street shook his head. âAn odd cat. But a good man.â
Street took another sip of scotch. Charlie caught the eye of a Copa Girl and did a whirl with his fingerâanother round of drinks. Onstage,
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