John D McDonald – Travis McGee 07 Darker Than Amber

When I returned to that corner it was five after nine. She opened the car door quickly and got in.

“Just drive around?” I asked.

“No. Go straight ahead and I’ll tell you where to turn. It’s a place we can talk.” It was a narrow driveway, a small back yard surrounded by a high thick hedge of punk trees. There was a small screened porch, lights on, comfortably furnished. I followed her to the porch. She had changed to a dark green jumper dress, worn with a white long-sleeved shirt, with a big loose white bow at the throat.

As I followed her onto the porch and we sat in two comfortable chairs on either side of a small lamp table, she said, “Friends of mine.” She took a cigarette from her purse, lighted it. “Very conspiratorial, I know. But we’re getting very used to that these days, huh, McGee. Mr. Sam said I could trust you. I’m one of the regional directors of CORE. I’m a University of Michigan graduate. I taught school before I got married. He died of cancer two years ago and I came back here. Working as a maid gives me more freedom of action, less chance of being under continual observation. Eventually I’m what you might call a militant optimist. I believe that the people of good will of both races are going to get it all worked out. Now you can stop wondering about me and my little act and tell me what you want to know. You gave an accurate picture of Tami Western. If she didn’t travel so often, I would have dropped her from my list. That woman could turn that apartment into a crawling slum in about twenty minutes flat. About all I can say for her is that she was generous. Extra money, clothes she was tired of, presents men gave her she had no use for. But in a strange way, she made me feel… crawly. No one could live in Arlentown without being pretty much aware of the facts of life. But whenever we were there alone when I was doing the housework, the times when she wasn’t sleeping or fixing her face or taking one of her half-hour showers, she was always trying to convince me how much better off I’d be selling myself to white men. She said she could give me all the pointers I’d need, and introduce me to the right people, and I could clear three or four hundred a week with no trouble at all. I just had to keep telling her no God-fearing Baptist church lady could do like that without going to hell for sure. It really shocked me to hear you say she’s dead.”

“Murdered. How long did you work for her?”

“I think… fifteen months. Yes.”

“And she went on trips how often?”

“On cruises. Cruise ships to the Caribbean. Anywhere from five days to fifteen days. She’d tell me when she was leaving and when she’d be back, so I could clean it after she left and show up again the day after she was due back. She’d leave from Port Everglades. And she’d bring back some little present for me, usually. Those ships, you know, go winter and summer, all year. I’d say she went off, oh, a dozen times while I worked for her.”

“Was there any predictable pattern?”

“Sort of, I guess. When she’d get back she’d stay at the apartment there, not going out at all. Sleep until noon, play those records, watch the TV, and do those exercises of hers. One thing about that woman, Mr. McGee, she kept herself fit. She’d lie down on the floor and hook her feet under the edge of the couch and lace her fingers behind her neck and do situps, dozens of them, just as slowly as she could. Sometimes she’d try on everything she owned and leave it all stacked around for me to put away again. And there were two girlfriends she had. Sometimes when she was staying home neither of them would come around. Other times it would be one or the other, and a few times they’d both come by. They’d fool with each other’s hair, fixing it in different ways. And they’d play gin rummy, gambling. You never heard such language.”

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