Whispers

Tony ran one hand along the rosewood arm of the couch and said, “Mr. Tucker, this is marvelous.”

Tucker raised his eyebrows. “You know what it is?”

“I don’t know the precise period,” Tony said. “But I’m familiar enough with Chinese art to know this is definitely not a reproduction that you picked up on sale at Sears.”

Tucker laughed, pleased that Tony knew the value of the furniture. “I know what you’re thinking,” he said good-naturedly. “You’re wondering how an ex-con, just two years out of the stir, can afford all this. A twelve-hundred-dollar-a-month townhouse. Chinese antiques. You’re wondering if maybe I’ve gotten back into the heroin trade or some allied field of endeavor.”

“In fact,” Tony said, “that’s not what I’m asking myself at all. I am wondering how the devil you’ve done it. But I know it’s not from selling junk.”

Tucker smiled. “How can you be so sure?”

“If you were a drug dealer with a passion for Chinese antiques,” Tony said, “you’d simply furnish the entire house at a single crack, instead of a piece or two at a time. You are clearly into something that earns a lot of bread, but not nearly as much as you’d make distributing dope like you used to do.”

Tucker laughed again and applauded approvingly. He turned to Frank and said, “Your partner is perceptive.”

Frank smiled. “A regular Sherlock Holmes.”

To Tucker, Tony said, “Satisfy my curiosity. What do you do?”

Tucker leaned forward, suddenly frowning, raising one granite fist and shaking it, looking huge and mean and very dangerous. When he spoke he snarled: “I design dresses.”

Tony blinked.

Collapsing back in his chair, Tucker laughed again. He was one of the happiest people Tony had ever seen. “I design women’s clothes,” he said. “I really do. My name’s already beginning to be known in the California design community, and some day it’ll be a household word. I promise you.”

Intrigued, Frank said, “According to our information, you did four years of an eight-year sentence for wholesaling heroin and cocaine. How’d you go from that to making women’s clothes?”

“I used to be one mean son of a bitch,” Tucker said. “And those first few months in prison, I was even meaner than usual. I blamed society for everything that happened to me. I blamed the white power structure. I blamed the whole world, but I just wouldn’t put any blame on myself. I thought I was a tough dude, but I hadn’t really grown up yet. You aren’t a man until you accept responsibility for your life. A lot of people never do.”

“So what turned you around?” Frank asked.

“A little thing,” Tucker said. “Man, sometimes it amazes me how such a little thing can change a person’s life. With me, it was a TV show. On the six o’clock news, one of the L.A. stations did a five-part series about black success stories in the city.”

“I saw it,” Tony said. “More than five years ago, but I still remember it.”

“It was fascinating stuff,” Tucker said. “It was an image of the black man you never get to see. But at first, before the series began, everybody in the slammer figured it would be one big laugh. We figured the reporter would spend all his time asking the same idiot question: ‘Why can’t all these poor black folks work hard and become rich Las Vegas headliners like Sammy Davis, Jr.?’ But they didn’t talk to any entertainers or sports stars.”

Tony remembered that it had been a striking piece of journalism, especially for television, where news–and especially the human interest stories on the news–had as much depth as a teacup. The reporters had interviewed black businessmen and businesswomen who had made it to the top, people who had started out with nothing and eventually had become millionaires. Some in real estate. One in the restaurant business. One with a chain of beauty shops. About a dozen people. They all agreed that it was harder to get rich if you were black, but they also agreed that it was not as hard as they thought when they started out, and that it was easier in Los Angeles than in Alabama or Mississippi or even Boston or New York. There were more black millionaires in L.A. than in the rest of California and the other forty-nine states combined. In Los Angeles, almost everyone was living in the fast lane; the typical southern Californian did not merely accommodate himself to change but actively sought it and reveled in it. This atmosphere of flux and constant experimentation drew a lot of marginally sane and even insane people into the area, but it also attracted some of the brightest and most innovative minds in the country, which was why so many new cultural and scientific and industrial developments originated in the region. Very few Southern Californians had the time or patience for outmoded attitudes, one of which was racial prejudice. Of course, there was bigotry in L.A. But whereas a landed white family in Georgia might require six or eight generations to overcome its prejudice toward blacks, that same metamorphosis of attitudes often transpired in one generation of a Southern California family. As one of the black businessmen on the TV news report had said, “The Chicanos have been the niggers of L.A. for quite some time now.” But already that was changing, too. The Hispanic culture was regarded with ever-increasing respect, and the browns were creating their own success stories. Several people interviewed on that news special had offered the same explanation for the unusual fluidity of Southern California’s social structures and for the eagerness with which people there accepted change; it was, they said, partly because of geology. When you were living on some of the worst fault lines in the world, when the earth could quake and move and change under your feet without warning, did that awareness of impermanence have a subconscious influence on a person’s attitudes toward less cataclysmic kinds of change? Some of those black millionaires thought it did, and Tony tended to agree with them.

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