Page 20 of Purple Cane Road (Dave Robicheaux 11)
âNo, Iâm meeting this retired jigger an hour from now. You coming or not?â
âA bank jigger?â
âMore serious. He was the lookout man for a couple of hit teams working out of Miami and New Orleans.â
âNot interested.â
âWhere do you think weâre supposed to get information from, the library?â
When I didnât reply, he said, âDave, if you want me out of town, just say so.â
âLetâs talk about it tomorrow.â
âYou talk about it. Iâm meeting the jigger. You donât want to hear what I find out, no problem.â
After he closed the door behind him, his heat and anger remained like a visible presence in the roomâs silence.
That evening Alafair, Bootsie, and I were eating supper in the kitchen when we heard a heavy car on the gravel in the driveway. Alafair got up from the table and peered out the window. She was in high school now and seemed to have no memory anymore of the civil war in El Salvador that had brought her here as an illegal refugee, nor of the day I pulled her from the submerged wreckage of an airplane out on the salt. Her Indian-black hair was tied up on her head with a blue bandanna, and from the back, when she raised up on the balls of her feet to see better through the blinds, her body looked like that of a woman ten years her senior.
âItâs somebody in a limousine, with a chauffeur. Sheâs rolling down the window. Itâs an old woman, Dave,â she said.
I went out the back door and walked around the side of the house to the limousine. It was white, with charcoal-tinted windows, and the chauffeur wore a black suit and cap and tie and white shirt. Oddly, his face was turned away, as though he did not want me to see it.
Through the limousineâs open back window I saw Jim Gableâs wife, in a white dress and gloves, drinking sparkling burgundy from a crystal glass with a long stem. The late sunâs glow through the trees gave her skin a rosy tone it did not naturally possess, and her mouth was soft, full of wrinkles, when she smiled at me. What was her name? Corrine? Colinda?
âMicah, open the door so Mr. Robicheaux can get in,â she said to the chauffeur.
He stepped out of the driverâs seat and opened the back, his face still averted. When I was inside, on the rolled leather seat, he walked down toward the dock just as a flight of snow egrets flew across the water, their wings pink in the sunset.
âHow you do, Miss Cora?â I said.
âI couldnât stand staying another day alone while Jimâs in the city. So I got Micah to drive me on a little tour of your lovely area. Join me in a glass of burgundy, Mr. Robicheaux,â she said.
I realized, listening to her voice, that her Deep South accent came and went arbitrarily, even though her eyes, which were violet, never seemed to vary in their level of warmth and sincerity.
âNo, thanks. Would you like to come in and have a bite to eat?â I replied.
âIâm afraid Iâve intruded. I do that sometimes. Lack of an audience, that sort of thing.â She watched my face to see if I had inferred a second meaning. Obviously I had not.
âAudience?â I said, confused.
âItâs a vanity of mine. I assume everyone on the planet spends time thinking about old movies.â She opened a scrapbook and turned several pages that were thick and stiff with glued news articles and black-and-white photographs. She turned another page, and I looked down at a stunning color photograph of a woman with long blond hair in a black nightgown, reclining seductively on a divan with one arm behind her head. Her eyes were violet, her lipsticked mouth waiting to be kissed.
âYouâre Cora Perez. You were a movie star. I saw you in a film with Paul Muni,â I said.
âThat was at the end of Paulâs career. He was such a wonderful man to work with. He knew how nervous and unsure I was, and he used to bring a flower to me each morning at the set,â she said.
âItâs an honor to know you, Miss Cora,â I said, still unsure of the reason for her visit. My eyes drifted to the kitchen window, where Alafairâs and Bootsieâs silhouettes were visible at the table.
; âI mustnât keep you,â she said, and touched me lightly on the back of the hand. âSometimes I just need someone to reassure me Iâm not indeed of diminished capacity.â
âPardon?â
âIâm being declared as such by the court. Itâs not flattering, of course. But perhaps theyâre right. How does one accused of being mentally impaired prove she is not mentally impaired? Itâs like trying to prove a negative.â
âI donât think youâre impaired at all, Miss Cora. You strike me as a remarkable person.â