Chapter 16

Ulysses Davis ran a bail bonds business down off Poplar not far from the courthouse and the Shelby County Jail. The neighborhood had nothing but bondsmen for several blocks, their neon signs advertising in the windows with telephone numbers and assurances: ANYTIME, ANY PRICE. But you couldn’t miss ole U’s place. At first, it looked like a damned art gallery. A lot of blue neon and pictures of martial arts film stars lining the walls. I once kidded U about it, said it looked like these were the folks he’d bailed out of jail. But U didn’t think that was funny. Since the time we played on the same Saints’ defense, U rarely thought I was funny.

He was sitting at this big presidential wooden desk when I walked in with Abby. From his stereo, Marcus Roberts played jazz piano while patchouli incense burned from a nearby shelf. He’d tied his braided hair into a ponytail, sweat burned off his dark brown skin. A black leather jacket lay on the edge of his desk where he was filling out some papers.

Almost didn’t see the young black kid sitting across from U. Kid had a shaved head and multiple nose- and earrings. Couldn’t help notice there was a jagged slot in his left ear where he was bleeding pretty badly. Kid had duct tape across his mouth and was handcuffed to a ladderback chair.

“Hey, motherfucker,” I said.

U kept his eyes down on the paperwork and broke into a broad grin. “And how is your momma, Dr. Travers?”

Abby gave me a skeptical stare.

The kid handcuffed to the chair started making groaning noises.

U finished dotting some “i” or crossing some “t” and threw down his pen. He stood up to his six-foot-four, 240-pound frame and grasped my hand. Felt like he’d been working out. ‘Course that was all U seemed to do. Lift weights, practice tae kwon do, and eat his health food. Tofu and wheat grass. God. I had spent three years trying to get him to eat some ribs and drink some beer without luck.

“What the fuck do you want?” U asked.

“Tell you that I’ve always loved you. Make up for lost time.”

“Well, wait for me in the lobby, punk. Be through in a second. Antoine here decided to fuck me one time too many. Time to get my money back.”

Abby took a seat in front of a huge plate glass window with a view looking onto the gray coldness of the jail. She was wearing a pair of jogging pants I bought for her in the hotel lobby and another one of my T-shirts.

Outside, cops and worn-out families milled about. A couple of women dressed in pleather pants and halters walked by the glass window with a cold, indifferent affection.

“How do you know this guy?”

“Played football together. He was my roommate on road trips.”

“What can he do?” Abby asked.

“He knows about every cop and federal agent in town.”

Abby was quiet for a moment and picked up an old copy of Black Belt magazine. Chuck Norris was on the cover. Dressed as a cowboy. Kicking some poor bastard in the nuts.

Twenty minutes later, U walked back from the jail where he had deposited the kid. He was rubbing his hands together as if he’d finished cleaning the kitchen.

“Come on back,” he said, taking off his jacket.

Abby found a seat by the desk. I stood. The patchouli continued to burn although Roberts had finished. Now, the stereo played selections from Carmen.

“Last night, I drove out to a casino in Tunica.”

“Figured you would after I ran that plate. Now you wanna tell me why?”

“Looking for a man named Clyde James. Some security guards from the casino had been looking for him, too.”

“Why do you care?”

“He was a big-time soul singer in the ‘sixties.”

“New project?”

“He’s Loretta’s brother.”

“Mmm-hmm,” U said, rubbing his goatee. “And she’s worried.”

“While I was there, I met Miss Abby here. A woman had kidnapped her and taken her to the casino.”

“Which one?”

“Magnolia Grand.”

“I see. I see.”

“While I was getting her out, I killed a man.”

“Ain’t your line of work, is it, Travers?”

“I want to set it right. Where do we go? I don’t want to go back to that place half-assed.”

U nodded. He folded his massive arms – veined and corded – across his chest. “Tunica is a hell of a place.”

“You know what we’ve stepped into?”

“Looks like, brother, you’ve just landed in a steaming pile of the Dixie Mafia.”

I blew out my breath.

“Oh, yeah,” U said. “Buckle your ass up.”

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