Bare Bones
scores the air-conditioned bedroom.” Spoken through one side of his mouth. “With six kids, I suppose he’d be lucky just to score a bedroom.”

    I ignored him.

    Heat magnified the smel s inside the tiny house. Onions. Cooking oil. Wood polish. Whatever was used to scrub the linoleum.

    Who scrubbed it? I wondered. Tamela?Geneva ? Banks himself?

    I studied the black Jesus. Same robe, same thorny crown, same open palms. Only the Afro and skin tones differed from the one that had hung over my mother’s bed.

    Slidel sighed audibly, hooked his col ar with a finger, and pul ed it from his neck.

    I looked at the linoleum. A pebble pattern, gray and white.

    Like the bones and ash from the woodstove.

    What wil I say?

    At that moment a door opened. A gospel group singing “Going On in the Name of the Lord.” The swish of padded soles on linoleum.

    Gideon Banks looked smal er than I remembered, al bone and sinew. That was wrong, somehow. Backward. He should have seemed larger in his own space. King of the realm. Paterfamilias. Was my recal incorrect? Had age shriveled him? Or worry?

    Banks hesitated in the archway, and his lids crimped behind their heavy lenses. Then he straightened, crossed to the recliner, and lowered himself, gnarled hands gripping the armrests.

    Slidel leaned forward. I cut him off.

    “Thank you for seeing us, Mr. Banks.”

    Banks nodded. He was wearing Hush Puppies slippers, gray work pants, and an orange bowling shirt. His arms looked like twigs sprouting from the sleeves.

    “Your home is lovely.”

    “Thank you.”

    “Have you lived here long?”

    “Forty-seven years come November.”

    “I couldn’t help noticing your pictures.” I indicated the photo col ection. “You have a beautiful family.”

    “It’s jus’Geneva and me here now.Geneva my second oldest. She hep me out. Tamela my youngest. She lef ’ a couple months ago.” In the corner of my eye I noticedGeneva move into the archway.

    “I think you know why we’re here, Mr. Banks.” I was flailing about for a way to begin.

    “Yes’m, I do. You lookin’ for Tamela.”

    Slidel did some “get on with it” throat clearing.

    “I’m very sorry to have to tel you, Mr. Banks, but material recovered from Tamela’s living room stove—”

    “Weren’t Tamela’s place,” Banks broke in.

    “The property was rented to one Darryl Tyree,”Slidel said. “According to witnesses, your daughter’d been living with Mr. Tyree for approximately four months.”

    Banks’s eyes never left my face. Eyes fil ed with pain.

    “Weren’t Tamela’s place,” Banks repeated. His tone wasn’t angry or argumentative, more that of a man wanting the record correct.

    My shirt felt sticky against my back, the cheap upholstery scratchy under my forearms. I took a deep breath, started again.

    “Material recovered from the stove in that house included fragments of bone from a newborn baby.” My words seemed to catch him off guard. I heard a sharp intake of breath, and noticed his chin cock up a fraction.

    “Tamela only seventeen. She a good girl.”

    “Yes, sir.”

    “She weren’t with child.”

    “Yes, sir, she was.”

    “Who say that?”

    “We have that information from more than one source.”Slidel .

    Banks considered a moment. Then, “Why you go looking in someone’s stove?”

    “An informant stated that an infant had been burned at that address. We investigate such reports.” Slidel didn’t point out that the tip came fromHarrison “Sonny” Pounder, a street-corner dopeman bargaining for favor after his recent bust.

    “Who say that?”

    “That’s not important.” Irritation sharpenedSlidel ’s tone. “We need to know Tamela’s whereabouts.” Banks pushed to his feet and shuffled to the nearest bookshelf. Easing back into the recliner, he handed me a photo.

    I looked at the girl in the picture, acutely conscious of Banks’s eyes on my face. And of his second oldest looming in the

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