LaBrava

LaBrava Read Free Page A

Book: LaBrava Read Free
Author: Elmore Leonard
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective, Hard-Boiled
Ads: Link
he continued snapping away: shooting up and down Southwest Eighth Street, the heart of Little Havana; or riding with a couple of Metro cops to document basic Dade County violence. He felt himself attracted to street life. It was a strange feeling, he was at home, knew the people; saw more outcast faces and attitudes than he would ever be able to record, people who showed him their essence behind all kinds of poses—did Maurice understand this?—and trapped them in his camera for all time.
    He got hot again through court appearances and was given a cooling-off assignment—are you ready for this?—in Independence, Missouri.
    After counterfeiters?
    No, to guard Mrs. Truman.
    A member of the twelve-man protective detail. To sit in the surveillance house watching monitors or sit eight hours a day in the Truman house itself on North Delaware. Sit sometimes in the living room looking around at presidential memorabilia, a picture of Margaret and her two kids, the grandfather’s clock that had been wired and you didn’t have to wind—which would have been something to do—listening to faint voices in other rooms. Or sit in the side parlor with Harry’s piano, watching movies on TV, waiting for the one interruption of the day. The arrival of the mailman.
    “Don’t get me wrong, Mrs. Truman was a kind, considerate woman. I liked her a lot.”
    The duty chief had said, “Look, there guys would give an arm and a leg for this assignment. If you can’t take pride in it, just say so.”
     
    He glanced at Maurice sitting there prim, very serious this evening. Little Maurice Zola, born here before there were roads other than a few dirt tracks and the Florida East Coast Railway. Natty little guy staring at this illuminated interstate highway—giant lit-up green signs every few miles telling where you were—and not too impressed. He had seen swamps become cities, a bridge extended to a strip of mangrove in the Atlantic Ocean and Miami Beach was born. Changes were no longer events in his life. They had happened or they didn’t.
    One of the green signs, mounted high, told them Daytona Beach was 215 miles.
    “Who cares?” Maurice said. “I used to live in Daytona Beach. First time I got married, October 10, 1929—wonderful time to get married, Jesus—was in Miami. The second time was October 24, 1943, in Daytona Beach. October’s a bad month for me. I paid alimony, I mean plenty, but I outlived ’em both. Miserable women. In ’32, when I worked for the septic tank outfit and wrestled alligators on the weekends? It was because I had the experience being married to my first wife.”
    “What about the lady we’re going to see?”
    “What about her?”
    “You ever serious with her?”
    “You’re asking, you want to know did I go to bed with her? She wasn’t that kind of girl. She wasn’t a broad you did that with.”
    “I meant did you ever think of marrying her?”
    “She was too young for me. I don’t mean she was too young you wanted to hop in the sack with a broad her age, I mean to get married and live with. I had all kinds of broads at that time. In fact, go back a few years before that, just before Kefauver, when I had the photo concessions and the horse book operation. I’ll tell you a secret. You want to know who one of the broads I was getting into her pants was at the time. Evelyn, at the gallery. She was in love with me.”
    “I don’t think you’ve introduced me to any who weren’t.”
    “What can I say?” Maurice said.
    “How old’s the woman we’re going to see?”
    “Jeanie? She’s not too old. Lemme think, it was ’58 I gave her a piece of the hotel. Or it might’ve been ’59, they were making that movie on the beach. Frank Sinatra, Edward G. Robinson . . . Jeanie was gonna be in the picture, was why she came down. But she didn’t get the part.”
    “Wait a minute—” LaBrava said.
    “They wanted her, but then they decided she looked too young. She was in her twenties then and

Similar Books

Heretic

Bernard Cornwell

Dark Inside

Jeyn Roberts

Men in Green Faces

Gene Wentz, B. Abell Jurus