heâd lived and worked there. Danny was a big man, taller than just about anyone Joe had ever met. Heâd been a hell of a boxer, a hell of a cop, and he knew little of fear. An organizer and vice president of the policemenâs union, heâd met the fate of every cop whoâd chosen to go out on strike in September 1919âheâd lost his job without hope of reinstatement and been blackballed from all law enforcement positions on the Eastern Seaboard. It broke him. Or so the story went. Heâd ended up in a Negro section of Tulsa, Oklahoma, that had burned to the ground in a riot five years ago. Since then, Joeâs family had heard only rumors about his whereabouts and those of his wife, NoraâAustin, Baltimore, Philadelphia.
Growing up, Joe had adored his brother. Then heâd come to hate him. Now, he mostly didnât think about him. When he did, he had to admit, he missed his laugh.
Down the other end of the car, Emma Gould said âExcuse me, excuse meâ as she worked her way toward the doors. Joe looked out the window and saw that they were approaching City Square in Charlestown.
Charlestown. No wonder she hadnât gotten rattled with a gun pointed at her. In Charlestown, they brought .38s to the dinner table, used the barrels to stir their coffee.
H e followed her to a two-story house at the end of Union Street. Just before she reached the house, she took a right down a pathway that ran along the side, and by the time Joe got to the alley behind the house, she was gone. He looked up and down the alleyânothing but similar two-story houses, most of them saltbox shacks with rotting window frames and tar patches in the roof. She couldâve gone into any of them, but sheâd chosen the last walkway on the block. He assumed hers was the blue-gray one he was facing with steel doors over a wooden bulkhead.
Just past the house was a wooden gate. It was locked, so he grabbed the top of it, hoisted himself up, and took a look at another alley, narrower than the one he was in. Aside from a few trash cans, it was empty. He let himself back down and searched his pocket for one of the hairpins he rarely left home without.
Half a minute later he stood on the other side of the gate and waited.
It didnât take long. This time of dayâquitting timeâit never did. Two pairs of footsteps came up the alley, two men talking about the latest plane that had gone down trying to cross the Atlantic, no sign of the pilot, an Englishman, or the wreckage. One second it was in the air, the next it was gone for good. One of the men knocked on the bulkhead, and after a few seconds, Joe heard him say, âBlacksmith.â
One of the bulkhead doors was pulled back with a whine and then a few moments later, it was dropped back in place and locked.
Joe waited five minutes, clocking it, and then he exited the second alley and knocked on the bulkhead.
A muffled voice said, âWhat?â
âBlacksmith.â
There was a ratcheting sound as someone threw the bolt back and Joe lifted the bulkhead door. He climbed into the small stairwell and let himself down it, lowering the bulkhead door as he went. At the bottom of the stairwell, he faced a second door. It opened as he was reaching for it. An old baldy guy with a cauliflower nose and blown blood vessels splayed across his cheekbones waved him inside, a grim scowl on his face.
It was an unfinished basement with a wood bar in the center of the dirt floor. The tables were wooden barrels, the chairs made of the cheapest pine.
At the bar, Joe sat down at the end closest to the door, where a woman with fat that hung off her arms like pregnant bellies served him a bucket of warm beer that tasted a little of soap and a little of sawdust, but not a lot like beer or a lot like alcohol. He looked for Emma Gould in the basement gloom, saw only dockworkers, a couple of sailors, and a few working girls. A piano sat against the brick