The note was
written in a scrawl
Chapter
20) The Upstate Boys meet with Churchail
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Just
as the Klan leaders were awakening to problems in Blacktown, Churchail
was meeting with two of the Upstate Boys at his mansion in Abbeyville.
These
were the serious men of greed, the unerringly polite Alfred the Tailor
and Joey Rib, known for his absolute violence and charm. Joey was wide
and short with hard empty clear blue eyes with a pure white scar
leaning down at an angle over the right one. For a long time he was
just called Scar.
Story was he got his current name some years
before when an associate joked that Joey’s head was just the ball with
eyes. Apparently meaning the head was vacuous without grey matter.
Joey
laughed along with several other men at the meeting then pulled a knife
and ripped out the man’s rib cage. One supposes that was memorable
enough to earn a new name and membership in the gang, but no matter the
exact nature of prior transactions, it was clearly understood that the
Upstate Boys drew no quarter from weakness, and of that, Churchail was
aware.
The commissioner's appointments were canceled for the day, and the secretary gone.
The housestaff was hiding in the barn and Mrs Churchail was not at home that day.
The
Upstaters arrived in armored cars. Two bodyguards came inside and four
more waited outside, with another car along the driveway about eighth
mile back. They were deeply allied with and infested by Klan, each
needing the other for various reason of political power, which reduced
the chance that Churchail's proposal could solve everything at once.
Hiding
in an adjoining room were Thomas Churchail III and two other loyal men
with guns. The situation was a powder keg with lead in the barrel
and if trouble came sour, they would all have to shoot it out ...
doubtful however that men would arrive in that fashion intent on a
gunfight, but you never knew for sure.
No pleasantries were exchanged. Churchail and the two Upstate Boys sat down.
Both
sides knew why the meeting was hastily called: Statewide Bank was
demanding that local strongmen get their hand out of the bank's pocket
and Churchail agreed. That decision was cutting into his payments to
the Upstate Boys.
Churchail's loyalty was in balance, and this might be his single chance to smooth things over.
Churchail got down to business and said, we got a problem with the Bank. But we can work out a deal.
We all know it takes money to make opportunity.
There
are big opportunities here. The Interstate highway is coming through.
That means concrete, gravel, trucks. New homes and development. More
roads. Sewage. Inspectors.
You see, those guys at the Bank don't know the real value.
We can step back off them like they want, and still keep things running like usual.
It will cost more to start, like an investment.
Then we can move forward into the new opportunity.
And you know, I can keep those bank fellows happy.
The
Upstate Boys were grim-faced. They heard Churchail was going to win the
election, and they certainly didn't want Lever Lanky in there, but if
Churchail was selling them short, then somebody going to be real
unhappy.
How much is it costing us?
Churchail pulled out the numbers.
See what I mean? The Bank doesn't know the value. We can pull twice that on gravel alone once the Interstate gets going.
But we got another problem right now that you fellows might know about.
There's a Negro named Spade disturbing the peace down there in Blacktown, which is next to Trinity.
The
new Interstate is going to come in just outside of Trinity. Hell they
got the federal guys out there every day because it's the best place to
put the bridge because we ginnyed the samples so it would come our way.
But
if the Klan gets involved in that Blacktown problem, the federal boys
might change their mind. They might postpone the whole deal. See what
I'm saying? It could get real messy with all that Washington stuff,
especially if those Northern newspapers get a hold of it.
Now I
don't want the Klan getting started on some big project here. You
understand, we need to handle one man. That's all. Just one man, real
quiet. No big Klan rally. Real quiet, nobody says a word.
Churchail
was bent on revenge against Spade for killing his darling love Molly
Princess, and for that he wanted to know for sure they got the right
man, not just a scattershot of killing and a few lynched field hands
while everybody else escaped.
The real problem was the Upstate
Boys were pushing Negro communities to get more money, but it got out
of hand in Blacktown. And then the fight started in Crooks Tail. Plus
their man Ammerson was beat pretty bad by Negroes near Trinity.
The
Upstate Boys needed to get things under control quick because a bunch
of noise was going to attract attention they didn't need right now.
Plus Churchail's numbers added up pretty healthy. Yes, it was true,
opportunity was coming and the bank didn’t know the full value, and any
Klan action near the Interstate could cut into profits.
Backing off was the best plan.
They
understood the Commissioner’s proposal was more important than tiny
dollars from Negroes, so it didn't take long to reach agreement. They
would pull back the Klan and ease off Churchail for now, and put
Ammerson onto Spade to keep things favorable.
It was done. The Upstate Boys left.
Churchail
III watched out the window to make sure they were gone. A man signaled
from the farthest field. Houseworkers came in from hiding outside. Guns
were stowed away and Churchail's home was restored.
Churchail
dodged getting killed or going to jail by the slimmest margin. He
dearly missed his Molly Princess, but discovered he still loved his
wife. Yep, it was a fine day and all was back to normal and the doors
were wide open for Statewide Bank to destroy Trinity.
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