lap.
An old man murmured, âNigger better run. Better run good.â
âHush.â Mary gulped air. âHush.â She covered her mouth with her hands.
âMaryââ Allen reached for her.
âLet go. Let go my hands.â She scooted backward, her hands striking the air, her eyes wide and staring. âPlease. Please let me go.â
âMaryââ Allenâs arms snaked around her.
âLet go,â she screamed. âLet me go.â She clung to the bars, sobbing.
âLet her go,â said Clay.
Allen flinched. âSheâs upset, canât you see that? She thinks Iâmââ
âIâd feel the same way if a colored touched me,â said Louise. âWouldnât trust any man.â
Arms across her abdomen, her brow touching her knees, Mary whimpered, âMa. Please, Ma.â
Clay felt sorry for her. There were scratches on Maryâs legs and hands. Bruises on her wrists. Bring the nigger in. Case solved. Simple . Mud speckled her hem. Tangled hair curtained her face. Her shoe was missing its heel. Clay knew nothing was simple. He stooped low.
Allen was cooing, âMary, Mary.â She wrestled away her hands. âLet go my hands. Iâm not beautiful. Iâm not.â
âItâs a damn shame,â said Louise.
Mary sobbed harder. Clay reached forward and slapped her.
Allen swore. âThereâs no need to hit her. Sheâs been through enough.â
âSheâs hysterical,â said Clay. âI need her to talk.â
Mary hiccuped, âHush.â
âIâll take care of her,â said Allen.
Ignoring him, Clay moved close to Mary. âThereâs a boy running for his life. Can you tell me anything?â
âHe touched you, didnât he? Took your panties and touched you,â said one of the old men.
Mary bit her lip.
âI need you to answer me, maâam.â
âA proper woman donât talk about such things,â said Louise, pulling at her collar.
Clay studied Mary. She must be in shock, he thought. She looked at him strangely, lines furrowing her plain face.
âWeâve never had anything like this before,â said Bates. âNiggers always take the stairs. He shouldâve been on the stairs.â
âHow long were they together?â asked Clay, looking up at Bates.
âLong enough,â said Bates.
âTwo minutes. Maybe four,â said Allen. âNot long enoughââ
âYes?â
Allen shook his head.
Whimpering, Mary collapsed against Allen. Clay thought it curious that Allen buried his face in the girlâs hair. Kissed her dull strands. Clay shrugged. He didnât care who aroused Allenâs interests, even a vacant-eyed girl. Everybody had their tastes: Ambrose for big-bosomed girls; his friend, Gainey, wanted them black. Colored men supposedly liked them light-skinned or white.
Clay could see Miss Louiseâs toes, Batesâ perfectly shined shoes, Maryâs bruised knees. The elevator was hot. Airless. Maybe six by four, if that. Clay looked up. A minichandelier dangling from the apex cast slivers of light.
Why take a woman here? A cage within a box. The chute was lined with mirrors. When the âbird cageâ rose, everyone got to see themselves behind gilded bars. Ambroseâs fancy. Images multiplied like fun house mirrors. A white man would be mad to rape a girl here. A colored would have to be desperate to die.
Clay stood. âI can think of smarter places for a rape.â
âNiggerâs got to pay,â said Bates.
âAre you telling me my job?â
âYouâre wasting time.â Bates squinted. âAmbrose wonât like it.â
âThe girl hasnât accused anybody.â
âWe all saw it, didnât we?â Bates said, his hand sweeping, taking in the nodding, elderly men who on ordinary days rode the elevator tooffices where they bartered oil
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