The Last Days Of Ptolemy Grey - Part 30
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Part 30

"Papa Grey?" Robyn said, and the wheels started turning again.

"Darryl Pride?" he asked.

"Yes, sir."

"I don't know the name but do he have a girlfriend name of Melinda Hogarth?"

"That's him, sir."

"You are a very polite young man. It's nice when a policeman is civil."

Officer Arnold smiled.

"You young men come on in," Ptolemy said, once again master of his own mind.

The officers, Arnold and Thompkins, sat on the couch while Ptolemy took the folding stool and Robyn brought out a chair from the kitchen.

"Ms. Hogarth says that you were involved in Mr. Pride's beating," Arnold was saying.

"Did she tell ya that she been muggin' me on the street for three years? Did she tell ya that she pushed her way in this house an' stoled all the money outta my spendin' can an' slapped me to the ground an' here I'm ninety-one year old?"

"We're not here about that," Officer Thompkins said. He had a baby face and dark skin that was so smooth, it could have been called perfect.

"When my great-grandniece come to stay wit' me, she told that heifer that she bettah not be robbin' me no mo'," Ptolemy said. "That's when she turned to this man Pride. Imagine that. A man named for self-respect tellin' me I got to pay up."

The officers looked at each other.

"He stole from you?"

"No, sir. No, he did not. He told me that I should pay, but I told him that I would call the cops."

"He says that you were involved in his beating," Arnold repeated.

"Look at me, Officer. Look at me. How'm I gonna beat up a man the size of a icebox? I might could shoot him if I owned a gun. I might'a would'a shot him if I did. But all I said was that I didn't have no money and that we was gonna go to the cops if they do anything else. He's afraid'a the cops. Him and Melinda both dope fiends. Both of 'em."

"So you deny that you had anything to do with Pride's beating?" Thompkins asked.

Ptolemy did not answer.

"Did you see him get beaten?" Thompkins pressed.

"No, sir."

"Did you, ma'am?" Thompkins asked, turning to Robyn.

"I don't even know who you talkin' 'bout," she said. "Papa Grey had some trouble with that b.i.t.c.h, but I gave her the news."

"We ..." Arnold said. "We heard that there was another family member taking care of Mr. Grey."

"No. Just me."

"Ms. Hogarth said that there was a young man," Arnold said. "She claimed that he beat her and that another man, a heavyset guy, and a young woman had beaten her."

"d.a.m.n," Robyn said. "She been beat by just about everybody on the block accordin' to her."

Officer Arnold couldn't help but smile.

"Will you please answer the question?"

"You didn't ask no question. You just said that somebody said somethin'."

"Do you know of anyone else taking care of your uncle?"

"There's Reggie Brown."

Ptolemy's heart lurched in his chest when Robyn uttered that name.

"Where is this Reggie Brown?"

"Dead."

Again the policemen looked at each other.

"He was killed in a drive-by 'bout nine weeks ago. Killed him on Denker when he was sittin' out in front'a the house of a friend'a his."

Thompkins frowned and Arnold rubbed his fingertips together.

"Listen," Robyn said. "Melinda do dope. I'ont know her boyfriend but he prob'ly a dopehead too. My uncle's a old man. He ain't in no gang. He ain't runnin' down no dopehead, beatin' him on the street. That's just stupid."

"And what about you?" Officer Arnold asked.

"What about me?"

"She said that a young woman beat her with an electric fan."

"So? She tell you that she the Virgin Mary when she get enough dope in her blood."

"How old are you?" Thompkins asked.

"Eighteen."

"Are you in school?"

"Got my GED and I'm gonna start LACC in the fall."

Ptolemy could see Robyn's chest heaving.

The policemen stared a minute, but neither Ptolemy nor Robyn crumbled under the scrutiny.

Then the policemen looked at each other, nodded, and stood as one.

"We may have more questions later," Officer Arnold said.

"We always here, Your Honor," Ptolemy told him. "At ninety-one, with dope fiends all ovah the street, I don't get out too much."

You bettah call Billy Strong an' tell him not to come by here for a while," Robyn said after the cops were gone.

"I almost lost my mind when them bull was at that do'," Ptolemy said.

"What you mean?"

They were sitting at the kitchen table, drinking ice water from purple plastic tumblers.

"I saw them uniforms an' my mind went blank. It didn't mattah that the cops was both colored, not one bit. It was like, was like I was feebleminded again. If you aksed me my name I wouldn't been able to say."

"But you talked to them, Papa Grey. You talked good too."

"But I could feel it, honey. It's like black curtains comin' down on me. Like a shroud."

They reached across the table at the same time, entwining their fingers. Ptolemy smiled and Robyn understood him.

"Come on ovah to the closet, baby," he said. "It's time I gave you my treasure."

In the night Coy came to him.

"You finally done did sumpin', huh, boy? What took you so long?"

"I was scared," a full-grown Ptolemy Grey said to the man Coy McCann.

"Scared? What you got to be scared about? Here you got a nice apartment, wit' two girlfriends, money comin' in every week, an' a treasure too."

"There's blood on that gold, Coydog."

"My blood. You know, for every grain of gold dust that make up that treasure a black mother have cried and a black son done shed sweat or blood, maybe even life itself. That man was a slave master, only he didn't have to feed his slaves."

"You stole," Ptolemy said.

"An' they stoled an' they murdered. So who gonna be in front'a who on the line?"

Ptolemy smiled then. His fever was raging but he didn't know it. He was with Coydog again, having a brand-new conversation like they did in the old days before fire and blood flooded the chambers of the child's mind.

"You right, Coy," he said in his delirium. "You sure is. I showed Robyn the treasure an' told her what to do an' how to do it. She gonna be your heir. She gonna take that gold an' see my blood outta down here. They all gonna go to college or rest easy in they final days."

Coy stood there for a long time at the foot of the bed. The sun was rising behind him, and Africa, from two thousand years before, loomed in those first rays of light.

Ptolemy remembered the stories Coy told him about Africa; about a land before the G.o.ds of the North descended; about kings and crazy men; about wars waged and done with and not a drop of blood drawn or even a bruise suffered by a single warrior.

How you know all that, Coy?" the boy, Li'l Pea, had asked. "You said that the white man's history books lie about us all the time."

"They do."

"Then how you know about how it was before the white man? No n.i.g.g.ah know all that."

"Oh yeah, boy," Coy McCann said. "We from there. Some of us remembah with our minds. But even more got them stories jammed up in they hearts an' spirits. They tell white men's stories but changes 'em. They talkin' about things they know an' don't remembah. I listens an' tease out the truth that lay underneath."

Coy stood at the foot of the bed with the sun rising and the secret memory of Africa emerging out of memories that were forgotten but not lost.

Ptolemy began to fret that maybe he'd done something wrong. Maybe Coy didn't want a woman to lay hold to his treasure. Maybe he had waited too long to take action. But after a long time, at least two days by Ptolemy's reckoning, Coydog smiled, and then, a few hours later, he nodded . . .

A pain lanced through Ptolemy's rib cage. It was like a spear that had entered by his left side and went out through the right. He sat up straight in his bed and yelled.

Robyn was sitting there, and next to her was a man who was holding a syringe, leaning over and frowning.

"h.e.l.lo, Satan."

"Good to see you, Mr. Grey," Dr. Ruben said.

"Am I dead yet?"

"If it wasn't for your niece you would have been. I'm surprised you've made it so long. I'm glad too."

"You ain't taken no money or nuthin' from him, have you, girl?" Ptolemy asked.

"No, sir. Nuthin'."

Ptolemy thought he could make out things crawling and bristling in the doctor's great mustaches. Ruben's eyes seemed to be blazing: yellowy-green flames on a brown sea.

"Lemme talk to this man alone a minute, will you, Robyn?"

"Yes, sir," she said again, relief at his revival in her tone and her shoulders, and even in the way she stood.

She closed the door and the doctor pressed a thumb against Ptolemy's wrist.