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Sam swallowed several times, feeling a chill in the center of his chest. “I thought we had a deal,” he said faintly.

“You know, I found out recently that that child’s father was killed as a result of trying to rescue her. Is that right?”

He looked at the clock, wondering how many minutes he had left in the office. A drop of sweat ran down from behind an ear. “More or less.”

“I’m sorry to hear that. And I’m sorry to say we don’t need you as a floorwalker.”

He swallowed again and looked at the carpet, trying to make sense of the design. “Do you have any positions at all?”

“The big stores in town are cutting back a little. I’m sorry.”

“Nothing?” He held out a hand, palm up.

Krine picked up a folder of paperwork and stood. “Nothing,” he said, like a shot, and the meeting was over. “We have your number. If we ever need a floorwalker, we’ll call you.”

He took the elevator down and walked around the first floor as if he were shopping, touching the bright ties, the glossy shoes. He was tempted to straighten a rack of shoe-polish tins but pulled his hand back at the last moment. Across the store, one of the new floorwalkers was chatting with a well-dressed woman who’d come out of the café. Sam wanted a cup of the wonderful coffee the café brewed, but it was free only for employees. He turned around once in an aisle, taking a last look, then headed for the main doors. On the street he felt vaguely like an exile, glanced back once at the store’s Italianate façade, and began walking home. Three blocks off Canal Street, he remembered the Ambassador was leaving port in two days, and he changed direction down to the ferry landing. He wouldn’t play piano in a gangster’s bar or carry a gun for a bank or the city, so second mate, if he could get it, would suit him fine.

***

HIS WIFE’S FACE fell, and she sat down hard on the sagging mahogany settee in the front room. “You’ll be gone months at a time. I need you here.”

“You need the rent paid. The grocery bill.”

“I can get a little from Mom.”

“Hey, sometimes the boat lays over and I can take a train home for a couple days. Lots of the schedule’s down South.”

“And you’ll eat up your salary on train tickets and meals. Lucky, why can’t you just play music in town?”

He looked at the bright spot against the wall where his piano had been, a fine, booming instrument he’d bought with his mustering out pay. “I can’t get a good piano spot. This is New Orleans, darling. Everybody plays better than I do.”

She turned away, then leaned back against him. “What’ll they pay?”

“More than the last trip.”

“Put your arms around me.”

He kissed her nape, the backs of her pale ears.

“Lucky, when I walk up the street I see these nice houses with porches and big backyards. Sometimes I ask myself how anybody can afford to own a house, you know? To keep it up? Everybody I know rents.”

He took in a slow breath. “There’s a lot of businessmen in town, I guess. Store owners. Superintendents.” Out on the sidewalk someone passed by bouncing a basketball, the pneumatic pings rising for a time and then diminishing up the street. “I thought I could work my way up at Krine’s,” he said absently.

“This kidnapping dragged us down, baby.”

“I know.”

“I thought it would be over, but it isn’t.”

“I know that, too.”

She took in a sudden breath. “When do you leave?”

“Probably day after tomorrow.”

“Do you still have your nice Hamilton watch? The one Uncle Claude gave you for a wedding present?”

“Sure.”

She turned to face him. He thought she might want a kiss, but when she gave him a sad, complicated smile instead, he knew what she would say, and he looked away. “You have to sell it.”

***

THE AMBASSADOR wasn’t ready to steam for a week. The day before he was to leave, Sam received a call from a New Orleans assistant district attorney summoning him downtown to be deposed for an upcoming trial of the Whites in Kentucky. In an office of the federal building he met a slim young lawyer who asked him to write out a statement. He labored over four pages for an hour, signed off on them, and waited for the lawyer to step back into the room. Trying to imagine what would happen to the Whites was beyond him, but he had a dim notion that such people never saw the inside of a jail. He hoped, however, they could be fined enough to keep them away from anyone else’s children.

The glass in a mahogany door rattled, and the lawyer came in and reached for the deposition as he walked by.

Sam looked up at him. “Has the boy been in yet?”

“We took his statement yesterday. How’s the little girl doing?”

“I haven’t seen her again. I go to work tomorrow, and I guess she’ll be on board.” Sam stood and shook his pants legs loose. “They trying those people in Kentucky?”

The lawyer, who wore a thin mustache, turned it up on one side. “Well, I don’t know. The jurisdiction’s rather confused.”

“I figured they’d get out of it.”

“Oh, I wouldn’t say that. They’re still in a county jail in Mississippi. The sheriff there’s got his own juice, as they say, and the Whites threatened him in several ways, then offered to bribe him, so there are two or three new local charges against them. Mrs. White’s in the regional female prison wearing denim clothes along with the whores and lady pickpockets. Not doing too well, I hear. Mr. White’s still in the Woodgulch pokey.”

Sam thought about this while the lawyer examined his handwriting. “I guess it might bother them more than it would some other folks.”

“Let’s just say they’re not used to such accommodations. I got a telegram from Graysoner, Kentucky, that said the local paper has the story all over the front page, and the reporter didn’t gild the lily, if you know what I mean.”

“I’d have guessed the local paper would’ve taken their side.”

“Me too. But the reporter has a young brother on the police force who gave him some interesting details.”

Sam grinned. “Sometimes a criminal gets his justice just because of bad luck?”

The lawyer opened the door into the marble hallway. Down the broad stairs Sam heard people talking and quick footsteps, and someone dropped what sounded like an armload of file folders. Throughout the building people were trying to propel the lumbering steamroller of justice forward in a straight line, but it seemed to him a complex business, both noble and imprecise.

The lawyer clapped a hand on Sam’s shoulder. “As for bad luck, I think the Whites have rolled snake eyes.”

***

THE AMBASSADOR ran three trips on a Saturday in New Orleans, breaking in the new band, the repaired machinery, and a revolutionary speaker system mounted on the roof and dance floor. On Sunday, Sam went to Mass at the cathedral with his wife, and at noon the boat departed, banners flying, bunting set, and twin clouds of coal smoke rising skyward. It would run a meet-the-boat trip, carrying excursionists upriver about forty miles and then exchanging the whole crowd with that from the Buckeye Deluxe, a big sidewheel excursion boat tramping south. The Ambassador would then paddle upriver to Donaldsonville and drop off the sidewheeler’s tired load.

Sam caught a glimpse of Elsie through the crowd boiling around the decks, but the captain caught his arm as he was making his way to her.

“Lucky, we’ve got a new generator in the engine room, and Bit says he can’t watch it all the time, so you’re elected to learn how to operate the thing and just check its meters every couple hours. It runs all the new bulbs on the rails, plus the loudspeaker thing.”