Chapter 7
Arthur Returns
The job was mine for the asking. I started then and there, following up on a domestic dispute where a wife had repeatedly stabbed her husband because he brought home pork chops instead of veal cutlet. Returning to the Times after interviewing the police officers who made the arrest, I typed the story up and handed it in to my new editor. He read it, made one grammatical change and sent it out for publication in the afternoon edition.
I was back on the job.
That night I took Belva out to celebrate. Charlie Parker had a regular gig at the Tiffany Club at 8th and Normandy. Parker a relatively unknown musician had seemingly burst upon the jazz world overnight with his sparkling sax work as he played what was being called 'bebop.'
Having spent a few years in Chicago, I was familiar with several of the giants of Jazz, like Muggsy Spainier, Louis Armstrong and Jack Teagarden. I had seen Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker at a club in St. Louis some months earlier and looked forward to sharing Parker's stultifying saxophone again; this time with Belva, who knew little about bebop, but loved the big bands of the day.
Parker was in rare form, and we stayed for three sets, only leaving because Belva did have to get up early for work the next day.
For the next month or so I worked diligently for the Times, covering the police blotter mainly, but also filling in whenever another reporter called in sick, (read to hung-over to walk into the office) and so I wound up covering everything from weddings to ribbon-cutting ceremonies.
Belva began making noises about wedding bells and I wasn't adverse to the idea, but I still had the novel as something I had to get out of my system before hopping down the matrimonial trail.
Then on August 28th, I was walking down Normandy when I heard my name called out from an alley. It piqued my curiosity as I wasn't that well known in the City of Angels. I ventured into the alley, my right fist clenched into a fist in the event the caller suddenly became confrontational, only to recognize Arthur, my alien colleague New Mexico.
"Arthur?"
"Hello Roy, how are things?"
"Things are swell. Um, what do you want with me?"
"I thought I'd look you up; see how your novel is coming along," he said smoothly, ignoring the hostility in my voice.
"It's nowhere, man. I hit a dead-end on the Black Dahlia case, just like the LAPD."
"You weren't able to uncover any new data on it?"
"No, Arthur, I hit a dead-end, like I said."
"That's a pity, Roy. So have you looked into the Bill Harbidge thing?"
"The Harbidge... oh, that. No, Arthur, I haven't. Well, I have found out that Harbidge is dead."
"Harbidge may be dead, but Bill isn't. I'm sure of it. There's a great story there, Roy."
"Look, Arthur, that may be true, but I've found this girl...."
"Yes, Belva; she seems very nice, Roy."
"You... know about her?"
"I told you I'd be in touch, didn't I?"
"Yes, but I didn't think it meant you'd be hovering over me."
"Very aptly phased, Roy; you do have the makings of a great writer."
"You're spying on me? But why?"
"It's not spying, Roy. It's merely observing. That's what we do. We observe you and others like you. We've done so for thousands of years."
"Yeah, yeah, but why me? Why this thing about Harbidge?"
"I believe we made a mistake with Bill Harbidge, Roy. That's why I want you to find him and write your novel about him. His story... when you learn it, will fascinate you and whoever reads your book. That I guarantee you."
"Well, Arthur, it's like this; I need moola to get by. I was fired from my paper in Chicago for taking too long on the Dahlia case. I was lucky to hook up with the local paper here in Cinematown."
"So its money that's holding you back."
"I don't...."
"How much do you need to carry you through the next... say, two years?"
Something in Arthur's voice, (He wasn't actually speaking. His voice was inside my head. For that matter, I wasn't speaking to him either. He made do with my thoughts. Some of which aren't going to appear on this page) told me he was deadly serious about this, so I didn't make light of it.
"I make $2460 a year at the Times, Arthur."
"Would $7500 take care of you and Belva for a two year period?"