One-Shot Harry
One-Shot Harry
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Author(s): Phillips, Gary
ISBN No.: 9781641292917
Pages: 288
Year: 202204
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 34.43
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

CHAPTER ONE "Fifteen." Josh Nakano placed his domino tile on the table with the others. The raspy voice of comedian Redd Foxx, known for his blue material, issued from an LP spinning on the record player. "Yes, ladies and gentlemen, here we are again for the great racing of the T-bone stakes." An audience tittered in the background of the live recording. The album was titled The New Race Track. "Don''t stop writing yet, scorekeeper." Peter "Strummer" Edwards smiled, slapping down a tile.


"Ten." He was a tall, dark-skinned man with large hands, several of his knuckles misshaped like a seasoned boxer''s. James "Shoals" Pettigrew marked the points on a lined yellow notepad, then put down his own domino. The hardware store owner didn''t score. Using one hand, Harry Ingram picked up his facedown tiles, turning them toward his face, studying them. Between two fingers of his other hand, a cheap cigar smoldered. "If you blink three times, they still ain''t gonna change," Pettigrew joked. "Got it, Captain Hook.


" Ingram put down his choice, hoping this time to block Nakano from scoring again. "Thanks for nothing," Nakano said, playing after Ingram. He was a medium-built man with thick black hair going gray at the sides. He wore glasses and a colorful Hawaiian shirt over casual slacks. He favored loud sport shirts when not relegated to suit and tie, as befitted a funeral director. "Always at your service, good sir." When the LP ended, Ingram got up from the card table and went over to his record player, which was set below several built-in bookshelves. Among the books on the shelves were two police scanners and an AM/FM transistor radio.


Ingram put the record back in its sleeve, the photographic image on the front a smiling young woman in modified jockey gear straddling a hobby horse. "Put on the radio, would you, Harry?" Edwards said, yawning and stretching. "Can''t have Redd making me too excited before I go to bed alone." Pettigrew wiggled his fingers. "Alone, you say?" Everyone chuckled. Ingram slotted the Foxx album alphabetically among other comedic, jazz and blues albums he kept in wooden produce crates stacked in a corner. He turned the radio on, adjusting the antenna and turning the dial to bring the station in clearer. ".


and the hunt goes on for the bank robber dubbed the Morning Bandit. But now, my dear listeners," the DJ continued, "we here at KGFJ urge all right-thinking Angelenos to come out and hear what Martin Luther King has to say when he arrives in town less than three weeks from today. As many of us know, his message isn''t just for the South, but for what goes on here in the supposedly enlightened north." "You covered the reverend when he was in town before, didn''t you?" Nakano said to Ingram as he sat down again. King had last been in Los Angeles two years earlier to speak at the Sports Arena. The facility had been filled to capacity with thousands standing outside to hear him over the loudspeakers. "Yeah, I''ve got a request in through the Sentinel to take shots when he speaks this time too. But they''d already got this reporter assigned who takes his own pics.


" Ingram made part of his living as a photographer for the Black press. "What about the march later this year?" Edwards said. In the 1950s he''d been the one to look after the interests of gangster Jack Dragna on the Black side of Los Angeles. These days he had his own interests to see to--some aboveboard and others he didn''t file taxes about. "You going?" Ingram asked. "Thinking about it." Edwards looked up from his dominoes at the other three staring at him. "What? All sorts of people are going, including Moses.


" He meant Charlton Heston, who was heading the Hollywood contingent to the March on Washington taking place in August. "You know this is the second time this has been tried," Nakano said. "Huh?" Edwards lit a cigarette and opened another can of Hamm''s he''d retrieved from Ingram''s refrigerator. "A. Philip Randolph threatened a march back in the forties unless Roosevelt desegregated the armed forces and paid the same wages to Blacks working in the war industries. FDR didn''t desegregate but did sign a bill about the fair pay. And Randolph called off the march, though some say he was bluffing all along." "King ain''t bluffing," Pettigrew said.


"Damn, how come you always know more about negro history than me, Josh?" Edwards said. "Maybe he''s just a better soul brother than you," Ingram laughed. "That''s probably true." Edwards had more of his beer. Nakano said, "The Japanese American Citizens League is sending a contingent. A cousin of mine is going to be in it." "You thinking about going?" Ingram asked him. "Yep.


For sure I''ll be at the rally in town." Nakano looked up from his dominoes, a wry smile lighting his face. "Equal rights is equal rights, isn''t it?" "Across the board," Pettigrew said. The friends played until a few minutes past ten in the evening. After they left, Ingram folded up the card table they''d been playing on, put the dominoes back in their box and cleaned up in the kitchen where they''d made sandwiches. There was a door separating the kitchen from a compact back porch area. In there was a utility sink for use with a rubboard to wash clothes. Ingram had turned this area into a darkroom with lengths of clothesline strung up to hang drying prints.


Back in his apartment''s living room, he considered putting on one of the scanners but decided to pour himself something stiffer than beer and sit in his easy chair. The window overlooking the street below was cracked open and the sounds of a quieting city drifted in as he sat and drank. The radio was still on, but he''d turned the volume down. Ingram had taken one of his file folders from a rack of several and had it open on his lap, looking through his photos. He frowned as if this were the first time he was seeing his work from a critical standpoint. There was all manner of mayhem represented in the black-and-whites, from a man laid out on the sidewalk in a nice suit, two-tone shoes and a knife sticking out of his head to a woman in a beret, hands manacled behind her back as a cop led her away. There was a bloody hatchet in another cop''s hand and a bloodstain on the lower part of her skirt. "No wonder Look won''t hire me," he muttered, enjoying more bourbon.


He closed the file and put it aside. As he began to doze off, Ingram resolved to take more happy pictures, like people picnicking in the park and kids laughing as they flew kites. At some point he woke up and KGFJ, an around-the-clock station, was playing classical music. He got up and went to bed to the strains of Debussy''s Three Nocturnes . In the morning after a sound sleep and a trip to the john, Ingram put on his threadbare cotton bathrobe over his boxers and athletic tee. He turned on one of his scanners. ". suspect, male, white American, twenties, reddish-blond hair heading north on Bronson from Venice on foot .


" With that as his background accompaniment, Ingram fixed a breakfast that included sausage links from the neighborhood grocery store downstairs, Whitehead''s Market. Afterward, taking his second cup of coffee into the bathroom, he showered and shaved. The scanner was still going. Monday morning crime, at least in terms of the Black east side, was limited to a purse snatching and a parked vehicle clipped in a hit-and-run. This wasn''t unusual. Ingram knew colored fellas were often jacked up by the cops on Saturday night and were awaiting a hearing or still arranging bail at the start of the new week. Things would be jumping by nine tonight, he reflected as he got his equipment together, including his Speed Graphic camera. There were two nicks from bullets grooved in its casing and Ingram rubbed one of them for luck, as he always did.


He''d brought the camera home from the war. Fleeting was the notion of photographing normal people doing normal things. Where was the kick in that? Melancholy moments like the one he''d had last night he invariably washed away with booze. Tweed sport coat on and no tie, slipping a couple of his cigars into an inner pocket, he quit his apartment, going out the rear door through his darkroom and down the creaking wooden stairs. Behind the building his car was parked in one of the few designated spaces. There was another man downstairs in a plaid shirt-jacket and casual slacks. "What''s happening, Arthur?" Ingram clapped the other man on the shoulder as Arthur unlocked the back door to Whitehead''s. Ingram''s building was made of brick and wood trim, constructed in the late 1920s.


The corner grocery store commanded most of the space on the ground floor. To the south of that was the front entrance into the apa.


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