American Tabloid - James Ellroy [223]
Kemper hit his brights. The whole range lit up.
Dougie, wash your sheet—you look awful.
Lockhart whooped. “Boss, you got me under the hot lights now! Boss, I gotta confess—it was me that bombed that nigger church in Birmingham!”
He had bad teeth and pimples. His moonshine breath was wafting out a good ten yards.
Kemper said, “Did you really do that?”
“As sure as I’m standing here basking in your light, Boss. As sure as niggers—”
Kemper shot him in the mouth. A full clip took his head off.
96
(Washington, D.C., 11/19/63)
Bobby made him wait.
Littell sat outside his office. Bobby’s note stressed promptness and closed with a flair: “I’ll give any Hoffa lawyer ten minutes of my time.”
He was prompt. Bobby was busy. A door separated them.
Littell waited. He felt supremely calm.
Marcello didn’t break him. Bobby was a relative child. Marcello bowed when he only took one drink.
The outer office was wood-paneled and spacious. It was very close to Mr. Hoover’s office.
The receptionist ignored him. He counted down to the moment.
11/6/63: Kemper gives the dope back. Trafficante rebuffs his handshake.
11/6/63: Carlos Marcello calls. He says, “Santo has a job for you,” but will not elaborate further.
11/7/63: Sam Giancana calls. He says, “I think we can find work for Pete. Mr. Hughes hates spooks, and Pete’s a good narcotics man.”
11/7/63: He conveys this message to Pete. Pete understands that they’re letting him live.
If you work for us. If you move to Vegas. If you sell the local niggers heroin.
11/8/63: Jimmy Hoffa calls, elated. He doesn’t seem to care that he’s in very deep legal trouble.
Sam told him about the hit. Jimmy tells Heshie Ryskind. Heshie checks into the best hotel in Dallas—to enjoy the event close up.
Heshie brings his entourage: Dick Contino, nurses and hookers. Pete shoots him full of dope twice a day.
Heshie’s entourage is baffled. Why uproot to Dallas when you’re so close to passing away?
11/8/63: Carlos sends him a news clipping. It reads, “Klan Leader Murdered—Baffling Deep South Riddle!”
The cops suspect rival Klansmen. He suspects a Kemper Boyd gesture.
Carlos includes a note. Carlos says his deportation trial is going quite well.
11/8/63: Mr. Hughes sends him a note. Baby Howard wants Las Vegas like most children want new toys.
He wrote back to him. He promised to visit Nevada and compile research notes before Christmas.
11/9/63: Mr. Hoover calls. He says his private taps have picked up scalding outrage—the Joe Valachi Show is terrifying mobsters coast to coast.
Hoover’s inside source says that Bobby is privately interrogating Valachi. Valachi refuses to discuss the Fund books. Bobby is furious.
11/10/63: Kemper calls. He says Guy Banister’s “far-fetched” ploy succeeded: the Miami motorcade was canceled.
11/12/63: Pete calls. He reports more campsite raids and hit-plot rumors.
11/15/63: Jack parades through New York City. Teenagers and middle-aged matrons swarm his car.
11/16/63: Dallas newspapers announce the motorcade route. Barb Jahelka has a front-row seat—she’s performing a noon show at a club on Commerce Street.
An intercom buzzed. Bobby’s voice cut through static: “I’ll see Mr. Littell now.”
The receptionist got the door. Littell carried his tape recorder in.
Bobby stood behind his desk. He jammed his hands in his pockets and made no forward moves—Mob lawyers received cut-rate civility.
The office was nicely appointed. Bobby’s suit was an off-the-rack sack cut.
“Your name seems familiar, Mr. Littell. Have we met before?”
I WAS YOUR PHANTOM. I ACHED TO BE PART OF YOUR VISION.
“No, Mr. Kennedy. We haven’t.”
“I see you brought a tape recorder.”
Littell set it down on the floor. “Yes, I did.”
“Has Jimmy owned up to his evil ways? Did you bring me some kind of confession?”
“In a sense. Would you mind listening?”
Bobby checked his watch. “I’m yours for the next nine minutes.”
Littell plugged the machine