Or opening up, depending in what kind of business you mean.
At the Goodwill store, northwest corner, Milam and Preston, Carolyn Mason, a pretty brown-eyed girl was about to empty the day’s receipts into a steel cash box, when she saw the shifty-eyed derelict take a 39-cent shirt off the rack, roll it up and stick in inside his shirt.
Being physically handicapped, like all Goodwill employees (she suffered a spine injury in a traffic accident), Carolyn wondered what she ought to do.
* * *
Across Preston, the Real Tailors was closing, but the Rose O’Dixie and three other bars were spilling boogie music into the Reef. The sidewalks, both sides, were crowed with people going home and people with no home to go to, black people brown people, white people.
Glitter
In the 411 Club, the glittering new heart and nerve center of the Reef, owner Bob Griffey, ex-gambler, wearing a yellow sports coat, stood near the cash register, shuffling silver half-dollars like a deck of cards. On his left hand a diamond flashed like a headlight of a locomotive.
Bob felt good. His place was crowded. Not a vacant table, not an idle moment for the brown-skinned waitresses. His customers were dark-complexioned, but they were sports. The left two inched of beer in their bottles, and smoked two-bit cigars.
Bob laughed aloud, but couldn’t hear himself because of the music and voices. He laughed because he knew what the sure-thing boys were saying – that Griffey was flat. Huh! Huh-huh!
* * *
Across the Reef, in Prensky’s pawnshop, an ex-night-club bouncer was trying to sell an expensive camera. He was trying to raise train fare home. He was dying of cancer and wanted to die in the town of his birth, not in a Jeff Davis ward.
Pursuit
A bright boy in a purple big-apple cap paused at Prensky’s window, looking at the knives. He wanted to see if there was a knife in the window with a blade longer than the one he had in his pocket. There wasn’t. From the corners of his eyes he watched the white man coming out of the pawnshop carrying a camera. The bright boy wondered how much the camera was worth.
Down at the corner a contact man in a pink sports shirt was waiting for a contact. The contact was late. A yellow-skinned woman passed him and he said, “You seen old Mule Ear?”
I’ve seen him a hour ago,” the yellow woman said. “He was with Two-by-Fo.” The woman hurried across the street. A big dark man in a $150 suit followed her, but she didn’t look back.
* * *
In the 411 Club, Bob Griffey passed the deck of half-dollars to his cashier. The cashier, too, was a white man, and he always looked pale next to Bob. Then the ex-gambler turned around and gazed through the fog of tobacco smoke at the murals.
The murals cover three walls of the 411 Club. They were painted by a colored boy named Lemanzel Finley, who wore a beret.
Street Scene
Bob Griffey doesn’t completely trust men who wear berets, but he paid Lemanzel $200 for the job. He wondered if he, Bob, got stung.
The first picture, nearest the door showed a well-dressed, middle-aged colored man hurrying along a city street. Ahead of him three other persons stood against a background of skyscrapers. One was a wavy-haired youth in a zoot-suit with a drape-shape. The second was a slick chick standing on the lid of a large garbage can. Since she wore a tight skirt, the results were arresting.
The third figure was a well-dressed middle aged colored man, wearing a ring set with what Bob supposed to be a zircon.
The series of pictures continued around the walls, and ended near the bar, with an enlarged portrait of an open straight razor.
It seemed to Bob that the pictures told a kind of story, but he couldn’t figure it all out. The wavy haired boy, he decided, was a producer. The man with the zircon was to get shed of the chick. But the rest was cloaked in dark symbolism.
Under Arrest
Back in the Goodwill store, Carolyn watched the shifty-eyed man sidle towards the door with the stolen 39-cent shirt Her heart bumped her ribs. He was at the door now. Now he was walking down the street. Suddenly Carolyn picked up the empty steel box and started running. She completely forgot that she couldn’t run. She chased the thief two blocks and told him she would hit him in the head with the box if he didn’t bring the shirt back.
The derelict denied the theft, but he went back to the store. Carolyn followed behind him the steel box ready. She didn’t look up the Reef as she marched him back into the store, but there was a commotion in front of the Rose O’Dixie bar.
* * *
Two men were fighting on the sidewalk. A young man and a big dark man. The young man wore a purple cap. In the crowd looking on was a yellowed-skinned woman. She begged the men watching to stop the fight. “He’s got a knife!” She kept saying. “He’s got a knife!”
The police car coming up Milam started to stop at the Goodwill store, where the complaint had come from, but then the man at the wheel saw the crowd on the eats side of the Reef, he drove on, but with out pushing the yellow signal. You can stop trouble in Catfish Reef, but it’s only temporary. It always breaks out again.
2 comments:
I love this. I love reading about Catfish Reef. Thanks for posting. Check this out, I have a vintage suit that i bought a while back for shows. I looked in the tag and there it was. It says, "REal Tailors 402 Milam." still in decent shape. I also found a Midland Obit online with the name Lemanzel Finley (link below). Thanks !
http://boards.ancestry.com/localities.northam.usa.states.texas.counties.midland/957/mb.ashx
My Dad is (was) Bob Griffey. The owner od 411 CLUB. have looked for articles about him for the last few years. He was a good man and bigger than life life to me. He also owner two other "black" night clubs of this era and would take me to visit them in the late 40's early 50's. I always remember him saying the most honest man I have known was a colored man, Andrew - In later years when I was sixteen and my Dad was in Las Vegas; he sent Andrew the money to buy me my first car. I think remembering this comment experience of visiting the Clubs - gave me a fair attitude towards people with different complexions and religions. He was also the owner of the TALK OF THE TOWN, the first air conditioned club in Houston - which was shut down for illegal gambling in the back room - the Mayor was there! Thanks for writing about my "Daddy" he was a wonderful father he took me to sit on Roy Rogers lap and I had my picture with Roy at the Rodeo. Later he took me to see Elvis twice -Dad never let me down. I now understand he was a "cool dude" and hip before his time. I remember his love and generosity to his family. I am Proud to call my self a Daddy's Girl THX again Bobbi Griffey
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