King of the Corner Read online




  King of the Corner

  Loren D. Estleman

  For Linda and Jeff Marl

  the heart of the order

  and

  in memory

  For Ray Puechner

  the coach

  CONTENTS

  Part One: Breaking Ball

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Part Two: Change-Up

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Part Three: Screwball

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Part Four: Heat

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Part Five: Slider

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  A Biography of Loren D. Estleman

  To the Reader

  Approximately ninety-nine and nine-tenths percent of the characters who inhabit King of the Corner are fictional creations intended to represent a tiny cross section of the population of the city of Detroit in our time. The remaining one-tenth of one percent are factual. Although their personalities and backgrounds are presented accurately, they have not been faced with the specific circumstances that occur in this story, and their reaction and behavior are pure speculation. This is what makes King of the Corner a work of fiction.

  During what should be rush hour, reporters from the Free Press play a macabre game, called King of the Corner. The object is to stand at a downtown intersection and look all four ways. If you can’t see a single human being in any direction, you are King of the Corner. Every morning anoints its own royalty. Detroit, America’s sixth largest city, is the only metropolis in the country where you can walk a downtown block during business hours without passing a living soul.

  —Ze’ev Chafets,

  Devil’s Night:

  And Other True Tales of Detroit

  When I came up to Detroit I was just a mild-mannered Sunday-school boy.

  —Ty Cobb

  Detroit Free Press Magazine, Sunday, April 8, 1990:

  GRANNY AT THE BAT:

  LONGTIME BENGALS ROOTER REMEMBERS

  By Leon “Bud” Arsenault

  Loyola MacGryff hasn’t missed an opening day at Tiger Stadium since her father took her to her first game in 1908.

  Mrs. MacGryff, who has lived at her present address on Trumbull near the stadium for most of her 87 years, remembers that day as clearly as if it were last Saturday.

  “The colors—I never saw so many in one place at one time,” she recalls. “The men all wore straw boaters and the women were dressed like Easter Sunday. And, oh, it was noisy! People were much more vocal then. Papa asked me if I was scared. I said, ‘Oh, no, I want to see Ty Cobb.’”

  And did she?

  “Not that time. He was out with a groin pull, only they didn’t say that then, they just said he hurt his leg. But I saw him lots of other times.

  “He wasn’t a kind man, that Mr. Cobb. Once this boy in the row in front of me leaned over the rail and touched a fly ball Mr. Cobb was running to catch and put it out of play. The Orioles scored a run on it. Well, he just jerked that boy clean out of his seat and went to beating on him till the rest of the team ran out and pulled him off.

  “I never saw it in the paper, so I guess Mr. Jennings—Mr. Hughie Jennings, he managed the Tigers then—I guess Mr. Jennings made it right with the boy’s parents.

  “But, my, that man Cobb could run.”

  Tragically, young Loyola’s fateful first trip to Navin Field (as it was known then) had been intended for her older brother Paul, but he was in the hospital recuperating after a trolley car accident claimed both his legs.

  “We wanted to bring him a souvenir ball, but we were out of luck that day so Papa bought him a pennant at the stand. He kept it on his wall till the day he died.”

  Eighty-one opening days later, Mrs. MacGryff’s record remains pristine, although there have been close calls along the way.

  In 1924, when it seemed that her first child would make his appearance close to that all-important date, she had the baby delivered by cesarean section two weeks early.

  A flat tire and a night in jail for husband Horace when he declined to pull over for a motorcycle patrolman were the cost of a timely arrival in 1930.

  “But 1935 was the closest I ever came to missing,” says this blue-eyed, apple-cheeked grandmother of eight. “Horace got beat up on the picket line at Ford’s and died of a brain hemorrhage, but I postponed the funeral a day.

  “That was the year we beat the Cubs in the Series and it was grand to see Charlie Gehringer come to bat for the first time in one of his best seasons. I got my picture taken with him outside the door where the team came out after the game.”

  (to be continued)

  PART ONE

  Breaking Ball

  Chapter 1

  THE DAY BEFORE DOC Miller was released, a hammer murderer named Ed Friend blew his one-hitter to hell with a two-out double in the bottom of the eighth.

  Blaize Depardieu, the team manager and a 1982 second-round draft choice for St. Louis currently doing eleven to twenty for rape, came out to the mound and turned on his thousand-candlepower grin. “Man got a hell of a swing, that’s why he’s in here,” he said. “Don’t sweat it.”

  “I’m not,” Doc said. He struck out the last man and retired the side in the ninth with a strikeout, a pop fly to center field, and a grounder to first. Afterward Depardieu gave him the ground ball signed by everyone on the team, a roster of killers, rapists, drug-runners, and state congressmen that would have kept a city block in terror for a month. “Gonna miss you in the Milan game,” he told Doc. “Talk is they’s transferring a embezzler from Marion that bats three-eighty.”

  “Earl can handle him if you can get him to lay off that knuckleball. Every time he tries it his control goes to hell.” Doc turned the ball around in his hand, unconsciously lining up his fingers with the seams. Standing there in the shower room with its stench of sweat and mildew, he suddenly realized he had pitched his last game.

  The grin illuminated Depardieu’s blue-black face. “Getting sprang tomorrow, Stretch. You look like they’s fixing to feed you the gas.”

  “You know a team that’s scouting ex-cons?”

  “All of ’em. Lookit Gates Brown and Ron LeFlore.”

  “Denny McLain. Pete Rose.”

  “They was over the hill when they went in. You’re what, thirty?”

  “Thirty-three.”

  “Thirty-three-year-old with a ninety-mile-an-hour fastball and a split-finger that Henry Aaron couldn’t hit on his best day.”

  “Nobody ever heard of Brown and LeFlore until they got out and joined the majors. I took my headlines going in. Nobody wants a southpaw with a sheet.” He smacked Depardieu’s naked muscular shoulder with his open palm. “You’re a great manager, Blaize. You’d be in the Show now if you’d kept it in your pants.”

  “What I should of did was send flowers.”

  They shook hands.

  The next morning, Doc put on a gray suit of clothes and tried the necktie that had come with it, but too much time had passed since he’d had a knot at his throat and he rolled it up and put it in the side pocket of his jacket The suit was one of his old ones
and the lapels were out of fashion, but it still fit which was why he had asked his brother to send it to him instead of putting on one of the ready-mades the state provided. Doc stood six-five in his socks and weighed less than two hundred. Suits that weren’t made especially for him tended to fall way short of his wrists and ankles when they didn’t wrap twice around his waist

  As a matter of fact the trousers were a little snug, but that was penitentiary food. They fed you well in Jackson, lots of mashed potatoes and fatty pork chops and buttered vegetables, on the theory that an overweight prisoner was less likely to hoist himself over the wall. Doc, who was indifferent to food, would start dropping pounds without even thinking about it as soon as he was outside.

  Kevin Miller had become Doc back in double-A ball when it got around that he had studied pharmacology for a year. The gold-rimmed glasses he wore to correct astigmatism, with a clip behind his head to keep them from sliding off during his follow-through, had made the nickname stick when he joined the Tigers. That year he had fourteen saves and was on his way to a Cy Young Award when the Detroit Criminal Investigation Division got to him first

  As a starter for the Southern Michigan Penitentiary at Jackson he had won 116 games in seven years. The team played fewer than a hundred games a season.

  He evaluated his buzz cut in the mirror over his sink and decided he wouldn’t grow it out much. Styles had changed since he’d left his collar-length mane on the floor of the prison barbershop, and the look took a couple of years off him. The black hair and his cheekbones came courtesy of some Cherokee blood way back on his mother’s side; for the rest he was German-Irish and a third-generation native of Kentucky. In high school it had seemed strange to be swinging an aluminum bat with the company that made the Louisville Slugger operating just forty miles away. When he’d mentioned this to his coach, the coach had slapped him on the butt and said, “Play. Don’t think.”

  That was one piece of advice Doc wished he’d forgotten.

  Earl Hardaway, the other starter and a trusty with six months to go on a one-to-three for reckless endangerment, unlocked Doc’s cell. He was a chunky redhead with freckles the size of dimes, one blue eye and one brown, and an appointment to check in with the Tigers’ front office the first Monday after his release. His fastball had been clocked at ninety-nine miles per hour. That was six less than he had been doing the night he wrapped his father’s Porsche around a dead elm, fracturing his left ankle and turning his girlfriend into a paraplegic.

  “Where’s Howard?” Doc asked.

  “Mopping C Block. We traded. I didn’t get a chance to say good-bye after the game.” He turned his blue eye on Doc. Earl thought he saw better out of it, although the ophthalmologist who visited Jackson had told him he had twenty-twenty vision in both. “I got the knuck down now.”

  “Give it up. It isn’t your pitch.”

  “I wish I could show it to you.”

  They were walking down the corridor. Doc shook several of the hands dangling between the white-painted bars of the cells. He felt like Jimmy Cagney walking the Last Mile. He had to remind himself he was being freed. “You’ve got the heat and a good sinker. All you need’s a curve you can count on and Blaize will show you how to throw that.”

  “I’ll need more than three pitches if I’m going to be in the Show.”

  “That’s one more than Koufax had. Your knuckleball can’t find the plate.”

  “It don’t have to if they can’t hit it.”

  “You can fan them out and still give up first while the catcher’s chasing the ball all the way to the backstop. You’ll never see the Show if you make your catchers look bad. They’re mean sons of bitches. They’d pass up a shot at the pennant to send down a cocky pitcher.” He stopped before the door at the end of the block.

  The face that came to the gridded window when Earl banged on the door didn’t have a name. The turnover among guards was high; there would be no warm handshake at the gate or snarled “You’ll be back.” This one unlocked the door, swung it open, and made an impatient noise when Doc grasped Earl’s hand. “When Grant Hoover gets to first in the Milan game, keep him there if you have to go over there a hundred times. If he steals second you might as well hand him third. I don’t know what he’s in for, but it must’ve been purse-snatching.”

  “He won’t get to first.”

  A second guard, equally anonymous but one Doc had seen before, took him to Admissions, where a young harried clerk with an acne condition spent twenty minutes looking for Doc’s paperwork before stamping it and giving him a copy. It contained the name of his parole officer and the date and time of his first appointment. The clerk broke the seal on a manila envelope with dog-eared corners and tipped out items Doc hadn’t seen in seven years: gold Hamilton wristwatch, class ring, black enamel money clip with no money in it, and a Franklin half-dollar struck the year Doc was born, his lucky piece. He’d carried it in his pocket during all his saves. On the other hand, he’d had it with him the night he was arrested and the day he was convicted. He considered giving it to the stressed-out clerk, but minutes away from freedom he worried that it might be considered bribery and break his parole. He signed a receipt, put on the watch and ring, and pocketed the other items.

  His brother Neal was standing in the waiting room with his hands in his pockets looking at the framed prints on the wall when Doc entered with the guard. (No halfway measures here. He was a prisoner until he was not.) Fair and balding, two inches shorter than his brother and running to fat, Neal had gotten most of the Irish blood in his family, down to the leprechaun jowls and a twinkle in his gray eyes that was entirely illusory; the elder of the two Miller boys had no humor. For the reunion he had put on a plaid sport coat over a clean work shirt and gray woolen trousers gone fuzzy in the knees. Doc was pretty sure the sport coat was the only one Neal had ever owned.

  “Put on some,” was the first thing he said to Doc.

  “Not since your last visit.”

  “You was sitting down then.”

  Under the guard’s eye they shook hands briefly. Although Neal had washed—outside the shop he always smelled of the brown grainy Fels Napthe soap he used—there was a cross-hatching of old black grime in the creases of his palm. He had been a mechanic at a John Deere dealership on Middlebelt since his teens, and the grease was ground in as deeply as the central Kentucky drawl that he had hung on to years after Doc’s had slipped away. “I was starting to think you got yourself in trouble again and they wasn’t going to let you out.”

  “Paper chase.” Doc thought about something else to say. Communication had always been difficult with this brother who left high school the year Doc entered first grade. “How’s Dad?”

  “The same. He’s coming over for dinner next week.”

  The female security guard at the desk, pulled-back hair and burnished cosmetics in a pale blue starched uniform blouse, buzzed open the door. At the gate the guard who had escorted Doc from the cellblock turned a key in the mechanism. It clonked, and the gate shunted open. “Have a nice day.” They were the first words the guard had spoken.

  In the parking lot Neal unlocked the driver’s door of a new GMC three-quarter-ton pickup, heaved himself up and under the wheel, and reached across to open the door on the passenger’s side. Suddenly locks were opening everywhere. Doc stepped up into the plastic-smelling interior. It was a great square silver tank of a vehicle that had cost as much as a Cadillac, and which his brother would probably still be paying for in five years. By which time he’d have traded it in on something bigger with an even higher testosterone level.

  It was a typical nippy Michigan early-April day. The sky was the color of iron, and crusted snow clung to the shady side of the berms on both sides of the road. Neal drove with the seat pushed forward almost as far as it would go—a painful sight when it involved a man his size—his shoulders hunched over the wheel and his big heavy face screwed into a strained expression as if power steering had never been invented.

&n
bsp; They took Michigan Avenue through Jackson, four flat, faded lanes cleaving between new-looking glass and steel buildings that soon gave way to horizontal structures of crumbling block with signs rusting through their paint; a prison town whose personality matched the gray bland decaying interior of the penitentiary itself. An electric sign ringed with yellow bulbs flashing in a spastic pattern advertised the Island Health Spa. A number of cars and a van with its fenders eaten away were parked outside the building.

  “You start Saturday.”

  “Saturday?” Doc shifted on the seat. The sight of the massage parlor had given him an erection.

  “Sure Saturday. Farmers can’t afford to farm fulltime, they all got jobs. Saturday’s the only day they got to shop.”

  “What am I selling?”

  “Well, not tractors. That’s commission work. You sell parts and accessories. Anyone comes in wants to look at the heavy equipment you steer him to a salesman.”

  “What’s it pay?”

  “Three hundred a week. I’m sorry it ain’t a million a season and your own car.” Neal sounded testy.

  “It’s better than I’ve been making.”

  “You wouldn’t of got parole if the board didn’t think you had a job waiting.”

  “Thanks, Neal. I know you went out on a limb.”

  “Not so much.” He relaxed a little. “Warren’s a baseball fan. That’s the manager. Probably ask you a million questions.”

  They entered I-94 then and didn’t exchange another word until they reached the suburbs of Detroit.

 

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