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Chapter
1
Part I
EXTRADITION
November 22-25, 1963
1
Wayne Tedrow Jr.
(Dallas, 11/22/63)
They
sent him to Dallas to kill a nigger pimp named Wendell Durfee. He wasn't
sure he could do it.
The
Casino Operators Council flew him. They supplied first-class fare. They
tapped their slush fund. They greased him. They fed him six cold.
Nobody
said it:
Kill
that coon. Do it good. Take our hit fee.
The
flight ran smooth. A stew served drinks. She saw his gun. She played up.
She asked dumb questions.
He
said he worked Vegas PD. He ran the intel squad. He built files and logged
information.
She
loved it. She swooned.
"Hon,
what you doin' in Dallas?"
He
told her.
A
Negro shivved a twenty-one dealer. The dealer lost an eye. The Negro booked
to Big D. She loved it. She brought him highballs. He omitted details.
The
dealer provoked the attack. The council issued the contract-death for
ADW Two.
The
preflight pep talk. Lieutenant Buddy Fritsch:
"I
don't have to tell you what we expect, son. And I don't have to add that
your father expects it, too."
The
stew played geisha girl. The stew fluffed her beehive.
"What's
your name?"
"Wayne
Tedrow."
She
whooped. "You just have to be Junior!"
He
looked through her. He doodled. He yawned.
She
fawned. She just loooooved his daddy. He flew with her oodles. She knew
he was a Mormon wheel. She'd looove to know more.
Wayne
laid out Wayne Senior.
He
ran a kitchen-help union. He rigged low pay. He had coin. He had pull.
He pushed right-wing tracts. He hobnobbed with fat cats. He knew J. Edgar
Hoover.
The
pilot hit the intercom. Dallas-on time.
The
stew fluffed her hair. "I'll bet you're staying at the Adolphus."
Wayne
cinched his seat belt. "What makes you say that?"
"Well,
your daddy told me he always stays there."
"I'm
staying there. Nobody consulted me, but that's where they've got me booked."
The
stew hunkered down. Her skirt slid. Her garter belt gapped.
"Your
daddy told me they've got a nice little restaurant right there in the
hotel, and, well . . ."
The
plane hit rough air. Wayne caught it low. He broke a sweat. He shut his
eyes. He saw Wendell Durfee.
The
stew touched him. Wayne opened his eyes.
He
saw her hickeys. He saw her bad teeth. He smelled her shampoo.
"You
were looking a little scared there, Wayne Junior."
"Junior"
tore it.
"Leave
me alone. I'm not what you want, and I don't cheat on my wife."
1:50
p.m.
They
touched down. Wayne got off first. Wayne stamped blood back into his legs.
He
walked to the terminal. Schoolgirls blocked the gate. One girl cried.
One girl fucked with prayer beads.
He
stepped around them. He followed baggage signs. People walked past him.
They looked sucker-punched.
Red
eyes. Boo-hoo. Women with Kleenex.
Wayne
stopped at baggage claim. Kids whizzed by. They shot cap pistols. They
laughed.
A
man walked up-Joe Redneck-tall and fat. He wore a Stetson. He wore big
boots. He wore a mother-of-pearl .45.
"If
you're Sergeant Tedrow, I'm Officer Maynard D. Moore of the Dallas Police
Department."
They
shook hands. Moore chewed tobacco. Moore wore cheap cologne. A woman walked
by-boo-hoo-hoo-one big red nose.
Wayne
said, "What's wrong?" Moore smiled.
"Some
kook shot the President."
Most
shops closed early. State flags flew low. Some folks flew rebel flags
upright.
Moore
drove Wayne in. Moore had a plan: Run by the hotel/get you set in/find
us that jigaboo.
John
F. Kennedy-dead.
His
wife's crush. His stepmom's fixation. JFK got Janice wet. Janice told
Wayne Senior. Janice paid. Janice limped. Janice showed off the welts
on her thighs.
Dead
was dead. He couldn't grab it. He fumbled the rebounds.
Moore
chewed Red Man. Moore shot juice out his window. Gunshots overlapped.
Joyous shit in the boonies.
Moore
said, "Some people ain't so sad."
Wayne
shrugged. They passed a billboard-JFK and the UN.
"You
sure ain't sayin' much. I got to say that so far, you ain't the most lively
extradition partner I ever had."
A
gun went off. Close. Wayne grabbed his holster.
"Whoo!
You got a case of the yips, boy!"
Wayne
futzed with his necktie. "I just want to get this over with."
Moore
ran a red light. "In good time. I don't doubt that Mr. Durfee'll be sayin'
hi to our fallen hero before too long."
Wayne
rolled up his window. Wayne trapped in Moore's cologne.
Moore
said, "I been to Lost Wages quite a few times. In fact, I owe a big marker
at the Dunes this very moment."
Wayne
shrugged. They passed a bus bench. A colored girl sobbed.
"I
heard of your daddy, too. I heard he's quite the boy in Nevada."
A
truck ran a red. The driver waved a beer and revolver.
"Lots
of people know my father. They all tell me they know him, and it gets
old pretty quick." Moore smiled.
"Hey,
I think I detect a pulse there."
Motorcade
confetti. A window sign: Big D loves Jack & Jackie.
"I
heard about you, too. I heard you got leanings your daddy don't much care
for."
"For
instance?"
"Let's
try nigger lover. Let's try you chauffeur Sonny Liston around when he
comes to Vegas, 'cause the PD's afraid he'll get himself in trouble with
liquor and white women, and you like him, but you don't like the nice
Italian folks who keep your little town clean."
The
car hit a pothole. Wayne hit the dash.
Moore
stared at Wayne. Wayne stared back. They held the stare. Moore ran a red.
Wayne blinked first.
Moore
winked. "We're gonna have big fun this weekend."
The
lobby was swank. The carpets ran thick. Men snagged their boot heels.
People
pointed outside-look look look-the motorcade passed the hotel. JFK drove
by. JFK waved. JFK bought it close by.
People
talked. Strangers braced strangers. The men wore western suits. The women
dressed faux-Jackie.
Check-ins
swamped the desk. Moore ad-libbed. Moore walked Wayne to the bar.
SRO-big
barside numbers.
A
TV sat on a table. A barman goosed the sound. Moore shoved up to a phone
booth. Wayne scoped the TV out.
Folks
jabbered. The men wore hats. Everyone wore boots and high heels. Wayne
stood on his toes. Wayne popped over hat brims.
The
picture jumped and settled in. Sound static and confusion. Cops. A thin
punk. Words: "Oswald"/"weapon"/"Red sympath --"
A
guy waved a rifle. Newsmen pressed in. A camera panned. There's the punk.
He's showing fear and contusions.
The
noise was bad. The smoke was thick. Wayne lost his legs.
A
man raised a toast. "Oughta give Oswald a --"
Wayne
stood down. A woman jostled him-wet cheeks and runny mascara.
Wayne
walked to the phone booth. Moore had the door cracked.
He
said, "Guy, listen now."
He
said, "Wet-nursing some kid on some bullshit extradition--"
"Bullshit"
tore it.
Wayne
jabbed Moore. Moore swung around. His pant legs hiked up.
Fuck
-- knives in his boot tops. Brass knucks in one sock.
Wayne
said, "Wendell Durfee, remember?" Moore stood up. Moore got magnetized.
Wayne
tracked his eyes. He caught the TV. He caught a caption. He caught a still
shot: "Slain Officer J. D. Tippit."
Moore
stared. Moore trembled. Moore shook.
Wayne
said, "Wendell Durf --"
Moore
shoved him. Moore ran outside.
The
council booked him a biggg suite. A bellboy supplied history. JFK loved
the suite. JFK fucked women there. Ava Gardner blew him on the terrace.
Two
sitting rooms. Two bedrooms. Three TVs. Slush funds. Six cold. Kill that
nigger, boy.
Wayne
toured the suite. History lives. JFK loved Dallas quail.
He
turned the TVs on. He tuned in three channels. He caught the show three
ways. He walked between sets. He nailed the story.
The
punk was Lee Harvey Oswald. The punk shot JFK and Tippit. Tippit worked
Dallas PD. DPD was tight-knit. Moore probably knew him.
Oswald
was pro-Red. Oswald loved Fidel. Oswald worked at a schoolbook plant.
Oswald clipped the Prez on his lunch break.
DPD
had him. Their HQ teemed. Cops. Reporters. Camera hogs all.
Wayne
flopped on a couch. Wayne shut his eyes. Wayne saw Wendell Durfee. Wayne
opened his eyes. Wayne saw Lee Oswald.
He
killed the sound. He pulled his wallet pix.
There's
his mother-back in Peru, Indiana.
She
left Wayne Senior. Late '47. Wayne Senior hit her. He broke bones sometimes.
She
asked Wayne who he loved most. He said, "My dad." She slapped him. She
cried. She apologized.
The
slap tore it. He went with Wayne Senior.
He
called his mother -- May '54 -- he called en route to the Army. She said,
"Don't fight in silly wars." She said, "Don't hate like Wayne Senior."
He
cut her off. Binding/permanent/4-ever.
There's
his stepmom:
Wayne
Senior ditched Wayne's mom. Wayne Senior wooed Janice. Wayne Senior brought
Wayne along. Wayne was thirteen. Wayne was horny. Wayne dug on Janice.
Janice
Lukens Tedrow made rooms tilt. She played indolent wife. She played scratch
golf. She played A-club tennis.
Wayne
Senior feared her spark. She watched Wayne grow up. She torched reciprocal.
She left her doors open. She invited looks. Wayne Senior knew it. Wayne
Senior didn't care.
There's
his wife:
Lynette
Sproul Tedrow. Perched in his lap. Grad night at Brigham Young.
He's
shell-shocked. He got his chem degree -- BYU/'59 -- summa cum laude.
He craved action. He joined Vegas PD. Fuck summa cum laude.
He
met Lynette in Little Rock. Fall '57. Central High desegregates. Rednecks.
Colored kids. The Eighty-Second Airborne.
Some
white boys prowl. Some white boys snatch a colored boy's sandwich. Lynette
hands him hers. The white boys attack. Corporal Wayne Tedrow Jr. counters.
He
beats them down. He spears one fuck. The fuck screams, "Mommy!"
Lynette
hits on Wayne. She's seventeen. He's twenty-three. He's got some college.
They
fucked on a golf course. Sprinklers doused them. He told Janice all.
She
said, "You and Lynette peaked early. And you probably liked the fight
as much as the sex."
Janice
knew him. Janice had the home-court advantage.
Wayne
looked out a window. TV crews roamed. News vans double-parked. He walked
through the suite. He turned off the TVs. Three Oswalds vanished.
He
pulled his file. All carbons: LVPD/Dallas County Sheriff's.
Durfee,
Wendell (NMI). Male Negro/DOB 6-6-27/Clark County, Nevada. 6¢4?/155.
Pander
beefs -- 3/44 up. "Well-known dice-game habitue." No busts outside Vegas
and Dallas.
"Known
to drive Cadillacs."
"Known
to wear flamboyant attire."
"Known
to have fathered 13 children out of wedlock."
"Known
to pander Negro women, white women, male homosexuals & Mexican transvestites."
Twenty-two
pimp busts. Fourteen convictions. Nine child-support liens. Five bail
jumps.
Cop
notes: Wendell's smart/Wendell's dumb/Wendell cut that cat at Binion's.
The
cat was mobbed up. The cat shanked Wendell first. The council set policy.
The LVPD enforced it.
"Known
Dallas County Associates":
Marvin
Duquesne Settle/male Negro/Texas State custody.
Fenton
"Duke" Price/male Negro/Texas State custody.
Alfonzo
John Jefferson/male Negro/4219 Wilmington Road, Dallas 8, Tex. "Gambling
partner of Wendell Durfee."
County
Probation: (Stat. 92.04 Tex. St. Code) 9/14/60-9/14/65. Employed: Dr Pepper
Bottling Plant. Note: "Subject to make fine payments for term of probation,
i.e.: every 3rd Friday (Dr Pepper payday) County Prob Off."
Donnell
George Lundy/male Negro/Texas State custody. Manuel "Bobo" Herrara/male
Mexican/Texas State custody.
The
phone rang. Wayne grabbed it.
"Yeah?"
"It's
me, son. Your new best buddy."
Wayne
grabbed his holster. "Where are you?"
"Right
now I'm noplace worth bein'. But you meet me at eight o'clock."
"Where?"
"The
Carousel Club. You be there, and we'll find us that burrhead."
Wayne
hung up. Wayne got butterflies.
Wendell,
I don't want to kill you.
Excerpted
from The Cold Six Thousand by James Ellroy. Copyright 2001 by James
Ellroy. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House,
Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or
reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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