
Grave Digger sucked the gristle from his last chicken foot and spat the small white bones onto the pile on his plate.
“I’ll bet you a bottle he don’t make it,” he said in a low voice, barely audible.
Coffin Ed looked at his wrist watch. “What kind of bet is that,” he replied in a similar tone of voice. “It’s already five minutes to twelve, and she got off at eleven-thirty. You think she’s waiting for him.”
“Naw, but he thinks so.”
They glanced surreptitiously at a man sitting in a worn wooden armchair in the corner beside the stove. He was a short, fat, bald-headed man with the round, black, mobile face of a natural-born comedian. Except for an overcoat, he was dressed for the street. He was staring across at them with a pleading look.
He was Mister Louise, Mammy’s husband. He had been picking up a hot little brownskin waitress at the Fischer Cafeteria next to the 125th Street railroad station every Saturday night since the new year began.
But Mammy Louise had got a bulldog.
