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Ross Thomas - The Seersucker Whipsaw

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Ross Thomas The Seersucker Whipsaw

The Seersucker Whipsaw: summary, description and annotation

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A provocative and entertaining novel of political adventure in contemporary Africa... Clinton Shartelle, a Southern gentleman partial to seersucker, is the best rough-and-tumble political campaign manager in the United Stares. Peter Upshaw, the narrator, is a public relations man who searches out Shartelle and persuades him to run a very unusual campaign. The candidate is Chief Sunday Akomolo. and the office sought is the premiership of Albertia, an African colony soon to achieve independence. THE SEERSUCKER WHIPSAW is an exciting and suspenseful story, full of wild but wise humor and penetrating insights into American and African attitudes. But it is Clinton Shartelle, the Seersucker Whipsaw, who animates the entire narrative with his wit, charm and cunning. Whether he is planning his opponents mistakes or performing a drunken cakewalk, Shartelle is the unique character who makes this novel unforgettable.

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Ross Thomas

The Seersucker Whipsaw

Confound their politics,

Frustrate their knavish tricks...

Old Song

TO HARRIET

whip saw (hwipso) v.t. 1. to cut with a whipsaw; hence, 2. to defeat or get the best of (a person) two ways at once, as in faro, by winning two different bets in a single play.

Websters New World Dictionary of the American Language

Chapter 1

My four-city search for Clinton Shartelle ended in Denver where I found him playing shortstop for the Kwikway Truckers in a sandlot park at 29th and Champa. He was playing barefoot and talking it up in the infield.

The scoreboard said it was the top half of the ninth and that the Truckers were leading the Pueblo Ironmen six to five. There was one out with the tying run on first. The bleachers that ran along the third and first base lines were about three-quarters filled with the teams families, friends, and just people who think a free baseball game is a good way to kill a warm July evening.

I took a seat in the stands next to a fat Mexican who ate tamales out of a newspaper as he gave some advice to the pitcher.

Burn it in there, baby! the Mexican yelled through a cupped hand. He had something wrong with his adenoids and whatever it was lent his voice a blasting resonance that crackled in the night air.

Where do you get the tamales? I asked.

Guys got a cart, right down there by third, the Mexican said. I went over and bought three tamales from an old man with a white pushcart that rolled on bicycle wheels. He used The Denver Post to wrap them in, but the individual tamales were bound in real cornshucks. They cost twenty-five cents each.

I went back to the bleachers and sat down by the Mexican again. The pitcher tried another fast ball, but it was low and outside. How come the guy playing short hasnt got any uniform? I asked the Mexican.

Just a minute, he said and gave the pitcher some additional encouragement. The guy out there was just sitting here watching. Then when Connors got his ankle twisted, he just goes over and talks to the manager and they give him Connors glove and he starts playing. He aint bad neither.

Connors is regular short, huh?

Hes regular short, but he got his ankle twisted in the second inning when he mistook a hop.

And the tall guys been playing since?

The Mexican chewed the last of his tamale, licked his fingers neatly, and nodded. Thats right, he said after he tidied himself up.

The pitcher took a long windup and tried a slider. It was hit-and-run. The man at the plate got a fat piece of the ball as the runner on first scampered towards second. It was a hard-hit grounder to short that took a nasty bounce, but Shartelle pulled it in on the hop and snapped it to second in one smooth motion as if he had been doing it all spring and summer. The second baseman made a nice throw to first in time for the double play.

How bout that? the Mexican said.

He can go to his right, I said.

Not bad for an old guy like that.

You mean the shortstop?

He must be close to forty.

And then some, I said and walked down from the bleachers towards the bench of the Kwikway Truckers.

I had never met Clinton Shartelle, but I had seen pictures of him in the elaborate dossier that the agency had compiled and bound in a leather folder that made it look like a presentation to Anaconda Copper. We always went sled-length in that agency. The pictures had been mostly news shots, grainy stuff from AP, UPIs Wide World, Black Star, and the rest of the commercial houses. In nearly all of them Shartelle had been in the background, apparently by accident, standing slightly behind and to the right of the photos principal figures. In most of the shots he wore a preoccupied look, as if he were trying to remember whether he had turned off the roast. In others, he was next to a variety of beaming but somehow glassy-eyed men young, old, and middleaged who smiled vacuous smiles and made some small gesture of victory: a thumb and index finger forming an O or hands clasped together over their heads in the boxers salute.

The pictures showed Shartelle as a man with a face in the shape of a broken heart. His chin came to a rough point and a wide mouth wandered around above it. His nose was on the right track until it got halfway to where it was supposed to go and then it veered slightly to the left. It was a good nose, a strong nose. His eyes in the pictures were dark and direct and the left eyebrow was in a fixed arc that lent him a questioning look. It was a face that gave off, if it gave off anything, an air of preoccupied amusement that stopped just short of cynicism, but not much short.

He was using a towel on the short-cropped hair that was his trademark, when I approached him. The hair met in a widows peak, was pure white, and had been so since he was nineteen years old.

That was a nice play, Mr. Shartelle, I said.

He turned to look at me. Now youd be a little young to scout for the Pittsburgh Pirates, he said. Although that was a kindly thing to say to a man of my years.

It was a fine catch and a good snap to second. Im Peter Upshaw.

He put the towel on the bench and we shook hands. My pleasure, Mr. Upshaw.

Ive been looking for you for five days. Youve been moving around.

You come on slow, Mr. Upshaw. But nice.

I smiled. Its a holdover from the days when I sold mutual funds in college.

And now youre selling?

Im not. I work for Padraic Duffy. In London.

Himself?

The same.

Shartelle nodded and looked up as the ballparks lights were switched off. And how is the poor Irish lad from Chicago who aspires to be Englands noblest lord? He didnt seem really interested.

He was in New York for a month recently. We all hoped that they enjoyed having him there as much as we enjoyed him being there.

He hasnt changed, I take it?

No. He hasnt changed.

Shartelle gave me an appraising look and again nodded his head slightly. He hasnt changed the initials either?

No. They still stand for Duffy, Downer and Theims. Limited.

Prosperous, I hear.

Very.

Padraic Francis Duffy or Pig as we called him.

He raises them now, in case youre interested.

He would, Shartelle said. He would raise pigs just to prove that a pigsty, as long as its Irish, can be a work of art. Chester Whites?

Poland Chinas.

Shartelle produced a package of Picayunes and offered me one.

I didnt think they still made these, I said.

You can get them at the tobacco stores, the kind of places that sell nothing but tobacco. Most drug stores dont carry them.

Theyre strong.

Im getting just a little chilled, Shartelle said. Why dont we go to my hotel and Ill take a shower and then you can make your pitch. He looked around the deserted baseball field. For some reason, I dont think this is quite the place to entertain a proposition from Pig Duffy.

Shartelle had a small suite in the old part of the Brown Palace on Sixteenth and Broadway. He had a view of the mountains, furniture that was a cross between Italian Provincial and Midwestern Modern, about two dozen books, and an ample liquor supply. It looked as if he had settled in for a long stay.

You a married man, Mr. Upshaw?

Not any more.

Well, I dont reckon this kind of living would appeal to a married man.

It probably depends on how long hes been married.

Shartelle grinned. It might at that. Why dont you fix yourself a drink while I take a shower. Theres a bucket of ice in the refrigerator and the refrigerator is in the bottom of that thing that looks like an escritoire.

I poured a measure of Virginia Gentleman into a glass, dropped in two ice cubes which slopped a little of the liquor over the side, added some water and walked over to the window to see what I could of the mountains at night. There were some lights high up, but at night Denver looked very much like Birmingham, New Orleans, and Oklahoma City which were the three other towns where I had been searching for Clinton Shartelle.

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