“Would that describe the FBI’s role in this, Mr. Young?” the mayor asked.
“Pretty well,” Young said uncomfortably. “The FBI, of course, stands ready to provide whatever assistance we can offer.”
“We appreciate that,” the mayor said. “And I’m sure Inspector Wohl will call on you if he thinks he needs something.”
He looked at Young to make sure that he had made his point. Then he turned to Peter Wohl.
“Before you take any doors, let me know,” the mayor said. “I think I would like to be in on it.”
“Yes, sir.”
With that, the mayor walked out of the conference room.
I wonder, Peter Wohl thought, if the mayor just happened to hear about this meeting via somebody on the night shift here, or whether Lowenstein or Coughlin called him up, and told him what was going on, sure that he would be anxious to keep the arrest, if there was one, from being taken over by the FBI or the Secret Service. Now that I think about it, Charley Larkin didn’t seem very surprised when the mayor honored us with his presence.
The food in the dining room of the Lorraine Hotel was simple, but quite tasty, and, Marion thought, very reasonably priced. There was no coffee or tea. Apparently, Marion reasoned, Father Divine had interpreted Holy Scriptures to mean that coffee was somehow sinful. He wondered how Father Divine had felt about what had been reported by Saint Timothy vis-à-vis Jesus Christ’s attitude toward fermented grapes. There was no wine list, either, in the Divine Lorraine Dining Room.
It was not going to be a problem, Marion thought. He habitually took a little walk after dinner to settle his stomach. He would take one now, and was certain to come across someplace where he could get a cup of coffee.
On his way through the lobby to North Broad Street, he saw that the bulletin board in the lobby announced, “Sacred Harp Singing, Main Ball Room, 7:30. All Welcome!”
He wondered what in the world that meant.
When he returned from his walk, which included two cups of coffee and a very nice piece of lemon meringue pie at a Bigger Burger, the lobby was full of pleasant voices, singing, a cappella, “We Will Gather at the River.”
He followed the sound of the voices, passing and noticing for the first time an oil portrait of a white middle-aged woman, wearing the whateveritwas these people wore on their heads. He wondered if that was Mrs. Father Divine, and then if she was called “Mother Divine.”
He found the source of voices. It was in the main ballroom. A neatly dressed black man put out his hand, said, “Welcome, brother. Make yourself at home. Praise the Lord.”
“Praise the Lord,” Marion replied, and went into the ballroom and took a mimeographed program, which included the words to the hymns and spirituals on the program, from a folding chair.
He was a little uncomfortable at first but the music was lovely, and the sincerity and enthusiasm of the singers rather touching, and after a few minutes, he was quite caught up in the whole thing.
He had always liked “Rock of Ages,” and other what he thought of as traditional hymns, and he had never before had the opportunity to not only hear Negro spirituals, but to join in with the singers.
Afterward, when he went to his room, he wondered if perhaps somehow the last two hours, which certainly could be interpreted as worship, would now give him an insight into Haggai 2:17.
He read it again, standing up at the desk where he had left the Bible open to it: “17. I smote you with blasting and with mildew and with hail in all the labours of your hands; yet ye turned not to me, saith the Lord.”
He thought perhaps he had an insight. Viewed from one perspective, it was possible, even likely, that it was what the Lord might be saying to the Vice President, rather than directed to him.
That made a certain sense vis-à-vis “blasting,” but while one might be smitten with “blasting” and “hail,” being smitten with mildew made no sense. Mildew was what grew in the grouting around the tiles of a bathroom.
He undressed and took a shower, and then took the Bible to bed with him. But even after praying for insight, Haggai 2:17 made no sense to him at all.
Marion Claude Wheatley dropped off to sleep, propped up against the headboard, with the Holy Bible open on his lap.