One Lonely Night Page 8
“I’ll drive this time,” she said.
We got in and drove. It rained a little and it snowed a little, then, abruptly, it was clear and the stars came in full and bright, framed in the hole in the sky. The radio was a chant of pleasure, snatching the wild symphonic music from the air and offering us orchestra seats though we were far beyond the city, hugging the curves of the Hudson.
When we stopped it was to turn off the highway to a winding macadam road that led beneath the overhanging branches of evergreens The cottage nestled on top of a bluff smiling down at the world. Ethel took my hand, led me inside to the plush little playhouse that was her own special retreat and lit the heavy wax candles that hung in brass holders from the ceiling.
I had to admire the exquisite simplicity of the place. It proclaimed wealth, but in the most humble fashion. Somebody had done a good job of decorating. Ethel pointed to the little bar that was set in the corner of the log cabin. “Drinks are there. Would you care to make us one ... Then start the fire? The fireplace has been laid up.”
I nodded, watched her leave the room, then opened the doors of the liquor cabinet. Only the best, the very best. I picked out the best of the best and poured two straight, not wanting to spoil it with any mixer, sipped mine then drank it down. I had a refill and stared at it.
A Commie. She was a jerky Red. She owned all the trimmings and she was still a Red. What the hell was she hoping for, a government order to share it all with the masses? Yeah. A joint like this would suddenly assume a new owner under a new regime. A fat little general, a ranking secret policeman, somebody. Sure, it’s great to be a Commie ... as long as you’re top dog. Who the hell was supposed to be fooled by all the crap?
Yet Ethel fell for it. I shook my head at the stupid asses that are left in this world and threw a match into the fireplace. It blazed up and licked at the logs on the andirons.
Ethel came out of the other room wearing her fur coat. Her hair looked different. It seemed softer. “Cold?”
“In there it is. I’ll be warm in a moment.”
I handed her the glass and we touched the rims. Her eyes were bright, hot.
We had three or four more and the bottom was showing in the bottle. Maybe it was more than three or four. I wanted to ask her some questions. I wanted the right answers and I didn’t want her to think about them beforehand. I wanted her just a little bit drunk.
I had to fumble with the catch to get the liquor cabinet open. There was more of the best of the best in the back and I dragged it out. Ethel found the switch on a built-in phonograph and stacked on a handful of records.
The fireplace was a leaping, dancing thing that threw shadows across the room and touched everything with a weird, demoniac light. Ethel came to me, holding her arms open to dance. I wanted to dance, but there were parts of me trying to do other things.
Ethel laughed. “You’re drunk.”
“I am like hell.” It wasn’t exactly the truth.
“Well I’m drunk. I’m very, very drunk and I love it!” She threw her arms up and spun around. I had to catch her. “Oo, I want to sit down. Let’s sit down and enjoy the fire.”
She pulled away and danced to the sofa, her hands reaching out for the black bearskin rug that was draped over the back of it. She threw it on the floor in front of the fire and turned around. “Come on over. Sit down.”
“You’ll roast in that coat,” I said.
“I won’t.” She smiled slyly and flipped open the buttons that held it together. She shrugged the shoulders off first letting it fall to her waist, then swept it off and threw it aside.
Ethel didn’t have anything on. Only her shoes. She kicked them off too and sunk to the softness of the bearskin, a beautiful naked creature of soft round flesh and lustrous hair that changed color with each leap of the vivid red flame behind her.
It was much too warm then for a jacket. I heard mine hit a chair and slide off. My wallet fell out of the pocket and I didn’t care. The sling on my gun rack wouldn’t come loose and I broke it.
She shouldn’t have done it. Damn it, she shouldn’t have done it! I wanted to ask her some questions.
Now I forgot what I wanted to ask her.
My fingers hurt and she didn’t care. Her lips were bright red, wet. They parted slowly and her tongue flicked out over her teeth inviting me to come closer. Her mouth was a hungry thing demanding to be tasted. The warmth that seemed to come from the flames was a radiation that flowed from the sleek length of her legs and nestled in the hollow of her stomach a moment before rising over the convex beauty of her breasts. She held her arms out invitingly and took me in them.
CHAPTER FIVE
I CAME AWAKE with the dawn, my throat dry and my mind groping to make sense out of what had happened. Ethel was still there, lying curled on her side up against me. Sometime during the night the fire had gone down and she had gotten up to get a blanket and throw it over us.
Somehow I got to my feet without waking her up. I pulled on my clothes, found my gun sling and my jacket on the floor. I remembered my wallet and felt around for it, getting mad when I didn’t find it. I sat on the arm of the sofa and shook my head to clear out the spiders. Bending over didn’t do me much good. The next time I used my foot and scooped it out from under the end table where I must have kicked it in getting dressed.
Ethel Brighton was asleep and smiling when I left. It was a good night, but not at all what I had come for. She giggled and wrapped her arms around the blankets. Maybe Ethel would quit being mad at the world now.
I climbed into my raincoat and walked out, looking up once at the sky overhead. The clouds had closed in again, but they were thinner and it was warmer than it had been.
It took twenty minutes to reach the highway and I had to wait another twenty before a truck came along and gave me a lift into town. I treated him to breakfast and we talked about the war. He agreed that it hadn’t been a bad war. He had gotten nicked too, and it gave him a good excuse to cop a day off now and then.
I called Pat about ten o’clock. He gave me a fast hello, then: “Can you come up, Mike? I have something interesting.”
“About last night?”
“That’s right.”
“I’ll be up in five minutes. Stick around.”
Headquarters was right up the street and I stepped it up. The D.A. was coming out of the building again. This time he didn’t see me. When I rapped on Pat’s door he yelled to come in and I pushed the knob.
Pat said, “Where the hell have you been?” He was grinning.
“No place.” I grinned back.
“If what I suspect goes on between you and Velda, then you better get that lipstick off your face and shave.”
“That bad?”
“I can smell whisky from here too.”
“Velda won’t like that,” I said.
“No dame in love with a dope does,” Pat laughed. “Park it, Mike. I have news for you.” He opened his desk drawer and hauled out a large manila envelope that had CONFIDENTIAL printed across the back.
When he was draped across the arm of the chair he handed a fingerprint photostat to me. “I took these off the corpse last night.”
“You don’t waste time, pal.”
“Couldn’t afford to.” He dug in the envelope and brought out a three-page document that was clipped together. It had a hospital masthead I didn’t catch because Pat turned it over and showed me the fingerprints on the back. “These are Oscar Deamer’s too. This is his medical case history that Lee was holding.”
I didn’t need to be an expert to see that they matched. “Same guy all right,” I remarked.
“No doubt about it. Want to look at the report?”
“Ah, I couldn’t wade through all that medical baloney. What’s it say?”
“In brief, that Oscar Deamer was a dangerous neurotic, paranoiac and a few other phychiatric big words.”
“Congenital?”
Pat saw what I was thinking. “No, as a matter of fact.
So rest easy that no family insanity could be passed on to Lee. It seems that Oscar had an accident when he was a child. A serious skull fracture that somehow led to his condition.”
“Any repercussions? Papers get any of it?” I handed the sheets back to Pat and he tucked them away.
“None at all, luckily. We were on tenterhooks for a while, but none of the newsboys connected the names. There was one fortunate aspect to the death of Oscar ... his face wasn’t recognizable. If the reporters had seen him there wouldn’t have been a chance of covering up, and would some politicians like to have gotten that!”
I pulled a Lucky from my pack and tapped it on the arm of the chair. “What was the medical examiner’s opinion?”
“Hell, suicide without a doubt. Oscar got scared, that’s all. He tried to run knowing he was trapped. I guess he knew he’d go back to the sanitarium if he was caught ... if he didn’t stand a murder trial for Moffit’s murder, and he couldn’t take it.”
Pat snapped his lighter open and fired my butt. “I guess that washes it up then,” I said.
“For us ... yes. For you, no.”
I raised my eyebrows and looked at him quizzically.
“I saw Lee before I came to work. He called,” Pat explained. “When he spoke to Oscar over the phone Oscar hinted at something. He seems to think that Oscar might have done other things than try to have him identified for a murder he didn’t do. Anyway, I told him you had some unusual interest in the whole affair that you didn’t want to speak about, even to me. He quizzed me about you, I told all and now he wants to see you.”
“I’m to run down anything left behind?”
“I imagine so. At any rate, you’ll get a fat fee out of it instead of kicking around for free.”
“I don’t mind. I’m on vacation anyway.”
“Nuts. Stop handing me the same old thing. Think of something different. I’d give a lot to know what you have on your mind.”
“You sure would, Pat.” Perhaps it was the way I said it. Pat went into a piece of police steel. The cords in his neck stuck out like little fingers and his lips were just a straight, thin line.
“I’ve never known you to hang your hat on anything but murder, Mike.”
“True, ain’t it.” My voice was flat as his.
“Mike, after the way I’ve been pitching with you, if you get in another smear you’ll be taking me with you.”
“I won’t get smeared.”
“Mike, you bastard, you have a murder tucked away somewhere.”
“Sure, two of ’em. Try again.”
He let his eyes relax and forced a grin. “If there were any recent kills on the pad I’d go over them one by one and scour your hide until you told me which one it was.”
“You mean,” I said sarcastically, “that the Finest haven’t got one single unsolved murder on their hands?”
Pat got red and squirmed. “Not recently.”
“What about that laddie you hauled out of the drink?”
He scowled as he remembered. “Oh, that gang job. Body still unidentified and we’re tracking down his dental work. No prints on file.”
“Think you’ll tag him?”
“It ought to be easy. That bridgework was unusual. One false tooth was made of stainless steel. Never heard of that before.”
The bells started in my head again. Bells, drums, the whole damn works. The cigarette dropped out of my fingers and I bent to pick it up, hoping the blood pounding in my veins would pound out the crazy music.
It did. That maddening blast of silent sound went away. Slowly.
Maybe Pat never heard of stainless-steel teeth before, but I had.
I said, “Is Lee expecting me?”
“I told him you’d be over some time this morning.”
“Okay.” I stood up and shoved my hat on. “One other thing, what about the guy Oscar bumped?”
“Charlie Moffit?”
“Yeah.”
“Age thirty-four, light skin, dark hair. He had a scar over one eye. During the war he was 4-F. No criminal record and not much known about him. He lived in a room on Ninety-first Street, the same one he’s had for a year. He worked in a pie factory.”
“Where?”
“A pie factory,” Pat repeated, “where they make pies. Mother Switcher’s Pie Shoppe. You can find it in the directory.”
“Was that card all the identification he had on him?”
“No, he had a driver’s license and a few other things. During the scuffle one pocket of his coat was torn out, but I doubt if he would have carried anything there anyway. Now, Mike, ... why?”
“The green cards, remember?”
“Hell, quit worrying about the reds. We have agencies who can handle them.”
I looked past Pat outside into the morning. “How many Commies are there floating around, Pat?”
“Couple hundred thousand, I think,” he said.
“How many men have we got in those agencies you mentioned?”
“Oh ... maybe a few hundred. What’s that got to do with it?”
“Nothing ... just that that’s the reason I’m worried.”
“Forget it. Let me know how you make out with Lee.”
“Sure.”
“And Mike ... be discreet as hell about this, will you? Everybody with a press card knows your reputation and if you’re spotted tagging around Lee there might be some questions asked that will be hard to answer.”
“I’ll wear a disguise,” I said.
Lee Deamer’s office was on the third floor of a modest building just off Fifth Avenue. There was nothing pretentious about the place aside from the switchboard operator. She was special. She had one of those faces that belonged in a chorus and a body she was making more effort to show than to conceal. I heard her voice and it was beautiful. But she was chewing gum like a cow and that took away any sign of pretentiousness she might have had.
There was a small anteroom that led to another office where two stenos were busy over typewriters. One wall of that room was all glass with a speaking partition built in at waist level. I had to lean down to my belt buckle to talk and gave it up as a bad job. The girl behind it laughed pleasantly and came out the door to see me.
She was a well-tailored woman in her early thirties, nice to look at and speak to. She wore an emerald ring that looked a generation older than she was. She smiled and said, “Good morning, can I do something for you?”
I remembered to be polite. “I’d like to see Mr. Deamer, please.”
“Is he expecting you?”
“He sent word for me to come up.”
“I see.” She tapped her teeth with a pencil and frowned. “Are you in a hurry?”
“Not particularly, but I think Mr. Deamer is.”
“Oh, well ... the doctor is inside with him. He may be there awhile, so ...”
“Doctor?” I interrupted.
The girl nodded, a worried little look tugging at her eyes. “He seemed to be quite upset this morning and I called in the doctor. Mr. Deamer hasn’t been too well since he had that attack awhile back.”
“What kind of attack?”
“Heart. He had a telephone call one day that agitated him terribly. I was about to suggest that he go home and at that moment, he collapsed. I ... I was awfully frightened. You see, it had never happened before, and ...”
“What did the doctor say?”
“Apparently it wasn’t a severe attack. Mr. Deamer was instructed to take it easy, but for a man of his energy it’s hard to do.”
“You say he had a phone call? That did it?”
“I’m sure it did. At first I thought it was the excitement of watching the Legion parade down the avenue, but Ann told me it happened right after the call came in.”
Oscar’s call must have hit him harder than either Pat or I thought. Lee wasn’t a young man any more, a thing like that could raise a lot of hell with a guy’s ticker. I was about to say something when the doctor came out of the office. He was a little
guy with a white goatee out of another era.
He nodded to us both, but turned his smile on the girl. “I’m sure he’ll be fine. I left a prescription. See that it’s filled at once, please?”
“Thank you, I will. Is it all right for him to have visitors?”
“Certainly. Apparently he has been thinking of something that disturbed him and had a slight relapse. Nothing to worry about as long as he takes it easy. Good day.”
We said so long and she turned to me with another smile, bigger this time. “I guess you can go ahead in then. But please ... don’t excite him.”
I grinned and said I wouldn’t. Her smile made her prettier. I pushed through the door, passed the steno and knocked on the door with Deamer’s name on it.
He rose to greet me but I waved him down. His face was a little flushed and his breathing fast. “Feeling better now? I saw the doctor when he came out.”
“Much better, Mike. I had to fabricate a story to tell him ... I couldn’t tell the truth.”
I sat in the chair next to his and he pushed a box of cigars toward me. I said no and took out a Lucky instead. “Best to keep things to yourself. One word and the papers’ll have it on page one. Pat said you wanted to see me.”
Lee sat back and wiped his face with a damp handkerchief. “Yes, Mike. He told me you were interested somehow.”
“I am.”
“Are you one of my ... political advocates?”
“Frankly, I don’t know a hoot about politics except that it’s a dirty game from any angle.”
“I hope to do something about that. I hope I can, Mike, I sincerely hope I can. Now I’m afraid.”
“The heart?”
He nodded. “It happened after Oscar called. I never suspected that I have a ... condition. I’m afraid now the voters must be told. It wouldn’t be fair to elect a man not physically capable of carrying out the duties of his office.” He smiled wistfully, sadly. I felt sorry for the old boy.
“Anyway, I’m not concerned with the politics of the affair.”
“Really? But what ...”
“Just a loose end, Lee. They bother me.”