Meet Me at the Morgue

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Meet Me at the Morgue Page 12

by Ross Macdonald

“I don’t know. What does it matter, anyway? Art Lemp was stringing him along, just using the story to get Kerry off someplace where he could murder him.”

  “Do you know that, or just imagine it?”

  “I know Art Lemp, he couldn’t tell the truth to save his life. He come back here with the car, said Kerry sold it to him because Kerry was going away on a trip, he didn’t know where. He knew where.”

  “You think he took Kerry off on a wild-goose chase and murdered him?”

  “So he could move in on me. He was always nuts about me. Nuts is the word. I must of been nuts to let him do it.”

  “Why did you?”

  “To get back at Kerry, mostly. And I was lonely here by myself, and I didn’t know how I was going to pay the rent. A big help Art was, laying around half-soused most of the time.”

  “When did you kick him out?”

  “A couple of weeks ago. I found out he pawned my watch, that Kerry gave me for a wedding-present. We had a big blow-up that night, and the bastard beat me. That was the first and last time. I said to him: get out or I call the cops. The evidence is on my back. It still is.”

  She stood up and began to remove her dress.

  I said: “Keep it on. Have you seen Lemp since then?”

  “I’ve heard from him plenty of times. He keeps calling me up, begging me to let him come back, or else I should go and see him. Big offers, he makes. Mink coat, a new car, a trip to Honolulu. I told him I’d sooner go with a Gila monster.”

  “Do you know where he’s staying?”

  “Down in Long Beach, at some hotel, least he was when he phoned me on Thursday.”

  “What hotel?”

  “I think it was the Neptune he said. He was crazy for me to come and see him. I told him I wasn’t any masochrist.”

  CHAPTER 18: We drove south towards Santa Monica. It was past eleven, and traffic was slackening off. The city whose fires shone in the sky to the south and east was slowing down like a giant Catherine wheel, shooting off fewer sparks. The Santa Monica beach front was deserted, except for a few late couples depending on love or car heaters to keep them warm. There was a hard offshore wind, which made my front wheels weave a little, and flying clouds over the sea.

  With her face averted from me, Molly gazed at their gray invasion.

  “I hate this country,” she said. “It isn’t human country. I look at that ocean and it drives me cuckoo thinking how wide it is, how deep. It’s ten thousand miles across, Kerry told me. Did you know that?”

  “I crossed it during the war.”

  “Kerry did, too. His ship was back and forth across it half a dozen times. I was thinking just a minute ago—I must be going cuckoo like I said—I feel like Kerry went away on another long trip across the ocean, too far to ever come back.” She leaned forward with her face against the car window. “It’s dark out there. It must be lonely all by yourself out there.”

  She turned her coat collar up around her ears. The top of her head gleamed like a golden egg in a brown nest. When I followed the highway inland, she turned against the back of the seat and watched the sea through the rear window until it disappeared.

  “Where did you come from, Molly?”

  “I won’t tell you. You’ll try to send me back.”

  “I thought you’d want to go back, after the rough time you’ve been having.”

  “I never expected the road to be an easy one.” Her voice took on a hard obsessive quality, like a fanatic’s quoting scripture. “The road to stardom is never an easy one, even if a girl is gifted with beauty and talent both. Read the movie magazines if you don’t believe me.”

  “You’re pretty enough. Do you have talent, too?”

  “I’m beautiful,” she corrected me. “Some very good judges consider me beautiful. I have classical measurements: thirty-five, twenty-three, thirty-five. Those proportions are classical. And I do have talent. I can act. Do you want me to act something? I know some scenes by heart.”

  “I wouldn’t be able to watch you while I’m driving. What brought you out here in the first place, a beauty contest?”

  “I have won beauty contests, back home. That’s when the judges said about my classical proportions. I won the bathing-suit part of the state finals. But I came out here on my own.”

  “Did you run away?”

  “I certainly did not. I had my mother’s permission. She gave me the bus-fare, even. My mother is quite wealthy. She owns an extensive chain of beauty parlors.”

  “Where?”

  “You can stop trying to get it out of me. I’m not telling.”

  “Why not, if your mother knows where you are?”

  “She doesn’t.”

  “Why not?”

  “She’s dead. She died last winter, in a flood.”

  “What about your father?”

  “He’s dead, too. The whole family was wiped out in the flood.”

  “So you inherited the beauty parlors.”

  She paused. “I would of, only the river swept them away. So you see, it isn’t any use trying to send me back. I’m staying here until I get a contract, and I’ll get one, you just watch. I have the beauty and the talent both.”

  “How old are you, Molly?”

  “Twenty-one.”

  “Impossible. If you’d been telling lies for twenty-one years, you’d be better at it.”

  She didn’t take offense, but repeated stubbornly: “I’m twenty-one.”

  I was tired, and had tried to cover too much ground too quickly. Before she closed up entirely, I changed the subject: “What kind of a ship was Kerry on?”

  “Some kind of a carrier, he said. He called it a jeep carrier, he tried to kid me that that meant it carried jeeps, but it was airplanes. He was the ship photographer. That’s where he got his start as a photographer, in the Navy.”

  “Do you know the name of the ship?”

  “I did. Let me think. It was something with ‘Bay’ in it.”

  “Eureka Bay.”

  “That’s it, Eureka Bay.”

  “Fred Miner served on the same ship. He was an aviation mechanic. Didn’t Kerry ever mention him?”

  “You asked me about him before. I told you I never heard of him. What’s so important about this Miner character?”

  “His car was the one that ran Kerry down in February.”

  “You said it was Art Lemp.”

  “That was your idea. But I still think Lemp had something to do with it.” “I know he did. Art was always jealous of Kerry. He knew me first, and he thought he had a right to me. After we got married—”

  “Were you and Kerry really married?”

  “Sure we were. I can prove it. Even after that, Art was always sniffing around, trying to get me, trying to talk Kerry into some of his crooked plans. That Art Lemp is a crook. He used to be a cop, and they’re the worst. Lilies that fester smell much worse than stinkweeds, I learned that in high school.”

  “And Kerry wasn’t a crook?”

  “Kerry was different. He was an artistic personality. That’s why Kerry and me matched up so well. Maybe he did a few things wrong in his life. Who hasn’t?”

  “You said he spent time in Portsmouth.”

  “Six years of it, but it wasn’t Kerry’s fault. He got taken advantage of.”

  “Open up the glove compartment in front of you. There’s a camera in there. I want you to look at it.”

  “A camera? Why?” She did as she was told.

  I turned the dash lights up. “Have you ever seen that before?”

  “Maybe I have. Where did you get it? I think it’s the camera he lost.”

  “Was it Kerry’s camera?”

  “He had it.”

  “What does that mean?”

  “I was just going to tell you. He didn’t really mean to steal the cameras. He told me all about it. His ship was in the drydock at San Diego, and he met this red-headed woman at a party—”

  “What was her name?”

  “He ne
ver called her by name, he called her the red-headed woman. He told me she infatuated him. She talked him into going over the hill from his ship, then when she tired of him she turned him over to the F.B.I. He had a couple of cameras with him from the ship that he forgot to take back, so they had him for A.W.O.L. and theft of government property and everything. This camera they didn’t find, though, he stashed it at a friend’s house.”

  My right foot stamped the accelerator. We were on a stretch of highway that lay level and straight as a causeway across the salt flats. Away to our left and behind us, the lights of the airport flared in a giants’ bivouac. A plane rose wobbling through them like a vulture heavy with carrion. Night in these regions had an unredeemed ugliness. I wrestled the steering-wheel while the speedometer turned past eighty, hoping to leave the ugliness behind.

  It rode in front of my eyes, a red-haired woman with a naked back.

  “Is that your story, or Kerry’s?”

  “It’s the honest truth. Kerry always told me the truth.”

  “You should try it yourself some time.” I couldn’t keep the bitterness out of my voice.

  That or the speed frightened her. “I did tell the truth, I’m no liar. Where are we going?”

  “To see Art Lemp.”

  “I don’t believe you. You’re the one that’s lying. You’re taking me some place, you’re going to send me away.”

  My nerves were pulled wire-thin. “Shut up. Be quiet.”

  She was suddenly too quiet. I looked away from the speeding gray road and saw her fumbling in the lighted glove-compartment. I kept an automatic at the back of it. It came out in her hand.

  Instinctively I pressed the brake, too hard. The car rocked and screeched. Molly said:

  “That’s right, stop the car. This is the end of the ride. And you’re the one that’s getting out.” She held the gun two-handed, steadily.

  It was a service forty-five, heavy enough to cut me in half. I took my time about stopping the car. I couldn’t remember whether the automatic was actuated.

  If it was, a slight pressure on the trigger would end me. If it wasn’t, she couldn’t fire the gun. It took a fairly strong man to ready it for firing.

  The car ground to a stop on the cinder shoulder. The shallow ditch was paved with empty cans. A sulfur stench fouled the air. On the rim of the plain, against the cloudy reflection of the city, the oil derricks stood like watchtowers around a prison camp where nothing lived.

  I had come to the wrong place, at the wrong time, and done the wrong thing. A law officer who let a prisoner take his gun was worse than a fool. I set the emergency brake, my stomach expecting disaster.

  “Don’t bother with that,” she said. “You’re getting out, and leave the keys where they are.”

  “I’m staying in.”

  “No you’re not. I warn you, I’ll shoot. You’re not sending me back to Minnesota for people to laugh at, or frame me with a camera I never stole. I’ll kill you first.”

  Her eyes were a blind and stormy blue.

  “The gun isn’t actuated, Molly. It won’t fire.”

  She grasped the barrel-jacket and wrestled with it, pressing with all her might. The muzzle turned downward, away from me. I got one hand on it, and then the other.

  She scratched the backs of my hands. I twisted the gun away from her, held it out the window and fired into the wasteland. Its recoil, only half-expected, flung my arm up. I set the safety very carefully and dropped the gun in the left-hand pocket of my jacket.

  “It was actuated. You might have killed me. Then what would you have done?”

  “You got plenty on me now,” she said glumly. “Now you can put me away for a long time.”

  “I’m not interested in doing that. I’d like to find a place for you where old men won’t beat you, where young men won’t die on you.” After the shot, I had no anger left in me.

  “Is there a place like that?”

  Her gaze slipped past me, across the black fields, to the tower-ringed horizon. The odor of burning was still strong on the air.

  We drove on into Long Beach.

  CHAPTER 19: The Neptune Hotel stood in the limbo of side streets between the neons of the business section and the dark waterfront. Its own sign, ROOM WITH BATH $1.50, flickered and went out and came to life again like a palsied lust. Flanking the hotel entrance was a bar where a few sailors and their fewer girls sat with midnight faces. The lobby was dimly lit and unpeopled. Its green-washed walls cast a pallor on Molly’s face and turned her blown hair to green gold. She looked around the lobby as if she had been in similar places before.

  The night clerk stood up behind his desk He was a dark young man with an advanced haircut, short on top and long around the ears. He wore a luminescent scarlet shirt and illustrated suspenders.

  “You want a double?” he said in a cynical tenor.

  “No.”

  “You take her up to a single, you pay the same as a double.”

  “I’m a police officer.”

  He ducked, ran his fingers through his short top-hair, and came up smiling. “Why didn’t you say so?”

  “You have a man named Arthur Lemp staying here.”

  He glanced at the brass-hooked key-rack behind him. “Lemp is out.”

  “When did he leave?”

  “I couldn’t tell you that. I haven’t seen him tonight, or last night either.”

  “When did you see him?”

  “Night before last, I guess. One night is like another.” He moved one hand palm-down across the flat surface of his nights.

  “Who was he with?”

  “I never saw him with nobody. He’s a loner.”

  “No friends?”

  “Not that I ever saw. He always come by himself. That’s the only time I saw him, when he come in for the night. It was generally pretty late, around this time.”

  “Where did he spend his evenings?”

  He inverted the eloquent hand. “How would I know? The bars. I’m not his cycloanalyst. But he’s got the flybar look.”

  Molly snorted.

  “He’s traded it in on the mortuary look,” I said.

  The young man touched his mouth, and then the side of his nose. “Dead?”

  I nodded.

  Molly’s hand gripped my elbow. Her outraged whisper hissed in my ear: “You didn’t tell me he was dead. You been conning me. You brought me down here under false pretenses.”

  I shook off her hand, and spoke to the clerk: “Lemp was murdered this morning, out of town. I want a look at his room.”

  “You got a warrant?”

  “I don’t need a warrant. This is a homicide case. The man is dead.”

  Shrugging his thin shoulders, he took a tagged key from the rack and pushed it across the desk:

  “I guess you know what you’re doing. It’s three seventeen. Okay if I don’t go up with you? I got no replacement here. You turn left from the elevator. It’s the last one at the back, by the fire escape.”

  “Thanks,” I turned to Molly. “You’re coming up with me.”

  “I don’t want to come up.”

  “I’m not taking a chance on your running around loose and getting into more trouble.”

  I took her arm and walked her to the elevator. Its protesting machinery lifted us to the third floor. We went to the left, following a series of small red lights to the end of the corridor. Molly’s footsteps dragged.

  There were human sounds behind the walls and doors, sounds of unquiet slumber, alcoholic laughter, furtive love. I was tired enough to feel the weight of lives pressing from both sides on the narrow hallway. For a nightmare instant I felt infinitely tiny, a detached cell threading the veins of a giant, tormented body.

  The key turned loosely in the lock and passed us into the room. A light switch inside the door controlled the ceiling fixture. A pair of forty-watt bulbs blinked weakly on an iron-framed single bed, a corner washbasin, a rickety bureau, a few square yards of worn carpet.

  Ac
ross the half-blinded single window the fire escape slanted up, a black-iron Jacob’s ladder against the roiled light and darkness over the rooftops.

  “So this is where he’s been staying,” Molly said contemptuously. “In this dump, and he was talking mink and convertibles on the phone. He always was a dirty lying old skunk.”

  “You seem to be able to handle your grief.”

  “Why not? You didn’t see what he did to me. Look at this.”

  Shedding her coat abruptly, she reached for the zipper in the back of her dress and bared her shoulder blades. Downward from the base of her neck, the white flesh was crisscrossed with blue-black welts turning green and yellow.

  “He did it to me with his Mexican belt the night that I broke with him. You know what he said? Why he did it? That he’d do anything for a little affection. He said he was old and loveless, so he beat me.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “So am I sorry, but not for him.” She closed the zipper. “A swell chance I got of landing any modeling assignments as long as those marks are on my back.”

  “Sit down and be still now, Molly. I have work to do.”

  She sat in the room’s only chair and looked at the wall. A curved decorator’s tool had marked the walls and ceiling with myriad small crescents, like hoofprints left by a revolving army of nightmares.

  There was no closet, and nothing on the hooks behind the door. The bureau drawers were empty. I went to the bed, which had been freshly made up, and pulled off the sheets. There was nothing under them but the brown stains on the mattress. I raised the mattress and propped it against the wall. Lemp’s suitcase was under the bed.

  It was made of tan canvas trimmed with brown leather. The leather was scuffed, and the lock had long since been sprung. It contained a paper parcel from a Chinese laundry, which I didn’t bother to open, a pint bottle of cheap bourbon wrapped in a moth-eaten coat sweater, a carefully folded brown suit, with a tarnished San Francisco Police Department badge in the inside breast-pocket, a .38-caliber revolver and a box of shells, a packet of licorice throat-lozenges, a heavy jackknife equipped with a fingernail-clipping device, a pair of black-leather boots with razor slits across the toes, half a ham sandwich moldering in wax paper, an empty, alligator wallet, a nearly empty bottle labeled Pote-N-Zee the Hormone Elixir, and a pair of small baby-shoes cast in bronze and tied together with a blue ribbon.

 

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