To the left a long corridor ran down the back side of the long house. I went down that way. The left-hand wall was punctuated with doors and each door led into a patient's room. The first one was empty. In the second room was a wispy old lady wearing a flowered nightdress with a lace collar. Her gray hair framed her face in soft permanent waves. There was the hint of a beautiful youth about her. It whispered in the way she held her head and the repose of her small body in the chair. She had a large picture book open on her lap and she was looking at it intently through gold-rimmed wire glasses. I stepped quietly into the room. On the half-open door was a small plate that said MRS. NORMAN SWAYZE.
"Good morning, Mrs. Swayze," I said.
She looked up from her book and smiled at me.
"Hi," she said.
"I'm Dr. Marlowe," I said. "How are you feeling this morning?"
I closed the door quietly behind me as I spoke.
"Oh, I'm perfectly fine, doctor," she said. "This morning I was looking out the window trying to see my house, but I don't think I can see it. Can you?"
"Where do you live, Mrs. Swayze?"
She pointed toward the window.
"Over there," she said brightly, "somewhere."
I nodded and glanced out the window.
"No," I said. "I don't see your house either."
"I look," she said. "I look all the time, but I never seem able to find it."
As I got closer I could see that her book was a high-class, well-printed four-color collection of some of the filthiest pornographic photographs I had ever seen. It was the kind of expensive smut that Arthur Gwynne Geiger had peddled out of his shop on Hollywood Boulevard near Las Palmas. But that was a while ago now, before I killed Lash Canino.
The old lady had lost interest in me and was studying her book again, licking her thumb periodically to turn a page. Hunched over the big book in her small lap, she looked like a gentle sparrow. On the bureau against the wall, and piled on the nightstand beside her bed, were other books just like the one she had, well bound, well produced, and filthier than a Tijuana latrine.
She looked up and saw me looking at the books.
"Would you like to read one of my books?" she said. "I love books like this. Do you?"
I shook my head. "No, ma'am," I said. "Not exactly."
"Well, I do," she said firmly. "And the doctor gets them for me anytime I want them."
"Dr. Bonsentir?" I said.
"Yes-well, not himself always, sometimes one of the young men gets them for me."
"Mrs. Swayze," I said, "do you know Carmen Sternwood?"
She let the book rest open in her lap. There were two women and a man in a double-truck full-color spread. I tried not to notice.
"Carmen?" she said. She had straightened and her forehead wrinkled slightly as she tried to pull the raveled threads of her aging mind together.
"Carmen Sternwood," I said. "Young woman, smallish, nice figure, light brown hair. Her thumbs were sort of odd-looking."
Mrs. Swayze smiled. It was the thumbs.
"Of course. Carmen. She lives here too. Yes. She often comes in to read my books. Sometimes we read them together."
"Have you seen her lately?" I said.
Mrs. Swayze's face tightened a little. It made her cheeks pinch and redden.
"I think she went off with Mr. Simpson. I think she's visiting him."
"Really?" I said. "Do you know Mr. Simpson's full name?"
Mrs. Swayze's eyes got very wide and she looked a little frightened.
"Me? I don't know. I don't know anyone's first name. I don't remember very much anymore. I can't even remember where my house is. I look and I look and I can't see it."
"Do you know where Mr. Simpson's house is?"
She shook her head vigorously, and pointed again, vaguely, toward the window.
"Over there," she said, "I imagine."
"Do you know why she went to visit Mr. Simpson?" I said.
Mrs. Swayze smiled secretively and winked at me.
"A lot of the young girls here go to visit Mr. Simpson."
"Do they usually come back?"
"I don't know," she said. Her tone suggested that the question was idiotic.
Then her eyes shifted past me and she said, "Hi, sweetie."
I turned. Sweetie was the Mexican, on crepe-soled shoes, who had opened the door behind me. I should have smelled him. He was rank as a goat. His small eyes fixed on me and never left.
"I've been talking with Dr. Marlowe," Mrs. Swayze said. "He tried to see my house for me but he says he can't."
The Mexican's eyes never wavered.
"Si, Seriora Swayze," he said. Then he raised a forefinger and curled it toward him and gestured me toward the hall. I turned to Mrs. Swayze and bowed slightly.
"If I see your house," I said, "I'll let you know."
As I said it I slipped my gun out from under my arm and held it down against my leg, where the Mexican couldn't see it. Then I straightened and turned to leave.
"Thank you, doctor," Mrs. Swayze said. She was bent back over her book, fully engrossed again, wetting her thumb to turn the next page.
The Mexican backed out of the room ahead of me and as I reached the hall and stepped away from the door he whistled a punch with his left hand that caught me on the side of the jaw and slammed me back against the wall. It was like being hit by a bowling ball. I banged into the wall, my legs felt rubbery and I slid a little downward, trying to brace against the wall with my back as I slid. There was no expression on the Mexican's face as he stepped in to me and rammed his forearm up under my chin, and pinned me back against the wall. His breath was sour in my face as he came in against me and I saw his eyes suddenly widen as I jammed the muzzle of the Colt into his belly under his rib cage.
"Back up," I said hoarsely, "your breath is wilting my suit."
The Mexican stepped back carefully and stood with his hands a little away from his sides, his small eyes still steady on me.
"Now," I said, "you and I are going to walk down this corridor and into the front hall and out the front door. And you're going to do it backwards."
He made no motion, he said nothing. I could feel the tension in him, like a trigger waiting to be pulled. I hoped he could feel the same thing in me. Especially because I had a trigger to pull.
"Move," I said.
He backed slowly down the corridor, moving through the patches of sunlight where the doors to patients' rooms were open and the light streamed in from the east. Dust motes lazed in the sunlight. At the far end of the corridor there was a door in the right wall. I jerked the gun at it and it opened and we were in the entry hall where I'd waited to see Dr. Bonsentir. The slick-haired man in the white coat was there. He looked at me and made a move with his hand. I shook my head and he froze.
"You too!" I said. "Both of you face the wall, hands on the wall, spread your legs, back away from the wall so the weight is on your hands."
They did as they were told. No one spoke. I patted them down. The Mexican had no gun. He'd probably gotten hungry one day and eaten it. I took a Smith and Wesson .38 out from under the other guy's left arm.
"Anyone pokes his nose through the door," I said, "gets a bullet in it."
No one moved or spoke. I opened the front door carefully and looked out. The front yard was empty. The two orderlies leaned on the wall. I stepped out the front door and closed it and ran for my car.
CHAPTER 9
There were 105 people named Simpson in the L. A. phone book, if you counted the guy who spelled it without the P, or the one who spelled it Sympson. Of them, five were women, and three more had only the first initial and thus probably were women. Which left only 97 people for me to run down. If Carmen was with someone whose phone was listed, or with someone in L. A. If his real name was Mr. Simpson. My source was not impeccable.
I got up from my desk and stared out the window at the heat shimmering up off Hollywood Boulevard. The sun was steady and hot, and the smell of
the grill from the coffee shop downstairs went perfectly with the weather. My coat was off and hanging on my chair. My shirt stuck to my back and I had taken off my shoulder holster and hung it on the chair over my coat, handy in case a horde of sanitarium orderlies burst in and tried to stick me in a straitjacket. If I looked left I could stare down Cahuenga toward lower Hollywood, out of the glitter district where big comfortable homes with deep verandas still lined quiet streets. It would be cool inside those homes with their thick walls and their low roofs, some people kept the windows closed and the heat out, others opened them for ventilation and the lace curtains would stir lazily in the hot wind and make a soft whisper. But listen though I might, it didn't whisper where Carmen Sternwood was. I needed a different approach.
I called Vivian Regan. Her maid said she was resting. I said I'd be there in an hour. I washed my hands and face in the sink. Dried them, put my shoulder holster back on and my coat and went down to get my car. I drove over the Alta Brea Crescent with the top down and the hot wind blew some of the perspiration off my face. But my shirt was still wet under my jacket and my hat band was damp. I was early to the Sternwoods' so I cruised a little in the hills, looking at all the sprinklers on all the lawns. Brown was the normal and permanent color of southern California, it was held at bay by regiments of lawn sprinklers.
At two I was at the front door of the Sternwood home. The maid opened the door for me and led me through the house to the patio beside the pool where Vivian lay on a pink chaise under a pink and white umbrella, wearing a gleaming white one-piece swim-suit. She had on oversized sunglasses and there was an ice bucket handy with a bottle of champagne in it. Vivian's body was tanned the color of honey and all of it that I could see was smooth and resilient.
"My God, Marlowe," she said to me. "Take off your coat in this beastly heat."
"I'm wearing a gun," I said.
"For goodness' sake I should hope so," Vivian said. "I don't mind. I might rather like to see it, actually."
I peeled my jacket off and folded it and put it on the ground. I took the chair she offered and tilted my hat brim forward so that the sun would stay out of my eyes.
"Would you care for champagne?" Vivian said. "On a day like this I find it helps take your mind off the heat."
She took a sip of her champagne from a fluted glass.
Moisture had beaded on the side of the ice bucket and coursed down along the sides, making fine tracks in the condensation.
"When I drink champagne in the sun," I said, "I get a walloping headache."
"Well"-she laughed, showing teeth perfectly even and perfectly white-"why not get over here under the umbrella?"
She poured some champagne and handed it to me. I took it and turned the glass slowly in my hands. I watched her face closely.
"Know anyone named Simpson?" I said.
She didn't choke on the champagne, but it was only ten generations of iron breeding that saved her. For a moment her face fell apart, and then she got it back together again and said very casually, "No, I don't believe I do."
I nodded, as if I believed her.
"Why do you ask?" she said even more casually than she had spoken before.
"I have information that Carmen may be with him."
Vivian drank some champagne, maybe a little more quickly than she had previously.
"What was the name?" she said as if she were asking the time of day.
"Simpson," I said.
Vivian shook her head vaguely and patted the upholstered chaise beside her.
"Come and sit over here and stop sweating so much," she said.
I got up and moved into the shade and sat on the chaise. Vivian poured more champagne into my glass and some into hers. She drank. With one bright red fingernail she traced the outlines of my gun in its holster.
"Frightening things," she said. "But somehow fascinating."
She moved the tracing finger up from the gun, along my shoulder line and along the edge of my jaw.
"Like you," she said, "a dark deadly brute of a thing."
"You should see me in my teal robe," I said.
Her lipstick was brilliant red and made a wide bright slash across her evenly tanned face. Her black eyes seemed hotter at close range. She rolled onto her side and put her arms around me. The champagne glass had disappeared somewhere on her side of the chaise. She slid her hands up my back and riffled the hair at the back of my neck. We were pressed together from knee to forehead.
"There's not much between us," she said with her lips fluttering against mine as she spoke.
"In a manner of speaking," I said. I was doing everything I could not to whinny like a stallion.
"Just a thin layer of bathing suit," she whispered, "that zips down the back."
I slid my hand down the line of her zipper. She arched her body hard against me and pressed her mouth against mine. We hung that way, balanced on the edge of the chaise, and of God knows what else. Finally she pulled her head back. Her lipstick was smeared.
"The zipper." Her voice was hoarse.
I shook my head.
"Not like this," I said. "Like a clotheshorse towel boy on the chaise by the pool. Do I get a tip afterwards?"
Her eyes widened.
"You don't want me?" she said.
"I want you, but when it's me and you, not you trying to distract me so I won't keep asking about a guy named Simpson who may have your baby sister."
Tears welled into her eyes. We were both sitting up on the chaise now, though in truth I couldn't remember changing position. Her fists clenched.
"You terrible son of a bitch, Marlowe. You arrogant bastard. My baby sister. God, how can you know. How can you even imagine what it's like to have to be in charge of that baby sister?"
"I've had a taste of it," I said.
"A taste. I've had a lifetime. And now I have her alone. My father's gone, which is just as well. She would break his heart if he were here."
"Or she were," I said.
Vivian seemed to be really crying now.
"You don't know, Marlowe, what it is like, a woman alone, trying to manage Carmen, trying to keep the General's memory so that his name isn't dishonored, so that he can sleep in peace."
"When I mentioned Simpson," I said, "you acted like you'd swallowed a mouse."
Vivian put her face in her hands and began to sob, her honey-colored shoulders hunched. Her whole body shook with the crying.
"Damn you, Marlowe, why can't you leave me alone?"
"I'm a detective, lady. I work at it. I've got a client. He deserves my best effort."
Without looking up, her face still pressed into her hands, she said, "The only Simpson I know is Randolph Simpson."
"Is Carmen with him?" I said.
"I don't know."
"Where does he live?"
"Above Malibu," she said. "In the hills."
"Thanks," I said. "For the champagne too."
"He's too much for you, Marlowe. You can't go against him."
"I've heard that before," I said. "I'm still around."
She shook her head in her hands.
I couldn't think of anything else to say so I gave her the gunman's salute with my forefinger and turned and walked away.
Behind me I heard her call me a bastard. A lot of people had called me that. Could all of them be wrong?
CHAPTER 10
There was no Randolph Simpson in the phone book. I went down to the library and looked in the collection of street directories. No listing. I went over to the hall of records and began digging through the real estate tax rolls, and after three very dusty hours I found him. Randolph Simpson, Sierra Verdugo Rd. I went back to my office and looked at my map. Sierra Verdugo Rd. was in the Santa Monica Mountains, west of Topanga Canyon and south of Mulholland. A guy that lived there and kept his name out of the city directory and had his phone number unlisted probably didn't welcome a visit from a stranger.
I put on my hat and went to my car and drove right out to s
ee him.
Sierra Verdugo Rd. cut through the parched hills that people out here called mountains between the Pacific Coast Highway and the San Fernando Valley.
They still shot Westerns out here, low-budget stuff with aging stars on tired horses, and as I wound through the narrow turns of the road I half expected to see a band of rampaging Indians round the bend. The hills were brown and barren except for the scrubby low growth of indeterminate species that clung to the otherwise eroding hillsides. Boulders the size of outhouses teetered near the rim of the highway, looking as if you could reach out as you drove by and push them over into the canyon. The road west off Topanga Canyon went slowly upward in a series of S turns until it widened into a graded turnaround in front of a large iron gate. The gate was set into a ten-foot fieldstone and mortar wall that circled slowly out of sight in both directions. The wall was topped with broken glass of many colors set sharply in the mortar. Beyond the gate was a plain of green grass highlighted with flower beds and flowering shrubs. In the middle of the sere hills it looked like a vision of Eden from the plains to the east.
I parked my car near the gate and got out and walked to it. Beyond the gate was a small guard shack that looked like a miniature castle. A man came out and walked to the gate. He looked like a tough accountant. Dark suit, white shirt, dark tie, sunglasses.
"What can I do for you?" he said. His hair was cut short and very neatly trimmed around the ears.
"Looking for Randolph Simpson," I said.
He smiled politely and nodded encouragingly.
"I had the impression he lived here," I said.
"Really," he said.
"I wish to talk with him about Carmen Sternwood."
"I'm afraid you've made a mistake, sir," he said.
"Sure," I said. "I'd drive all the way up here without knowing that Simpson lived here. In fact I just drive around L. A. in my spare time knocking on doors at random and asking for Randolph Simpson."
The gate guard smiled as politely as a tax collector, but not as warmly.
"Mr. Simpson doesn't accept callers," he said.
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