by P. N. Elrod
“He’ll be glad you hold me in such high regard.”
“Then I’m doing us both a favor.” He emptied his glass and stood. “Thanks for the beers. I’ll see you around.”
He strode toward the office, and that was that, until I could corner him when he was more sober or there were fewer witnesses. I’d either have to start earlier in the evening or somehow persuade him to drink a gallon or so of coffee. Fists wouldn’t work on him. He was the type to just grin and spit his crooked teeth at me.
I quit the table and went back to the bar with my glass of water. If Coker wasn’t in a mood to talk, then I’d try Malone. Bartenders usually knew a little about everything going on in their place. Instead of change, I put a five-dollar bill in front of me. It didn’t take him long to notice and come over.
“Yes, sir, what would you like?”
“Shivvey said you could help me.”
He glanced past my shoulder, probably looking for Coker to get some confirmation of my statement. Coker was out of sight, though. “I’ll do what I can, sir.”
“I’m looking for a woman named Rita Robillard.”
That quick nervous tic of a smile came and went, and he gave the bill a fleeting look of regret. “Perhaps Mr. Coker was having a little joke on you, sir. She’s right over there, with Mr. Upshaw.” He indicated the loud, frizzy blonde twirling over the floor with her well-dressed partner.
I felt foolish having been caught out in my lie. “What do you know about her?”
“She comes here a lot. She enjoys dancing.”
“Who are her friends?” I slid the five toward him.
He backed away from it. “Perhaps you should talk to Mr. Coker about her, not me.”
“Because he’s one of her friends? Okay, I don’t want you in trouble with Shivvey, but I’d appreciate an introduction to her.”
“I don’t think you’ll need one. Just ask her to dance.”
“I will.” I pushed the money at him again.
“Oh, sir, that’s not necess—”
“Don’t worry about it.”
The band eased into a slower number and the man called Upshaw slowed his high-stepping accordingly. He held Rita lightly, hands perfectly placed, balance perfectly centered. There was no intimacy of touch between them, though, not like when Bobbi and I danced. Upshaw was apparently just getting in some practice. Rita’s eyes were shut, a dreamy expression on her face. When they circled toward my side of the floor I pressed forward and asked if I could cut in.
Upshaw paused at my interruption; Rita opened her baby blues and gave me a quick once-over. She wore a gold dress that clung like paint to her firmly built figure, yet swirled freely around trim ankles.
“Sure, Sport,” she said enthusiastically, answering for him. Showing no more expression than a waxwork, Upshaw smoothly bowed out and glided from the floor.
Rita took hold of me—that was the only way to describe it—smiling like a happy shark. I led off, and we did all right for a few measures, then she tried to turn in another direction, reacting on her own to the music. I held fast, insisting on taking her my way. She finally came along.
“I’m Rita,” she said, laughing from our brief wrestling match.
“Jack.”
“Hello, Jack. You really know what you’re doing, don’t you?” She lifted her arms slightly to indicate our dancing.
“Most of the time.”
“I saw you talking with Shivvey. You a friend of his?”
“Just business.” No need to make up any more lies tonight. I had no real talent for it. “After he left I thought I’d like to dance with you.”
“Well, it just shows you’ve got good taste.” She didn’t look as drunk as before. All the moving around with Upshaw must have helped her work off some of the booze.
Close up, without the smoky air obscuring the details, she wasn’t too bad. There were good bones under the skin, by default giving her pretty features. She had height and was slim enough not to need much in the way of restrictive underwear. Her dress represented a month’s pay for most men, and she knew what was becoming.
She would also know that every man had his own angle, and while I moved us around, she studied me from under her lashes, trying to determine mine. I figured her to be twenty-five going on fifty. Too many drinks, cigarettes, and late nights were already taking their toll, aging her fast. I didn’t want to think of where’d she be in five years, and chances were it wasn’t something she wanted to think about much, either.
“You know Shivvey for long?” she asked.
“Just met him tonight. I’ve seen him around.”
“What are you here for?”
“I had to talk business with Nevis, but he went under the weather. Had to take a nap.”
“He does that sometimes. What kinda business?”
“I leased some property from him, turning it into a nightclub: Lady Crymsyn.”
“Oh, you’re that guy! I been hearing about that place all over town. Everyone says it’s going to really be something. When do you open?”
“In two weeks.” Officially. The private, invitation-only party was in one week.
“I gotta come see it. I used to go there all the time. To the old place, I mean.”
“Really? I’ve made a lot of changes. Maybe I’ll give you a special tour.”
She punched my shoulder. “Yeah, yeah, I know all about those! Though with you it’d be fun, I bet.”
“As much fun as you can handle,” I murmured. She’d want to hear something like that.
She gave out with a loud laugh. Loud, but with genuine mirth behind it. This was a gal who knew how to enjoy herself.
“I wasn’t in town back when Welsh Lennet had the place,” I said. “What was it like?”
“Not fancy, but you could whoop it up fine there most nights. Too bad about poor Welsh. He was a jerk, but could show a girl a good time when he wanted.”
“Who else used to be there with you? I might know some of ‘em.”
“Just the usual gang. Shivvey could tell you better. I’m not so good at remembering names.”
Or she was just being naturally cautious. “I heard you were friends with a gal named Lena.”
Rita lost rhythm for a moment. “Yeah, sure, we whooped it up, but she went away a long time back.”
“Went away?”
“Owed some rent, too—we used to share a flat—but that wasn’t the big deal. She left behind all her clothes and things. It was pretty strange. Not one word from her, either. I asked all over, too.”
I knew exactly how that felt, looking for someone who would never be found. “Where’d she go? Any reason why?”
She shrugged. “Couldn’t say. She left enough stuff to hock so I could cover the rent, so that was something.”
“You try to find her?”
“Well, of course I did! I even went to the cops and filed one of those missing person reports, but I might as well have tooted in the wind for all the help they were.”
“Was she tight with anyone back then? Maybe with Booth Nevis?”
She stopped dancing altogether. “You ask a lot of questions, Mister.”
“With good reason. You need to talk with me.”
“Oh, yeah? Why?” She took her arms away and planted her feet.
“To find out what happened to Lena.”
“What do you know about her if you wasn’t in town then?”
“Where’s your table?”
Rita glared a moment, then stalked to a place right by the dance floor. The table was just big enough to hold two glasses, an ashtray, a handbag, and one elbow. She dropped heavily into a chair and leaned toward me as I took the opposite seat.
“C’mon, tell me what’s what,” she demanded.
“You see the papers today?”
“I don’t have time for reading.”
Probably too busy sleeping off her nightly revels. “Maybe you caught it on the radio, then. The workmen at my club found a body there—�
�
“Ohmygod,” she breathed. “I heard that! Walled up they said. You telling me that it was Lena? I don’t believe it.”
I kept silent. She needed time for the surprise to wear off. It did, eventually, and the loud Miss Robillard started looking more sober by the second.
She canted her head, giving me a sideways eye. “You’re serious, aren’t you, Sport? About it being her?”
“Very serious.”
“W-why do you think it was Lena?”
“She had on some nice pieces of jewelry. Real stuff, not dime-store. Had dark hair…”
“That could be anybody.”
“The handmade dress she was wearing had a label of an exclusive shop, La Femme Joeena. The fabric was a really bright, deep red, like a traffic light. With a lot of sequins—”
Rita went white. She sat straight in her chair now, not touching its back, hands in her lap, her big shocked blue eyes staring at me and probably not seeing a thing. Dance music flowed over us; couples drifted past, laughing, talking.
“I’m sorry,” I said, an inadequate response to her reaction. Anything would be. I don’t think she heard.
After a moment, she scrabbled blindly at her handbag and pulled out some cigarettes and a lighter, which she couldn’t get to work. I took it from her twitching fingers and did the gentlemanly thing. She sucked that first draw of smoke deep into her lungs. It shuddered out. Around the fourth draw she looked a little less stricken. I remembered what it was like to need one that badly. No such ordinary cravings now.
“You gonna be okay?” Another man might have offered to buy her a steadying drink, but that would have worked against me. I had plans for this gal.
“Not tonight, I’m not. That’s the worst thing I ever heard. That poor kid. What a horrible, awful…” She sucked in more smoke.
“Try not to think about it.”
“Easy for you to say, Sport, but Lena was my best friend. About the only friend I ever had, and I haven’t had any like her since. My God…” More smoke.
“Look, I didn’t know her, and I can’t imagine what you’re going through with this news, but I want to help.”
“Help? How help?” Her eyes narrowed. She was suddenly back to figuring angles.
“To find out who killed her.”
“Why should you bother?”
I gave her a short line of what I’d told Nevis about clearing up black marks.
Rita finished her cigarette and stabbed it into the ashtray. “How could you find out anything? That’s what cops are supposed to do.”
“I got a few tricks up my sleeve, one of them is knowing you can be a big help in this.”
“I don’t know nothing.”
“Yes, you do. I want the names of the people Lena ran with.”
She bent forward, words hovering on her carmine lips. Then she must have thought better of it. She pulled back, crossing her arms. “Yeah, so maybe one of ‘em comes and stuffs me behind a wall, too. No thanks.”
“That won’t happen.”
“Oh, so you’re some kinda swami. You gotta crystal ball to see the future? Nuts to that, Sport.”
“Lena was your best friend.”
“Yeah, and she wouldn’t have wanted me in no trouble on her account.”
“You won’t get into trouble. I just want to hear what you’ll say to the cops.”
“I ain’t talking to no cops. If the lousy bastards had done their job the first time, they might have found her and Lena’d still be alive.”
The chances were that Lena had been dead long before Rita filed her report with the authorities, but there was no point in mentioning it. “You’ll have to eventually. They’ve traced the dress, and they’ll trace down where she lived, and finally come to you. You just tell me what you’d tell them.”
She studied me, narrow and hard. I’d knocked her flat with the news, but getting back on her feet again must have been an instant reflex for her. “You’re really interested in this, ain’t you? It’s more than just getting your club all square again.”
“It’s one of my more aggravating faults. Bothers the hell out of me all the time.”
She made a short, nervous half laugh that reminded me of Malone’s tic. I glanced at the bar and noticed him looking our way. He went back to polishing glasses. Upshaw was also there, also looking. I couldn’t read his face. He slid from his stool and retreated into the thick atmosphere. I followed his murky progress toward the back wall.
Sitting at Booth Nevis’s table was Shivvey Coker, returned from wherever he’d gone. Upshaw went there. He didn’t bother to sit, just bent low to talk or to listen. Both, probably.
I turned back to Rita. “That guy you were dancing with. What’s his story?”
“Tony Upshaw,” she said. She got another cigarette out. I lighted it.
“What’s he around here?”
“Nobody special. He just decorates the place, keeps the girls happy while their men are losing money. Looks like a pansy, but he ain’t. Just likes to dance. What about him? You think he’s with me or something? Nah, it’s not like that. We just dance is all.”
“What’s he do when he’s not dancing?”
“Nothing, ‘cause that’s all there is for him. He teaches in a studio somewhere, Takes acting lessons, too. Says he’s going to Hollywood soon to give Fred Astaire some grief. He just might do it. I think he’s waiting around to find a Ginger Rogers to go with him. Fat chance of that in this crowd.”
“He ever work for Nevis?”
“Not that I heard of.”
“Why don’t you and me get out of here?” I suggested. “Go someplace where we can really talk.”
She gave me a long considering look. Working out a few angles of her own, no doubt. “No, I don’t think so.”
“You pull that kind of shut-face with the cops, and they’ll yank you in on suspicion.”
For a second she believed me, then decisively shook her head. “You’re not scaring me much, Sport. An’ even if the cops do something that crazy, I got plenty of friends to spring me.”
“Friends like Shivvey? Or Nevis?”
She puffed away and just grinned. It didn’t suit her. I couldn’t get mad at her, though, not the way I did with Nevis. Part of me could see things from her side. She’d only been about twenty or so when Lena vanished. Combine that with the life she led, and five years would be a very long time to Rita. In her world it didn’t pay to be too loyal to live friends, much less a dead one.
I’d get the information I wanted, though. It would just take a while.
And a lot of coffee. “You eaten yet?”
“I don’t have time to eat.”
“Make it. I’ll take you someplace nice.”
There was a wavering in her eyes, and I knew I was reading her right. She was a gal with basic appetites, and enjoyed having them filled. A little food, a sympathetic ear, and maybe I wouldn’t have to use hypnosis to discover why Booth Nevis had worked so hard to mutter out her name.
“Nothing good’s open this late,” she protested. Not too forcefully. She only wanted to be talked into it.
“I know a few spots. Come on.”
She was right on the edge of saying yes, then gave a little guilty start. I looked where she looked. Gliding toward us, his tux still fresh despite all his dancing, was Tony Upshaw.
6
He paused close enough so as not be ignored, but far enough away so as not to crowd either of us. Like a perfect diplomat or a well-trained headwaiter. His features were mostly unremarkable, but he did have a lot of poise and presence and was impeccably turned out. He must have used up half a jar of Vaseline to keep his dark wavy hair slicked so firmly in place. He wore a polite expression and gave a slight bow.
“Pardon me,” he said in a gravelly voice with a local accent, “but I’d like to finish my dance with Miss Robillard.”
“Sure, Tony,” she responded with visible relief, rising from her chair before I could object.
I tr
ied not to show irritation at this turn. To judge by the amused glint in Upshaw’s eyes, I failed. Rita allowed herself to be swept onto the dance floor. She and Upshaw made quite a show of things as the band swung into a hot rumba. He was the more practiced of the pair, but she did a reasonable job of keeping up with his lead, laughing and squealing with delight the whole time. When the music shifted into another song, he decisively led her away. They went to Coker’s table. Upshaw saw to it she was seated, then melted into the background, his errand of separating us as neatly executed as one of his dance steps.
Rita wouldn’t be returning, not while I remained, anyway. I waited long enough to see if Upshaw also planned to retrieve her purse. Instead he approached one of the many other women in the joint, inviting her to dance. She happily accepted.
While the opportunity lasted, I snooped. Rita’s little beaded handbag held a folded-up wad of a couple hundred in worn tens and twenties, lip rouge, a gold face powder case with her initials on it, a vial of perfume, some keys, an address book, and a driver’s license from which I got her address. I flipped through the book. It had only names and phone numbers to some bookie joints I knew about and a few I didn’t.
A girl who liked to gamble. If the cash was anything to go by, she did well at it, too.
Leaving the purse, I moved back to lounge at the bar, finding a spot where I could see Rita and Coker. There was little point moving closer; even if I’d been at the next table my improved hearing wouldn’t pick much useful conversation out from the constant blaring music and other voices. I wondered if it was too late in life to start learning how to read lips. The idea of getting away for a moment so I could vanish and sneak up on them occurred, but was momentarily impractical. Upon quitting Rita’s table, I noticed every gorilla in the place watching me. I couldn’t duck into the john without having company, now. Coker had been too thorough passing word to them.
Rita and Coker had their heads close together. Rita shook hers a few times. I could guess he wanted to know what I’d been asking and was getting all the details. He frowned the whole time, which gave me a warm feeling inside. It meshed comfortably with my burning ears. If I had him worried, then I was definitely on to something interesting.