The Collected Raymond Chandler

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by Raymond Chandler


  “No. Why should I?”

  “He was first to the body,” I said. “Whatever looked wrong to Talley must have been equally visible to Lavery.”

  “Is Lavery that kind of man?”

  “I don’t know. He has no visible means of support, no job. He gets around a lot, especially with women.”

  “Its an idea,” Grayson said. “And those things can be handled very discreetly.” He smiled wryly. “I have come across traces of them in my work. Unsecured loans, long outstanding. Investments on the face of them worthless, made by men who would not be likely to make worthless investments. Bad debts that should obviously be charged off and have not been, for fear of inviting scrutiny from the income tax people. Oh yes, those things can easily be arranged.”

  I looked at Mrs. Grayson. Her hands had never stopped working. She had a dozen pairs of darned socks finished. Grayson’s long bony feet would be hard on socks.

  “What’s happened to Talley? Was he framed?”

  “I don’t think there’s any doubt about it. His wife was very bitter. She said he had been given a doped drink in a bar and he had been drinking with a policeman. She said a police car was waiting across the street for him to start driving and that he was picked up at once. Also that he was given only the most perfunctory examination at the jail.”

  “That doesn’t mean too much. That’s what he told her after he was arrested. He’d tell her something like that automatically.”

  “Well, I hate to think the police are not honest,” Grayson said. “But these things are done, and everybody knows it.”

  I said: “If they made an honest mistake about your daughters death, they would hate to have Talley show them up. It might mean several lost jobs. If they thought what he was really after was blackmail, they wouldn’t be too fussy about how they took care of him. Where is Talley now? What it all boils down to is that if there was any solid clue, he either had it or was on the track of it and knew what he was looking for.”

  Grayson said: “We don’t know where he is. He got six months, but that expired long ago.”

  “How about his wife?”

  He looked at his own wife. She said briefly: “1618½ Westmore Street, Bay City. Eustace and I sent her a little money. She was left bad off.”

  I made a note of the address and leaned back in my chair and said:

  “Somebody shot Lavery this morning in his bathroom.”

  Mrs. Grayson’s pudgy hands became still on the edges of the basket. Grayson sat with his mouth open, holding his pipe in front of it. He made a noise of clearing his throat softly, as if in the presence of the dead. Nothing ever moved slower than his old black pipe going back between his teeth.

  “Of course it would be too much to expect,” he said and let it hang in the air and blew a little pale smoke at it, and then added, “that Dr. Almore had any connection with that.”

  “I’d like to think he had,” I said. “He certainly lives at a handy distance. The police think my client’s wife shot him. They have a good case too, when they find her. But if Almore had anything to do with it, it must surely arise out of your daughter’s death. That’s why I’m trying to find out something about that.”

  Grayson said: “A man who has done one murder wouldn’t have more than twenty-five per cent of the hesitation in doing another.” He spoke as if he had given the matter considerable study.

  I said: “Yeah, maybe. What was supposed to be the motive for the first one?”

  “Florence was wild,” he said sadly. “A wild and difficult girl. She was wasteful and extravagant, always picking up new and rather doubtful friends, talking too much and too loudly, and generally acting the fool. A wife like that can be very dangerous to a man like Albert S. Almore. But I don’t believe that was the prime motive, was it, Lettie?”

  He looked at his wife, but she didn’t look at him. She jabbed a darning needle into a round ball of wool and said nothing.

  Grayson sighed and went on: “We had reason to believe he was carrying on with his office nurse and that Florence had threatened him with a public scandal. He couldn’t have anything like that, could he? One kind of scandal might too easily lead to another.”

  I said: “How did he do the murder?”

  “With morphine, of course. He always had it, he always used it. He was an expert in the use of it. Then when she was in a deep coma he would have placed her in the garage and started the car motor. There was no autopsy, you know. But if there had been, it was known that she had been given a hypodermic injection that night.”

  I nodded and he leaned back satisfied and ran his hand over his head and down his face and let it fall slowly to his bony knee. He seemed to have given a lot of study to this angle too.

  I looked at them. A couple of elderly people sitting there quietly, poisoning their minds with hate, a year and a half after it had happened. They would like it if Almore had shot Lavery. They would love it. It would warm them clear down to their ankles.

  After a pause I said: “You’re believing a lot of this because you want to. It’s always possible that she committed suicide, and that the cover-up was partly to protect Condy’s gambling club and partly to prevent Almore having to be questioned at a public hearing.”

  “Rubbish,” Grayson said sharply. “He murdered her all right. She was in bed, asleep.”

  “You don’t know that. She might have been taking dope herself. She might have established a tolerance for it. The effect wouldn’t last long in that case. She might have got up in the middle of the night and looked at herself in the glass and seen devils pointing at her. These things happen.”

  “I think you have taken up enough of our time,” Grayson said.

  I stood up. I thanked them both and made a yard towards the door and said: “You didn’t do anything more about it after Talley was arrested?”

  “Saw an assistant district attorney named Leach,” Grayson grunted. “Got exactly nowhere. He saw nothing to justify his office in interfering. Wasn’t even interested in the narcotic angle. But Condy’s place was closed up about a month later. That might have come out of it somehow.”

  “That was probably the Bay City cops throwing a little smoke. You’d find Condy somewhere else, if you knew where to look. With all his original equipment intact.”

  I started for the door again and Grayson hoisted himself out of his chair and dragged across the room after me. There was a flush on his yellow face.

  “I didn’t mean to be rude,” he said. “I guess Lettie and I oughtn’t to brood about this business the way we do.”

  “I think you’ve both been very patient,” I said. “Was there anybody else involved in all this that we haven’t mentioned by name?”

  He shook his head, then looked back at his wife. Her hands were motionless holding the current sock on the darning egg. Her head was tilted a little to one side. Her attitude was of listening, but not to us.

  I said: “The way I got the story, Dr. Almore’s office nurse put Mrs. Almore to bed that night. Would that be the one he was supposed to be playing around with?”

  Mrs. Grayson said sharply: “Wait a minute. We never saw the girl. But she had a pretty name. Just give me a minute.”

  We gave her a minute. “Mildred something,” she said, and snapped her teeth.

  I took a deep breath. “Would it be Mildred Haviland, Mrs. Grayson?”

  She smiled brightly and nodded. “Of course, Mildred Haviland. Don’t you remember, Eustace?”

  He didn’t remember. He looked at us like a horse that has got into the wrong stable. He opened the door and said: “What does it matter?”

  “And you said Talley was a small man,” I bored on. “He wouldn’t for instance be a big loud bruiser with an overbearing manner?”

  “Oh no,” Mrs. Grayson said. “Mr. Talley is a man of not more than medium height, middle-aged, with brownish hair and a very quiet voice. He had a sort of worried expression. I mean, he looked as if he always had it.”

  “Looks
as if he needed it,” I said.

  Grayson put his bony hand out and I shook it. It felt like shaking hands with a towel rack.

  “If you get him,” he said and clamped his mouth hard on his pipe stem, “call back with a bill. If you get Almore, I mean, of course.”

  I said I knew he meant Almore, but that there wouldn’t be any bill.

  I went back along the silent hallway. The self-operating elevator was carpeted in red plush. It had an elderly perfume in it, like three widows drinking tea.

  CHAPTER 24

  The house on Westmore Street was a small frame bungalow behind a larger house. There was no number visible on the smaller house, but the one in front showed a stencilled 1618 beside the door, with a dim light behind the stencil. A narrow concrete path led along under windows to the house at the back. It had a tiny porch with a single chair on it. I stepped up on the porch and rang the bell.

  It buzzed not very far off. The front door was open behind the screen but there was no light. From the darkness a querulous voice said:

  “What is it?”

  I spoke into the darkness. “Mr. Talley in?”

  The voice became flat and without tone. “Who wants him?”

  “A friend.”

  The woman sitting inside in the darkness made a vague sound in her throat which might have been amusement. Or she might just have been clearing her throat.

  “All right,” she said. “How much is this one?”

  “Its not a bill, Mrs. Talley. I suppose you are Mrs. Talley?”

  “Oh, go away and let me alone,” the voice said. “Mr. Talley isn’t here. He hasn’t been here. He won’t be here.”

  I put my nose against the screen and tried to peer into the room. I could see the vague outlines of its furniture. From where the voice came from also showed the shape of a couch. A woman was lying on it. She seemed to be lying on her back and looking up at the ceiling. She was quite motionless.

  “I’m sick,” the voice said. “I’ve had enough trouble. Go away and leave me be.”

  I said: “I’ve just come from talking to the Graysons.”

  There was a little silence, but no movement, then a sigh. “I never heard of them.”

  I leaned against the frame of the screen door and looked back along the narrow walk to the street. There was a car across the way with parking lights burning. There were other cars along the block.

  I said: “Yes, you have, Mrs. Talley. I’m working for them. They’re still in there pitching. How about you? Don’t you want something back?”

  The voice said: “I want to be let alone.”

  “I want information,” I said. “I’m going to get it. Quietly if I can. Loud, if it can’t be quiet.”

  The voice said: “Another copper, eh?”

  “You know I’m not a copper, Mrs. Talley. The Graysons wouldn’t talk to a copper. Call them up and ask them.”

  “I never heard of them,” the voice said. “I don’t have a phone, if I knew them. Go away, copper. I’m sick. I’ve been sick for a month.”

  “My name is Marlowe,” I said. “Philip Marlowe. I’m a private eye in Los Angeles, I’ve been talking to the Graysons. I’ve got something, but I want to talk to your husband.”

  The woman on the couch let out a dim laugh which barely reached across the room. “You’ve got something,” she said. “That sounds familiar. My God it does! You’ve got something. George Talley had something too—once.”

  “He can have it again,” I said, “if he plays his cards right.”

  “If that’s what it takes,” she said, “you can scratch him off right now.”

  I leaned against the doorframe and scratched my chin instead. Somebody back on the street had clicked a flashlight on. I didn’t know why. It went off again. It seemed to be near my car.

  The pale blur of face on the couch moved and disappeared. Hair took its place. The woman had turned her face to the wall.

  “I’m tired,” she said, her voice now muffled by talking at the wall. “I’m so damn tired. Beat it, mister. Be nice and go away.”

  “Would a little money help any?”

  “Can’t you smell the cigar smoke?”

  I sniffed. I didn’t smell any cigar smoke. I said, “No.”

  “They’ve been here. They were here two hours. God, I’m tired of it all. Go away.”

  “Look, Mrs. Talley—”

  She rolled on the couch and the blur of her face showed again. I could almost see her eyes, not quite.

  “Look yourself,” she said. “I don’t know you. I don’t want to know you. I have nothing to tell you. I wouldn’t tell it, if I had. I live here, mister, if you call it living. Anyway it’s the nearest I can get to living. I want a little peace and quiet. Now you get out and leave me alone.”

  “Let me in the house,” I said. “We can talk this over. I think I can show you—”

  She rolled suddenly on the couch again and feet struck the floor. A tight anger came into her voice.

  “If you don’t get out,” she said, “I’m going to start yelling my head off. Right now. Now!”

  “Okay,” I said quickly. “I’ll stick my card in the door. So you won’t forget my name. You might change your mind.”

  I got the card out and wedged it into the crack of the screen door. I said: “Well goodnight, Mrs. Talley.”

  No answer. Her eyes were looking across the room at me, faintly luminous in the dark. I went down off the porch and back along the narrow walk to the street.

  Across the way a motor purled gently in the car with the parking lights on it. Motors purl gently in thousands of cars on thousands of streets, everywhere.

  I got into the Chrysler and started it up.

  CHAPTER 25

  Westmore was a north and south street on the wrong side of town. I drove north. At the next corner I bumped over disused interurban tracks and on into a block of junk yards. Behind wooden fences the decomposing carcasses of old automobiles lay in grotesque designs, like a modern battlefield. Piles of rusted parts looked lumpy under the moon. Roof high piles, with alleys between them.

  Headlights glowed in my rear view mirror. They got larger. I stepped on the gas and reached keys out of my pocket and unlocked the glove compartment. I took a .38 out and laid it on the car seat close to my leg.

  Beyond the junk yards there was a brick field. The tall chimney of the kiln was smokeless, far off over waste land. Piles of dark bricks, a low wooden building with a sign on it, emptiness, no one moving, no light.

  The car behind me gained. The low whine of a lightly touched siren growled through the night. The sound loafed over the fringes of a neglected golf course to the east, across the brickyard to the west. I speeded up a bit more, but it wasn’t any use. The car behind me came up fast and a huge red spotlight suddenly glared all over the road.

  The car came up level and started to cut in. I stood the Chrysler on its nose, swung out behind the police car, and made a U-turn with half an inch to spare. I gunned the motor the other way. Behind me sounded the rough clashing of gears, the howl of an infuriated motor, and the red spotlight swept for what seemed miles over the brickyard.

  It wasn’t any use. They were behind me and coming fast again. I didn’t have any idea of getting away. I wanted to get back where there were houses and people to come out and watch and perhaps to remember.

  I didn’t make it. The police car heaved up alongside again and a hard voice yelled:

  “Pull over, or we’ll blast a hole in you!”

  I pulled over to the curb and set the brake. I put the gun back in the glove compartment and snapped it shut. The police car jumped on its springs just in front of my left front fender. A fat man slammed out of it roaring.

  “Don’t you know a police siren when you hear one? Get out of that car!”

  I got out of the car and stood beside it in the moonlight. The fat man had a gun in his hand.

  “Gimme your license!” he barked in a voice as hard as the blade of a shovel.
>
  I took it out and held it out. The other cop in the car slid out from under the wheel and came around beside me and took what I was holding out. He put a flash on it and read.

  “Name of Marlowe,” he said. “Hell, the guy’s a shamus. Just think of that, Cooney.”

  Cooney said: “Is that all? Guess I won’t need this.” He tucked the gun back in his holster and buttoned the leather flap down over it. “Guess I can handle this with my little flippers,” he said. “Guess I can at that.”

  The other one said: “Doing fifty-five. Been drinking, I wouldn’t wonder.”

  “Smell the bastard’s breath,” Cooney said.

  The other one leaned forward with a polite leer. “Could I smell the breath, shamus?”

  I let him smell the breath.

  “Well,” he said judiciously, “he ain’t staggering. I got to admit that.”

  “ ’S a cold night for summer. Buy the boy a drink, Officer Dobbs.”

  “Now that’s a sweet idea,” Dobbs said. He went to the car and got a half pint bottle out of it. He held it up. It was a third full. “No really solid drinking here,” he said. He held the bottle out. “With our compliments, pal.”

  “Suppose I don’t want a drink,” I said.

  “Don’t say that,” Cooney whined. “We might get the idea you wanted feetprints on your stomach.”

  I took the bottle and unscrewed the cap and sniffed. The liquor in the bottle smelled like whiskey. Just whiskey.

  “You can’t work the same gag all the time,” I said.

  Cooney said: “Time is eight twenty-seven. Write it down, Officer Dobbs.”

  Dobbs went to the car and leaned in to make a note on his report. I held the bottle up and said to Cooney: “You insist that I drink this?”

  “Naw. You could have me jump on your belly instead.”

  I tilted the bottle, locked my throat, and filled my mouth with whiskey. Cooney lunged forward and sank a fist in my stomach. I sprayed the whiskey and bent over choking. I dropped the bottle.

  I bent to get it and saw Cooney’s fat knee rising at my face. I stepped to one side and straightened and slammed him on the nose with everything I had. His left hand went to his face and his voice howled and his right hand jumped to his gun holster. Dobbs ran at me from the side and his arm swung low. The blackjack hit me behind the left knee, the leg went dead and I sat down hard on the ground, gritting my teeth and spitting whiskey.

 

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