Authors: Jim Thompson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fiction, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #General, #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Los Angeles (Calif.) - Fiction, #Humorous stories, #Humorous, #Gold smuggling - Fiction, #Women Sleuths, #Adventure stories, #Gold smuggling, #Swindlers and swindling, #Swindlers and swindling - Fiction
Dammit, that gold
was
being bought, regardless of what Mitt said. And this
was
entirely different from anything he had ever touched. He'd have to be careful, certainly. He'd have to do some tall scheming. But just because he'd had a few bad breaks in the past, there wasn't any reason to-
Toddy was almost running when he reached the hotel. He ignored the elevator and raced up the steps. He went swiftly down the hall. He shouldn't have left Elaine alone. He shouldn't have left the watch in the room.
His hand trembled on the doorknob. He turned it and went in. The room was dark. He found the light switch and turned it on.
She lay sprawled backwards on the bed. Naked. Sheets tumbled with her strugglings, damp from her bath. Eyes glazed and bloodshot; pushing whitely, enormously from the contorted face. Veins empurpled and distended.
One of the stockings was tied around her throat, knotted and reknotted there, and her stiffening fingers still clawed at it. The other stocking had been stuffed into her mouth; the toe of it, chewed, wet from gagging, edged out through the open froth-covered oval of her lips.
Toddy swayed.
How could I know… something I read… she was always asking for trouble
… He closed his eyes and opened them again. He put a hand out toward her-toward that hideously soggy fragment of stocking. Hastily he jerked the hand back.
The room had been ransacked, of course. Every drawer in the dresser had been jerked out and dumped upon the floor. Toddy's eyes moved from the disarray to the window. He went to it and flung up the shade.
There was a man down there near the foot of the fire escape. He was a small man with a hat almost as wide as his shoulders. One of his feet had slipped through the steps, and he was struggling frantically to free it.
Toddy liked nice things. He liked to live in good places. He found that it paid off. In the swank apartment hotel where he resided, he was believed to be the scion of a Texas oil millionaire. No one would have thought of associating the tanned, exquisitely tailored young man with anything off-color.
He was sitting in the bar of his hotel the day he met Elaine. Apparently she had followed him in from the street, although he had not seen her. The first he saw of her was when she slid onto the stool next to his and looked up at him with that funny, open-toothed smile.
"Order yet, darling?" she said. "I believe I'll have a double rye, water on the side."
He looked at the bartender, who was giving Elaine a doubtful but chilly eye. "That sounds good enough for me," he said. "Two double ryes, water on the side."
In the few seemingly casual glances he gave her, while she drank that drink and three others, he checked off her points and added them up to zero. She was scrawny. Her clothes, except for her hat-she was always careful with her hats-looked like they had been thrown on her. The wide-spaced teeth gave her mouth an almost ugly look. When she crinkled her face as she did incessantly, talking, laughing, smiling, she looked astonishingly like a monkey.
Yet, dammit,
and yet
there was something about her that got him. Something warm and golden that reached out and enveloped him, and drew him closer and closer, yet never close enough. Something that even infected the bartender, making him solicitous with napkins and ice and matches held for cigarettes-that held him there wanting to do things that were paid for by the doing.
Toddy glanced at his watch and slid off the stool. "Getting late," he remarked. "Think we'd better be getting on to dinner, don't you?"
"No," said Elaine promptly, crinkling her face at him. "Not hungry. Gonna stay right here. Jus' me an' you an' nice bartender."
The bartender beamed foolishly and frowned at Toddy. Toddy gave him an appraising stare.
"I think," he said, "the nice bartender is in danger of losing his nice license. Which is worth a nice twenty-five thousand for a nice place like this. It isn't considered nice, it seems, to provide liquor to obviously intoxicated people."
"Not 'tox-toxshi-conshtipated! Ver' reg'lar-"
But now the bartender had become even more urgent than Toddy. And Elaine was holding herself in a little; she wasn't ready to open all the stops. Toddy got her out of there and into the Cadillac, and she passed out immediately.
He opened her purse, looking for something that would give him her address. Its sole contents, aside from compact and lipstick, was a wadded-up letter. He read it with a growing feeling of gladness.
Of course, he'd been sure from the beginning that she wasn't peddling, another b-girl, but he was glad to see the letter nonetheless. Any girl might blow her top if something like this happened to her-having a studio contract canceled before she ever started to work. Hell, he might have gone out hitting up strangers himself. Now, with the letter in his hand, he saw why he had felt that he had known her.
He had seen her several years before in a picture. It had been a lousy picture, but one player-a harried, scatter-witted clerk in a dime store-had almost saved it. She had only to fan the straggling hair from her eyes or hitch the skirt about her scrawny hips to set the audience to howling. They roared with laughter-laughter that was with her, not at her. Laughter with tears in it.
Toddy drove her around until she awakened, and then he drove to a drive-in and fed her tomato soup and coffee. She took these attentions matter-of-factly, trustingly, either not wanting to ask questions or not needing to. He took her to her home, a court apartment in North Hollywood.
He went in with her, steered her through the disarray of dropped clothes and empty bottles and overturned ashtrays to a daybed. She collapsed on it, and was instantly asleep again.
Toddy stared at her, perplexed, wondering what to do, feeling a strange obligation to take care of her. The court door opened unceremoniously and a woman stepped in.
She had a bust on her like a cemetery angel and her face looked just about as stony. But even she looked at Elaine and spoke with a note of regret.
So this was Mr. Ives-the brother Elaine had insisted would arrive. And just when she was beginning to believe there wasn't any brother! Well. She knew how perturbed he must be, she was fond of Elaine herself, and-and such a great talent, Mr. Ives! But it just couldn't go on any longer. She simply could not put up with it. So if Mr. Ives would find her another place immediately, absolutely no later than tomorrow-And since he'd want to get started early, the back rent-six weeks, it was…
Toddy paid it. He stayed the night there, sprawled out on two chairs. In the morning, he helped Elaine pack. Or, rather, he packed, stopping frequently to hold her over the toilet while she retched, and washing her face afterward.
He found and paid for another apartment. He put her to bed. Not until then, when she was looking up at him from the pillows-a bottle of whiskey on the reading stand, just as "medicine"-did she seem to take any note of what he had done.
"Sit down here," she said, patting the bed. And he sat down. "And maybe you'd better hold my hand," she said. And he held it. "Now," she said, her face crinkling into a frown, "what am I going to do about you?"
"Do?" Toddy grinned.
"Now, you know what I mean," she said severely. "I'm broke. I'm not working and I don't know when I will be. I guess I should ask you to sleep with me, but I've never done anything like that, and anyway it probably wouldn't be much fun for you, would it? I mean I'm so skinny I'd probably stick you with a bone."
"Y-yes," nodded Toddy. He had the goddamnedest feeling that he was going to bawl!
"Maybe I could wash some clothes for you," said Elaine. "That's an awfully pretty suit you have on. I could wash it real nice for you and hang it out the window, and it… would that be worth fifty cents?"
Toddy shook his head. He couldn't speak.
"Well"-her voice was humble-"a quarter, then?"
"D-don't," said Toddy. "Oh, for Christ's sake…"
Toddy hadn't cried since the night he ran away from home. He'd half-killed his stepfather with a two-by-four, bashed him over the head as he came into the barn. He'd tried to make it look like an accident, like one of the rafters had broken. But he was shaking with fear, with that and the bitter coldness of the night. He'd huddled down in a corner of the boxcar, and sometime during the night a tramp had crawled into the car also. Observing the proprieties of the road, the tramp had gone into a corner, that corner, to relieve himself. And Toddy had been soaked, along with his thin parcel of sandwiches. The stuff had frozen on him. He'd cried then, for the last time.
Up to now.
He was down on his knees at the side of the bed, and her arms clutched him in an awkward, foolishly sweet embrace, and she was talking to him like a child, as one child to another, and there had never been another moment like this in the history of man and woman. They cried together, two lost children who found comfort and warmth in each other. And then they started to laugh. For somehow in the extravagant and puppyish outpouring of her caresses, she had hooked the armhole of her nightgown around his neck.
While she shrilled gleefully that he was tickling her, and while her small breast pounded his face with merriment, he lifted and stood her on the bed. Then, since there was no other way, he slid off the other shoulder strap and drew the gown off her body, lowering his head with it.
He shucked out of it and turned around. She was still standing upright, examining herself in the wall mirror.
She twisted her neck and gazed at her childish buttocks. She faced the mirror and bowed her back and legs. She raised one leg in the air and looked.
She turned around, frowning, and nodded to him. "Feel… no, here, honey. That's where you do it, isn't it?"
Toddy felt.
"Not bad," he said gravely. "Not bad at all."
"Not too skinny?"
"By no means."
Elaine beamed and put her legs back together. Pivoting, arms stiff at her sides, she did a pratfall on the bed. When she stopped bouncing, she lay back and looked at him.
"Well," she said, puzzledly. "I mean, after all… hadn't we better get started?"
Thus, the story of the meeting of Toddy and Elaine. Funny-sad, bitter-sweet. It put a lump in your throat; at least, it put one in the throat of Toddy, who lived it. Then, they flew to Yuma that night and were married. And the lump moved up from his throat to his head.
Literally.
They were in their hotel room, and Elaine was teasing for just one "lul old bottle, just a lul one, honey." All her charm was turned on. She pantomimed her tremendous thirst, staggered about the room hand shielding her eyes, a desert wanderer in search of an oasis. Then, she broke into an insanely funny dance of joy as the oasis was discovered-right there on the dresser in the form of his wallet.
Laughing tenderly, Toddy moved in front of her. "Huhuh, baby. No more tonight."
Elaine picked up the empty bottle and hit him over the head with it. "You stupid son-of-a-bitch," she said, "how long you think I can keep up this clowning?"
Without co-signers, collateral or even a job, in the usual meaning of the word, you could borrow from one to a maximum of ten dollars from Shake; and you could-and usually did-take the rest of your lifetime to pay it back. Shake liked to get along with people; he liked to live and let live. He said so himself.
If you objected to these lenient arrangements, things were still made easy for you; there was a swift and simple alternative. Shake's
pachucos
, his young Mexican toughs, would pay you a visit. They would drop around to your one-chair barber shop or your shoeshine stand or the corner where you hustled papers and kick the holy hell out of you. They'd lay you so flat you could crawl under doors. Shake pointed to the expense of these kickings as justification for his whimsical methods of compounding interest.
When Toddy pushed Donald into the office ahead of him, Shake and two of the
pachucos
were in the back room. They'd been splitting a half-gallon of four-bit wine while they stamped phony serial numbers into an equally phony batch of Irish sweepstakes tickets. Their minds were a little muggy and they were jammed around a littered table. Before they could snap together, Toddy had dutch-walked Donald inside and kicked the door shut.
They got to their feet then; they advanced a step in a three-cornered half-circle. But Toddy jerked his head toward the windows and the movement stopped abruptly.
"Come on," he invited grimly. "I won't do a damn thing but toss this bastard out on his skull."
"N-now, T-Toddy…" Nervous phlegm burbled in Shake's throat. "Now, Toddy," he whined, "is this a way to act? Bustin' into a office after business hours?"
He was a swollen dropsical giant with an ague, probably syphilis-inspired, which kept his puffed flesh in faint, almost constant oscillation.
"I've got something to say," said Toddy. "If you don't want those punks to hear it, you'd better send 'em out."
"Well, now-" Shake made a flabbily deprecating motion. "I don't know about that. We're settin' here having a nice little party, Ramon an' Juan an' me. Just settin' here minding our own business, and then you come along an'-"
"All right," said Toddy. "I gave you a chance. I went up to my room tonight and-"
"
Wait!
Send 'em out, Shake!"
"Oh?" Shake looked doubtfully at the little shiv artist. "You been up to somethin' bad, Donald?"
"Send 'em out!" Donald gasped, teetering painfully in Toddy's grip. "Do like he says, Shake!"
"Well… how far you want 'em to go, Toddy?"
"How good can they hear?"
Shake hesitated, then waved his hand. "All the way down, boys Clear down in front"
The
pachucos
left, duck tail haircuts gleaming, heel plates clicking on the ancient marble. When Toddy heard the Outer door close, he released Donald with a shove.
"All right, strip."
"Goddammit, I done tole you I-"
"Take 'em off, Donald." Shake's pig eyes gleamed with interest as he sank into a chair.
Sullenly, Donald shed his clothes until he stood naked before them.
"You're awful dirty, Donald." Shake clucked his tongue reproachfully. "He have a chance to ditch it anywheres, Toddy? Could he of tossed it away?"
"No," Toddy admitted, "he couldn't."
"How big was it?… Donald, maybe you better bend over an'-"
Toddy chuckled unwillingly and Donald spewed out outraged obscenities.
"All right, then!" Shake said. "You just get them clothes back on before you catch cold. And, Toddy, maybe you better…"
Toddy nodded slowly. "Here it is," he began. "Donald hit me up for protection again tonight, and I gave him a brush-off. One that he'd remember. Then-"
"But that was just business, Toddy! Just because a man's ambitious and wants to expand, it don't prove-"
"It proves you're stupid enough to try anything. Jesus-" Toddy shook his head in wondering disgust. "Trying to shake down a gold- buyer! A bunch of cheap hoods like you. Why the hell don't you work out on Mickey Cohen?"
Shake looked embarrassed. "Well, now," he mumbled. "Maybe it wasn't real smart, but-"
"Smart!" snarled Donald. "You see what the son-of-a-bitch done to my nose?"
"I met Donald on the way to Milt's shop. I went on down to the shop and checked in, then I went back to my room. I couldn't have been gone more than thirty or thirty-five minutes at the outside. When I went in I found the room turned upside down, I found Donald heading down the fire escape, and I found my wife on the bed… strangled with her own stockings."
"Sss-strangled?… Y-you mean h-he…?"
"I didn't!" Donald snapped, fearfully. "Dammit, Shake, why for would I do a thing like that?"
"W-why for was you in Toddy's room?"
"I-well, I-"
"Spill it!"
Donald edged toward the corner of the room, keeping a cautious eye on Toddy. "I j-just went up there to wait for him. Kind of surprise him, you know."
"Yeah?"
"I was-I was just goin' to cut him up a little when he came back."
Shake sighed with relief. "You see, Toddy? Donald wouldn't of killed her. Donald ain't that kind of boy. He was just goin' to cut you up a little."
"Uh-huh. And Elaine jumps him, so he gives her the business."
"You're a goddam liar!"
"Now you know better than that, Toddy," said Shake. "You been around too long to think a thing like that. In the first place, he ain't a killer. In the second place, he's a shiv man. Why for would he screw around with stockings when he had a shiv? It ain't his-his-"
-modus operandi
, Toddy supplied silently. It was true; the operation method of a criminal almost never changes. The police would have a hell of a time if it did. Still, Donald had had the opportunity. He'd been caught at the scene of the murder.
"You think I'm-I'm immortal or somethin?" Donald demanded with genuine indignation. "You think I'm a pervert? You think I killed the Black Dahlia?"
"I think you're a very sweet little boy," said Toddy. "The whole trouble is, people just don't understand you. Like me, for example. How'd you know it was safe to go into my room? How'd you know my wife wasn't in there… alive?"
"I could look under the door an' see it was dark. I knocked an' didn't get no answer, so I went in."
"The door was unlocked?"
"I'm tellin' ya."
"How long was this after you left me?"
"Well… fifteen-twenty minutes maybe."
"Just long enough to work your nerve up, huh? How long had you been there when I came in? It couldn't have been much more than ten minutes."
"It wasn't." Donald scowled peevishly. "Look. Why don't you cut out the third degree an' let me tell you."
"Okay. Keep it straight."
"I knocked on the door," said Donald. "I knocked an' waited a minute. I thought I heard someone movin' around-kind of a rustlin' sound-and I almost took a powder. But I didn't hear it no more, then, after the first time, so I figured it must be the window shade flappin' or something like that. I opened the door just a crack an' slid in…"
"Go on."
"I"-Donald wiped sweat from his face-"I stood there by the door, hugging the wall and waiting… an'… an' I don't know. I begin to get kind of a funny feeling, like someone was staring at the back of my neck. Well, you know how it is in that room. You can't really see into it up there by the door. You can't see the bed or nothing hardly until you get past the bathroom. Not with the lights off, anyways…"
"I know that," said Toddy impatiently.
"Well, I got this feeling so… so I slide down along the wall until I'm out of that little areaway. I came even with the bed and my eyes are gettin' kind of used to the dark an' I can see. A little. I can see they's someone on the bed. I- I-Jesus! I can't even think what I'm doin'! All I can think of is lightin' a cigarette-I mean, I don't really think of it. I do it without thinkin'. And then the match flares up an' I see everything. I see what's happened. An' then I hear you at the door, an' I try to beat it down the fire escape an'-"
Toddy nodded absently. Donald was in the clear. He'd been pretty sure right from the beginning. But under the circumstances, there'd been nothing to do but grab him.
Donald stepped to the table, poured out a water glass of sherry, and killed it at a gulp. Shake stroked his chins and stared interestedly at Toddy.
"If you was so sure Donald killed your wife," he said, "why didn't you just call the cops? That's what cops is for, to arrest criminals."
"So that's it," said Toddy. "I often wondered."
"You know what I think?"
"Yes."
"I think you killed her yourself. You either bumped her off before you left the room or-"
"-Or I went up the fire escape and did it, then beat it down and came up the front way." Toddy's tone was light, satirical, but there was a heavy feeling around his heart. Something seemed to struggle there, to fight up toward the hidden recesses of his mind. "Sure. That's what the cops will think. That's what
I'll
say after they work me over a few days."
Shake shook his head with a complete lack of sympathy. "They sure swing a mean hose in this town. You wouldn't believe what it does to a man's kidneys. I had a
pachuco
workin' for me; you remember him, Donald-Pedro? You remember how he went around after the cops had him? All bent together like a horseshoe. Had to take off his collar to pee."
"Think of that," said Toddy.
"Me an' Donald has got a duty to do, Toddy. The only thing is, how long should we take to do it? Now if we was real busy-say, we had some money to count-"
"Huh-uh."
"Huh-uh?"
"In spades."
"Too bad." Shake stared at the telephone. "That certainly is too bad, ain't it, Donald?"
"Oh, it's not too bad yet," said Toddy. "Let's see, now. It would take your
pachucos
a couple of minutes to get up here. That's not much, but I don't think you and Donald can take much. I really don't think you can, Shake. Of course, if you'd like to find out…"
He spread his hands, beaming at them mirthlessly. Shake drew the back of his hands across his mouth.
"So you'll sit here the rest of your life?" he burbled.
"All right," said Toddy. "Say that I walk out of here and you use the phone. I know every big-time con man in the country, and con men stick together. I'd make bond eventually. I'd be around to see you. You wouldn't enjoy that, Shake. I tell you from the bottom of my heart you wouldn't."
He stared at them a moment longer, white teeth bared, eyes gray and cold. Then he broke the tension with an easy, good-natured laugh.
"Now why don't we stop the clowning?" he said. "You boys know I'm all right. I know you're all right. We're all a little upset, but we're all big men. We can forgive and forget… and do business together."
Donald's narrow shoulders straightened unconsciously. Shake emitted a ponderous wheeze. "Now that's good sense," he declared. "Mighty good. Uh-what kind of business did you have in mind, Toddy?"
"Elaine was murdered for a watch. There was just one guy who knew I had it, the man that killed her. He's got rid of the watch by now. He'll also have an airtight alibi. So I'm stuck. All I can do is skip town…"
"This watch… did it belong to this guy in the first place?"
"No," Toddy lied. "It belonged to an old lady. I fast-talked her out of it… God, Shake, I wish you and Donald could have seen the pile of stuff that woman had. Brooches, rings, necklaces. A good fourteen-fifteen grand worth or I don't know lead from platinum!"
"An' you just clipped her for the watch?"
"A
two-thousand-dollar
watch. I couldn't bite her any harder without raising a chatter. And, of course, I didn't dare go back for another try."
"Sure, uh-huh." Shake bobbed his jowls understandingly. "How come you hadn't turned the watch, Toddy?"
"Too hot. Milt wouldn't have touched it. I'd just about decided to take the stones out and cut it up for scrap, but I hadn't got around to it yet. I'd only had it three days."
"Mmm," said Shake. "Uh-hah!" he said briskly. "All right, Toddy, it's a deal. You just give us this old lady's address an' we'll see that you get your cut."
Toddy smiled at him.
"Now what's wrong with that?" Shake demanded. "We'll cut him in for a full half, won't we, Donald?"
"Well, it's been nice," said Toddy, rising. "I'll drop you a card from Mexico City."
"Now, wait a minute…!"
"I'll wait five minutes," said Toddy. "If I don't have two hundred bucks by that time, I'm on my way."
"Two
hundred!
"
"Two hundred-for almost a hundred times two hundred." Toddy's eyes flickered. "I won't say it'll be a cinch. She's about the crankiest, orneriest old bitch I ever tangled with. She lives all alone, see; doesn't have anyone she can pop off to. And she's got this game leg. I guess that makes her crankier than she would be ordinarily."