Calypso (8 page)

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Authors: Ed McBain

BOOK: Calypso
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    "I'll talk to you during your next break," Carella said.
    Chloe nodded. She rose, listened for a moment to recapture the beat, and then swiveled long-leggedly to where the black man sat at the other end of the bar.
    
***
    
    She danced for half an hour, and then came to the small table where Carella was eating the sandwich he'd made at the lunch bar. She explained at once that she had only a ten-minute break. Her embarrassment seemed to have passed. She was wearing a flimsy nylon wrapper belted at the waist, but she was still naked beneath it, and when she leaned over to rest her folded arms on the tabletop, he could see her breasts and nipples in the V-necked opening of the gown.
    "I want to apologize for last night," he said at once, and she opened her eyes wide in surprise. "I'm sorry. I was trying to touch all the bases, but I guess I slid into second with my cleats flying."
    "That's okay," she said.
    "I'm sorry. I mean it."
    "I said it's okay. Did you look at George's notebook?"
    "Yes. I have it here with me," he said, reaching under his chair to where he'd placed the manila envelope. "I didn't find anything I can use. Would you mind if I asked you a few more questions?"
    "Go ahead," she said, and turned to look at the wall clock. "Just remember it's a half hour on the bar, and a ten-minute break. They don't pay me for sitting around talking to cops."
    "Do they know your husband was killed last night?"
    "The boss knows, he read it in the newspaper. I don't think any of the others do."
    "I was surprised you came to work today."
    "Got to eat," Chloe said, and shrugged. "What did you want to ask me?"
    "I'm going to start by getting you sore again," he said, and smiled.
    "Go ahead," she said, but she did not return the smile.
    "You lied about this place," he said.
    "Yes."
    "Did you lie about anything else?"
    "Nothing."
    "Positive about that?"
    "Positive."
    "Really no trouble between you and your husband? No unexplained absences on his part? No mysterious phone calls?"
    "What makes you think there might have been?"
    "I'm asking, that's all."
    "No trouble between us. None at all," she said.
    "How about unexplained absences?"
    "He was gone a lot of the time, but that had nothing to do with another woman."
    "What did it have to do with?"
    "Business."
    "I jotted some names down," Carella said, nodding. "Got them from his appointment calendar, people he had lunch with or meetings with in the past month, people he was scheduled to see in the next few weeks ahead. I wonder if you can identify them for me."
    "I'll try," Chloe said.
    Carella opened his notebook, found the page he wanted, and began reading. "Buster Greerson," he said.
    "Saxophone player. He was trying to get George to join a band he's putting together."
    "Lester… Handey, is it?"
    "Hanley. He's George's vocal coach."
    "Okay, that explains the regularity. Once every two weeks, right?"
    "Yes, on Tuesdays."
    "Hawkins. Who's that?"
    "I don't know. What's his first name?"
    "No first name. Just Hawkins. Appears in the calendar for the first time on August tenth, that was a Thursday. Then again on August twenty-fourth, another Thursday."
    "I don't know anybody named Hawkins."
    "How about Lou Davis?"
    "He's the man who owns Graham Palmer Hall. That's where George-"
    "Oh, sure," Carella said, "how dumb." He looked at his notebook again. "Jerri Lincoln."
    "Girl singer. Another one of George's album ideas. He wanted to do a double with her. But that was a long time ago.
    "Saw her on August thirtieth, according to his calendar."
    "Well, maybe she started bugging him again."
    "Just business between them?"
    "You should see her," Chloe said, and smiled.
"Strictly
business, believe me."
    "Don Latham," Carella said.
    "Head of a company called Latham Records. The label is Black Power."
    "C. J.," Carella said. "Your husband saw him-or
her,"
he said, with a shrug, "on the thirty-first of August, and again on September seventh, and he was supposed to have lunch with whoever it is today-I
guess
it was going to be lunch-at twelve noon. Mean anything to you?"
    "No, you asked me that last night."
    "C. J.," Carella said again.
    "No, I'm sorry."
    "Okay, who's Jimmy Talbot?"
    "Don't know him."
    "Davey… Kennemer, is it?"
    "Kennemer, yes, he's a trumpet player."
    "And Arthur Spessard?"
    "Another musician, I forget what he plays."
    "Okay, that's it," Carella said, and closed the notebook. "Tell me about George's brother," he said abruptly.
    "Santo? What do you want to know about him?"
    "Is it true he ran away seven years ago?"
    "Who told you that?"
    "Ambrose Harding. Is it true?"
    "Yes."
    "Ambrose said he may have gone back to Trinidad."
    "He didn't go to Trinidad. George went there looking for him, and he wasn't there."
    "Have any ideas where he might be?" Chloe hesitated.
    "Yes?" Carella said.
    "George thought…"
    "Yes, what?"
    "That somebody killed his brother."
    "What made him think that?"
    "The way it happened, the way he just disappeared from sight."
    "Did George mention any names? Anybody he suspected?"
    "No. But he kept at it all the time. Wasn't a day went by he wasn't asking somebody or other about his brother."
    "Where'd he do the asking?"
    "Everywhere."
    "In Diamondback?"
    "In Diamondback, yes, but not only there. He was involved in a whole big private investigation. Police wouldn't do nothing, so George went out on his own."
    "When you say his brother just disappeared, what do you mean?"
    "After a job one night."
    "Tell me what happened."
    "I don't
know
what happened, exactly. Neither does anyone else, for that matter. It was after a job-they used to play in a band together, George and his brother."
    "Yes, I know that."
    "George and two other guys in the band were waiting in the van for Santo to come out. He'd gone to the men's room or something, I'm not sure. Anyway, he never
did
come out. George went back inside the place, searched it top to bottom, couldn't find him."
    "The other musicians who were there that night-would you know them?"
    "I know their names, but I've never met them."
    "What are their names?"
    "Freddie Bones and Vincent Barragan."
    "Bones? Is that his real name?"
    "I think so."
    "How do you spell the other name?"
    "I think it's B-A-R-R-A-G-A-N. It's a Spanish name, he's from Puerto Rico."
    "But you've never met either of them?"
    "No, they were both before my time. I've only been married to George for four years."
    "How do you happen to know the names then?"
    "Well, he mentioned them a lot. Because they were there the night his brother disappeared, you know. And he was always talking to them on the phone."
    "Recently?"
    "No, not recently."
    "Four years," Carella said. "Then you never met George's brother, either."
    "Never."
    "Santo Chadderton, is it?"
    "Santo Chadderton, yes."
    "Is this your first marriage?"
    "Yes."
    "Was it George's?"
    "No. He was married before." She hesitated. "To a white woman," she said, and looked him straight in the eye.
    "Divorce her or what?"
    "Divorced her, yes."
    "When?"
    "Couple of months after we met. They were already separated when we met."
    "What's
her
name, would you know?"
    "Irene Chadderton. That's if she's still using her married name."
    "What was her maiden name?"
    "I don't know."
    "Does she live here in the city?"
    "Used to, I don't know if she still does."
    "Would
she
have known Santo?"
    "I suppose so."
    "Would she know anything about his disappearance?"
    "Anybody who ever had anything to do with George knows about his brother's disappearance, believe me. It was like a goddamn obsession with him. That's the
other
thing we argued about, okay? My dancing here, and him talking about his
brother
all the time!
Searching
for him all the time, checking
newspapers,
and
court
records, and
hospitals
and driving everybody
crazy."
    "You told me you had a good marriage," Carella said flatly.
    "It was good as most," Chloe answered, and then shrugged. The flap of the gown slid away from one of her breasts with the motion, exposing it almost completely. She made no effort to close the gown. She stared into Carella's eyes and said, "I didn't kill him, Mr. Carella," and then turned to look at the wall clock again. "I got to get back up there, my audience awaits," she said breathlessly and smiled suddenly and radiantly.
    "Don't forget this," Carella said, handing her the envelope.
    "Thank you," she said. "If you learn anything…"
    "I have your number."
    "Yes," she said, and nodded, and looked at him a moment longer and then turned to walk toward the bar. Carella put on his coat and hat-both still wet-and went to the register to pay his check. As he walked out of the place, he turned to look toward the bar again. Chloe was in the same position the other dancer had assumed less than forty-five minutes ago- back arched, elbows locked, legs widespread, furiously smiling and grinding at a customer sitting not a foot away from her crotch. As Carella pushed open the door to step into the rain, the customer slid a dollar bill into the waistband of her G-string.
    
6
    
    It was almost 2:00 p.m. when he got back to the squad-room and began hitting the phone books. There were no listings for either Irene Chadderton or Frederick Bones in any of the city's five directories, but he found a listing for Vicente Manuel Barragan in the Calm's Point book. He dialed Directory Assistance for further information, and was told by the operator that she had nothing at all for an Irene Chadderton anywhere in the city, and whereas she
did
have a listing for a Frederick Bones, it was an unpublished one. Carella identified himself as a working detective and she said, "This'll have to be a call-back, sir."
    "Yes, I know that," he said. "I'm at the Eighty-Seventh Precinct, the number here is Frederick seven eight-oh-two-four."
    He hung up and waited. He knew the operator would first check out the number he had given her to make certain he was indeed calling from a police station. She would then need permission from her supervisor before revealing Bones's unpublished number-even to a cop. The phone rang ten minutes later. Carella picked it up. The operator gave him a number in Isola, and when he requested the address, she supplied that as well. He thanked her and walked over to where Meyer Meyer was telling a joke to Bert Kling, who sat in a swivel chair behind his desk, his feet up on the desk, listening with something akin to childlike anticipation. Kling was the youngest detective on the squad, a tall, blond strapping kid (they thought of him as a kid even though he was in his early thirties) with guileless hazel eyes and an open face more suited to a beet farmer in Grand Forks, North Dakota, than a detective here in the big bad city. Carella caught only the punchline as he approached Kling's desk-"I say, old boy, are you trying to escape?"
    Kling and Meyer burst out laughing simultaneously. Meyer stood beside the desk looking at Kling and laughing at his own joke, and Kling sat there in his chair, his feet on the floor now, laughing so hard Carella thought he would wet his pants. Both men laughed for what seemed a solid three minutes, though it was surely only thirty or forty seconds. Carella stood by, waiting. When Meyer stopped laughing at last, he handed him the sheet of paper on which he had listed the names, addresses, and phone numbers of Frederick Bones and Vicente Manuel Barragan.
    "What we're looking for," he said, "is information on what happened the night Santo disappeared, seven years ago."
    "You think somebody really did him in?" Meyer asked.
    "His brother thought so, that's for sure. Conducted a one-man investigation all over the city, even went back to Trinidad looking for him. If somebody really
did
knock off the kid…"
    "And if George was getting close to who did it…"
    "Right," Carella said. "So let's find out what happened back then, okay? Which one do you want?"
    "They sound like a vaudeville team," Meyer said. "Barragan and Bones."
    "I'll flip you," Carella said.
    "Not with your coin," Meyer said. "If we flip, we use a neutral coin."
    "My coin
is
neutral," Carella said.

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