Meet Me at the Morgue (16 page)

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Authors: Ross Macdonald

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There were human sounds behind the walls and doors, sounds of unquiet slumber, alcoholic laughter, furtive love. I was tired enough to feel the weight of lives pressing from both sides on the narrow hallway. For a nightmare instant I felt infinitely tiny, a detached cell threading the veins of a giant, tormented body.

The key turned loosely in the lock and passed us into the room. A light switch inside the door controlled the ceiling fixture. A pair of forty-watt bulbs blinked weakly on an iron-framed single bed, a corner washbasin, a rickety bureau, a few square yards of worn carpet.

Across the half-blinded single window the fire escape slanted up, a black-iron Jacob’s ladder against the roiled light and darkness over the rooftops.

“So this is where he’s been staying,” Molly said contemptuously. “In this dump, and he was talking mink and
convertibles on the phone. He always was a dirty lying old skunk.”

“You seem to be able to handle your grief.”

“Why not? You didn’t see what he did to me. Look at this.”

Shedding her coat abruptly, she reached for the zipper in the back of her dress and bared her shoulder blades. Downward from the base of her neck, the white flesh was crisscrossed with blue-black welts turning green and yellow.

“He did it to me with his Mexican belt the night that I broke with him. You know what he said? Why he did it? That he’d do anything for a little affection. He said he was old and loveless, so he beat me.”

“I’m sorry.”

“So am I sorry, but not for him.” She closed the zipper. “A swell chance I got of landing any modeling assignments as long as those marks are on my back.”

“Sit down and be still now, Molly. I have work to do.”

She sat in the room’s only chair and looked at the wall. A curved decorator’s tool had marked the walls and ceiling with myriad small crescents, like hoofprints left by a revolving army of nightmares.

There was no closet, and nothing on the hooks behind the door. The bureau drawers were empty. I went to the bed, which had been freshly made up, and pulled off the sheets. There was nothing under them but the brown stains on the mattress. I raised the mattress and propped it against the wall. Lemp’s suitcase was under the bed.

It was made of tan canvas trimmed with brown leather. The leather was scuffed, and the lock had long since been sprung. It contained a paper parcel from a Chinese laundry, which I didn’t bother to open, a pint bottle of cheap bourbon wrapped in a moth-eaten coat sweater, a carefully folded brown suit, with a tarnished San Francisco
Police Department badge in the inside breast-pocket, a .38-caliber revolver and a box of shells, a packet of licorice throat-lozenges, a heavy jackknife equipped with a fingernail-clipping device, a pair of black-leather boots with razor slits across the toes, half a ham sandwich moldering in wax paper, an empty, alligator wallet, a nearly empty bottle labeled Pote-N-Zee the Hormone Elixir, and a pair of small baby-shoes cast in bronze and tied together with a blue ribbon.

There was a layer of books and papers at the bottom. One of the books was entitled “The Real Meaning of Your Dreams”; the cover illustration was a man’s head swelling with fantasies. The nature of Lemp’s fantasies was indicated by the other books, most of which were under-the-counter paperbacks with sadistic illustrations. On the flyleaf of one of them, someone had written a verse with an indelible pencil:

            
Molly Molly it’d be jolly
            
For you and I to have a frolic little girl
            
You got a beautiful golden curl
            
Blue eyes like heaven
            
Take me up to heaven at eleven
            
I love you little girl
.

    
REFRAIN:—
Jolly little girl with the golden curl
.

The papers included a letter, written by an Assistant District Attorney of San Diego County in 1941, recommending Lemp’s employment as a company guard by a San Diego aircraft plant; a sepia snapshot print of a bald-headed young man who might have been Lemp holding a long-dressed baby under a leafless maple tree; and Lemp’s birth certificate. He had been born Arthur George Lempke in Pittsburgh, Pa., on June 14, 1892, to Arthur Lempke,
laborer, and his wife Trinity, housewife. As if to bracket his life in a single document, Lemp had written in pencil on the dog-eared official envelope containing the birth certificate:

Timetable—post letter Valley Vista Ranch, Ridgecrest Fri. p.m. not too late—Miner take boy to desert before mail (Sat.) delivered 9-9:30 a.m.—train pulls out station 11 a.m.—plane leaves Int. Airport 2:20 p.m
.

But Lemp had been taken up to heaven shortly after eleven, and missed the plane. I opened his bottle of bourbon and had a stiff drink. The room, the contents of the suitcase, the remnants of Lemp’s sixty years were infinitely dreary. I felt the shuddering lapse of all those years.

“Stealing a dead man’s liquor. Pretty low.” Molly got up from her chair and took a few tentative steps towards me. “Mister, I could use a slug of that myself.”

“You won’t get it from me.”

“Why not?” She smiled coaxingly.

“I never give liquor to minors or take candy from babies.”

She struck a pose, shoulders back, chest out, stomach in. “I’m no baby. I’ve been drinking regular for several years.”

It struck me with sudden harsh clarity, simultaneously with the crude whisky, that I was at the center of the evil maze. It contained a timetable for a kidnapping packed with a sentimental pair of baby boots, an old man writing a vapid love-poem on the flyleaf of a corrupt book, a young girl who had learned to accept corruption. Molly’s smile, as blank as the walls, as threadbare as the carpet, had somehow become the meaning of the room.

“You’re a babe in the woods,” I said. “Cover yourself with leaves.”

Memory came into her eyes like dark ink spreading in
water. “You say the darnedest things. I used to do that all the time, cover myself with leaves. I loved to play in the leaves in the fall when I was a kid. We used to play house.”

“Was that before the flood?”

“Yeah, before the flood.”

I squatted down and began to repack the suitcase. There was an angry core of heat in my body. It was, hard to hate evil without overdoing the hate and becoming evil. It wasn’t Molly I hated, or even Lemp. It was the shapes of their desires, the frantic waste of their flesh, the ugly zero waiting at the end.

My hands were awkward. Folding the brown suit, they shook the alligator wallet onto the floor.

Molly scrambled for it on hands and knees.

“Give it to me,” I said. “It’s all evidence.”

“But this belongs to Kerry. I gave it to him for his birthday last year. It was his thirtieth birthday, and I was in the chips for once.”

“Are you sure it was his?”

Her fingers were exploring its interior. “It’s got his initials in it. I had them put on at the leather shop when I bought it.”

She showed me the tiny gold initials in one corner: K S. “I was right. He murdered Kerry and stole his car and his wallet.”

“And his girl.”

“It isn’t true. Kerry was the only one I loved. Except when he got nasty, Art Lemp was more like a father to me, a grandfather. All he wanted to do was look at me. I was always faithful to Kerry in my heart.”

I took the wallet from her hand and finished packing the suitcase. She went to the mirror above the washbasin. After studying her reflection for some time, she said to herself, or to no one in particular:

“I forget who I am sometimes. I can’t remember who I am sometimes.”

She raised the window and looked out across the fire escape. Red and black were tangled in a skein blown over the rooftops. Distant cries and hootings rose from the city, gusts of sound like wind blowing here and there in an iron forest.

 

CHAPTER
20
:
      
The hideous concrete façade of
the courthouse, Moorish-arched and Byzantine-turreted, was lovely to my eyes. The lights in the embrasured windows of the sheriff’s wing shone like the lights of home. But Molly hung back: she saw the bars on the windows. I had to help her up the steps and through the door.

I deposited her on a bench in the outer office, with Lemp’s suitcase beside her. There were three deputies on night duty instead of the usual one. Six eyes converged on Molly, swinging to me reluctantly when I spoke:

“Any word of the Johnson boy?”

“Not yet. Could be they’re not telling us everything. Who’s the cutie?”

Molly thrust her shoulders back and posed for the deputies’ flashbulb admiration.

“A witness I’m bringing in. Is Sam still on duty?”

“In his office. He won’t go home.”

“Forest?”

“He set up temporary headquarters in the Clerk’s rooms,” the man at the telephone desk said. “You want to talk to him, I’ll see if I can get you a passport and visa. You ever consorted with Democrats?”

“Don’t bother.”

“That was a joke, son.”

“Ho ho.”

“What’s the matter, Howie, you losing your sense of humor?” He turned to the other deputies. “Mister Cross done hitched his wagon to a star.”

I said: “If you want to do something, order me in some food. I haven’t eaten for several weeks.”

“I leap to do your bidding, marster.” He swiveled back to the telephone.

“Thanks. Make it ham and eggs and coffee. I’ll be in with Sam.”

I tossed a dollar across the counter and took the suitcase and Molly down a tile-floored corridor to Sam Dressen’s cubicle. Sam was asleep, his gray head resting on his desk like a large granite paperweight. I shook him and he sat up, blinking and smiling:

“Must have dozed off for a minute. That was a red-hot tip, Howie, that business card you gave me. We got one corpse identified already.”

“Art Lemp?”

The smile sagged disappointedly. “You know, eh? Where you been?”

“To hell and back. This young lady knew Lemp, and the other one was her husband.”

I nodded towards Molly. She was making herself small and flat against the door-frame. I wondered if she recognized the jail smell that sifted down inevitably from the second floor. Or perhaps it was the
WANTED
circulars that were the only pinups on Sam’s walls.

“You wouldn’t kid an old man old enough to be your father, Howie?”

“She’s his widow, common-law possibly, but his widow. His name was Kerry Snow.”

“We were married in Las Vegas,” she cried. “On the fifteenth of January. It was legal!”

“I believe you, Molly. Come in and sit down now, and tell us all about it.”

A session of questioning followed, until my breakfast arrived. Molly gave us no additional information. Either her men had kept her completely in the dark about their illegal activities, or she was afraid of talking herself into jail. She looked afraid, and hungry.

I shared my toast and coffee with her. Sam had eaten at midnight, he said. It was nearly two.

I stood up, feeling the stiffness in the hinges of my knees. “Is Amy Miner still here?”

“She’s in the special cell on the third floor. I’ll take you up.”

“Who’s on duty?”

“Stan Marsland.”

“I can run the elevator. You’ve got work to do, Sam. This suitcase belonged to Lemp. It’s loaded with grist for your mill.”

His lined face expressed a nice balance of anticipation and foreboding. “Fine,” he said doubtfully. “What do I do with the girl?”

“Forest will want to talk to her. Perhaps you’d better turn the suitcase over to him, too. They’ve got their mobile laboratory down here, haven’t they?”

“It’s in the garage courtyard.”

“Good. You can go home then. Why not take Molly with you? She doesn’t want to spend the night in jail.”

“I’ll say I don’t.”

Sam regarded her dubiously. “I got a wife already.”

“That’s the point. I haven’t.” I turned to her. “If Sheriff Dressen puts you up in his house, you won’t run away?”

“Where would I run away to?”

“Okay, Howie,” he said. “You did enough for me lately.
One thing you didn’t do, though, you didn’t bring back my pictures.”

“I will. Give me a few minutes more.”

The automatic elevator was the only way to reach the jail floors at night. I rode it up. Stan Marsland was waiting at the top of the shaft with his hand on his holster.

“Isn’t it kind of late for visiting-hours?”

“Special circumstances, Stan. How often do we have a kidnapping?”

“Often enough to suit me. What’s in the briefcase, food? I hope it’s food.”

“Files and hacksaws.”

“Don’t mention them there things.” The graveyard shift made everybody garrulous. “I was hoping maybe it contained a steak, onions, fried potatoes, and a glass of draft beer. All of which I could use.”

“Is Mrs. Miner awake?”

“I wouldn’t know. She probably is. They don’t sleep so good the first night. You want to see her?”

“Yes.”

“Down here?”

“In her cell will do. It will only take a minute.”

He led me up a curved iron stair to an iron-railed gallery with a riveted floor. We passed a series of iron-sheathed doors with small wire-reinforced windows. There were shouts and howls and laughter behind one of them.

“Drunk tank,” Marsland said. “It’s just like fiesta, on a Saturday night. But oh on Sunday morning!”

At the end of the gallery he unlocked a door and turned me over to a sleepy matron. The women’s cells were open cages with barred doors. I could smell perfume among the animal and chemical odors. Amy Miner, alone in a corner cell, was standing at the bars as if she had known I was coming.

“Mr. Cross! You’ve got to get me out of here.”

“Quiet, Amy,” the matron said soothingly. “You’ll disturb the other girls.”

“But I’ve got no right to be here. I’ve done nothing wrong.”

The matron wagged her head in my direction. Her hair was tied back in an old-fashioned bun that looked as hard and shiny as a doorknob. “Amy’s been quite a problem, Mr. Cross. Do you think they’ll be letting her out in the morning?” She added in a whisper: “I had to take her stockings off, she was talking about putting an end to herself.”

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