The Zebra-Striped Hearse Part 5
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"Give him a tranquilizer."
"Mark has been eating eating tranquilizers all week. It doesn't seem to help his nerves. If he goes on at this rate, I'm afraid he'll shake himself to pieces." tranquilizers all week. It doesn't seem to help his nerves. If he goes on at this rate, I'm afraid he'll shake himself to pieces."
"It's other people I'm worried about."
"You mean the young man-Damis?"
"I mean anyone who crosses him."
She touched me lightly on the arm. "You don't think he's capable of doing actual harm to anyone?"
"You know him better than I do."
"I thought I knew Mark very well indeed. But he's changed in the last year. He's always been a gentle man. I never thought he belonged in the military profession. The Army came to agree with me, as it happened. They retired him after the war, very much against his will. His first wife, Pauline, divorced him about the same time."
"Why, if you don't mind my asking?"
"You'd have to ask her. She went to Nevada one day and got a divorce and married another man-a retired dentist named Keith Hatchen. They've lived in Mexico ever since. I suppose Pauline and her dentist have a right to whatever happiness they can muster. But it left poor Mark with nothing to fill his life but his guns and his sports and the Blackwell family history which he has been trying to write for lo these many years."
"And Harriet," I said.
"And Harriet."
"I'm beginning to get the picture. You say he's changed in the past year. Has anything special happened, besides Harriet's taking up with Damis?"
"Mark took up with me last fall," she said with a one-sided smile.
"You don't strike me as a malign influence."
"Thank you. I'm not"
"I had the impression that you'd been married longer than that." It was partly a question and partly an expression of sympathy.
"Did you now? Of course I've been married before. And I've known Mark and Harriet for a great many years, practically since she was a babe in arms. You see, my late husband was very close to Mark. Ronald was related to the Blackwells."
"Then you probably know a lot of things you haven't told me," I said.
"Every woman does. Isn't that your experience, Mr. Archer?"
I liked her dry wit, even if it was cutting me off from further information. I made a gesture that took in the big house and the roses and the gap in the boxwood hedge where Harriet's car had last been seen.
"Do you think I should go on with this?"
She answered deliberately: "Perhaps you had better. Mark certainly needs another man to guide his hand and advise him-not that he's terribly good at taking advice. I liked the way you handled this crisis just now. It could have erupted into something terrible."
"I wish your husband realized that"
"He does. I'm sure he does, though he won't admit it." Her dark eyes were full of feeling. "You've done us all a good turn, Mr. Archer, and you'll do us another by staying with us in this. Find out what you can about Damis. If you can give him a clean bill of health, morally speaking, it should do a lot to reconcile Mark to the marriage."
"You're not suggesting a whitewash job on Damis?"
"Of course not. I'm interested in the truth, whatever it may turn out to be. We all are. Now if you'll excuse me I think I'd better go in and look after my husband. Holding his hand seems to be my function in life these days."
She wasn't complaining, exactly, but I detected a note of resignation. As she turned away, very slim in her linen sheath, I caught myself trying to estimate her age. If she had known the Blackwells since Harriet was a baby, and had come to know them through her first husband, she must have married him more than twenty years ago. Which suggested that she was over forty.
Well, so was I.
chapter 6
I USED USED B BLACKWELL'S KEY to let myself into the beach house. Nothing had changed in the big upstairs room, except that there were black paper ashes in the fireplace. They crumbled when I tried to pick them up on the fire shovel. The painting hung on its easel, still gleaming wet in places. In the light that slanted through the gla.s.s doors, the spot of cobalt blue which Damis had added last glared at me like an eye. to let myself into the beach house. Nothing had changed in the big upstairs room, except that there were black paper ashes in the fireplace. They crumbled when I tried to pick them up on the fire shovel. The painting hung on its easel, still gleaming wet in places. In the light that slanted through the gla.s.s doors, the spot of cobalt blue which Damis had added last glared at me like an eye.
I backed away from the picture, trying to understand it, and went down the stairs to the master bedroom. The louvered doors of the closet were swinging open. It had been cleared out. There was nothing in the chest of drawers, nothing in the bathroom but some clean towels. The back bedroom was empty.
I moved back into the front bedroom and went through it carefully. The wastebasket had been emptied, which probably accounted for the burned paper in the upstairs fireplace. Damis had gone to a lot of trouble to cover his traces.
But he had overlooked one piece of paper. It was jammed between the sliding gla.s.s door and its frame, evidently to keep the door from rattling. It was thick and yellowish paper, folded small. When I unfolded it, I recognized it as one of those envelopes that airlines give their pa.s.sengers to keep their tickets in.
This was a Mexicana Airlines envelope, with flight instructions typed inside the flap. Mr. Q. R. Simpson, the instructions said, was to leave the Guadalajara airport at 8:40 A.M A.M. on July 10 and arrive at Los Angeles International at 1:30 P.M P.M. the same day.
I messed around in the bedroom some more, discovered only some dust mice under the bed, and went upstairs. The painting drew me back to it. It affected me differently each time. This time I saw, or thought I saw, that it was powerful and ugly-an a.s.sault of dark forces on the vision. Perhaps I was reading my fantasy into it, but it seemed to me that its darkness was the ultimate darkness of death.
I had an impulse to take it along and find an expert to show it to. If Damis was a known artist, his style should be recognizable. But I couldn't move the thing. The oils were still wet and would smear.
I went out to the car to get my camera. The zebra-striped hea.r.s.e was standing empty beside it. The sky had cleared, and a few sun-bathers were lying around in the sand like bodies after a catastrophe. Beyond the surf line the six surfers waited in prayerful att.i.tudes on their boards.
A big wave rose toward them. Five of the surfers rode it in, like statues on a traveling blue hillside. The sixth was less skillful. The wave collapsed on her. She lost her board and swam in after it.
Instead of taking it out to sea again, she carried it up the beach on her head. She left it on the sand above the tide line and climbed the rocky bank to the parking s.p.a.ce. She had the bust and shoulders of a young Amazon, but she was s.h.i.+vering and close to tears.
It was the girl who had made the face at me, which gave us something in common. I said: "You took quite a spill."
She looked at me as if she had never seen me before, almost as if she wasn't seeing me now. I was a member of another tribe or species. Her eyes were wet and wild, like the eyes of sea lions.
She got a man's topcoat out of the back of the hea.r.s.e and put it on. It was good brown tweed which looked expensive, but there were wavy white salt marks on it, as if it had been immersed in the sea. Her fingers trembled on the brown leather b.u.t.tons. One of the b.u.t.tons, the top one, was missing. She turned up the collar around the back of her head where the wet hair clung like a golden helmet.
"If you're cold I have a heater in my car."
"Blah," she said, and turned her tweed back on me.
I loaded the camera with color film and took some careful shots of Damis's painting. On my way to the airport I dropped the film off with a photographer friend in Santa Monica. He promised to get it developed in a hurry.
The very polite young man at the Mexicana desk did a few minutes' research and came up with the information that Q. R. Simpson had indeed been on the July 10 flight from Guadalajara. So had Harriet Blackwell. Burke Damis hadn't.
My tentative conclusion, which I kept to myself, was that Damis had entered the United States under the name of Simpson. Since he couldn't leave Mexico without a nontransferable tourist card or enter this country without proof of citizens.h.i.+p, the chances were that Q. R. Simpson was Damis's real name.
The polite young Mexican told me further that the crew of the July 10 flight had flown in from Mexico again early this afternoon. The pilot and copilot were in the office now, but they wouldn't know anything about the pa.s.sengers. The steward and stewardess, who would, had already gone for the day. They were due to fly out again tomorrow morning. If I came out to the airport before flight time, perhaps they would have a few minutes to talk to me about my friend Senor Simpson.
Exhilarated by his Latin courtesy, I walked back to the Immigration and Customs shed. The officers on duty took turns looking at my license as if it was something I'd found in a box of breakfast cereal.
Feeling the need to check in with some friendly authority, I drove downtown. Peter Colton was in his cubicle in the District Attorney's office, behind a door that said Chief Criminal Investigator.
Peter had grown old in law enforcement. The grooves of discipline and thought ware like saber scars in his cheeks. His triangular eyes glinted at me over half-gla.s.ses which had slid down his large aggressive nose.
He finished reading a multigraphed sheet, initialed it, and scaled it into his out-basket.
"Sit down, Lew. How's it going?"
"All right. I dropped by to thank you for recommending me to Colonel Blackwell."
He regarded me quizzically. "You don't sound very grateful. Is Blackie giving you a bad time?"
"Something is. He handed me a peculiar case. I don't know whether it's a case or not. It may be only Blackwell's imagination."
"He never struck me as the imaginative type."
"Known him long?"
"I served under him, for my sins, in Bavaria just after the war. He was in Military Government, and I was in charge of a plain-clothes section of Military Police."
"What was he like to work for?"
"Tough," Colton said, and added reflectively: "Blackie liked command, too much. He didn't get enough of it during the fighting. Some friend in Was.h.i.+ngton, or some enemy, kept him in the rear echelons. I don't know whether it was for Blackie's own protection or the protection of the troops. He was bitter about it, and it made him hard on his men. But he's a bit of an a.s.s, and we didn't take him too seriously."
"In what way was he hard on his men?"
"All the ways he could think of. He went in for enforcement of petty rules. He was very keen on the anti-fraternization policy. My men had murder and rape and black-marketeering to contend with. But Blackie expected us to spend our nights patrolling the cabarets suppressing fraternization. It drove him crazy to think of all the fraternization that was going on between innocent American youths and man-eating Frauleins." Frauleins."
"Is he some kind of a s.e.x nut?"
"I wouldn't put it that strongly." But Colton's grin was wolfish. "He's a Puritan, from a long line of Puritans. What made it worse, he was having fraternization problems in his own family. His wife was interested in various other men. I heard later she divorced him."
"What sort of a woman is she?"
"Quite a dish, in those days, but I never knew her up close. Does it matter?"
"It could. Her daugher Harriet went to Mexico to visit her a few weeks ago and made a bad connection. At least it doesn't look too promising. He's a painter named Burke Damis, or possibly Q. R. Simpson. She brought him back here with her, intends to marry him. Blackwell thinks the man is trying to take her for her money. He hired me to investigate that angle, or anything else that I can find on Damis."
"Or possibly Q. R. Simpson, you said. Is Damis using an alias?"
"I haven't confirmed it. I'm fairly sure he entered the country a week ago under the Q. R. Simpson name. It may be his real name, since it isn't a likely alias."
"And you want me to check it out"
"That would be nice."
Colton picked up his ball-point pen and jabbed with it in my direction. "You know I can't spend public time and money on a private deal like this."
"Even for an old friend?"
"Blackwell's no friend of mine. I recommended you to get him out of my hair in one quick easy motion."
"I was referring to myself," I said, "no doubt presumptuously. A simple query to the State Bureau of Criminal Investigation wouldn't take much time, and it might save trouble in the long run. You always say you're more interested in preventing crime than punis.h.i.+ng it."
"What crime do you have in mind?"
"Murder for profit is a possibility. I don't say it's probable. I'm mainly concerned with saving a naive young woman from a lot of potential grief."
"And saving yourself a lot of potential legwork."
"I'm doing my own legwork as usual. But I could knock on every door from here to San Luis Obispo and it wouldn't tell me what I need to know."
"What, exactly, is that?"
"Whether Q. R. Simpson, or Burke Damis, has a record."
Colton wrote the names on a memo pad. I'd succeeded in arousing his curiosity.
"I suppose I could check with Sacramento." He glanced at the clock on the wall. It was nearly four. "If the circuits aren't too loaded, we might get an answer before we close up for the night. You want to wait outside?"
I read a law-enforcement trade journal in the anteroom, all the way through to the advertis.e.m.e.nts. Police recruits were being offered as much as four hundred and fifty dollars a month in certain localities.
Peter Colton opened his door at five o'clock on the nose and beckoned me into his office. A teletype flimsy rustled in his hand.
"Nothing on Burke Damis," he said. "Quincy Ralph Simpson is another story: he's on the Missing Persons list, has been for a couple of weeks. According to his wife, he's been gone much longer than that."
"His wife?"
"She's the one who reported him missing. She lives up north, in San Mateo County."
chapter 7
IT WAS CLEAR late twilight when the jet dropped down over the Peninsula. The lights of its cities were scattered like a broken necklace along the dark rim of the Bay. At its tip stood San Francisco, remote and brilliant as a city of the mind, hawsered to reality by her two great bridges-if Marin and Berkeley were reality. late twilight when the jet dropped down over the Peninsula. The lights of its cities were scattered like a broken necklace along the dark rim of the Bay. At its tip stood San Francisco, remote and brilliant as a city of the mind, hawsered to reality by her two great bridges-if Marin and Berkeley were reality.
I took a cab to Redwood City. The deputy on duty on the ground floor of the Hall of Justice was a young man with red chipmunk cheeks and eyes that were neither bright nor stupid. He looked me over noncommittally, waiting to see if I was a citizen or one of the others.
I showed him my license and told him I was interested in a man named Quincy Ralph Simpson. "The Los Angeles D.A.'s office says you reported him missing about two weeks ago."
The Zebra-Striped Hearse Part 5
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The Zebra-Striped Hearse Part 5 summary
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