Strange Embrace Read online

Page 2


  Chapter 2

  * * *

  “She must have been pretty,” Haig said. “Once, I bet, she must have been pretty.”

  “She was,” Johnny said.

  They were in the bedroom. Haig’s lab men were being busy, measuring distances, dusting for fingerprints, picking up dirt samples and doing other mysteriously scientific things which Johnny did not pretend to understand. He stood with Haig at the side of the bed. Now a thin white sheet covered Elaine James’ body, stopping an inch or two below the gash across her throat.

  Haig cleared his throat. He was a big man, heavy, with gray mixed into his black hair. He was not a pretty man. His nose had been broken twice and he had scar tissue around the eyes. He was a good cop and he and Johnny had been friends for years.

  “Some people would say she’s still pretty,” Haig went on. “Maybe she is. I don’t know. Once they’re dead they stop looking good to me. All I can see is the death part of it. The ugliness. There’s nothing pretty about death.”

  Johnny assented silently.

  “I oughta get used to it,” Haig said. “I see enough of them. Cuttings, stabbings, shootings—the works. You know what we had a week ago? A garroting. Got any idea what a garroting looks like?”

  “A fair idea.”

  Haig shrugged. “We found this guy in the park. Central Park. Damn fool was walking through Central Park at three in the morning. You got to be a real clown to walk through Central Park at that hour. Pretty when we found him. His head swelled up and turned purple. A purple basketball with the eyes three-quarters out of their sockets. Pretty.”

  “No worse than this,” Johnny said. “It couldn’t have been worse than this.”

  “Who knows? To me they’re all the same and I never get used to them. Maybe I’m in the wrong business.” He sighed heavily. “We might as well get out of here. The microscope boys can do more than we can. We only get in their way. Amazing guys. They can take the lint from a man’s pants cuffs and tell you who he’s been sleeping with. They’ll turn up something.”

  “They’ll turn up a few thousand fingerprints that belong to me,” Johnny said. “I must have handled half the apartment. I didn’t know I was going to find a corpse.” His eyes returned to the wound on the girl’s neck. “You know what killed her?”

  “Something sharp, most likely.”

  “Thanks a lot.”

  “Hell,” Sam Haig said. “Who knows? Maybe a big knife, a long one. Maybe a razor. The lab boys will study it and find out it’s a Malayan kris stolen from the British Museum in eighteen-fourteen. They’re amazing.”

  “If they’re so good, why do they keep you on the force?”

  The big cop grinned. “They need a rough son-of-a-bitch to beat up suspects. And to crash through doors with a gun in his fist. Like in the movies. Let’s get out of here, huh? I have to keep you up all night answering questions. You might miss your train.”

  Ito answered the phone almost at once. “Honorable Mister Lane’s residence,” he intoned. “Humble servant speaking.”

  “Can it,” Johnny said “It’s only me.”

  “I was wondering where you were.”

  “I’m in Haig’s office, Ito. Somebody found Elaine James before I did. Somebody slit her throat.” He stopped to catch his breath. “Ito, there’s a list of people connected with the show in the top drawer of my desk. Call everybody on the list, tell them to miss the train and wait for further instructions. We’ll be delayed a few days at least, maybe more.”

  “Do I tell them why?”

  “No. Just that I said so. They’ll find out soon enough anyway, but in the meantime they might as well stay in the dark. Call them and tell them no train, period. And don’t wait up for me. I’ll be a while.”

  “I’ll be up,” Ito said.

  “Don’t you ever sleep?”

  “Only in the winter,” Ito said.

  Johnny laughed and hung up, then looked across the desk at Haig. “That’s out of the way,” he said. “Now you’re supposed to ask me probing questions.”

  Haig nodded sleepily. “You kill her, Johnny?”

  “What!”

  “Well, I had to ask. It says so in the book. Any idea who did it?”

  “None.”

  “It wasn’t robbery,” Haig said. “She had a pearl ring on one finger and we found a few bucks in plain sight in a dresser drawer.”

  “Is it still there?”

  “Naturally. Cops only rob the living. Anyway, it wasn’t a burglar. Nothing ransacked. So it was sex or some personal-type motive.”

  Johnny nodded. “I can’t think of anybody who would have any reason to kill her,” he said. “Not offhand.”

  “Know much about her?”

  “Not too much.”

  “Let’s have what you know.”

  Johnny lit a cigarette. “Her name’s Elaine James,” he said. “It is now, anyway. She may have changed it somewhere along the line. She’s been in New York for two, three years looking for a break. The usual routine—temporary office help to pay the rent, a round of auditions that didn’t pan out. An occasional bit off-Broadway but never with a show that caught on. When I held open auditions for A Touch of Squalor she stood in line with a few hundred other girls. I took one look at her and saw that she’d be perfect for the lead if she could act worth a damn. So she read for it and she was perfect. A hell of a fine actress.”

  “So she could act. That all you know about her?”

  “Almost all,” Johnny admitted. “She came from a little town upstate. She was too young to have graduated from college and still spend two or three years in New York and die at twenty-two. Maybe she went to a junior college, I don’t know.”

  “We’ll find out.”

  “That’s the point—I don’t think there’s much I can tell you that you couldn’t turn up anyway. She lived alone. She was friendly enough with everybody in the show but none of them were close friends by any means. She hadn’t known them long enough for that.”

  “Was she sleeping with anybody?”

  “Not that I know of. I had a feeling she might be a virgin.”

  “Any reason to think so?”

  “Just a hunch.”

  “I didn’t think there were any virgins left in the world,” Haig said. “Well, we’ll find that out by morning when the Medical Examiner’s report comes in. That and other things. If she was raped. If she was pregnant. Anything like that, we’ll find out. You get yourself murdered and you don’t have any privacy at all. It’s one hell of a thing.”

  The big cop picked up a letter opener and began to clean his nails with it. “Let’s take the rest of the cast,” he suggested. “Maybe one of them had it in for her.”

  Johnny frowned. “That’s pretty hard to believe.”

  “Is it? If you know as much about them as you know about the James girl, they could all be orangutans and you wouldn’t know the difference. Who’s in the show?”

  “Carter Tracy is her co-star. Was her co-star. Hell, it’s wrong either way. How do you say it when it’s like this?”

  “Death fouls up tenses,” Haig said.

  “He’s the leading man. That does it. You know who he is?”

  “I’ve seen him in the movies, if that’s what you mean. Mostly late movies on television. Isn’t he a little old for our girl?”

  Johnny nodded. “He’s about fifty, I think. Admits to forty-two, which is impossible. See, the age difference was the point of it. The plot of the play spins around an ingénue type who falls for a smooth old bastard. Tracy plays the bastard and Elaine was supposed to play the sweet young thing.”

  “Sounds like typecasting. Tracy really is a bastard, isn’t he?”

  “He’s all wrapped up in his own ego,” Johnny said. “It amounts to almost the same thing. But he’s one hell of a good actor, and good actors are all egotistical. It’s an occupational disease. Besides, his ego hasn’t been up so high lately. He’s slumped. Hollywood doesn’t seem to think he’s a leading man anymore. He was ready to crawl for this part, figuring that it could make all the difference in the world to him. It’s an older part and a romantic role all at once, a handy bridge between two camps.”

  “Who else?”

  Johnny looked at Haig. He was taking brief but careful notes on a legal-sized pad of ruled yellow paper. “I suppose Jan Vernon is next,” Johnny said. “Know her?”

  “Name rings a bell.”

  “She hasn’t made any movies recently. She was a starlet in Hollywood for a while, then switched to Broadway. She had the lead in The Levantine Factor and good supporting roles in Under Black Skies and Last Thursday.”

  “What is she? The prim and proper type?”

  Johnny laughed. He pictured Jan in his mind, thought of the sleepily voluptuous figure, the pouting mouth, the lay-me look that never left her eyes, not even when she was doing something as prosaic as counting her lines.

  “Not exactly,” he said. “Not quite prim and proper. In our play she’s cast as Elaine’s older cousin. The one who’s been around until she’s a little frayed at the edges. Carter Tracy bangs her while he’s making the pitch for Elaine. Get the picture?”

  “Uh-huh. Tracy banging her off-stage as well as on?”

  “Damned if I know. If he isn’t, he can’t be trying.”

  “Another case of typecasting?”

  Johnny shrugged. “Who knows? You never know what to believe in this business. Everything is a rumor. She’s supposed to have figured in a few choice parties out on the Coast. The orgy set, you know. A little marijuana and a little juice and away we go. There was an arrest, according to this rumor, but she was under contract at the time and her studio managed to put the lid on it. The rumor routine may be so much nonsense, but if she’s got more moral
s than an alley cat then I’m Jack the Ripper.”

  “That leaves the question open, friend. Keep going.”

  “Reuben Flood is the lead’s father. The name won’t even ring a bell, but you’d recognize the face. He’s been in a few hundred movies and God knows how many plays. A trouper all the way, one of the best damn character actors in the business. Stan Harris plays the lead’s older brother. He’s a young kid, just starting out. The part is a small one and he’s right for it and that’s about all I know about him. Tony Foy has a bit part—he’s another young hopeful—and there are maybe five or six walk-ons. That takes care of the cast.”

  “Understudies?”

  “Uh-huh. But don’t ask me who they are, because I’d have to look them up to tell you. And don’t think that Elaine’s understudy killed her to inherit the part. She wouldn’t get it. The understudies are just insurance in case one of the cast comes down with a bad hangover or something. They wouldn’t serve as permanent replacements.”

  Johnny drummed his fingers on the desktop, pausing to think things out. The little recitation he’d given was fine for Haig’s notebook—it filled up plenty of yellow paper. But it wasn’t going to nail any killer to the wall.

  Hell, it was just a matter of form. In the morning the Medical Examiner would establish that Elaine had been raped and then murdered and the killing would be designated a pointless sex slaying. That would make fine copy for the tabloids, but it would also mean that there would be no way he could help. If the killer were caught at all, it would be police procedure that did the trick—not one Johnny Lane.

  “The director is Ernest Buell,” Johnny continued. “A temperamental guy maybe a little bit nuts. He’s been in one rest home or another off and on for fifteen years. He isn’t a complete nut, though. It’s just that he gets depressed. It seems to be an occupational disease. A few weeks away from Broadway and he’s all right again.”

  “What they ought to have,” Haig said, “is a rest home for cops. Lieutenants in particular. For days when I get depressed.”

  Johnny laughed. Then he thought about the girl, Elaine, and about the fiend who had killed her. The laughter died.

  “To hell with it,” he said. “I could tell you what color cat our assistant stage manager has and who planned the lighting and a million other damn fool things and it wouldn’t get us anywhere. What it boils down to is that I don’t know anything. Somebody killed her. I wish he hadn’t. Period.”

  “Sure, Johnny. It’s a mess. I ask questions because I have to. Then we find out it was a sex killing and we have to start all over again. We throw out a net and catch perverts, and we make all the perverts tell us what they were doing at the time and with whom, and maybe we get the bastard and maybe we don’t.” He held up his sheet of notes. “This,” he said, “I could throw it in the garbage and it wouldn’t matter.”

  “I’ll see you,” Johnny said. He stood up. “You’ll have to solve this one without me, Sam. But let me know when the ME report comes in, right?”

  “Of course,” Haig told him. “And you keep your crew of hams in town until they’re cleared.” He smiled sadly. “You won’t be able to go into action for a while in any case, will you? Not with your leading lady waiting to be replaced. I guess it’s been a bad night all around, huh?”

  Johnny agreed with him.

  Ito was still up. Johnny got rid of his hat and coat and found a chair to sink into. Then he gave Ito a full summary of the night’s activities. The butler’s face remained impassive.

  “Hell of a thing,” Ito said. “If whoever raped her waited one more day she’d have been all right. She’d have been out of town.”

  “I know. It’s quite a coincidence.”

  “What do you think?”

  “I don’t know. Somehow I can’t swallow the sex-killing bit. I’ve got a theatrical mind, Ito. I want a plot to dovetail neatly. The police have the right idea. They question everybody until one person looks wrong. They throw questions at half the town until one guy can’t answer them straight. And nine times out of ten the first one they pick is guilty.” He lit a cigarette. “I want it more complex than that, damn it. She—she died in a strange way. She couldn’t have put up much of a fight at all. She looked almost peaceful, for the love of God! As though she’d been sleeping when he . . . cut her throat.”

  “Does she always sleep nude?”

  “How the hell would I know? All right, you can stop laughing at me now. I fell for it. Any calls while I was out?”

  Ito told him there were none. Johnny finished his cigarette, then stood up.

  “I’m going to sleep,” he announced. “I’ve got a hell of a lot to do tomorrow. I’ll have to check out all the girls around who might be candidates for Elaine’s part. If I find a fast study in a hurry we may be able to open in time.”

  “Really?”

  “Really,” Johnny said. “With only two weeks for the leading lady to learn to tell her lines from her behind, we’ll be lousy in New Haven. But we can straighten it out in time for the New York opening. Look, it’s six now. Do you think you can be up by noon?”

  “I’ll be up at ten. Should I wake you at noon?”

  “Yeah, wake me at noon,” Johnny said. “But how in hell will you manage to be up at ten?”

  “You know, we Orientals are wonderfully industrious,” Ito said. “And inscrutable. You can never tell what we’re thinking—”

  “Go get some sleep,” Johnny said, then headed out of the room.

  Chapter 3

  * * *

  Johnny Lane came out of sleep slowly, groggily. Ito was shaking him, attempting to be both gentle and firm at once. Johnny’s eyes opened and the light was painful.

  “Go away,” he said sourly. “Go join your honorable ancestors or something.”

  “Mr. Lane—”

  Johnny groaned. “God,” he said. “It can’t be noon yet.”

  “It isn’t.”

  “What the—”

  “It’s eleven-thirty, which is close. And you have company. A visitor.”

  “Haig?”

  Ito shook his head. “Not even close,” he said. “A woman. An attractive woman. She insists that her name is Jan Vernon and that she has to see you at once.”

  “What does she look like?”

  Ito thought it over. “She looks as though she was slept with not long ago.”

  “Then it’s Jan,” Johnny said, grinning. “And she probably was. Tell her to sit down and relax while I try to turn back into a human being. She probably needs some coffee. Me, too. With vitamins in it.”

  “Vitamin B for bourbon?”

  Johnny nodded. He wondered how long it would take him to wake up. Quite a while, he decided.

  A shower helped. So did a shave. He brushed his teeth to remove their fur coat and splashed cold water on his face. He dressed in a hurry, putting on a sport shirt and a pair of light flannel slacks. He broke his shoelaces trying to tie them, threw the shoes away and put on a pair of loafers instead.

  A hot cup of fortified coffee was waiting for him in the living room. So was Jan Vernon.

  “Johnny,” she said, “I’m scared.”

  “I’m exhausted,” he told her. He sat down and took a sip of the coffee to clear away mental cobwebs. There was a lonely cigarette in the tray on the coffee table. He lit it and smoked, studying Jan at the same time.

  Ito was right, he decided. She definitely looked as though she had been slept with, and recently. The black hair that cascaded over her shoulders managed to look mussed up, even when every strand was in its place. The mouth pouted even when she smiled. And the eyes beckoned provocatively even when she was scared, which she obviously was now.

  “I’m scared,” she said.

  “You heard about Elaine?”

  She nodded, her face grim. “Some policeman came banging on my door in the middle of the night.”

  “Haig?”

  “That’s the one. He was halfway through the story before I figured out what he was talking about. At that point I started to shake. I’m still shaking.”

  “It was something to shake about,” Johnny told her. “A pretty rugged scene.”

  “You found the . . . body?”

  “Uh-huh. Didn’t Haig tell you?”

  “He probably did. I was a little out of it at the time. Johnny, are we still going through with the show?”

 
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Wrote, Directed, and Starred in an X-rated Movie (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)You Don't Even Feel It (A Story From the Dark Side) Read onlineYou Don't Even Feel It (A Story From the Dark Side)Zeroing In (Kit Tolliver #11) (The Kit Tolliver Stories) Read onlineZeroing In (Kit Tolliver #11) (The Kit Tolliver Stories)The Wife-Swap Report (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read onlineThe Wife-Swap Report (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)Keller's Fedora (Kindle Single) Read onlineKeller's Fedora (Kindle Single)Speaking of Lust Read onlineSpeaking of LustEverybody Dies (Matthew Scudder) Read onlineEverybody Dies (Matthew Scudder)Defender of the Innocent: The Casebook of Martin Ehrengraf Read onlineDefender of the Innocent: The Casebook of Martin EhrengrafAfter the First Death Read onlineAfter the First DeathWriting the Novel Read onlineWriting the NovelHow Far - a one-act stage play Read onlineHow Far - a one-act stage playChip Harrison Scores Again Read onlineChip Harrison Scores AgainThe Topless Tulip Caper ch-4 Read onlineThe Topless Tulip Caper ch-4The Crime of Our Lives Read onlineThe Crime of Our LivesKilling Castro Read onlineKilling CastroThe Trouble with Eden Read onlineThe Trouble with EdenNothing Short of Highway Robbery Read onlineNothing Short of Highway RobberySin Hellcat Read onlineSin HellcatGetting Off: A Novel of Sex & Violence (Hard Case Crime) Read onlineGetting Off: A Novel of Sex & Violence (Hard Case Crime)Coward's Kiss Read onlineCoward's KissAlive in Shape and Color Read onlineAlive in Shape and ColorBlow for Freedom Read onlineBlow for FreedomThe New Sexual Underground: Crossing the Last Boundaries (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior Book 10) Read onlineThe New Sexual Underground: Crossing the Last Boundaries (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior Book 10)April North Read onlineApril NorthLucky at Cards Read onlineLucky at CardsOne Night Stands; Lost weekends Read onlineOne Night Stands; Lost weekendsSweet Little Hands (A Story From the Dark Side) Read onlineSweet Little Hands (A Story From the Dark Side)Blood on Their Hands Read onlineBlood on Their HandsA Dance at the Slaughterhouse Read onlineA Dance at the SlaughterhouseHeadaches and Bad Dreams (A Story From the Dark Side) Read onlineHeadaches and Bad Dreams (A Story From the Dark Side)Keller's Therapy Read onlineKeller's TherapyThe Specialists Read onlineThe SpecialistsHit and Run jk-4 Read onlineHit and Run jk-4Threesome Read onlineThreesomeLove at a Tender Age (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read onlineLove at a Tender Age (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)The Devil Knows You're Dead: A MATTHEW SCUDDER CRIME NOVEL Read onlineThe Devil Knows You're Dead: A MATTHEW SCUDDER CRIME NOVELFunny You Should Ask Read onlineFunny You Should AskCH01 - No Score Read onlineCH01 - No ScoreSex and the Stewardess (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read onlineSex and the Stewardess (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)A Madwoman's Diary Read onlineA Madwoman's DiaryWhen This Man Dies Read onlineWhen This Man DiesSinner Man Read onlineSinner ManSuch Men Are Dangerous Read onlineSuch Men Are DangerousA Strange Kind of Love Read onlineA Strange Kind of LoveEnough of Sorrow Read onlineEnough of Sorrow69 Barrow Street Read online69 Barrow StreetA Moment of Wrong Thinking (Matthew Scudder Mysteries Series Book 9) Read onlineA Moment of Wrong Thinking (Matthew Scudder Mysteries Series Book 9)Eight Million Ways to Die ms-5 Read onlineEight Million Ways to Die ms-5Warm and Willing Read onlineWarm and WillingMona Read onlineMonaIn Sunlight or In Shadow Read onlineIn Sunlight or In ShadowA Candle for the Bag Lady (Matthew Scudder Book 2) Read onlineA Candle for the Bag Lady (Matthew Scudder Book 2)Conjugal Rites (Kit Tolliver #7) (The Kit Tolliver Stories) Read onlineConjugal Rites (Kit Tolliver #7) (The Kit Tolliver Stories)Speaking of Lust - the novella Read onlineSpeaking of Lust - the novellaGigolo Johnny Wells Read onlineGigolo Johnny WellsDark City Lights Read onlineDark City LightsVersatile Ladies: the bisexual option (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read onlineVersatile Ladies: the bisexual option (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)Passport to Peril Read onlinePassport to PerilThe Taboo Breakers: Shock Troops of the Sexual Revolution (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read onlineThe Taboo Breakers: Shock Troops of the Sexual Revolution (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)Lucky at Cards hcc-28 Read onlineLucky at Cards hcc-28Campus Tramp Read onlineCampus Tramp3 is Not a Crowd (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read online3 is Not a Crowd (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)Manhattan Noir Read onlineManhattan NoirThe Burglar in the Library Read onlineThe Burglar in the LibraryDoing It! - Going Beyond the Sexual Revolution (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior Book 13) Read onlineDoing It! - Going Beyond the Sexual Revolution (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior Book 13)So Willing Read onlineSo WillingThe Burglar Who Traded Ted Williams br-6 Read onlineThe Burglar Who Traded Ted Williams br-6Candy Read onlineCandySex Without Strings: A Handbook for Consenting Adults (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior) Read onlineSex Without Strings: A Handbook for Consenting Adults (John Warren Wells on Sexual Behavior)The Devil Knows You're Dead: A MATTHEW SCUDDER CRIME NOVEL (Matthew Scudder Mysteries) Read onlineThe Devil Knows You're Dead: A MATTHEW SCUDDER CRIME NOVEL (Matthew Scudder Mysteries)Manhattan Noir 2 Read onlineManhattan Noir 2The Scoreless Thai (aka Two For Tanner) Read onlineThe Scoreless Thai (aka Two For Tanner)