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Authors: Maia Chance

Come Hell or Highball (28 page)

BOOK: Come Hell or Highball
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“Because you purchased her shop,” Ralph said.

“No, no, I not pay her
that
much. No, the money from her son. Big film star now.” He poked his cigarette between his lips and used both hands to make a kind of theatrical master of ceremonies gesture. Rolling the
r,
he cried, “Bruno Luciano!” He waited for our reactions.

“You don't say,” Ralph said. He tipped his fedora. “Thanks, signor.”

We went back out onto the noisy sidewalk.

“You've got to learn to keep your cool, Mrs. Woodby,” Ralph said. “Don't give the game away. You've just got to keep people talking.”

I sucked my cherry lozenge. “You're a know-it-all, aren't you?”

“If by that you mean that I know everything, then, yeah, I am.”

I beaned his temple with a spice gumdrop. It bounced onto the sidewalk and was promptly gobbled up by a dog lounging in a shop doorway.

Cedric didn't know how good he had it.

I glanced up from the dog. A face was watching me from inside the shop window. Two dried-currant eyes in a blank face, peeping out between towers of red-and-white cans.

Fear slashed through me.

Mr. Highpants.

He shifted away, out of sight behind the tower. I was left staring at the red-and-white cans.
DA PONTE TOMATO PASTE
, the labels repeated again and again and again.

“Lola,” Ralph was saying. “What's the matter?”

“I saw him.” My throat was dry. “Mr. Highpants.”

“Where?”

“In this shop.”

Ralph sprang through the doorway. I forced myself to follow.

But inside the shop, no Mr. Highpants. Only a handful of crabby-looking old ladies in black dresses. Silence fell; the old ladies glowered.

Ralph and I legged it out of there before one of them put a hex on us.

*   *   *

Back at the love nest, Berta was bursting with news.

“I telephoned around to every household staffing agency in the city,” she said. “I strong-armed the secretary at the Mrs. Hartwicke Household Staffing Agency into admitting that a gentleman of Japanese extraction had passed through their doors a few weeks ago.”

Berta, strong-arming? Okay, it made sense.

“But,” she said, “I could not get anything else out of the secretary. Even a bribe was not going to work.”

“I could visit the agency in person,” I said. “I could throw my name about and force Mrs. Hartwicke to tell me where the butler has found his new position.”

“Throw your name about?” Ralph said.

I'd nearly forgotten; my name was mud.

“I'll go anyway,” I said. “Maybe Mrs. Hartwicke hasn't seen today's newspapers yet. And even if she has, well, I'm still Lola Woodby, aren't I?”

“Sure,” Ralph said.

Berta wrapped her fingers around her locket.

*   *   *

Before we went to the staffing agency, I needed to see if I could get ahold of Bruno Luciano at Dune House. I wished to pry into his sudden influx of cash last August. Sure, probably all that dough had come from his film contracts. But maybe, just maybe, it had come from secret checks written by Horace Arbuckle.

“Just don't make any of your direct accusations,” Ralph said.

“Quite,” Berta said. “Or, if Mr. Luciano is a blackmailer and a murderer, he might shoot you, too.”

What a soothing pair Ralph and Berta made.

Olive answered the telephone. “Oh, hello, darling. I thought you'd run off to Panama with that Swedish cook of yours. The police are simply
fuming
that you've disappeared. I said that
I
don't know where you are, and surely you didn't pop off Horace and Nanny Potter. I mean, why ever would you? Your dreadful brother-in-law, Chisholm, has been stopping by, too. Good heavens, what a scrummy face to be wasted on
such
a stuffy mind, and so I told him—”

“Could I speak with Bruno?” I asked.

She paused. “Bruno is filming.”

“Filming there, at your house?” I knew this, but I wished to confirm it.

“Yes, of course. The motion picture people are to be here for
days
. It's a good thing, too, because with Billy and Theo gone to Bar Harbor, I'd be absolutely
stranded
in the house with nobody for company but nasty old Auntie, and
she's
gone on a bender. She's going to run out of bootleg whiskey, and then where will she be?”

“I thought Eloise Wright was staying to keep you company.”

“Oh, she is. But she talks of nothing but her dreary divorce, and of her Girdle Queen company. Ladies oughtn't do business, I think. It makes them so
tedious,
so—”

“Would you tell Bruno that I telephoned?”

“Of course, darling.”

“Thanks.”

*   *   *

The Mrs. Hartwicke Household Staffing Agency was on the sixth floor of a fashionable Midtown building. I left Ralph and Berta on a sofa in the lobby and took the elevator up.

Inside the agency, I marched up to the reception desk, where a young secretary sat filing her nails.

“Have you an appointment, madam?” she asked.

“I do not need an appointment. I am Mrs. Woodby. Mrs. Alfred Woodby. And I require a new butler. Please inform Mrs. Hartwicke that I must see her at once.”

“Yes, madam.”

It was gratifying to so easily command respect. Granted, I'd changed from Berta's clothes into full Society Matron regalia: mink-collared coat (only slightly crumpled by my suitcase), diamond stud earrings, and a hat that could've doubled as a hassock. At the same time, commanding respect from skittering young girls is a sign that oneself is aging. One of life's tragic trade-offs.

The secretary returned. “Mrs. Hartwicke will see you.”

Mrs. Hartwicke was a plump lady in periwinkle, with a white bun and rectangular reading glasses. The gold chains drooping down from the sides of her glasses matched exactly the droop of her cheeks.

“Mrs. Woodby, what a pleasure!” Her voice was shrill.

She'd read the newspapers, then.

“Hello,” I said. I sat, and perched my handbag on my knees. “I require a Japanese butler.”

“Japanese?”

“Yes. Is it terribly eccentric of me?”

“Japanese. Well, I don't know.” Mrs. Hartwicke fluttered through dossiers on her desk. She also sneaked a few glances at the telephone.

Did she worry that I, in the capacity of Clinical Hysteric, was going to hurdle over her desk and throttle her? Probably.

“We
had
one gentleman of Japanese extraction pass through the agency recently,” Mrs. Hartwicke said. “But he has already found a situation.”

“Oh dear,” I said. “But I
must
have him.”

“Ah. Here we are.” Mrs. Hartwicke spread open a dossier. “Yes. Mr. Takanori Hisakawa. Such a lovely gentleman. He was quite snapped up by one of my clients. He had glowing recommendations, you see, and the most impeccable—”

“Yes, yes.” I twiddled my fingers. “I must have him for my own household.”

“I'm afraid that's—”

I leaned forward. “Who hired him?”

“We never disclose our clients' names, so—”

“Mrs. Hartwicke, you are perhaps aware that my mother, Mrs. Virgil DuFey, is in the process of restaffing her Park Avenue household?” A complete fabrication.

“Oh, indeed?”

“Mother will do her utmost to spread the word about your excellent agency.”

“Well—”

“However, if you were not the most
helpful
agency, well, perhaps Mother would be forced to seek out an alternative.”

Mrs. Hartwicke pursed her fuchsia lips. I could practically hear her thoughts: On the one hand, I was (reportedly) a murderous cuckoo on the loose. On the other hand, recommendations from the Woodbys and the DuFeys would be priceless.

Mrs. Hartwicke slid the dossier across the desk toward me.

I spun it around. I glanced at it long enough to see, printed at the top,
MRS
.
ST. AUBIN.

I knew Mrs. St. Aubin. Doddering battle-axe in oyster fruits and a whalebone corset. Her niece Posy had been in the class below me at Miss Cotton's Academy for Young Ladies. “Thank you, Mrs. Hartwicke.” I hurried toward the door.

“You cannot simply march into Mrs. St. Aubin's home and steal away her butler,” Mrs. Hartwicke called.

I turned. “Such thefts have been known to happen.”

Mrs. Hartwicke's hand was already reaching for her telephone.

 

31

Out in the corridor, I hastened toward the elevators. When I was a dozen paces off, an elevator pinged and someone stepped off.

I stumbled to a halt.

Mr. Highpants.

I took off in the other direction.

I didn't know if he was chasing me or not. I didn't
want
to know. Without a doubt, he was tailing me, although
why
I wasn't sure.

I ran down the corridor, around a corner, and to the end of the line, where there was a door marked
EXIT
.

I pushed through and found myself in a stairwell. I bolted down five flights of stairs and burst out into the lobby.

Berta and Ralph were still side by side on the sofa, looking bored.

“Come on!” I whispered,
tick-tick
ing past them. “Hurry!”

They followed me. Outside, we zigzagged through shoppers and businessmen on the sidewalk.

I swung one last look over my shoulder before we ducked down the subway stairs at the end of the block. A dark blue paddy wagon roared around the corner, heading toward the building we'd just fled.

Mrs. Hartwicke had ratted me out.

*   *   *

Thirty minutes later, I was safe at the love nest and cradling a highball.

“You ought to stay inside for the time being,” Ralph said. He looked through the kitchen window, down into the narrow brick alleyway.

Berta agreed.

“But it'll be so dull,” I said. I stretched out my hand to nab a butter almond cookie from a plate on the table.

“No!” Berta cried. “The rest of the cookies are for—I am saving them. For someone else.”

“He'll adore them,” I said.

“What makes you think it is a
he
?”

The telephone jingled.

“Ah, that will be the police,” Berta said. She went to answer it.

I removed the diamond stud earrings and stuffed them in my handbag for safekeeping. “Wouldn't the police simply break down the door?”

“Beats me,” Ralph said. “I've never been in your position. I never get caught.”

“It's for you, Mrs. Woodby,” Berta called.

Turned out, it wasn't the police. It was Bruno Luciano.

“I hear you've been checking up on me,” he said.

My guts twisted. How had he learned about our trip to Mulberry Street? Was he in league with Mr. Highpants? “Um,” I said.

“Olive told me you called.”

Oh.
That's
what he'd meant.

“I'm not some dingledangler,” Bruno said. “You
did
tell me how to telephone you.”

True. “I wished to speak with you, yes,” I said. “But come to think of it, I'm not so sure we ought to do it over the telephone. Are you still at Dune House?”

“I am, but you know, I wouldn't mind a jaunt into the city. We've all got cabin fever up here. Olive's quite the hostess, if you know what I mean. No room to breathe. And that batty old auntie is giving everyone the jitters. Staggers around drunk, won't stop going on about the goddam pork and beans, talks about burning this place to the ground. Say, how about meeting me for a drink tonight?”

“Oh. I am, at the moment, somewhat, um, wanted by the police, so—”

“Okay, how about at my apartment?”

“Your apartment?”

I glanced up. Ralph was making a
cut
gesture across his throat.

I blurted the first place that came to mind. “Blue Heaven. Have you heard of it?”

Ralph clapped a palm on his forehead.

Maybe it was crazy to go back there. On the flip side, if the police showed up at Blue Heaven, I wouldn't be the only one getting handcuffed.

“Okay, Blue Heaven,” Bruno said. “Ten o'clock tonight?”

“Perfect.”

*   *   *

I'll come clean. I've got my pride. And I'd spent the day dressed first in Berta's housewifely togs and then in my own worst Society Matron armor. So can you blame me if I spent forty-five minutes sprucing myself up for Blue Heaven?

When Berta, Ralph, and I arrived in Harlem at ten o'clock, I wore my short sable coat, my peach Coco Chanel, gold peep-toes, and triple helpings of mascara, kohl, and poppy-red lipstick. My bob was back in order, shiny and bedecked with one jeweled hairpin.

Ralph got us past Blue Heaven's door without even saying the password. Maybe it should have bothered me that he was known by a speakeasy guard, but I had other things on my plate. Inside, Blue Heaven was just as rip-roaring and gin drenched as it had been a few nights back, and the jazz band was at it full steam ahead.

We settled into a table with our backs to the wall. I slid off my sable and looked around for Bruno Luciano. No sign of him.

“How do you think Bruno will get past the guard?” I asked Ralph.

“Easy. He's famous,” Ralph said. “Drink?” A waiter had appeared.

“No, thanks,” I said. “I've got to keep my head clear.”

Berta ordered a gin blossom. Ralph asked for neat whiskey.

Fifteen minutes later, Bruno still hadn't shown, and Berta was submerged in her second gin blossom.

“Hey there, you juicy Swedish tomato, you.” Jimmy the Ant sidled up to our table. He only had eyes—or, I should say,
an
eye, since one of them was glass—for Berta.

BOOK: Come Hell or Highball
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