Death Takes a Bow (34 page)

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Authors: Frances Lockridge

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“You're wet,” he said. “It must be raining.”

This, obscurely, made Jerry feel better. Here was simple, straightforward reasoning, ending up solidly at the wrong conclusion. He smiled at Mullins and felt much better.

“We've come to help,” Pam told Mullins. Sergeant Mullins looked at her with doubt. He looked at Dorian Weigand and said “Hullo, Mrs. Weigand. The lieutenant ain't here.”

“Of course not, Mr. Mullins,” Pam said. “We know he isn't. That's why we are.”

Mullins looked at Jerry North. Jerry disengaged himself with a shrug.

“Because,” Pam North said, “of the baked apple. I mean—do you understand it?”

“Yes,” Mullins said. “Sure. She didn't get a baked apple at first. Then she got a baked apple and it—showed up. So maybe she got the apple after this kid left. And maybe, just as easy, she didn't. Maybe she got it while he was still there, or he got it for her, and then maybe he stuck the knife in her after she ate it. Is that what you mean, Mrs. North?”

“Well,” Pam said, “it's more complex than that.”

“How?” Mullins said, with simplicity.

“Well,” Pam said, “it just is. Are those her things?”

She was looking at things spread out on a table against one of the walls of the small, ancient office. There was a' dress and other articles of clothing; there was a purse, and, beside it, all the little, odd things which had apparently come out of the purse. A small compact with an enameled cover, two keys and a worn coin purse, an unused kleenex, an envelope with something written on it—pathetic things.

“Yeh,” Mullins said. “Those are her things. I was just—looking at them.” He looked at them again. “She was a little kid, sort of,” he said.

Pam North walked over and, without touching any of them, looked down at the things Frances McCalley had worn or carried when someone had thrust a knife in her throat, leaving her small and crumpled in a cafeteria booth. She had been a little kid, Pam noticed. It was a little dress. Then she looked again. It was a smaller dress than it had been once; the seams along the side had been taken up. There were small, neat stitches which still had not come from a professional workshop.

“Can I look at it?” Pam said. Mullins nodded. She picked it up. It was a black silk dress and on the front—on a great deal of the front—there was something which had dried. It did not show red now, against the black; it showed only a different, duller black. Pam turned the dress in her slim hands and saw that her hands were trembling. But there was still something curious about the dress. Forcing herself not to drop the stained dress, Pam turned back the collar and nodded at what she saw. Then, still holding it, she shook her head.

“Look,” she said. “This isn't her dress. It couldn't be. It's Bergdorf's.”

Mullins looked at her, uncomprehending.

“McCalley,” he said. “Frances McCalley. She was a filing clerk. Sure it's her dress. Who's Bergdorf?”

Pam looked at Dorian Weigand, who crossed and looked at the dress with her.

“She couldn't,” Pam said. “Not if it came from Bergdorf. It might as well be Carnegie.”

Mullins looked at them, and then anxiously at Jerry North.

“Bergdorf-Goodman's,” Jerry said. “Hattie Carnegie.” It was, he decided, wrong. He went over to look at the dress too. There was no doubt about what the label said.

“Look,” he said, and now he was getting interested. This worried him a little, but the interest remained. “Maybe she just got the label somewhere—found it or something—and sewed it in. It seems to me I've heard—”

“So have I,” Pam agreed. “But that isn't it. Is it, Dorian? You know about things like that.”

“No,” Dorian said, holding the dress away from her and looking at it. “It isn't that. This is the real thing—see the line, Pam?”

Pamela North nodded. Jerry looked at the dress. He thought he could see what they were talking about.

“And,” Dorian said, “it cost plenty. About what—she was a filing clerk, wasn't she, Sergeant?”

“Yeh,” Mullins said. He crossed to join in the examination, looking puzzled.

“Then,” Dorian said, “this dress cost what she'd make in two months. Maybe three, depending on the mark-up.”

“Well,” Mullins said, “some girls are crazy about clothes. Some of these poor kids—”

Pam and Dorian both shook their heads. They looked at each other, and Pam told Mullins how it was. A girl might spend two or three times what she made in a month on something to wear. She might go hungry for something to wear. But that would be for a fur coat at so much a week. Or for a dress to wear to parties, perhaps. But most likely a fur coat. But not for a black dress, however artfully cut, however good in material, to wear to an office.

“This can't be her dress,” Pam said. “Or else she can't be who we think she is—a little filing clerk. Dorian will tell you that too, Mr. Mullins.”

Mullins looked at Dorian Weigand. He looked at her hopefully. She shook her head.

“She's right, Sergeant,” she said. “No little filing clerk ever bought this dress.”

Jerry watched the hope die out of Sergeant Aloysius Mullins's face; he watched with sympathy and understanding. He watched another expression take its place and waited, with anticipation, for the certainly to be anticipated remark.

“Jeeze,” said Sergeant Mullins, and he spoke in sorrow. “Jeeze. It's going to be another screwy one.”

He looked at Pam North and shook his head slowly. His tone was not accusing, but it was resigned.

“Another screwy one, Mrs. North,” he said.

Pamela North looked at Sergeant Mullins, and there was only one thing for her to say.

“I'm sorry, Mr. Mullins,” she said. “Really I am.”

“O.K.,” Mullins said. “O.K., Mrs. North. It ain't your fault.”

But Sergeant Mullins, Mr. North was interested to note, did not make this last remark with any real assurance.

But, Pam North thought, dropping the dress back on the table, it has really been a screwy one since the baked apple and I didn't have anything to do with that. She thought of saying as much and then noticed something about the dress, now sprawled on the table, which she had not noticed before. Clipped to a seam near the bottom of the dress was a cleaner's tag. It had not shown when the dress was worn; Frances McCalley, if the girl had been Frances McCalley, had never noticed it.

“Look,” Pam said, pointing. “Can't we find out from that who she really is?”

“Listen, Mrs. North,” Sergeant Mullins said. “It ain't that screwy. We know who she is—was. That we
do
know.”

But he looked at the tag and, after a second, detached it. He leaned out of the door and called, and when a detective came, gave him the tag with instructions. Then he turned back.

“Just to make sure, Mrs. North,” he said, “I'm having them check up. They'll tell us who cleaned it. But she was Frances McCalley, anyway.” He looked firmly at all of them. “Anyway,” he repeated. “People looked at her. Who knew her.”

There was, he told them while they waited, nothing else in the small pile of the murdered girl's possessions which seemed to mean much. The envelope was addressed to Frances McCalley and Mullins pointed this out with modified triumph to Mrs. North. She had had two dollars and twelve cents in her purse when she was killed; she had bought the compact for a dollar at a glorified five and ten cent store on Fifth Avenue. The purse had come from Fourteenth Street; her stockings had been rayon and so had her few underclothes. She had worn no girdle. She—

The detective came back and handed Mullins the cleaner's tag with a slip of paper clipped to it. “Clinton Cleaners,” someone had written on the paper, and added a Madison Avenue address. Mullins looked pleased.

“Quick, those boys are,” he said. “Put a description on the teletype and it comes right back at you.” He nodded, approving the Police Department. “Laundry marks just the same,” he said. He sat down at the desk and picked up a Manhattan telephone book. “Not that it's any use,” he said. “It won't be open. Still—” He laid down the telephone book, asked for an outside line, and dialed a number. He waited and nothing happened. He was just about to hang up when someone answered.

The Clinton Cleaners was not, it appeared, closed, although it was closing and, evidently, glad of it. Mullins identified himself and read letters and numbers from the tag. He said, “Now, brother. When'd you think” and waited. He said. “Yeh” and Wrote something on the pad in front of him. He said “Thanks” and re-cradled the telephone. He sat for a moment looking at what he had written, a puzzled expression on his face.

“Seems to me I just—” he said, thoughtfully. Then he said, in a different tone, “Jeeze.” He turned to the others, and surprise now was in control of his features.

“You know who they cleaned that dress for?” he demanded. The others looked at him. “Ann Lawrence, who lives on Gramercy Park. And she—”

He stopped because all three were nodding at him.

“Yes, Mullins,” Jerry North said. “We know. She got killed tonight—too.”

“Or,” Pam said, “she got killed twice. Or—or this girl was a friend of hers and she gave her this dress, having it cleaned first. Or—”

She stopped and looked at them.

“They're tied up,” she said. “It isn't two cases. It's only one case. We've got to go and tell Bill. Right away.”

It was a jump, Jerry North thought. It was a frantic jump. Because it did not really follow, because Ann Lawrence had given a dress to Frances McCalley—if she had, which was unproved—that there was a connection between the deaths of the two girls. It meant, possibly, that they had known each other and—Then he had a new thought.

“Savings Shops!” he said. “Or something like that. Well-to-do women give their clothes to charities and charities run Savings Shops and girls like this buy expensive things there for very little and—”

Pam was agreeing.

“That was my other or,” she said. “It's Thrift Shops, dear. And of course it could be. Only I don't believe it for a minute. I don't believe in things like that, because if I did there wouldn't be any sense to anything. And that would be too confusing.” She paused and considered. “Things would be illogical,” she said. “And what would we do then, except go round and round?”

There was obviously an answer to that one. Jerry North tried to think of it all the way to Gramercy Park, while Mullins pushed a police car, its red lights blinking in front, through the soft barrier of snow. They had pulled up among the other cars in front of Ann Lawrence's little house before Jerry realized that there wasn't any answer because, as it happened, Pam was perfectly right.

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About the Authors

Frances and Richard Lockridge were some of the most popular names in mystery during the forties and fifties. Having written numerous novels and stories, the husband-and-wife team was most famous for their Mr. and Mrs. North Mysteries. What started in 1936 as a series of stories written for the
New Yorker
turned into twenty-six novels, including adaptions for Broadway, film, television, and radio. The Lockridges continued writing together until Frances's death in 1963, after which Richard discontinued the Mr. and Mrs. North series and wrote other works until his own death in 1982.

All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 1943 by Frances and Richard Lockridge; copyright renewed by 1971 by Richard Lockridge

Cover design by Andy Ross

ISBN: 978-1-5040-3116-5

This 2016 edition published by
MysteriousPress.com
/Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

345 Hudson Street

New York, NY 10014

www.openroadmedia.com

THE MR. AND MRS. NORTH MYSTERIES

FROM
MYSTERIOUSPRESS.COM
AND OPEN ROAD MEDIA

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