Read Something in the Shadows Online
Authors: Vin Packer
Muriel was being led from the room by the New Jersey policeman. “I remember about the pheasant now,” she was crying. “Billy said, ‘Mure, someone stole my pheasant!’ “ The New Jersey policeman was calming her, and the other policeman was taking some cellophane off a Cigarillo.
He said to Joseph, “I’m Captain Plant from Doylestown.”
“How do you do?”
“You don’t seem very surprised, Meaker.”
“I knew you were there.”
“So you’re Billy Duncan’s murderer, hmmm?”
“Yes. He’s under the woodpile, out behind my house.”
“Uh-huh. Sure, Meaker.” Captain Plant smiled pleasantly, sucked on his Cigarillo and regarded Joseph with an amused expression.
Joseph shook his head sadly. “Captain, do you think I’m out of my mind?”
“Do you think you are, Meaker?”
“Not out of it,
in
it, in a sense.
In
it, for the first time!”
“Well, Meaker, you can come along with us and we’ll have a long chat about it.”
“All right.”
“McGraw, I’ll wait out in the car with him. I’ll bring it around out front.”
McGraw walked back into the room. “Why don’t you take him in? I’ll stay here with her until we get someone else over here. She’s afraid, I think. Is someone picking up Hart?”
“Yes.” Captain Plant knocked an ash from his Cigarillo into a plastic ashtray, shaped like a top hat.
“What has Louis got to do with this any more?” said Joseph. “You mean she’s still afraid of Louis?”
The police officers ignored him. They were talking together now, leaving him to stand there in the middle of the living room, unguarded.
Joseph could see into the kitchen. Spared: a red cupid with wrapping string coming out of his bow. Muriel was standing there with her back to the doorway.
“I’ll call from here to say I’m bringing Meaker in,” Captain Plant said.
McGraw said, “Yeah, okay.” “Use your phone, Mrs. Duncan?” Muriel turned around then. “Yes,” she said, “go ahead.”
She was holding her glasses in her hand, starting to put them on.
“Wait!” Joseph said. He started to rush across to her, but McGraw stopped him, held him by the arm.
“I only wanted to tell her about her glasses,” said Joseph.
“Okay, Meaker, let’s go out to the car and wait for Captain Plant.”
Joseph said, “Muriel, you’ll probably want to marry again. If you had heavy frames it would detract from the squareness of your face. Those rimless glasses make your face look too broad. I saw a picture in
Vogue
of — ” but Muriel Duncan was screaming now, screaming hysterically, and McGraw was pulling Joseph across the living room towards the door.
On the telephone Captain Plant was chuckling. “Oh sure, it’s an air-tight confession, Paul. Body’s out behind his barn under the woodpile. Sure,” chuckling again, “with a deer and a pheasant.
You
heard me — ha! ha!”
Joseph stumbled into the tin umbrella stand. Then he stood up, and McGraw let go of him. “Let’s wait out in the car, Meaker, okay?”
“I just wanted to tell her about her glasses,” Joseph said.
McGraw had a smile on his face. “You can tell her about her glasses some other time, fella.”
He opened the door, and they went down the slate walk, past the pink wooden crane and away from Muriel and the white bungalow.
“No one believes me, do they?” Joseph asked.
“Let’s just say you’re going to put people to a lot of trouble, Mr. Meaker. You don’t really want everyone digging up your yard, do you?”
“No, but they have to find the body.”
“Car’s around the corner,” McGraw sighed. “Keys in yours?”
“Yes.”
“Someone will bring yours in later.”
The sun was melting last night’s snow. There were several small children digging in a drift with tin shovels. They did not even look up as Joseph walked by with McGraw. It seemed like any other perfectly ordinary December day. Where were the handcuffs? The police sirens? The hostile knots of neighbours with their naked curiosity, staring at Joseph?
McGraw’s voice was calm and nearly solicitous. “We had a talk with your wife this morning.”
“With Maggie?”
“She’s worried about you, Meaker. She sounds like she understands you pretty well.”
“Oh yes, yes,” Joseph sighed. “Everyone understands me.”
“We only think people don’t understand us,” said McGraw.
• • •
And what about the other Josephs? How many of them right at that moment were walking down streets like Landers Lane in Lambertville, New Jersey, sunny winter day near Christmas, looking like anyone else, knowing what they knew — listening to policemen tell them they were understood — waiting for recognition, of any kind — of
any
kind?
“I’ll say one thing,” McGraw drawled out as they reached the corner, “You were right about Mrs. Duncan’s glasses. Heavy frames would suit her better.”
• • •
Well, that was recognition of a kind. The rest would come slowly, the way it does to the Josephs of the world.
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5:45 to Suburbia
“E
VER HEAR
of a C-cup bitch before?” Wally Keene had asked Charlie once.
“She’s the worst kind of bitch there is, Charlie! She’s as power-happy as she is top-heavy. Our business is brimming over with them — ours and advertising. Her bosom bosses her body and she bosses you…. Hell,
you
know the type, Charlie. Tell her a joke and she heard it last February; but she knows ‘a new one’ you haven’t heard. Take her to lunch and she sends back the Gibson, because the onion isn’t crisp. In a conference room when you try to win a point by throwing in a random statistic to make it more effective, she’s the one who sends out for the
World Almanac,
and finds out there were nowhere near 7,140 automobiles stolen in Houston in 1955…. Just imagine Scarlett O’Hara playing Kitty Foyle, and you got a C-cup bitch. Better still, Charlie, take a look around you … at Marge Mann, for instance.”
Charlie had seen her in the back of the elevator as he had come in that morning; and for some reason as he stood pressed against the other passengers and rode in gloomy 8:55
A.M
. silence to 16, he was reminded of Wally’s description of her. Reminded of how he had hated young Keene for saying it (Keene had made the remark about a year ago in the bar at the Commodore, where they were both waiting for the 6:30 to Greenwich); and how he had hated him for being so amusingly accurate about Marge. About her type; about his own effortless admission to himself that she
was
a type; so what, Charlie had thought, who isn’t…. Still, it had made him angry; and he realized rather uncomfortably, it had made him feel some vague sense of guilt too.
He had seen her standing back there with the feather in her hat; smiled at her, and wished he had winked instead; and after he had thought of Wally’s year-old remark, he had recalled one of his own, years and years older; one of his own to Marge: “Wear a hat with a feather on it, and meet me at the Fiftieth Street Entrance to Saks.”
It sounded oddly prosaic to Charlie’s memory; sounded more like two old ladies off on a shopping spree than lovers bent on a clandestine rendezvous; but even so, Charlie knew he still couldn’t pass Saks without flinching; couldn’t look at one of Marge’s hats without telling himself, too often and too insistently, that he had
really
been in love wih her; my God, he had even considered divorcing Joan.
Seriously
considered it; hadn’t he?
When the elevator came to a stop he did an awkward thing that turned out to be pointless. Before he got out he looked back at Marge, wanting perhaps to improve on his initial greeting, wanting to add more to it, to make it less incidental; and instead, as he looked around, the man behind Charlie moved forward abruptly, so that both bumped noses; and the collision resulted in clumsy apologies, muttered as the two men stepped quickly out of the elevator, and in Charlie’s not having a second glance at Marge. He was sorry about that, particularly sorry about it because of the past month’s tension around Cadence Publications; and because somehow he wanted to reassure Marge that he was pulling for her. Pulling for her against Wally Keene.
Wally had said something else to Charlie about Marge once, not very long ago. A week or two ago. Wally had said, “Charlie, you want to hear something funny? This will break you up! The other night that bitch
offered
herself to me. That’s right, she offered herself to me! That wizened old bitch stretched herself out on a hide-a-bed like a slab of white lamb sacrificed on an altar! And you know what she said, Charlie, you know what she had the nerve to say? She said, ‘All right, you can have what you want. All right, take me!’” Wally had held his sides laughing. “I mean, God, can you picture it!”
Charlie didn’t believe it; didn’t believe for a minute Marge Mann would do anything like that — not for anyone, not even for her job. She used to tell Charlie, back when they were close, “The reason I like you, Charles, is that I like myself when I’m with you. I think that’s important.” That was like her; that was the way she was…. So Charlie didn’t believe Keene’s story.
Pushing through the wide glass doors, Charlie entered the reception room of Cadence Publications.
He looked right for these surroundings; at home in them. For a middle-aged man who lived well and was unlikely ever to become calorie-conscious (just on principle) Charlie Gibson had a good strong body that was tall and broad; and could still carry a single-breasted suit well enough to make many of his chunky colleagues envious.
He dressed that body well too. He had a feel for style and taste in his wardrobe; and a manner in his bearing, his stance and his gait, that announced he was right.
Distingúe,
some would have said of this man in the dark blue suit, with the thick crop of coal-colored hair streaked thinly with gray. Seeing him on this morning, some would have insisted
handsome
as well. For when Charlie’s round face was sullen in thought, with the wide deep brown eyes somber, he seemed almost handsome; seemed, ironically, younger too, and not as average of countenance. Nor as shy and vulnerable as he did when he had nothing bothering him.
As he strode across the thick gray carpet, passing the plush red leather couches and round white oak tables, one of the Cadence magazine covers stared up at him from a table top. It was their mystery magazine,
The Suspects,
one of the twenty magazines Cadence published.
A picture of a semi-nude blonde with blood running from her mouth, rushing down a rickety staircase, adorned its front. Charlie winced, made a mental note to get a memo off to the editor, and thought, as he mumbled a “morning” to the receptionist, of what Bruce Cadence had said yesterday.
“Look, Charlie, I don’t like it either. We’ve always had a good name in our field — always — except for that incident with our comic line. But that incident cost us plenty, Charlie. Now we’ve got to recover.”
Charlie had argued, “But we won’t recover making the same mistake we made with the comics. Sexy covers, lurid blurbs. Is this how we’re going to recover? … And a brand new exposé magazine we’re ashamed to put the Cadence name on!”
“The heat was on comics, Charlie. That’s all.”
“And it won’t be turned on our other books?”
“No, Charlie, it won’t be. Providing we stay in bounds, of course. It’s different with a children’s audience, you know that. They’re always worrying about what Johnny
should
read, when they’re not worrying about if Johnny
can
read.”
“Still and all, Bruce, Cadence doesn’t have to cheapen the line to sell!”
“Not
cheapen
the line, Charlie. You know I don’t mean that. Just make it less staid, as Keene says.”
“By exposing people?”
“Charlie, I know you’re opposed to the new magazine. I
know!
But do you have a better suggestion? … We’re in a hole, Charlie. We’re in a canyon!”
Before Charlie had left Cadence’s office, Bruce Cadence had added: “You’ll get the dummy tomorrow. After you make any corrections, rush it up to me. Okay, Charlie?”
It wasn’t okay. A lot of other people at Cadence felt the way Charlie did. No one — not even Charlie — had gone on record as being fighting-mad-vehemently-opposed to the new magazine; but even as it went around in dummy form, the nickname for it which someone had thought up, stuck…. Unofficially, it was called
Vile.
Vile
was Wally Keene’s brainchild. Bruce Cadence had hired young Keene as a troubleshooter, telling Charlie that he was convinced that the organization needed “new blood. Fresh blood, Charlie,
young
blood!”
Vile
was the fruit of the new, fresh, young blood.
Down at the end of the long corridor on the 16th floor was the pine-paneled office of the Executive Editorial Director at Cadence. This was Charlie’s office, and the panoramic view of West Manhattan midtown to the Hudson, from its windows, was one Charlie never tired of seeing as he walked in there every morning; a scene he never failed to appreciate — the same way he was aware of and warm toward the fragrance of his secretary’s perfume at the beginning of a work day. Bonnie sat just outside his door and she always wore Arpege. She always looked up just as he passed the row of telephones on her desk; always smiled; always said, “Good morning, Mr. Gibson. I’ll be right with you,” and always appeared five minutes from the time she said that.
So ten minutes after Charlie had hung up his coat, without having yet seen her, he began to suspect that something was wrong; that perhaps she was sick (she never
was);
or that perhaps there was some new intrigue transpiring, a situation that invariably seemed to decimate the normal routine in the office, because usually the secretaries were the first to know, and the last to savor the enjoyment. Haphazardly he glanced through the pile of mail on his desk, at the same time pressing the buzzer which would call Bonnie, if she were near enough to be called. As he was doing this, some slight resentment starting to rise in him, as it always did when his meticulous sense of organization seemed threatened, a newspaper clipping fell from an envelope he held in his hand.
It was clipped from the
Times;
a brief write-up of the dinner a charitable organization had given in Charlie s honor several weeks ago, in appreciation of his capabilities as a fund-raiser. Above the write-up, there was a rather poor photograph of Charlie, a shoulders-up, smiling shot. Across his face was scribbled something Charlie did not have time to read before he heard the sound of the singing.
He looked up, puzzled at Bonnie; puzzled and then bemused. He had forgotten all about it.
“Happy Birthday,” she said, holding the tiny cake out to him; grinning; a slim, baby-faced girl, not too much older than Charlie’s daughter, but less spoiled than Jane — and wiser, Charlie had a hunch; quicker. “And many happy returns, Mr. Gibson.”
She set it on his desk; a candle sagged in the icing, dripping and flickering.
“Forget?” she asked him.
“I sure did.”
“Well, make a wish and blow it out.”
It was uncanny that at the same time she said that to him, Charlie’s eyes fell for a slow second to the sealed interoffice memo that was lying beside his mail pile; and that he thought as he looked at it: I wish that weren’t on my desk; wish I didn’t have to read that; uncanny, because Charlie had no real idea what the memo contained.
“Did you make a wish?”
“Yes,” Charlie said, deciding good health was a sound one, then blowing the candle out. “There!”
“I won’t ask how old you are.”
“Fifty.”
“You didn’t
have
to tell, Mr. Gibson. I wasn’t fishing.”
“I suppose that sounds old, hmm, Bonnie? To you?”
Charlie glanced up at her. She said, “Yes, frankly … Want a piece with some coffee, or is it too early?”
“Much too early. Can we save it until after lunch?”
“Sure. Here, I’ll take it.” She leaned across for the plate, and her eyes fell to the sealed memo. “I suppose you saw
that.”
“Yes. Any idea what it’s about?”
“I wouldn’t like to speculate,” she told him. She looked suddenly serious. “I just wouldn’t like to.”
“Did Keene’s secretary leave it?”
“Uh-huh.”
Charlie felt something sink inside of him; then again remembered the curl to Keene’s lips that evening at the Commodore when he said, “Ever hear of a C-cup bitch before?”
As though she were reading his thoughts, Bonnie said, “You don’t think Mr. Cadence
would
demote her, do you, Mr. Gibson?”
“You think that’s what it’s about, too?”
She nodded.
“I don’t know, Bon,” he answered. “I hope not.”
“I think it would-kill her,” the girl said. She lifted the cake plate from his desk, frowning. “I wish you’d open it now.”
“After I’ve gone over
all
my mail, I will,” Charlie said. “That’s the only safe rule when it comes to these things. Open them last; that way the immediate business gets done before I blow my top.”
“I know, Mr. Gibson.” Bonnie sighed. “By now I know.”
She started across the office toward the door. Charlie let himself enjoy her legs before he looked up and said, “Bon? By the way, you’ll see that the dummy gets into me right away, won’t you? I want it checked and upstairs by four.”
“It’s on your desk now,” she answered. “Over on the left … And, Mr. Gibson, there’s a letter from your daughter in the pile.”
“Oh? Good!”
“Happy birthday again, Mr. Gibson.” She smiled in the doorway. “You don’t look fifty at all.”
When she had gone, Charlie sat momentarily to wonder how he had managed to forget that it was the 6th of March; and then, vaguely pleased in imagining Jane had remembered it, he fumbled through the letters on his blotter to find hers, but stopped abruptly when he came across the newspaper clipping he had put aside. He picked up the envelope it had come in, saw no return address, and when he shook it saw no other clue as to its sender. Then he took the clipping and read the legend written there across his face.
It said simply: YOU SURE TURNED OUT TO BE AN UGLY S. O. B. — CLASS OF ‘28.
For the first time that morning, Charlie Gibson began to laugh.