The Pearl Harbor Murders (16 page)

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Authors: Max Allan Collins

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Historical, #Military, #Mystery & Detective, #Mystery Fiction, #History, #Historical Fiction, #World War II, #Pearl Harbor (Hawaii); Attack On; 1941, #Burroughs; Edgar Rice, #Pearl Harbor (Hawaii), #Edgar Rice, #Attack On, #1941, #Burroughs

BOOK: The Pearl Harbor Murders
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"Put your kimonos on, girls," Burroughs said, "and take a break."

The pretty trio made sounds that mingled distress with giggling as they quickly got into their kimonos, which had been folded neatly on the floor behind them. This was another sparsely decorated, oak-lined, cream-walled room; a row of big picture windows looked out onto the ocean ... and Pearl Harbor, Ford Island visible to the west, the Army's Hickam Field just to the left. A powerful telescope on a stand awaited any ... tourist... who might want a better, closer look.

The now-clothed geishas scurried out past Morimura, who stood near the door with his arms folded, his face blank.

The consul said, "You are a rude and foolish man."

Burroughs strolled over and touched the telescope admiringly. "Maybe it's just cultural differences. Besides, I don't think
you're
a fool—even if everybody else seems to."

"Perhaps all Americans are foolish."

"They are if they don't think you're a damn spy."

Morimura smiled, almost gently. He gestured to the low table and the
tatami
mats. "Sake, Mr. Burroughs?"

"No thanks. I'm on the wagon."

"Wagon?"

"Never mind. But I'll sit with you, while you drink."

They sat across from each other at the low table; neither partook of the pitcher of sake.

Morimura's arms were again folded. "I am not a spy, Mr. Burroughs—I am a diplomat. Any information I have obtained has been through strictly legal means. Blame your own... American openness. Much can be gleaned from your daily newspapers, for example—and is there a law against looking through a telescope at a restaurant's lovely view?"

"Did you kill Pearl Harada?"

Morimura blinked, and his expression became one of horror. "What? What a ridiculous question!"

"Did you?"

"No. Certainly not I barely knew her."

"Do you... 'barely' know her, the way you 'barely' know those three geisha girls?"

"No. The singer and I were not romantically involved."

"How about carnally?"

"No."

"Then why were you arguing with her, in the Niumalu parking lot, the night of her murder?"

Morimura's eyes widened—obviously, he didn't know he and Pearl had been seen.

"Her uncle asked me to speak to her."

"Her uncle? The grocer?"

"Yes. He heard rumors she was planning to marry an American boy. A sailor. He disapproved. I merely conveyed this message to her, and she was....disrespectful, both to me and in speaking of her uncle."

"Why didn't her uncle tell her this himself? He was around the Niumalu in the afternoon."

Morimura glared at Burroughs. "Why are you curious? What business is it to you, the murder of this girl?"

"I helped put the cuffs on Harry Kamana... I caught him at the beach with his hands bloody."

The diplomat nodded. "This I have heard."

"Between the two of us, you and me, we really nailed the poor bastard."

"The two of us? Nail? Your meaning escapes me."

"You called Otto Kuhn in the middle of the night, and had him pretend to be an eyewitness. You had him finger that musician."

"Nonsense."

"Kuhn told me himself."

Morimura frowned. "If so, he lies. When did he say this?"

"Just now, in the parking lot. I don't blame you for trading his company in on those geishas... no comparison. Anyway, Otto admitted you called him, and had him play eyewitness. You see, Otto receiving a call last night, well... that's a known fact."

"Really? I understood there was no switchboard at the Niumalu."

Burroughs grinned. "How interesting that you'd know a trivial detail like that, Mr. Morimura, considering you're not at all involved in this. By the way, don't take it out on Otto—he's afraid you'll kill him, or have him killed, because of what he told me."

"Did you bribe the German?"

"Hell no."

"Ah." Morimura's eyes narrowed. "I see the scrape on your knuckles. You beat it out of him." Morimura stood. "Perhaps you would care to try taking that... very American approach to seeking information... with me."

The consul moved away from the low table and struck a martial-arts pose. A single eyebrow raised, tiny smile on his thin lips, Morimura said, "Judo."

Burroughs rose and took the L¸ger out and pointed it at him and said, "Gun."

Eyes flickering with fear, the supposed diplomat slowly raised his hands. "Shoot me if you wish, Mr. Burroughs ....but I will say nothing more. I am not like Otto Kuhn. I am not weak."

"And I'm not a murderer," Burroughs said, and slipped the gun in his pocket, and went out.

 

 

 

 

ELEVEN
Hotel Street

 

The exceptionally beautiful weather and the lopsided victory in this afternoon's football game coalesced into a night of rampant partying, excessive even for a Saturday in Honolulu. The city was rife with private parties and public revelry, and alive with music, from radios bleeding syrupy Hawaiian strains, seemingly designed to make lonely men feel even lonelier, to a lively battle of the bands at the Naval Receiving Station at Pearl Harbor, where the U.S.S.
Arizona
band was going over big, with the upbeat likes of "Take the A Train." Hotel ballrooms, like the Royal Hawaiian and the Ala Moana, were offering fox-trots, while swing music emanated from the town's less stodgy bandstands, like those at the Niumalu or the dance hall at Waikiki Amusement Park.

Swing also jumped from jukeboxes up and down Hotel Street, where sailors and soldiers swarmed in ribbons of white and khaki. A fleet of rickety taxis, wheezing buses and rattletrap jalopies charged down the two-lane highway connecting Pearl Harbor and Honolulu, conveying the invading horde to their dropping-off spot: the Army and Navy YMCA, at the eastern end of Hotel Street, a suitable starting point for an evening of good-natured debauchery.

Awash in garish neon, flickering under the strobe of fluorescent bulbs, Hotel Street was a glorified alleyway lined with low-slung stucco buildings wearing tin awnings like gambler's shades. To boys longing for home, the midway that was Hotel Street seemed to echo carnivals and state fairs, this rude collection of taverns, trinket counters, massage parlors, photo booths, pool halls, shooting galleries, curio stores, tattoo artists, and dime-a-dance joints.

Along the narrow sidewalks of every block were one or two barbershops, the barbers invariably young attractive Japanese women, and at least one lei shop, with pretty Hawaiian girls stringing flowers. Other sorts of "leis" were available, as well: hotels whose rooms all had the shades drawn—the Rex, the Anchor, the Ritz—attracted lines down the block of sailors and soldiers waiting to choose between two varieties of "room": three dollars for three minutes, or five dollars for an extended stay, up to ten. Relatively safe, too: the local police, in turning a blind if well-paid eye, insisted on weekly blood tests for these unofficially sanctioned soiled doves.

Hully and Jardine had recruited Sam Fujimoto to join on their Hotel Street expedition. Sam knew both

Ensign Bill Fielder and Corporal Jack Stanton, the former better than the latter, but in either case enough to recognize either in this sea of uniforms. Starting at the west end, Hully and Jardine, who were on a first-name basis now, took one side of the street, while Sam took the other—they had agreed to rendezvous at the Black Cat Cafe in an hour and a half.

"You figure whoever killed Pearl Harada," Hully said to the Portuguese detective, "killed Terry Mizuha, as well."

They were shouldering their way down the tight, teeming sidewalk, faces around them flushed with neon—theirs, too.

"Probably," Jardine said.

"Why was Terry killed? What could he have known?"

Jardine shrugged. "It's possible this Terry was a real eyewitness ... which may be more than can be said for Otto Kuhn."

A group of sailors slouched under a tin awning in front of a cafe, laughing, smoking, caps at jaunty an-gles, pant legs flapping in the almost cool breeze.

Hully said, 'Terry wouldn't've had to be an eyewitness to be dangerous to the killer. Everybody knew he and Pearl were best friends. She might have confided in Terry about something that allowed him to know, or anyway strongly suspect, the murderer's identity."

Jardine nodded. "There's another possibility."

"Which is?"

They were passing by a shooting gallery where soldiers were throwing baseballs at milk cans, and sailors were playing Skee-Ball and pinball.

"Perhaps," Jardine said, 'Terry Mizuha wasn't strictly
mahu
—maybe he was even closer to Pearl than we've been led to believe."

"Oh, that's crazy...."

"Is it? Gates have been known to swing both ways, on this island. Suppose this jealous sailor pal of yours, or that soldier, came upon Terry and Pearl, together on the beach?"

"What, and confronted by a sudden act of violence, Terry fled?"

"Yes ... and was afraid to come forward, for fear of looking a coward—hoping his silence would buy him a free pass from the killer."

"I don't buy it, John."

The detective summoned a thin smile. "Well, it's your own damn fault, Hully."

"My fault?"

"You're the one that started me thinking—I was content with Harry Kamana as the murderer."

Looking for Bill and Stanton, Hully and Jardine tried various taverns—the Two Jacks, the Mint, the New Emma Cafe—wading through clouds of cigarette smoke laced with the smell of stale beer, sorting swarms of sailors and soldiers, who were crowded at tables, packed in booths, flirting with Oriental waitresses, whom they so greatly outnumbered. None of the fresh, young, happy, sad faces belonged to Bill Fielder or Jack Stanton.

Hully and the detective checked tattoo parlors, where boys sat bare-chested under bare bulbs as Filipino artists inscribed American flesh with hula girls, anchors and "Mother." They tried curio shops where this sailor bought a fringed pillow cursively designated "Honolulu," and that soldier purchased a monkey-pod carving. They tried storefront photo studios, where gobs and GIs posed with pretty, grass-skirted Hawaiian girls who had no interest in a date. They tried cafÈ's—the Bunny Ranch, Lousy Lui's, Swanky Franky—where servicemen who had gotten drunk too fast tried to sober up just as quickly. No Fielder; no Stanton.

They tried a dime-a-dance joint, a barnlike second-floor ballroom not unlike a church hall or an Elks club. A small combo—piano, guitar, drums—played slow tunes; tables were scattered on either side of the heavily varnished, underlit cavern. Many of the girls were surprisingly good-looking, Hully thought, a variety of Japanese, Chinese, Puerto Rican, Hawaiian and combinations thereof—also the occasional white girl—in low-cut, shoulder-baring evening gowns. No liquor was sold on the premises, nor was it allowed to be brought in.

"These girls don't look like prostitutes," Hully whispered to Jardine, as the two stood on the sidelines.

"They aren't," the detective said. "See that blonde over there?"

Jardine was indicating a dazzling blonde dancing with an older man, a Filipino.

"She's somebody's wife, I'll lay odds," the detective said. "These are nice girls. They aren't allowed to date the customers—aren't allowed to leave until closing, when their mothers or their husbands pick them up."

 

But Hully wasn't looking at the blonde, anymore. He was nodding toward a soldier. "Hey—that's him.... That's Stanton."

Corporal Jack Stanton was dancing with an attractive if overly made-up Japanese girl in a low-cut blue satin gown that would have made her the hit of any prom; she was holding the boyishly handsome, brown-haired soldier close, her small fist tightly clenching a curling strand of tickets. She looked just a little bit like Pearl Harada, particularly to somebody drunk, like Jack Stanton.

When the tune ended—"Moonlight Becomes You"—Jardine went out onto the dance floor and tapped Stanton's shoulder, as if he were cutting in.

Stanton glared at the little fedora-sporting detective, but when Jardine held up his wallet, displaying his badge, Stanton swallowed and nodded, with morose inevitability. Hully couldn't hear what either man was saying—he had secured a small table at Jardine's request—and watched as the broad-shouldered, athletic-looking Stanton walked subserviently along with the diminutive detective, over to the waiting table.

Hully pulled out a chair for the corporal.

Suddenly Stanton's submissive attitude shifted; he seemed to bristle at the sight of Hully, saying, "I know you."

"I know you, too, Jack." Hully gestured to the chair and, in a not unfriendly way, said, "Sit down."

Stanton was scowling. "You're Bill Fielder's friend."

"I'm one of them."

Jardine said to Stanton, "Sit down." Not so friendly. Stanton sat. He was inebriated, but short of sloshed. Jardine sat on one side of the soldier, Hully on the other.

The detective said, "I brought Mr. Burroughs along to identify you. I could have embarrassed you by going to your commanding officer and requesting a photo, you know."

Stanton's eyes narrowed. "Why didn't you?"

"I wanted to hear your story."

"What story?"

"The story of you and Pearl Harada."

Stanton swallowed. Then he put his elbows on the table and began to cry into his hands. The shabby little combo was playing "Fools Rush In."

Jardine gave the corporal a handkerchief. Stanton thanked Jardine and used it, drying his eyes, blowing his nose.

Then the detective said, "You and Bill Fielder got into a tussle over Pearl Harada last night. Want to tell me about it?"

Swallowing again, Stanton shrugged, saying, "It wasn't much of a 'tussle'—I punched him and he punched me. Then it got broke up. That's all."

"Why did you punch him?"

"Because ... Pearl was my girl. I wanted him to stay away from her."

"You mean you were still seeing her? She was dating you, at the same time as Fielder?"

He shook his head, glumly. "No ... no. She broke it off with me, weeks ago. I just... couldn't get her out of my mind. Couldn't accept it. She was... so beautiful. So much fun... sweet... talented... smart..."

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