The Wife, the Maid, and the Mistress

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Authors: Ariel Lawhon

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BOOK: The Wife, the Maid, and the Mistress
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, 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, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2014 by Ariel Lawhon

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Doubleday, a division of Random House LLC, New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto, Penguin Random House Companies.

www.doubleday.com

DOUBLEDAY and the portrayal of an anchor with a dolphin are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.

Jacket design by Emily Mahon
Jacket photograph © Underwood Archives / The Image Works

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Lawhon, Ariel.
The wife, the maid, and the mistress / Ariel Lawhon. — First edition.
pages cm
ISBN 978-0-385-53762-9
eBook ISBN 978-0-385-53763-6
1. Crater, Joseph Force, born 1889—Fiction. 2. Judges—New York (State)—New York—Fiction. 3. Missing persons—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3601.L447G66 2014
813′. 6—dc23
2012049724

v3.1

For Marybeth, I owe you one
.
And for Ashley, I owe you everything else
.

Contents

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Club Abbey: Greenwich Village, August 6, 1969
Chapter One: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Saturday, August 2, 1930
Chapter Two: Orchard Street, Lower East Side, Monday, August 4, 1930
Chapter Three: Club Abbey, Wednesday, August 6, 1930
Chapter Four: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Thursday, August 7, 1930
Chapter Five: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Saturday, August 9, 1930
Chapter Six: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Monday, August 11, 1930
Chapter Seven: Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, Monday, August 18, 1930
Chapter Eight: West Sixty-Fourth Street, Friday, August 22, 1930
Chapter Nine: Fifth Avenue, Saturday, August 23, 1930
Club Abbey: Greenwich Village, August 6, 1969
Chapter Ten: Fifth Avenue, Friday, August 29, 1930
Chapter Eleven: Orchard Street, Lower East Side, Sunday, August 31, 1930
Chapter Twelve: Smithson Tailors, Monday, September 1, 1930
Chapter Thirteen: Fifth Avenue, Wednesday, September 3, 1930
Chapter Fourteen: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Saturday, September 13, 1930
Chapter Fifteen: Fifth Avenue, Friday, September 12, 1930
Club Abbey: Greenwich Village, August 6, 1969
Chapter Sixteen: Broadway Theater, Monday, September 15, 1930
Chapter Seventeen: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Tuesday, September 16, 1930
Chapter Eighteen: West Sixty-Fourth Street, Sunday, September 21, 1930
Chapter Nineteen: Belgrade Lakes, Maine, Monday, September 22, 1930
Chapter Twenty: Fifth Avenue, Friday, September 26, 1930
Chapter Twenty-One: Belgrade Lakes, Maine,: Wednesday, October 15, 1930
Chapter Twenty-Two: Portland, Maine, Thursday, October 16, 1930
Chapter Twenty-Three: New York County Courthouse, Wednesday, October 29, 1930
Chapter Twenty-Four: West Forty-Fifth Street, Wednesday, November 5, 1930
Chapter Twenty-Five: Liberty National Bank, Thursday, November 6, 1930
Chapter Twenty-Six: Portland, Maine, Saturday, November 15, 1930
Chapter Twenty-Seven: Morosco Theatre, Friday, December 5, 1930
Club Abbey: Greenwich Village, August 6, 1969
Chapter Twenty-Eight: Portland, Maine, Sunday, January 18, 1931
Chapter Twenty-Nine: Fifth Avenue, Monday, January 19, 1931
Chapter Thirty: Queens, Monday, February 2, 1931
Chapter Thirty-One: St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Tuesday, February 3, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Two: Surrogate’s Court, Wednesday, February 4, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Three: Queens, Saturday, February 28, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Four: Fifth Avenue, Sunday, March 1, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Five: Shelby, Iowa, Tuesday, March 3, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Six: Club Abbey, Thursday, August 6, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Seven: Shelby, Iowa, Saturday, August 15, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Eight: Orchard Street, Lower East Side, Thursday, August 20, 1931
Chapter Thirty-Nine: Financial District, Manhattan, Monday, August 24, 1931
Club Abbey: Greenwich Village, August 6, 1969
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
A Note About the Author

CLUB ABBEY

GREENWICH VILLAGE, AUGUST 6, 1969

There is, in the city’s sun-blistered canyons of concrete, a storied section known as Greenwich Village. And into it on August 6, this tall, stately woman walks, utterly disregarding the heat, on a pilgrimage out of the past. She isn’t alone. She is accompanied by a ghost. Her name is Stella Crater
.

—Oscar Fraley, preface to
The Empty Robe

We begin in a bar. We will end here as well, but that is more than you need to know at the moment. For now, a woman sits in a corner booth waiting to give her confession. But her party is late, and without an audience, she looks small and alone, like an invalid in an oversize church pew. It’s not so easy for her, this truth telling, and she strains against it. A single strand of pearls, brittle and yellowed with age, rests against the flat plane of her chest. She rolls them between her fingers as though counting the beads on a rosary. Stella Crater has avoided this confession for thirty-nine years. The same number of years she has been coming to this bar.

At one time, this meeting would have been a spectacle, splashed across the headlines of every paper in New York:
WIFE OF MISSING JUDGE MEETS WITH LEAD INVESTIGATOR, TELLS ALL!
But the days of front-page articles, interviews, and accusations are over, filed away in some distant archives. Tonight her stage is empty.

Stella looks at her watch. Nine-fifteen.

Club Abbey, once a speakeasy during the Jazz Age, is now another relic in Greenwich Village, peddling its former glory through the tourist guides. It sits one floor below street level, dark and subdued. The pine floors are scuffed. Black-and-white photos line the walls. An aging jukebox has long since replaced the jazz quartet. The only remnant is Stan, the bartender. He was fifteen when hired by the notorious gangster Owney Madden to sweep the floors at closing. Owney took a liking to the kid, as did the showgirls, and Stan’s been behind the bar ever since. He’s never missed Stella’s ritual. His part is small, but he plays it well.

Two lowball glasses. Twelve cubes of ice split between them. Whiskey
on the rocks. Stan arranges napkins on her table and sets the glasses down. Her eyes are slick with a watery film—the harbinger of age and death.

“Good to see you again, Mrs. Crater.”

Stella swats him away with an emaciated hand, and he hangs back to watch, drying glasses with a dish towel. It’s the same thing every year: she sits alone in her booth for a few minutes, and then he brings the drinks. Straight whiskey, the way her husband liked it. She’ll raise one glass, saluting the empty place across from her, and say, “Good luck, Joe, wherever you are.” Stella will take her time with the drink, letting it burn, drawing out the moment until there’s nothing left in her glass. That is when she’ll rise and walk out, leaving the other drink untouched.

Except tonight she does none of these things.

Fifteen minutes she sits there, rubbing the rim of her glass. Stan has no script for what to do next, and he stares at her, confused. He doesn’t see the doors swing open or the older gentleman enter. Doesn’t see the trench coat or the faded gray fedora. Sees none of it until Detective Jude Simon slides into the booth across from Stella.

She lays her palm on the table, inches from a pack of cigarettes, and sits up straighter. The booth is hard against her back, walnut planks pressing against the knobs of her spine. “You’re late.”

“Stella.” Jude touches the brim of his hat in greeting. He takes stock of her shriveled body. Tips his head to the side. “It’s been years.”

“You were here the first time—makes sense that you’d be here the last.” Stella lifts her glass and takes a sip of whiskey. Shudders. “Call it a deathbed confession.”

Jude surveys the room through the weary smoke. The regular Wednesday night crowd—a few women, mostly men—scattered around in groups of two and three drinking longnecks and griping about the stock market. “This isn’t exactly a church, and I’m not much of a priest,” he says.

“Priest. Detective. What’s the difference? You both love a good confession.”

His shoulders twitch—a doubter’s shrug. “I’m retired.”

Stella draws a cigarette from the pack and props it between her lips.

She looks at him expectantly.

He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a tarnished silver lighter.
Something like a smile crosses his face and then melts away. He stares at it, cupped there in his palm, before striking it with his thumb. Jude used to be handsome, decades ago when Stella first met him, and the traces are still there in the square line of his jaw and the steel-blue eyes. But now he looks tired and sad. A bit wilted. It takes three tries before a weak flame sputters from the lighter. Perhaps his hand trembles as he holds it toward her, or it could be a trick of the light.

Stella tips her cigarette into the flame, and the end glows orange. “You would be here tonight even if I hadn’t asked you to come.” Her eyes shift toward the bar, where Stan pretends not to eavesdrop. “You have your sources.”

“Maybe.” Jude hangs his fedora on a peg beside the booth and pulls a pad and pen from his coat pocket. He waits for her to speak.

Stella lured him here with the promise of a story—the real version this time. He has been like a duck after bread crumbs for thirty-nine years. Pecking. Relentless. Gobbling up every scrap she leaves for him. Yet the truth is not something she will rush tonight. He will get it one morsel at a time.

Stella Crater picked her poison a long time ago—unfiltered Camels—and she takes a long drag now, sizing up her pet duck. Her cheeks collapse into the sharp angles of her face, and she holds the smoke in her lungs for several long seconds before blowing it from between her teeth. Oh, she’ll tell Detective Simon a story all right.

Thirty-nine years earlier …

Chapter One

BELGRADE LAKES, MAINE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2, 1930

STELLA
slept with the windows thrown open that summer, a breeze blowing back the curtains. The sounds of nature lulled her to sleep: frogs croaking in the shallow water beneath her window, the hum of a dragonfly outside the rusted screen, the call of a loon across the lake. She lay there, with one arm thrown across her face in resistance to the burgeoning sunlight, when she heard the Cadillac crunch up the long gravel driveway.

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