Authors: Lynda La Plante
Lorraine sighed. A girl had hanged herself inside this whiter-thanwhite innocent room, but there was no sign of the tragedy, no sense of who Tilda Brown was. She closed her eyes, trying to remember their conversation. According to Tilda, Anna Louise was jealous of anyone’s being shown any affection by her father; had Robert Caley given the girls the white polar bears? Was that the reason she used the name Polar on her secret messages? Was that who the Valentine cards and birthday gifts were from? Did Robert Caley use the name Polar?
LYNDA LA P L A IV T E B57
Lorraine picked up one of the tennis rackets stacked neatly in a row in the closet Tilda had set aside for her sport and ski equipment. Even if Robert Caley did sign himself Polar, what did that matter now? Even if he had been sexually abusing Anna Louise or having willing intercourse with her, she was not his own flesh and blood.
Lorraine leaned forward and replaced the racket alongside the row of others. She glanced at one racket, whose cover bulged slightly on one sideperhaps a pair of socks? Lorraine drew back the zipper and felt inside. Her fingers touched a package of some kind and she took it out. The newspaper-wrapped package was about eight inches long, string wrapped tightly around it. Lorraine sat on the dressing-table stool, carefully untying the knot, then unwinding the string. She put it to one side and placed the package on the mirrored dressing table, moving aside mother-of-pearlbacked combs and brushes.
The paper, she noted, was dated February 15, the year missing where the newspaper had been torn across. It was also dirty, stained with what looked like mud, some of the print smudged. She eased the paper away from the contents and almost dropped it, springing up from the stool with shock because of the horrible smell. Urine and human feces were caked around a doll, whose trunk, arms and legs were made of crudely stuffed and tied sacking wound around with wool. It had a white dress, equally crudely hand-stitched, made from what looked like an oid piece of T-shirt. The head was cheap plastic, like the head of a Barbie doll, and glued onto the face was a picture of Tilda. An ordinarydressmaker’s pin was stuck through the left eye of the doll, protruding ht through the back of the head. When Lorraine turned it over, there were two or three long blond hairs and what appeared to be dried specks of blood attached to a tiny, pinkish-brown fragment of skin tied to the torso with crossbands of wool.
“Mrs. Page,”
called out Helen Dubois, and Lorraine quickly rewrapped the doll and put it in her briefcase just before the door opened.
“I think perhaps you should go. Mr. and Mrs. Brown have the chaplain coming to arrange the funeral, and”
“It’s all right, I was just leaving.”
The driver started the engine as soon as he saw Lorraine emerge from the house. She sat back in the hot, stuffy car, slowly rolling down one of the windows. She could smell the doll in her briefcase, so she pushed it away from her. She didn’t want to take it out, didn’t want to handle it again unless there was soap and water handy. She washed her hands as soon as she got back to her hotel room, over and over again. Then she dried them, sniffing at them, and stared at the wrapped parcel.
“Lorraine? Are you in there?”
It was Rosie.
Lorraine let her in, turning straight back toward the bed.
“You will not believe what I found at Tilda Brown’s place, it’s already stinking up the room, and …”
Rosie was red-eyed from weeping, clutching a big white handkerchief.
“Lorraine … I’ve got something to tell you.”
She knew something was wrong when the big, bulky figure of Rooney walked in behind Rosie and quietly closed the door.
“What is it? What’s happened?”
She could feel her legs shaking.
Rooney didn’t mean it to come out so bluntly, but there was no other way.
“It’s Nick, he’s dead, Lorraine.”
Her face drained of color. She looked at Rosie, back to Rooney, hoping it was some kind of a joke, but she knew it wasn’t by the expression on their faces. She felt for the side of the bed and sat down, trying to keep calm and steady.
“How did it happen?”
Rooney helped Rosie to sit down.
“He was murdered, throat cut. The cops found him in an alley early this morning, no wallet, no ID on him, and he was taken to the city morgue. They haven’t done an autopsy yet.”
Rooney gestured helplessly.
“The only identifying mark was a tattoo of the LAPD badge on his armlot of them had it done wn^n they were rookies.”
“Yes, I know,”
she said softly.
“Jack Lubrinski had one, wasn’t on his arm, though it was on his butt.”
Lorraine’s lips trembled and she clenched her teeth, needing to be alone.
“You mind giving me a few minutes by myself, just want to be on my own for a while.”
Rooney nodded and took Rosie’s arm.
“Sure, you give us a call when you want us.”
He knew intuitively that it was better to leave, but Rosie hung back.
“Just go, Rosie. Come on, sweetheart.”
He pushed her toward the door and closed it behind them, leaving Lorraine still standing motionless, her hands clenched by her sides.
Rosie turned on him in the hall.
“God, she’s a coldhearted bitch, imagine even talking about that guy Lubrinski. I mean, Nick, Nick’s …”
Rosie began to sob and Rooney put his arm around her and supported her down the corridor.
“She didn’t show any feelings about him at all.”
Rosie wept, but Rooney knew different: he’d been a cop too long not to recognize that look on someone’s face, often followed by a joke or some casual comment, anything to conceal the blow to the heart. Lorraine would weep for Nick, he
LYNDA LA PLAMTE 259
knew that, but not in front of anyone else. She would try to come to terms with Nick’s death in her own way, the way he knew too, privatelyyou never wanted to show anyone the pain.
Lorraine splashed cold water on her face, still dry-eyed and shocked, still not really registering the fact that she wouldn’t see Nick again. She whispered his name, over and over again, half questioningly, as she parted her face dry, and then walked into the bedroom and looked first at the bed where she had been sleeping when he woke her, then at the bed opposite where he had sat. She lay down on her own bed, curled up facing the empty one, wanting to reach out to him as though he were still there.
“Nick?”
she whispered again.
“Oh, Nick …”
she repeated, and then the tears came, her face crumpling like a child’s as she wept for Nick Bartello, lovely and crazy as he had been. She wept until she was exhausted, cried out, and then sat with her head in her hands.
It was then she caught sight of the bottle of vodka he had left. It had fallen on its side and rolled just under the bed. She stared at it, unable to look away, and it drew her like a magnet until she got down on her knees to retrieve it. She held it in her hands, examining the bottle, almost caressing it, and then slowly unscrewed the cap. Just one drink: she just needed the one to get herself back together and be ablt to work. Just the one and she’d be able to put the bottle away. She was sure of it.
CHAPTER
I Rooney arranged for Nick’s body to be sent home when the I autopsy was finished. He had called Nick’s sister to tell her the news, and she had been silent and uncommunicative but had said she would bury him and gave Rooney the address in downtown LA. Not until the end of the call did she ask how he had been killed. Her voice broke just a fraction when Rooney told her.
“Lenny was always getting himself into trouble.”
“Lenny?”
repeated Rooney, confused.
“Yes, he called himself Nick, but we, the family, always use his middle name, Lenny, well, Leonardo. Er, just one thing, Mr. Rooneywe can’t take his dog.”
“That’s okay, I’ll see to the dog.”
They had nothing more to say to each other, so he paid his condolences and replaced the phone.
‘Til take care of Tiger,”
Lorraine had said quietly. Rooney had nodded and then excused himself. She knew he needed to cry, and he did, leaning up against the elevator, returning later to force them all to get on with the job.
Lorraine drank from a can of Coke, seemingly more preoccupied with getting the day’s work started than discussing Nick, and her apparent lack
2E1
of emotion confused and worried Rosie. Rooney had warned her to leave Lorraine alone, and not to ask her questions, but Rosie couldn’t stop looking at her: Lorraine’s face was chalk-white and her eyes red-rimmed, but that apart, she seemed almost overbright.
“Rosie, will you quit gawking at me all the time,”
she snapped.
“I’m just wondering if you are all right.”
“I’m fine, Rosie now how about we get back to the reason we’re all here?”
They discussed the hideous, rotting doll, and then Rosie wrapped it in two newspapers and stuffed it into a drawer. Lorraine did not have any energy to interview anyone, but she knew she would have to speak to Elizabeth and Robert Caley. They also discussed the importance of Fryer Jones’s arrest and release, and his implication in some way with the disappearance of Anna Louise, but Rosie and Rooney would not allow Lorraine to go alone to his bar. Nick had been murdered a few blocks from there, and if there was a connection they would have to find out. Nick’s stupidity in going off alone made them angry, as now they had no idea where he had been or who he had spoken to. But their anger did nothing to ease their grief.
Rosie pulled a face at the smell coming from Lorraine’s briefcase as she withdrew the video of The Swamp and knelt down to slot it into the video recorder she had persuaded the receptionist to lend them from the lounge downstairs. r
Lorraine drew the curtains and perched one bed as Rooney and Rosie sat on the other. She saw him give her a gentle pat and lean in close.
“You all right, darlin’?”
Rosie nodded, returning his pat of comfort, making Lorraine feel excluded, but she ignored it as the film began. It was faded like some old sixties Technicolor film. Even the old Columbia Studios logo was fuzzy and the music was sliding badly. The pre-film script made them all lean forward.
“This film has carefully researched the life and times of the voodoo queen Marie Laveau, who arrived in New Orleans in the early nineteenth century.”
The film was tedious; it took a long time for the actual plot to unfold. Despite the faint picture and blurred lines across the print, Elizabeth Seal was certainly a great beauty, and her dance with a live snake was the high point of the first twenty minutes.
“They really did a good job of her makeup, she really does look black,” Rosie murmured. The film rolled on, the plot at times very confused. Even though the film spanned more than one generation and everyone else became gray and wizened, the star remained looking about twenty throughout. Even when they laid her body in her coffin she looked young and beautiful, whereas the real Marie Laveau had lived into her eighties. It really was a Hollywood-style distortion of the facts.
At the end the credits began to roll, and Rosie picked up the control to switch it off when Lorraine shouted,
“Wait, wait! Roll it back, Rosie, stop!”
They looked at the last section of the artists’ credits, and under the group heading of SNAKE CHARM DANCERS were two very familiar names, Juda and Edith Salina, and under the group of VOODOO PRIESTS they found the name of Fryer Jones.
Rosie turned off the TV and opened the curtains, while Lorraine picked up a fresh can of Coke and opened it on her way to the bathroom. There, she poured part of its contents down the toilet, and then topped it up with Nick Bartello’s vodka before returning to the bedroom. She sat down, drinking from the can, her foot tapping.
“Well, I’ve got my energy back. I want to talk to Elizabeth Caley this afternoon”
Rooney puffed out his breath.
“You want me with you?”
“No. We need to get to Juda Salina’s sisteryou got an address, Rosie?”
“No, not yet, I was about to when …”
She was about to say Nick’s name but covered fast.
“She’s not listed in the phone directory but I got a directory of clairvoyants, voodoo advisers and experts from the museum. She may be in that, I haven’t checked.”
“Do it, but you don’t go near her until I’m back. From now on we stick together, report in frequently, and if we move on, we give time and location.”
Rooney looked pissed, and Lorraine turned to face him.
“Bill, I handled the Caley situation badly. In an interview with Lloyd Dulay, I said things I shouldn’t have without checking the facts first. So I have to see him alone and apologize.”
“Okay, you know what you’re doing.”
“Not always, Bill, and I was out of line with Caley.”
“Well, you got results.”
“Yes, I did.”
She hesitated.
“Nick gets murdered, Tilda Brown commits suicide. I got those results all right because I was angry and tired out, tired because I had been up all night screwing Caley.”
“What, are you serious? You fucked Robert Caley?”
“Yes, yes, I did.”
LYNDA LA PLAMTE 263
“I don’t believe it,”
Rosie said, astonished.
“Well, it’s true, and it was a dumb move to make, but…”
She gave a glum smile, anolifted her shoulders in an apologetic gesture.
“Couldn’t help myself. So the next day I was so determined to find out if he was a suspect or not, I went at it like a bat out of hell.”
“Nick was right, then? He suggested you do it, and it got results.”
Lorraine turned away.
“No, Bill, Nick was wrong. I didn’t fuck him for information, I did it because I wanted him. Now excuse me, I need a shower.”
She closed her bathroom door, and Rosie snatched up her notes, her face set rigid. Rooney reached for his jacket and made for the door.
“That’s it, is it?”
Rosie said angrily.
He turned, surprised.
“What?”
Rosie put her hands on her hips.
“We just accept it, say nothing? She sleeps with our client. The guy hired us, Bill, and she gets fucked by him. Oh, that is really very professional, really good work. Gets laid so hard that the next night she crashes out early and Nick goes it’ alone and gets killed?”