Meet Me at the Morgue

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Authors: Ross Macdonald

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Praise for Ross Macdonald

“[The] American private eye, immortalized by Hammett, refined by Chandler, brought to its zenith by Macdonald.”


The New York Times Book Review

“Macdonald should not be limited in audience to connoisseurs of mystery fiction. He is one of a handful of writers in the genre whose worth and quality surpass the limitations of the form.”


Los Angeles Times

“Most mystery writers merely write about crime. Ross Macdonald writes about sin.”


The Atlantic

“Without in the least abating my admiration for Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, I should like to venture the heretical suggestion that Ross Macdonald is a better novelist than either of them.”

—Anthony Boucher

“[Macdonald] carried form and style about as far as they would go, writing classic family tragedies in the guise of private detective mysteries.”


The Guardian
(London)

“[Ross Macdonald] gives to the detective story that accent of class that the late Raymond Chandler did.”


Chicago Tribune

Ross Macdonald
Meet Me at the Morgue

Ross Macdonald’s real name was Kenneth Millar. Born near San Francisco in 1915 and raised in Ontario, Millar returned to the United States as a young man and published his first novel in 1944. He served as the president of the Mystery Writers of America and was awarded their Grand Master Award as well as the Mystery Writers of Great Britain’s Gold Dagger Award. He died in 1983.

Also by Ross Macdonald

The Dark Tunnel
Trouble Follows Me
Blue City
The Three Roads
The Moving Target
The Drowning Pool
The Way Some People Die
The Ivory Grin
Find a Victim
The Name Is Archer
The Barbarous Coast
The Doomsters
The Galton Case
The Ferguson Affair
The Wycherly Woman
The Zebra-Striped Hearse
The Chill Black Money
The Far Side of the Dollar
The Goodbye Look
The Underground Man
Sleeping Beauty
The Blue Hammer

FIRST VINTAGE CRIME/BLACK LIZARD EDITION, DECEMBER 2010

Copyright © 1953 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.,
and renewed in 1981 by John Ross Macdonald

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in the United Sates in hardcover by Alfred A. Knopf, New York, in 1953.

Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage Crime/Black Lizard and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, 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.

A condensed version of this novel appeared in
Cosmopolitan
under the title
Experience in Evil
.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the Knopf edition as follows:
Macdonald, Ross.
Meet me at the morgue [by] Ross Macdonald.
New York, Knopf, 1953.
p. cm.
PZ3.M59943 Me PS3525.I486
52012208

eISBN: 978-0-307-74075-5

www.blacklizardcrime.com

v3.1

To my favorite in-laws
Dorothy & Clarence

Contents
 

CHAPTER
1
:
      
I met the boy on the morning of the
kidnapping. It was a bright and blowing day. The wind was fresh from the sea, and the piled white cubes of the city sparkled under a swept blue sky. I had to force myself to go to work.

A bronze-painted sports car with a long foreign nose was standing at the curb in front of the County Annex building. I parked in my regular space, a few yards behind it. So far as I knew, there was only one bronze Jaguar in town. It belonged to Abel Johnson. I wasn’t surprised when Fred Miner, Johnson’s driver, emerged from my second-floor office and started down the outside steps to the street.

Fred reached the sidewalk and turned in my direction, a stocky man in his middle thirties who walked with a peculiar stiff-backed roll. The faded Navy suntans he always wore had darker patches on the sleeve, where his Chief’s stripes and hash-mark had been removed. His only concession to his civilian occupation was a black, peaked chauffeur’s cap, which shadowed his eyes. He passed my car without seeing me, his face closed in thought.

There was a yelp and a flurry of movement from the sports car. A small boy with a head of bright red hair scrambled over the door and launched himself like a missile at Fred’s legs. The man’s face opened in a laugh of pure delight. Taking the boy under the arms, he swung him upside down in the air and set him back on his feet:

“Knock it off now, swabbie. This is no time for games. Come to attention.”

“Okay, Fred,” the boy chirped. “Aye, aye, sir, I mean.” He brought his feet together and arched his back.

“Now wipe that smile off your face or I’ll break you down to apprentice seaman and take away your privileges for fifteen years.”

“Aye, aye, sir.”

The boy giggled. Fred tried to repress a snort of mirth, and couldn’t. They stood on the sidewalk laughing into each other’s faces. Passers-by smiled at them.

I stepped out of my car. When Fred saw me his face changed. “Morning, Mr. Cross,” he said without enthusiasm.

“Hello, Fred. Looking for me?”

“I came in to see Mr. Linebarge.”

“He’s on his vacation.”

“Yeah, the little lady told me. I was up to your office already.”

“I thought you didn’t have to report until next week.”

“It wasn’t that. I didn’t come in to report. It was just a couple of questions I wanted to take up with Mr. Linebarge.”

“About your probation?”

He looked sheepish, and shifted his weight from one leg to the other and back again. Being on probation embarrassed Fred. “More or less. It wasn’t anything important.”

“Can I help?”

He backed away a step. “No, I wouldn’t want to bother you, Mr. Cross. I’ll be seeing Mr. Linebarge next Saturday, anyway. He’ll be back next Saturday, won’t he?”

“He will if he doesn’t drown. He’s gone on a fishing-trip.”

The boy reached up and tugged at Fred’s belt. “Is something the matter? Can’t we go on our trip?”

“Sure we can, Jamie.” He brushed the cropped red head with his hand. “Remember now, no talking in the ranks.”

“Is this the Johnson boy?” I said.

“Yessir, this is Jamie Johnson. Jamie, meet Mr. Cross.” He added with a trace of irony: “Mr. Cross is a very good friend of mine.”

The boy gave me a sticky hand. “Pleased to meet you, Mr. Cross. Any friend of Fred’s is a friend of mine.”

Fred’s face lit up, but he said in a quarterdeck voice: “You hustle back aboard now, before you talk yourself to death.”

The boy scampered back to the Jaguar and dove head first over the low door. The last I saw of him was a thin denim behind and a pair of kicking moccasins.

“He’s a bright youngster,” I said. “How old is he?”

“Watch it, he’ll hear you.” Fred crossed his lips with an oil-grained forefinger, and lowered his voice. “He shouldn’t hear himself praised too much, it might give him a swell head. It’s going to be tough enough on him with all the dough in the family. Jamie’s four.”

“He’s doing all right for four. Who taught him his manners?”

“He’ll get by. I make him toe the mark.” Fred started to move away. “Well, so long, Mr. Cross. Nice seeing you.”

“Hold it a minute. What’s up?”

“There’s nothing up,” he answered woodenly.

“The boy said you were going on a trip. You’re not leaving the county?”

“No, I’m not going anywhere.” He was a long time answering.

I was almost sure he was lying. “You know the rules. You’re not allowed to go out of the county without definite permission from our office.”

“I know it.” He colored uncomfortably. “I’m just taking Jamie for a ride. Is that illegal?”

“You’re not supposed to drive except in line of work.”

“I got my orders. That makes it work, doesn’t it?” He
glanced nervously towards the sports car. “I ought to be on my way now, Mr. Cross.”

“Your way to where?”

His face had closed up completely again, into a mask of blank hostility. “I’m not supposed to tell anybody that.”

“Are you in some kind of trouble?”

“No sir, I’m not. I haven’t been in any trouble since February and I don’t intend to get into any trouble.” He said it with conviction.

“I’ll take your word for it, Fred. You’re all right as long as you don’t leave the county, obey the traffic laws, and stay on the wagon. You know what happens if you break those conditions.”

From the courthouse tower across the street, a bell began to sound the three-quarter hour. We both looked up at the tower clock. It was a quarter to nine.

“I know what happens,” he said. “I’ve got to shove off now, Mr. Cross.”

“What’s the hurry?”

He didn’t answer. The vibration of the bell still hung in the air above us like an echoing warning. He squinted up at the great iron-faced clock and shifted his feet impatiently.

“That’s a fast car,” I said. “What will it do?”

“A hundred and twenty, maybe. I never opened her up.”

“Remember to hold it down to fifty-five.”

“I’ll remember. Can I go now?”

I watched him climb into the driver’s seat of the Jaguar. It was a tight fit. Fred was thick in the chest and wide across the shoulders, and his back was stiff from being broken in the war. As he was maneuvering himself in under the low convertible top, I noticed the gun-shaped bulge in his hip pocket.

I wasn’t sure it was a gun. I didn’t know whether he had the legal right to carry one. Before I decided to stop him, the bronze car
leaped away from the curb and disappeared around the corner of the courthouse. The fading sound of its motor was like an ill wind.

Ann Devon looked up from her typewriter when I entered the outer office. She was one of my two assistant probation-officers, a mouse blonde with a recent degree in psychology and large untapped reserves of girlish fervor. Turned in her chair against the light from the window, she made a very pleasant silhouette.

“Good morning, Howie. There’s something on your mind.”

“Please don’t be intuitive so early in the day. I find it wearing.”

“You might as well tell me,” she said. “You always get those nasty vertical wrinkles between the eyebrows.”

“Maybe it wasn’t such a bad idea.”

“What wasn’t?”

“Burning witches.”

“Come on now, Howie. Tell good gray Doctor Devon.” She was twenty-four.

I sat on the corner of her desk. On the far corner she had set a bowl of multicolored sweet peas that contrasted prettily with the calcimined walls and scuffed office furniture.

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