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Authors: Max Allan Collins

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BOOK: The War of the Worlds Murder
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“It may well prove to be the radio equivalent thereof. If you would not indulge yourself in these drawn-out musical passages, and the...pauses, the silences...and all of these real-sounding places, official-sounding institutions...”

“CBS is satisfied with our changes. I instituted all of Dave’s last-minute ones, too.”

“Such as removing Franklin Roosevelt, and substituting the Secretary of Interior? You know goddamned well you’re directing Kenny Delmar to do his FDR impression!”

The smile turned downright devilish. He whispered, “It’s dead-on, isn’t it, Housey? Talented boy, our Kenny.”

“Orson, I’m warning you—you may get that lesson you’ve been asking for....”

“Oh, Housey—I’m going to need more than
one
lesson, don’t you think?”

Houseman sighed. “I’ve made my point of view known—nothing more I can do. But for your knowledge, I have Paul’s stopwatch tally. We’re way over.”

Welles cocked his head. “Where are we, Jack? How much cutting do we need to do?”

“You’re a good seven minutes long. If you’re not willing to trim back those endless musical interludes, I’d say the last section—the narrative bit about the professor wandering in the city—that can and must be pruned.”

Welles put a hand on Houseman’s shoulder. “Well, let’s get to work, then. You have your copy of the script handy?”

Houseman nodded. “It’s in the control booth. And I’ve annotated it. I’ll get it.”

He went off to do that, and Welles said, “Jack’s a great editor. You up for helping out, Walter?”

“Of course.”

With the exception of a theater on the ground floor, the studios (Gibson learned in passing) were confined to the twentieth and twenty-first floors. Another large one, the identical twin of Studio One, was on the twenty-first, directly above them; right now the highly regarded Norman Corwin was rehearsing a drama that would go on at nine
P.M.,
after the Mercury Theatre.

Welles led Houseman and Gibson down the hallway, away from the lobby and Studio One, deep into the building.

Walking alongside Houseman, the writer asked, “Are we heading to your offices?”

Without looking at Gibson, Houseman said dryly, “You were in our offices on Thursday. At the theater.”

“You have no office space here at CBS?”

“Of course not. They only have four or five floors of them. Why should they spare us any?... We tend to use Studio Seven, a small studio that isn’t terribly well-equipped and hence not in much use...as a makeshift office. Or that is, we use the control room in that fashion.”

Welles, without glancing back, added, “Such as now, when we need to do some rewriting, away from the cast and techs. And to give Paul some breathing room to give the actors some last-minute tips.”

Gibson asked, “Why isn’t Howard Koch going along, if this a writing session?”

They had arrived at the end of the hall, which ended at Studio Eight, a hallway cutting to the left. Next to them at right were two doors, practically side by side, labelled:
STUDIO SEVEN
(left door) and
CONTROL ROOM
(right one).

Welles opened the latter door, reached a hand over to flick on the light switch, and with a gracious after-you gesture, said, “Because this isn’t so much a writing session as a cutting one—and I hate it when writers bleed.”

The joke wasn’t a particularly good one, but Gibson might have forced a chuckle if his eyes hadn’t been filled with something that turned the witticism into an unintentional lapse into poor taste.

This control room—not nearly as elaborately outfitted with electronics, and absent the adjacent smaller sub-control room—nonetheless had a large horizontal window looking out on a studio that was perhaps a tenth the size of Studio One.

The lights in the studio were off, but (sharing the control-room illumination) revealed itself bare of anything but a table and a chair, a few microphones on stands, and a few more chairs against a wall. Nothing very exceptional, really, except for the woman seated at the table.

Or rather, slumped there, like a schoolgirl napping at her desk.

Gibson didn’t recognize her at first—she was pale and her eyes were closed and her strawberry-blonde hair was askew,
concealing a good portion of her face. But then it came to him: they had located the missing Miss Donovan, absent without an excuse from her receptionist post.

Only now she had an excuse, and a damned good one: her throat was slit and blood had pooled all over the tabletop, some of it dripping down the sides; and from their slightly elevated position in the control booth, the hunting knife...with the signature
ORSON WELLES
on its hilt...could be seen, swimming in red.

CHAPTER FIVE

NOW YOU SEE IT

W
ITHIN THE CONTROL BOOTH, THE
three men pressed against the glass, like children at a department store window; but unlike those dreamy-eyed kids, this trio of adults stared aghast, at a nightmare.

“The poor child,” Houseman said. Then he rushed from the room.

Gibson followed, and saw Houseman at the studio door, reaching for the knob. He clutched the producer’s arm and said, “What about fingerprints?”

“What if the girl is still
alive
?” Houseman’s normally unflappable expression was replaced by one of wide-eyed horror.

“With her throat cut? With all that blood...?”

“Are you a doctor, man?” Houseman snapped, and he clutched the knob, and twisted.

The door did not open.

“Locked!” Houseman blurted. He touched a hand to his forehead as if checking for a fever. “The goddamned thing is locked....”

Gibson took the few steps back to see what had become of Welles. Through the open doorway of the control booth, Welles could be seen, moon face as white as its namesake, the
long tapering fingers touching his lips, those normally rather Chinese-looking eyes now as wide as a Cotton Club dancer doing stereotypical shtick.

Gibson stood in the doorway. “Orson—are you all right?”

Welles’s body remained facing the window, but his head swivelled and the huge eyes under raised eyebrows stared unblinkingly at the writer.

Very softly, Welles said, “I am decidedly not all right. That poor young woman—that sweet young woman.... ‘For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?’ ”

Gibson thought if Welles was going to quote Shakespeare, it ought to be that line from
Macbeth
about how surprising it was, how much blood there’d been.

“Orson—join us in the hallway.”

He drew a deep breath, nodded gravely, but did not otherwise move, remaining as frozen as Lot’s wife.

In the hall, Gibson faced Houseman. “I believe she’s past help.”

Houseman had found his usual calm demeanor, if a troubled version thereof. “It would be difficult to break the thing down—all of these studios have heavy, soundproofed doors.”

Gibson pointed toward the small room from which Welles had yet to emerge. “What about that window?”

“Again,” Houseman said, shrugging fatalistically, “it’s heavy glass, perhaps unbreakable—part of the necessary soundproofing between control room and studio. Poor thing...poor thing....”

“Her name was Donovan.”

Houseman’s eyes tightened, in surprise. “That’s right—how did you know her, Walter?”

“I was here for the Thursday run-through. We spoke. She was friendly, efficient...an intelligent girl.”

“Yes.” Houseman seemed to taste his next two words: “But ambitious.”

Sensing something judgmental, Gibson asked, “By that you mean, she wanted to make it in show business?”

The producer nodded slowly, a priest pronouncing a benediction. “She’d performed in the front of our Mercury microphone, in minor roles.” Another tasting of words followed: “Thanks to Orson.”

“She was...?”

“One of his little conquests, yes. He has assembled quite a ‘cast’ of nubiles—actresses, dancers, ballerinas.”

Remembering, Gibson said, “A certain renowned ballet master signed Miss Donovan’s reception book, today.”

Frowning, Houseman said, “What? Are you sure? I haven’t seen the man anywhere around. Balanchine, you say?”

“Yes. And Virginia Welles signed in, too.”

Houseman shook his head. “Well, I haven’t seen her.”

Gibson nodded toward the locked door. “Well, Miss Donovan did—as I say, they both signed her book, but did
not
sign out....”

Gibson quickly explained about the security guard who’d taken over Miss Donovan’s post.

Houseman stood motionless, like a figure in a wax museum; when he spoke, his lips moved so slightly, the statue effect remained in place: “I do not have the pulp sensibilities of yourself, Mr. Gibson, nor of my gifted young partner. But in seeing...I suppose the term is, ‘the scene of the crime’...it would seem clear that either Orson himself performed a particularly senseless, sloppy crime of passion upon that child, or—”

“Or someone framed him for it.”

Houseman’s mouth twitched a smirk. “Using a weapon literally signed by the designated ‘killer.’”

Gibson’s eyes narrowed. “Jack, that murder weapon does limit the suspects.”

“How, pray tell?”

The writer thumped the producer’s chest gently with a forefinger. “It has to be someone who has access to your office at the Mercury Theatre—who could lift that grisly memento off its nails from its place of honor on your wall.”

The lipless smile that formed on Houseman’s face was like a cut in his flesh. “How much difficulty did
you
have, Walter, entering the Mercury unheeded at an odd time?”

“Well...” Gibson thought back to the slumbering Miss Holliday in the box office window. “...none, really.”

“Precisely. And there is no lock on the door of our eagle’s-nest office. Actors, crew, reporters, total strangers, come in and out of the Mercury at all hours.”

“But who would know about that
knife
?”

Houseman’s brow tightened slightly. “Well, certainly Virginia has been there, often enough, and likely saw it. And Mr. Balanchine, for that matter.”

“What was Balanchine doing there?”

Houseman’s eyebrows rose but his voice did not. “Threatening Orson’s life.”

“How about Owney Madden? Did he ever come around?”

Houseman blinked and grunted a single laugh. “The gangster? Why ever would he be in our office?”

Gibson raised an eyebrow. “How about that dancer Orson and Owney...shared? Was
she
ever in that office?”

“I believe...several times.”

“That gives her knowledge of the knife that she could have passed along to Madden, however innocently.”

Houseman shook his head, confused. “Walter, why does this gangster come to your mind? Did
he
sign in at Miss Donovan’s station, as well?”

“No—but wasn’t he cuckolded, in a manner of speaking, by Orson?”

Houseman drew in a breath; his eyes were alive with thought. “If having your way with another man’s mistress could fall under that description...yes.”

Gibson pointed toward the locked door. “I’m not saying Madden did it himself—but one of his people could have, and that social class knows all about framing people, and they aren’t squeamish about a little blood, either.”

“Again, Walter—why do you suspect Madden, when we know that both Balanchine and Virginia Welles were in the building? Perhaps one, or both, still are!”

Gibson told Houseman of the incident in the alley last night, outside the Cotton Club.

Finally, Welles came shambling out of the control booth, his expression mournful.
No tears, however
, Gibson noted.

The three men stood in a tight circle.

Houseman faced his partner and said, “Is this true, Orson? Were you accosted last night by ruffians?”

Blinking, Welles said, “What?... Oh. That. Yes. Yes, of course. Walter and I, uh, went to the Cotton Club, which perhaps was ill-advised, considering Mr. Madden’s temper....”

Houseman thrust a finger toward the door—the gesture had an accusatory aura, even though the digit did not point at Welles himself. “ ‘Ill-advised’ indeed, if what happened to Miss Donovan is the handiwork of Madden’s minions.”

Welles swallowed. His tone was strangely apologetic. “You know of course, I did not—”

Houseman waved that off. “That goes without saying.”

Gibson said, “You did have opportunity, Orson.”

The grief in Welles’s face turned to outrage, the white flesh to scarlet. “What are you saying, man?”

Patting the air, Gibson said, “Not that you did this—I don’t believe for an instant that that’s the case. But looking at it, objectively...you could have done this early this morning, before you and I breakfasted—”

“No,” Houseman said. “That blood is still glistening.”

Welles closed his eyes, shivered.

“Still shimmering wet,” Houseman continued. “This could not have happened long ago, elsewise it would have congealed, dried to a black patina, not that terrible red river.”

Welles glared at Houseman. “A little less poetry, Jack, and a little more help! Please!”

Softly Houseman said, “My apologies. But I think we’re all agreed that this young lady is beyond anyone’s help, now, save the Almighty.”

BOOK: The War of the Worlds Murder
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