WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1932
VALLEY GREEN, NEW JERSEY
In newspapers, she looked slender with a long, oval face, light hair, and the moony expression favored by wedding photographers. The rotogravure didn’t come close to the truth. She was sixteen when they got married, and in three years she’d filled out sweetly under a loosely unbuttoned top of silvery satin. She was tall and she had a faint spray of freckles across her nose and cheekbones. Her face was glistening with fevered sweat, maybe from the spooky doctor’s joy juice, and she was barefoot beneath loose pajama pants.
“Walter, they could be here.” Her voice had a whispery quality. “Right now, they could be right outside.” She grabbed her husband’s coat sleeves at the biceps, her fingers digging in and twisting the material.
For the first time, I understood what had happened to Spence. I couldn’t take my eyes off the woman.
“Don’t worry, darling, I’ve taken care of everything. This is Jimmy Quinn, my old friend. I’ve told you all about him.”
She turned and stared intently while I tried not to look down her loose pajama top.
“Will you protect little Ethan? Do you understand the danger he faces now? I’ll have to trust you with my only son. Do you swear to me that you will do it? Do you swear that?”
At the time, I thought it must have been the dope that was making her lay on the drama so thick. I was wrong.
Spence put his arm around her shoulders and led her out of the room. “I’ll explain everything to you in the morning, dear. Go back to sleep now. Jimmy’s here, he’s going to stay with the baby all night. There’s nothing to be concerned about, nothing at all.”
I poured another splash of rye and laid a log on the fire. A few minutes later, Spence came back in and sat behind his desk. “She’ll be fine now. She was just more upset than Dr. Cloninger thought she was.” He loaded a briefcase and rolled the maps into cardboard tubes. His voice took on the offhand tone he always used when he was trying to talk me into something.
“Look, Jimmy, I know this all sounds kind of crazy, but we don’t know what’s happened with Charles and Anne. You’ll be doing me a great favor if you agree to stay here for few days and keep an eye on things. From what Dixie told me, your place is going to have to stay closed for a bit, so what do you say? I’ll make it worth your while. That’s a promise.”
I stared into my whiskey, stalling for a few seconds. But by then we both knew what the answer was.
I finished the drink and said, “Why the hell not,” and the deed was done.
Spence came around the desk and clapped me on the shoulder. “Good man.”
“Where’s the phone? I gotta make some calls.”
Spence gestured to the telephone on his desk. “Use this line. I’ll look in on Flora, and here . . .” He opened the top right-hand drawer and took out a little Mauser .25 automatic. “You’ll want this.”
As soon he left, I popped the clip out of the pistol and worked the slide to clear the chamber. Nothing there. I put the clip in the coat pocket with the shotgun shells, the pistol in the other. I dialed the operator and gave her the number of the Utley Hotel, where Connie stayed. The night man there told me that Miss Halloran wasn’t in. I left a message with Walter’s number. Then I called the Chelsea. She wasn’t there, either.
I hung up the phone, pissed off and disappointed. Where the hell was she anyway? It was goddamn ten o’clock. She might be with Marie Therese and Frenchy, but they didn’t have a telephone.
I took a slow drink, tried to calm down, and thought back to the first day that Marie Therese brought Connie in. It had been right before Thanksgiving last year, midafternoon when things were always slow. Marie Therese came out from behind the bar to hand me a cup of coffee. She sat down at the table and lit a cigarette, waiting for me to put down the newspaper.
“Jimmy,” she said, “I’m going to do you a good turn today. I’m going to introduce you to your marvelous new waitress.”
“Another marvelous new waitress? Didn’t you say that about Dinah? And, before that, Gaby? They lasted less than a week between them. And what’s-her-name, Bridgid something.” Marie Therese was one of those kind souls who attracts strays. She brought in my marvelous new waitress or dishwasher every month or so.
She waved the names away with a plume of smoke. “They weren’t serious, you know. This Connie’s different. She’s a good girl. She’s new in town.”
“And wait till you get a load of her porch,” Frenchy interrupted. “This one’s really put together.”
She glared back at him. “Pay no attention to my pig of a husband. Trust me, you will like this girl and you know how busy we’re going to be between now and New Year’s. We need the help.”
“OK, I’ll talk to her. Tell her to come by.”
Marie Therese called out, “Connie,” and a girl came in from the front hallway, where she’d been waiting.
She was about five-foot-three, just my height, and Frenchy hadn’t exaggerated about her shape. She was nice, very nice. I saw a dark-blue coat and skirt, bobbed blond-brown hair under a hat, and an uncertain, hopeful smile. She worried a small purse with both gloved hands.
Marie Therese pulled out a third chair. “Come over here, honey. Have a seat. I told you, you don’t have to worry about Jimmy. He won’t bite. Unless you want him to.” The girl blushed.
I liked her right away. But then Marie Therese knew I was a sucker for the girls she brought around. She wouldn’t bring them if she didn’t know that my speak was a good place to work. Things were tough then. There were a lot of places where guys would assume that any girl working there was a whore. But not mine. I hired nice-looking young women because they helped bring customers into a speak that didn’t have a floor show or a dance band or ice to piss on. Instead, we had the best brand-name liquor from Canada and England, wine from France and Italy, and, when I could get it, beer that hadn’t been needled with ether. All at top-drawer prices.
“What’s your name?”
“Constance. Connie Halloran.”
“Where’re you from?”
“Yonkers.”
“Are you an actress? You’re pretty enough.”
Another blush. “Oh, I don’t know. I’ve thought about it and I sang in school.”
“That’s not why you came here? You’re not planning to become a showgirl?”
“No, at least . . .” She shook her head, “No, I’m not a showgirl.”
Marie Therese fired up another smoke. “Her boyfriend kept pushing her to settle down and she’s not ready.”
“Have you ever worked in a speak?”
“I was a waitress at the New Ideal diner last summer.”
Marie Therese said, “She can start tonight.”
She did. For the next two weeks, Connie Halloran showed up on time every night. She worked extra shifts whenever one of the other girls wanted time off. She didn’t take any guff from the idiots, drunk or sober, and still did fine with tips. She volunteered to help me close up when Frenchy and Marie Therese left early on Christmas Eve. And then, to my happy surprise, she spent that night at the Chelsea Hotel with me. It was the best Christmas I ever had.
So now I asked the operator to call the private line at my speak. Frenchy picked up. “Boss, where the hell are you?”
“It’s a long story. I’m in New Jersey, and it looks like I’m going to stay here for a while. What’s going on?”
“Fat Joe and me came in this afternoon and cleaned up. There’s not a lock or a seal on the door, so Marie Therese and I opened up late but only to regulars. No real business. What the hell went on last night?”
“I don’t know. Dixie Davis sprung me and he said the paperwork on the bust was hinky. Did you recognize that guy? I think I remember him coming in with some other cops from the Bronx.”
“Could be, yeah, now that you mention it, he was kinda familiar.”
“All I know is that he was a damn sight more interested in working me over than making sure the place stayed closed. He left the station before they even finished taking my prints.”
“Doesn’t add up, Jimmy.”
“No, it doesn’t. Look, open like normal tomorrow. Has Connie been by?”
“No, want me to ask Marie Therese?”
“Sure.”
I heard him talking in French and his wife answering, “Je ne l’ai pas vu.”
“She ain’t seen her,” he said.
“OK, open up as usual tomorrow. But tell Fat Joe not to let in cops who aren’t regulars. And if any cops do come by, find out if they know anything. You got last night’s take, right?”
“Sure, boss.”
“Hold on to it. I’ll be in as soon as I can, and I’ll call again tomorrow. And, oh yeah, here is my number in Jersey.” I read it off from the tag under the glassine cover on the dial, then hung up.
The library doors slid open immediately, and Mrs. Pennyweight came in, leaning on a cane. I guessed she’d been listening at the door and was waiting until I hung up the phone. What did that mean? Was she being considerate or was she eavesdropping?
We looked each other over, checking out our sticks. Hers was ebony with an ornate, tarnished silver handle. Mine was made of wood, I don’t know what kind, painted black with a curved handle.
She said, “You look like you slept in your suit. I’ll take two fingers of that whiskey.”
She was about as tall as her daughter and more angular. She had pale blue eyes, and was fond of tilting her head back and staring intently at anyone she was speaking to, daring them to disagree with any damn thing she said. Her hair was pinned up and she wore a thick, brown-gray belted sweater over loose trousers. Her brown leather shoes sported no heels. If she had on makeup, I couldn’t tell.
I poured three fingers of whiskey neat.
“I know who you are, Mr. Quinn, and I know why Walter asked you to come. I’m not sure I approve. Still, after giving the matter full consideration, I believe he’s right. If something that horrible can happen to a wonderful young couple like Charles and Anne, it can happen to anyone. We’re taking reasonably prudent precautions. And unlike my daughter, who sometimes doesn’t have a brain in her head, I understand exactly why Walter has to leave now and what he has to do. And how important the trip is to our family. These are hard times. Sometimes you don’t have a meaningful choice.”
“I’ve already told Spence that I’d stay, and I will.”
“Fine.” She gave me another long, cool look. “We’ve met before. Do you remember it?”
“Sure, the garden party. Spence, Mr. Pennyweight, the booze, and everything.”
“Yes, getting drunk with my husband was not a difficult thing but Walter was better at it than most.”
She frowned at the memory. Then her focus shifted and she looked toward the door. A second later, I heard the sound of an approaching car—the whining engine and a loud scatter of gravel as it slid to a stop. I could make out a loud, strident voice outside, and I picked up the shotgun. It was a man’s voice, followed by a heavy fist pounding on the big front doors. I fed the shells into the Purdey. There was more bellowing from outside.
I held out the gun butt-first to Mrs. Pennyweight. “Can you use this?”
She reached out impatiently. “Of course.” The front door banged open and the man yelled, still unintelligibly.
I snapped the clip into the Mauser, chambered a round, and gimped out into the main reception room.
A tall, potbellied man in a long black overcoat and tuxedo stood at the front door. He had a fringe of hair around his bald head and a smooth pale face with bulging eyes. He had a snootful, couldn’t stand without weaving. When he saw me, he got angry as some drunks will do, and teetered forward. I thought I could hear the wail of an approaching police siren in the distance.
“My garden is properly tilled and the pigeons will soon be home to roost where’s Walter I’ve got to talk to him it’s critically important that he know about the hotel . . .” The man’s babble had a weird lilting, hypnotic quality. He spoke carefully, each word clear and precise, but his big eyes snapped as he reeled forward, and his clawlike hands opened and closed mechanically. He reminded me of Lon Chaney in one of his really scary movies. The sound of the siren grew louder.
“You have a week and now no more no more . . .”
The man reeked of gin but his weird nonsense sounded like it was coming from dope. He lurched closer and clapped a paw on my shoulder. I twisted away and wondered why the hell everyone was so goddamned tall out there. I felt like I’d climbed up the beanstalk into the land of the giants. Who was this guy? By his clothes, he could be a rich neighbor. Should I try to jolly him back out the front door like a regular who’s had one too many? Or shoot him in the heart?
“Spence’ll be here in just a minute. Why don’t you sit down and cool off.”
“And I take everything into consideration for I have never wept nor damned the Roman kin, I am going to give you money if I can . . .”
He lunged forward clumsily, grabbing at me with both hands. I pivoted on my good leg and swung the cane around like a baseball bat at the back of his knees. He folded, knees hitting the carpet first, then hands, elbows, and finally his head. He shook it for a moment like a wet dog. Then he roared and rose up. When he turned, he was smiling madly, and his eyes bulged wider.
I was pulling the pistol out of my pocket when I heard Spence yell from above, “Don’t shoot him, Jimmy.”
“Fordham Evans, stop this instant.” Mrs. Pennyweight’s voice cut like a whip.The crazy guy turned to her, smiling, and his voice lost the weird drugged quality. “Ah, Catherine, there you are. Who’s the runt?”
I looked up and saw Spence and Flora on a second-floor balcony. Still falling out of her pajamas, she was excited by the fight, if you could call it that.
I pocketed the pistol as two cops sauntered in, one middle-aged, the other much younger, about my age. They wore snappy uniforms with black-peaked caps, dark-gray tunics, riding breeches, and tall leather boots. Fordham Evans raised his arms in welcome when he saw them. “Sheriff Kittner and Deputy . . . Deputy . . . what’s your name? I know I know your name but it’s flown straight out of my head. Fancy meeting you here. That little man hit me with something. My legs hurt. Let’s have a drink.”
The younger cop took the man’s arm. “You’re in the wrong house again, Mr. Evans. Let’s go now, we’ll get you back on the road.” He stopped and both of them looked up at the balcony. “Hello, Flora . . . I mean, Mrs. Spencer.” I was close enough to see a flush rise on his cheeks.
She smiled and waggled her fingers. “Hi, Jeff, good to see you.”
As Spence led her away, the deputy stared after them. Well, he stared after her.
The sheriff paid no attention to the drunk. He touched his cap and said, “I hope he’s not been too much trouble, Mrs. Pennyweight, but we can only do so much. Parker will make sure he gets home all right.” The flesh of his thick neck strained against the high collar of the tunic. He hooked thumbs into his Sam Browne belt and rocked back on his boot heels. “With the kidnapping, we’ve had our hands full.” He gave me his best hard cop stare but got no reaction.
“I’m sure you have. Here, let me see you out,” said Mrs. Pennyweight, honey dripping from her lips.
He ignored her. “Who’s this?”
“It’s Mr. Quinn. He’s staying with us for a few days.”
The sheriff stepped up close and leaned in, smelling of cigar smoke and alcohol. Maybe he and Fordham Evans patronized the same bootlegger. “One of Mr. Spencer’s old friends, is he? And just what were you doing with that piece you’ve got in your pocket?”
“I was going to shoot the fat drunk in the heart if he threatened Spence’s kid. I didn’t know that Valley Green’s finest were in hot pursuit.”
The sheriff sniffed. “A wiseguy, huh?” He leaned even closer, spit misting as he hissed. “Maybe that kind of talk buys you something in New York, but you keep a civil tongue in your head in my county if you know what’s good for you.”
Before he finished, I turned and gimped back to the library for my drink. Mrs. Pennyweight steered him toward the front door.
If the sheriff thought it was unusual for her to be carrying a shotgun around the house, he didn’t say anything.
When Mrs. Pennyweight came back into the library, she said, “It’s not a good idea to anger Sheriff Kittner. He’s often quite useful.”
“What about the other guy?”
“Fordham lives down the road. He used to be in love with Flora. As often as not when he gets boiled, he stops by here. Last time he hit one of the trees by the drive. We didn’t find him until the next morning when he’d stripped stark naked to take a swim in the lake. As you heard, he fancies himself a poet. The more he drinks, the more ‘poetic’ he becomes. At heart, he’s just a harmless, crazy drunk.”
Oh Boy came in and said, “I’ve put your stuff in your room.”
Mrs. Pennyweight tucked the Purdey comfortably under her arm. “I think I can handle things here with little Ethan. Get settled in and tell Mears to have that suit cleaned. Oliver, show Mr. Quinn upstairs.”
On the second floor, the stairs opened onto a balcony that overlooked the big room. Spence and Flora’s rooms were on the other side. Through an open door, I could see them sitting on the bed in her room, Spence’s shoulder and her hair reflected in a mirror that appeared to cover one wall. They were close together, arms around each other. He was still whispering to her.
Oh Boy said, “This way,” and led me down another hall.
The room had a comfortable-looking bed, an armchair, a small table with a lamp and an ashtray, and a chest of drawers with a radio. A radiator ticked near the window. My Gladstone and spare cane, the heavier one I used outdoors, were on the bed. Some of my suits were hanging in the closet, along with a pair of shoes and my walking boots. A dark brown curtain with wide red stripes covered the window and looked heavy enough to darken the room during the day. A door on the wall opposite the bed led to a white-and-black tiled bathroom. The tub had a shower enclosure. Both rooms smelled of a slightly dark odor, as if they’d been closed off for months.
I hooked my stick over the back of the chair and put Spence’s Mauser on the chest. “Oh Boy, what the hell’s going on here?”
“Don’t worry about Mr. Evans, he’s just a drunk.”
“What about the guys out front when we came in?”
“Dr. Cloninger, he’s another story. Oh boy, that man gives me the willies.” Oh Boy shivered, his face twisting into a worried frown. I saw that his hairline had retreated to the top of his head and his ginger hair was cut short. The imprint of the chauffeur’s cap still dented his forehead. And yet, except for the hair, he looked as young as I remembered.
“He and Spence have business together?”
Oh Boy shook his head. “I don’t think so. He’s got an office in the city, but his main place is close, on the other side of the lake.”
“The sanatorium?”
Oh Boy snorted, “Yeah, the nuthouse. Rich drunks from the city go there to dry out.” He hooked a thumb toward the window. “In the daytime you can see it from here.”
“Who’s the other guy? The one with the wild hair and the rifle.”
“That’s Dietz, the groundskeeper.”
I opened the top of my bag and sorted through clothes, knee brace, and other stuff that Oh Boy had taken from the hotel, including my knucks and knife.“Did Spence tell you he was going to fly to Texas?”
“Yeah, he was supposed to leave today. They’ve got the Pennyweight Petroleum Tri-Motor over at the airfield. I don’t know if Walter’s going to want me to drive him there tonight or tomorrow.” He looked even more worried than usual. “I guess I’ll have to stay up tonight, too.”
“How does a guy get something to eat around this joint?”
Oh Boy smiled at the mention of food. “That’s easy. Come down to the kitchen after you clean up. The chow’s good.”
After Oh Boy left, I pulled open the curtains, turned off the table lamp, and waited for my eyes to adjust to the darkness. The sheer craziness of the past twenty-four hours was still too confused to figure. Maybe that damn big cop hit me harder than I thought. And why did he close me down in the first place, and then why did he do such a piss poor job of it? It’s like he knew it wasn’t going to stick but he did it anyway. If Vinnie Coll was still alive, I’d think he was behind this scheme. I decided I’d call Dixie in the morning. And Lansky, if he was in town.
Shapes outside slowly became visible. Faint light from a ground-floor window fanned out over brown grass directly below. Beyond the light was the lake. I could make out the dark shape of Dr. Cloninger’s sanatorium on the other side. Headlights were moving near it. I opened the window and heard the sound of an engine and transmission gears in the cold night air.
I closed the window and curtains. Who the hell would snatch the Lindbergh kid? More important, where was Connie?
I stood under the shower and let the water beat down on my head and neck for a long time. It revived me and sharpened my hunger.
I got out my razor and turned on the radio to warm up while I shaved. I twisted the tuning knob until I heard a man’s voice.
“. . . since yesterday. We know that this was not the first experience with kidnapping the family has dealt with. A year ago, Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s sister Constance received a written threat that authorities took so seriously a false ransom payment was arranged while the colonel spirited the young woman to safety. No one was ever apprehended in that instance, and it is unknown whether the incident has any bearing on what happened yesterday.”
The announcer had a crisp British accent but he also sounded tired. I wondered how long he’d been talking.
“For many of us, the reality of this crime is still hard to accept. You think that someone will step out from behind a curtain and explain that it did not really happen, but I’m afraid that’s not the case.
“Colonel Lindbergh came to America’s attention five years ago when he became the first man to fly solo across the Atlantic in the Spirit of St. Louis. He and his airplane returned on the USS Memphis to massive parades in Washington and New York, and then, of course, he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. ‘Lucky Lindy’ became one of the most famous men in the world. He has used that fame to promote the cause of commercial aviation.
“In fact, he was doing just that when he flew to Mexico and met Anne Morrow, daughter of Ambassador Dwight Morrow. After their marriage, she came to share his passion for aviation, and they have literally circled the globe, seeking out and mapping new air routes. When Charles Jr. was born, they purchased several hundred acres of land in New Jersey’s Somerset and Mercer Counties. Work on their graceful stone home was finished last year.
“So, to recapitulate the situation as we understand it now . . .”
When I finished shaving, I dug into my Gladstone for my notepad and fountain pen. I opened the pad to the first partially blank page and wrote recapitulate, sounding it out as I wrote the letters. Also on the page were
liminal
biddable
gormless
fasade façade.
The radio continued, “Police have identified two pairs of footprints, likely made by a man and his female accomplice. The wooded area around the house was thoroughly searched last night and today. Thinking that a stolen car might have been involved, law-enforcement agencies in New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania have identified sixteen stolen vehicles and are on the lookout for them.”
The voice paused and the man said, “What?” and then “I don’t think so,” and “All right” to someone. “Here are the makes and models of those sixteen stolen cars. Police welcome any information the public can provide.”
I finished shaving and thought that the guy had been right. I still couldn’t believe what had happened to the Lindbergh kid. That feeling of things not being completely real was in the background of everything that happened for the next seven days at Valley Green, and the really strange stuff was just getting cranked up.