“It was all such a long time ago,” Gloria Rayner sighed.
We were sitting in the opulent “drawing room” of her Bel Air home. The room was crowded with the kinds of antiques that probably originally sat in a French palace right before the peasants had had enough and killed everyone they could lay their hands on: spindly-legged gilt chairs, brocade-covered sofas, marble-topped tables, and all kinds of gold-framed mirrors and vases and china knickknacks.
Gloria herself sort of looked like a knickknack with her platinum blonde hair and porcelain made-up face. She was very tiny and very wrinkled. Her baby blue hostess gown was a perfect match for the blue of the silk wallpaper behind her, with its designs of fantasy pagodas and curved bridges.
I said, “I appreciate your taking the time to talk to me again, Ms. Rayner.”
“That’s no hardship, Mr. North,” Gloria said with a flash of that famous smile. “You’re a delicious young morsel.” She giggled at my expression. “When you get to be my age you can say things like that.”
Actually, Gloria had been saying things like that for the last fifty years. She was nearly as famous for her racy comments as she was for the string of B movies that had secured her charter membership in the Hollywood bombshell pantheon. I’d seen a slew of those movies in the name of research, and I’d had to admit that she did have something: sexual charisma or animal magnetism. It was diffused now by age, but she didn’t seem to know that. Or maybe she did know it, and found it all the funnier.
“So you don’t have any idea why Eva broke her engagement to Tony Fumagalli?” I asked for the second time that afternoon.
Gloria bent forward to pick up one of the three white miniature poodles oscillating at her feet. “No,” she said. She straightened up, holding the poodle. “Tony the Cock. What a laugh. Did you know the name Fumagalli means ‘smoked chicken’ in Italian?”
“No, I didn’t.”
“Yeah. Smoked chicken!” She laughed a throaty nicotine laugh. “You said you’re a reporter?”
“I used to be.” I stroked the poodle on my own lap. It squirmed contently. “Now I’m writing this book about Eva.”
“About Eva?” she asked shrewdly. “Or about Eva’s murder?”
“Both, really. I can’t really explore the murder without understanding Eva.”
“You figure Eva out, explain her to me,” she replied. She patted the dog’s head with her gnarled fingers. Her nails were mandarin-length and painted in hot pink. One of the other dogs barked and she patted the sofa beside her. “Come on, then!”
The dog jumped, nails slithering on the slick upholstery, and wriggled into place beside Gloria.
I said, “But you were Eva’s best friend.”
“Baby, I was Eva’s only friend. Her only real friend, unless you count that quack Roman Mayfield. Now there was a queer duck. And I do mean queer.”
I looked at my notes. After a moment I said, “Roman Mayfield, the astrologer?”
“Seer to the Stars!” she scoffed. “Yep. He and Eva were as thick as thieves. He told her not to go the party that night.”
I’d heard this several times, but I’d always figured Mayfield’s premonition had been 20/20 hindsight. “Did she say so?”
“He said so. I heard him. For once he was right.” She fastened me with one of her marble blue eyes. “What paper did you used to work for?”
“The Santa Monica Mirror.”
“Never heard of it. So you decided you wanted to be An Author? My third husband was an author. What a joke. The only thing that guy authored were love letters to my secretary. Which is one reason why I don’t keep a secretary anymore. Or a husband.” She laughed that raucous laugh. “Not that I need a secretary these days. No one remembers Gloria Rayner. It’s all about which Third World country Angelina Jolie is adopting this week.” She sighed. “Hollywood isn’t what it used to be. In my day we understood about the fantasy, about entertainment. Who wants to see movie stars holding preferences about death and disease and disaster? Where’s the box office in that?”
“Uh, right.” I made an effort to drag the interview back on course. “So Eva wasn’t afraid of anyone or—?”
“Eva wasn’t afraid of anything,” she interrupted. “Although she was superstitious. She believed all that horseshit Roman used to shovel her way. It wasn’t just an affectation. Tarot cards, astrology, pick-up sticks, who the hell knows what all.”
“But she didn’t believe him that night? She went to the party at the Garden of Allah after he warned her not to.”
“She probably figured Roman was jealous. You must’ve run across the type in your line of work.”
“Roman’s type?”
“Hollywood has more than its share of jealous queens—of both sexes.” She winked at me. “I used to tell Eva I thought Roman believed he controlled the stars instead of just reading ‘em. Took it very personally when anyone didn’t hang on his every prediction.” Gloria shrugged. “Prediction or not, Evie wanted to see Stephen that night.”
“Stephen Ball?”
Gloria nodded and looked down at the dog she was patting. “They were both starring in a picture. Desire in the Dust or something. It was an adventure picture. Eva played Steve’s love interest.”
“Danger in the Dunes,” I said. “But they’d been engaged, right? Stephen Ball and Eva? For a brief time before she met Tony Fumagalli.”
“Yep, but that was all over. On Stephen’s part anyway.”
I tried to read her expression. “So it wasn’t over for Eva? Was that why she broke off her engagement to Fumagalli?”
“Like I said, baby, it was a long time ago.” She studied me. “Tim North. Do your girlfriends call you Timmy? You’re a very nice-looking boy, Timmy. You’ve got striking coloring. Blond hair and brown eyes.” She leaned closer and I automatically straightened up like you do when a wasp is trying to land on your nose. “But they’re not brown, are they? More what we used to call whiskey-colored. Very nice.” She winked. “Very nice.”
I got out, “Uh…Ms. Rayner, who do you think killed Eva?”
She replied instantly, “Will Burack. There was never a question in my mind.”
* * * * *
Gloria pressed me to stay for lunch, but I escaped on the—true—grounds that I had an appointment at the UCLA Library Department of Special Collections.
As it was, by the time I caught the bus for Westwood I was starting to feel tired and a little let down, enough so that I considered skipping UCLA and just heading home. There wasn’t any reason for it. The interview had gone fine, although it was obvious to me from Gloria’s body language and diversionary tactics that she wasn’t being candid about a number of things. That was to be expected. Maybe I wasn’t asking the right questions. Maybe I wasn’t aggressive enough. Or maybe she just needed to get a little more familiar with me—not that she wasn’t plenty familiar.
I’d had a bad night, and that always tended to color the next day. The bad night wasn’t a surprise considering the physical and emotional trauma of the day, and there wasn’t any point giving in to it. I’d had bad nights before—one in particular, which reminded me of Jack. The very last person I needed to be thinking of.
In my experience, when a guy tells you he doesn’t want a serious relationship, he really means he doesn’t want a serious relationship with you. If Mr. Right came along, he’d get serious fast enough. In a way Jack had done me a favor, although my currently fragile ego could have done without his sudden decision to come clean. I already knew Jack didn’t want to pursue a relationship, and I knew why. And once upon a time I’d probably have felt the same way.
So I didn’t blame him, but I didn’t want to be friends with him, either. In fact, I’d be happy never to run into him again. And I was going to do my best to see that I didn’t run into him again, which probably wouldn’t be hard because I was pretty sure Jack felt the same.
The bus roared along its air-conditioned way, and I popped the gold stud I’d removed for my interview with Gloria back in my ear, put my head back and closed my eyes. I thought about what I’d learned from Gloria. I kept remembering the Life magazine layout of that fateful party. Glossy black-and-white photos of Hollywood Babylon. Somehow Hollywood parties just never seemed as glamorous or exclusive as they did back in the ‘40s and ‘50s. Maybe it was because of the old star system. Those old actors and actresses had a mystique that didn’t seem to exist anymore. It wasn’t all good, of course. Part of the price of being packaged for public consumption meant sacrificing a lot of freedom both personally and professionally.
About an hour later, I sat in the hushed Ahmanson-Murphy Reading Room carefully turning the page of the September 1957 issue of Modern Screen magazine. The cover featured an artwork portrait of Eva Aldrich eating an apple. The issue had come out the month of Eva’s death, and it had been a huge seller. The article itself was not wildly informative: one of those planted publicity pieces where Eva chatted girlishly about her latest film, Danger in the Dunes, and her dreamy upcoming wedding to local businessman Tony Fumagalli.
Besides the fact that Eva mentioned her dashing costar Stephen Ball six times during the single-page interview, there didn’t seem to be any indication that her romance with Fumagalli was on the rocks.
Apparently no one—including Fumagalli—had seen it coming.
He hadn’t been the only one, I thought, studying the sexy little grin of Eva’s pinup portrait.
* * * * *
It was late by the time the bus let me off. I was dead tired and the thought of walking all the way around from Central Avenue was about as enticing as a picnic in Death Valley. I thought of Jack’s warning about not using the apartment parking lot as a shortcut, and then I thought to hell with Jack, and turned off the narrow alley that ran behind the neighboring complex.
It wasn’t really an alley, just a pathway of dirt and rocks and weeds stretching behind the buildings with a tall cinder block wall on one side shielding the apartments from the adjacent freeway.
Oleander bushes lined the freeway side of the wall, dead leaves and withered blossoms scattering the pathway as I strode along the length of two apartment complexes. At the end of the walk was a shorter cinder block wall. There were two wooden crates stacked against the wall providing makeshift steps. I climbed onto the crates and hauled myself up, balancing precariously on top of the wall as I looked down into the parking lot of my own apartment structure.
Jack, wearing jeans, boots, and a black blazer, was getting out of his Jeep. At the sound of my scrabbling ascent, he jerked around and stared.
One leg over the wall, I paused. Our gazes fastened across the roofs of cars.
Busted.
“Nice to see you take my advice seriously,” he said.
“I hang on your every word,” I returned, and I jumped down, landing with the lightness of a lot of practice beside a blue Mustang on wheel blocks.
I’m not sure why I was playing the smart-ass; I could tell by the way his face tightened that it wasn’t going to win points. But then, I didn’t want to win points with Jack anymore, and that allowed for a certain freedom. Actually, it allowed for a lot of freedom considering how very careful I’d been the couple of times we’d gone out. It had been like auditioning for a part or interviewing for a job you knew you weren’t qualified for. I’d been on my best behavior every second. Not giving a damn was surprisingly liberating.
I brushed the seat of my charcoal trousers, feeling where the rough surface of the wall had snagged the material. Jack continued to eye me. I walked toward the gate, passing close enough by him that I could see his five o’clock shadow.
“The fact is,” he said suddenly, “I wanted to talk to you.”
I’d had all the talks with Jack I wanted. “Can it wait? It’s been a long day and I need a shower.”
“It’s about your book. I found something out today that I think you ought to know.”
He sounded pretty grim, so I said, “In that case, follow me, Officer.”
He did—in silence. We got to my apartment and I let us in. The answering machine was on and I heard my twin sister Callie’s voice.
“Excuse me,” I said to Jack, and I brushed past him and grabbed for the phone before Callie hung up.
“Hey, Cal,” I said.
“Hey,” she said with obvious relief. “How are you doing?”
“Good.” I glanced at Jack who was still standing in the doorway. “Have a seat,” I mouthed at him.
Apparently he’d been waiting for an invitation. He sat down on the sofa and stared at the turned-off television.
“Are you?” Callie questioned. “Because I got this sudden feeling last night, and I’ve had it all day.”
“Ah, Cal,” I protested. But it was useless. It was the twin thing, I guess; she always knew when something was up with me, the same way I did when something was up with her. “I’m really okay.” I was uncomfortably aware of the fact that Jack couldn’t fail to hear every word.
“How’s the book coming?”
I loosened my tie, unbuttoned my collar. “It’s coming. I interviewed Gloria Rayner today.” Jack’s head turned in my direction.
“The one who does those AARP commercials? That must have been a laugh.” Her voice changed. “Are you…taking care of yourself, Tim? You know, doing everything you’re supposed to?”
I expelled a long breath. “Of course. Come on; stop acting like a big sister. You’re only eight minutes older.”
Callie chuckled. “I did a lot of living in those eight minutes. So are you still seeing the cop?”
I’d forgotten I’d told her about Jack. “No,” I said after a hesitation.
“Oh, no! What happened? He sounded—”
“Not my type.” I lowered my voice. “In fact, he was kind of an asshole.” Jack was staring at me with an odd expression. I gave him a cheerful smile. Unless he had bionic ears, there was no way he could hear what we were saying, but I had the not unpleasant feeling he somehow suspected.
“That’s too bad,” Callie was saying. “I keep hoping you’ll meet someone.”
“Low on my list of priorities right now,” I said. “I have to get this book finished.”
“Do you think you’ll have time for a trip home this summer? Mom and Dad were really hoping you would spend some time here. I think Mom wants to make up for…everything. I think she needs to. And Dad really misses you. You know that.”
This was getting way too complicated. I said carefully, “Yeah. I don’t know. Maybe. It depends on the book. Hey, Cal, can I call you back? I’m in the middle of something.”
“Oh, you should have said!” She hastily said her good-byes and I said mine, and then I hung up and walked over to the chair across from Jack.
“That was the twin sister?” he said.
I nodded, surprised he remembered, but I didn’t want to get distracted from the purpose of his visit. I didn’t want to start thinking of Jack as a friend—or mistaking a cop’s attention to the little things for anything more than that. “What was it you wanted to tell me?”
“Did you ever hear of a guy named Raymond Irvine? He was a crime reporter for the Herald Examiner.”
I shook my head. “No. Should I have?”
“It depends. In 1963, he started research for a book on Eva Aldrich’s murder.”
“He couldn’t have finished it,” I said, watching his face. “There is no book on the Aldrich case.”
“No, he didn’t finish it. He was killed the same year. His car was run off the road on Mulholland Drive.”