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End of a Call Girl
SHE WAS all of forty, but remarkably well-preserved, a shapely imitation blonde with an artfully made-up face, wearing a mink stole and an expensively tailored suit.
She sat in my office peevishly explaining the perils of her trade. Her trade was call girls, the hundred-dollar-and-up kind. She was no longer personally active but ran a list and would occasionally fill a date if the mood was on her and the customer tolerant. At least, that’s what she told me.
“The studio trade isn’t what it used to be,” she said sadly, “but we get a lot of visiting Texans. They can be rough on the girls, though, those Texans.”
I leaned back in my chair, doodling on a pad, and wondered why she was telling me all this. She was finishing a joke about a Texan with a big belt buckle when I asked her.
I asked, “Why are you telling me all this?”
She stopped talking to frown at me. Finally, “I wanted to be honest with you. Frank told me that was the way to be.”
“Frank—? Frank who?”
“Frank Perini. Didn’t I tell you he had recommended you to me?”
“No, you didn’t, Mrs. Diggert. Did he also tell you I work only within the law?”
She shook her head, her gaze slightly belligerent.
“He should have,” I said. “And your—business is outside the law, isn’t it?”
She shook her head again. “My girls are listed as models and entertainers. You could say I run a—lonely hearts service.”
“An ultimate service,” I added.
Her voice was sharp. “Frank’s outside the law. Frank’s a gambler. And you worked for him.”
“What I did for Frank Perini had nothing to do with his trade. I merely found his son for him.”
“So? And all I want you to do for me is find a friend of mine.”
“That’s different,” I agreed. “Who is the friend?”
“A girl named Jean Talsman. She was to meet a man at the Beverly Canyon Motel yesterday. She never kept the appointment and I haven’t been able to get in touch with her since.”
I asked quietly. “A friend? Or one of your girls, Mrs. Diggert?”
“As far as you need be concerned, Mr. Puma, the girl is simply a friend.”
“In that case, couldn’t you go to the police with your story?”
She glared at me, saying nothing.
“I hope that doesn’t sound too moral,” I apologised. “I’m not exactly Galahad, but I do have to stay in business and that means I must be careful. Now, tell me honestly, why didn’t you go to the police?”
“Because,” Mrs. Diggert said, “the man she was supposed to meet is a married man. Now, trot out your morality, Mr. Puma. Is there anything moral about ruining the respectable name of a husband and father?”
“It was a risk the man himself was taking.”
“So? That was his morality he was risking. Ruining his name would be on my conscience.”
I smiled and said nothing.
“And I’ll make it clearer, as long as we’re on the subject. My girls get from a hundred dollars a night—an evening, up. They are permitted to—choose their company. They could have landed in a less respectable end of this ancient profession where they sold a piece of their souls ten times a night at three dollars a piece. My girls promise nobody anything.”
I still said nothing.
“I could have gone to a dozen other investigators in this town who aren’t concerned with ethics.” “You didn’t. You still can.”
“I don’t want to. Listen, Puma, how many commandments are there?” “Ten.”
“Then why,” she asked, “when a woman is called an ‘immoral woman’ does it mean only one of the commandments has been violated. Nobody ever imagines it could be one of the other nine.”
“We have a Puritan tradition in this country,” I explained.
“Who actually lives it?”
I doodled some more.
“Say no if you’re going to, Mr. Puma. I won’t beg any more.”
“I get a hundred a day and expenses,” I explained.
She chuckled. “My girls don’t get expenses.” She lifted a huge black purse from her lap. “Are you accepting my business?”
I nodded. “And all you are really concerned with is finding the girl? That’s the unvarnished truth?” She stared. “What else?”
“I’m not supposed to drag her back, or anything?”
She sighed wearily. “What in hell do you think I am? They’re free to quit me any time they want to. I’m not their keeper; I’m their—well, agent would be the word, I guess. Jean, Mr. Puma, is a very close personal friend of mine.”
From the black purse she took out a four by five portrait of Jean Talsman which she handed me. I took down the rest of the pertinent information. Her home address was in Brentwood; her age was twenty-six; her linage was 36-22-38.
Mrs. Dora Diggert said, “Two days should do it, don’t you think?” She put a pair of hundred dollar bills on my desk. “You can bill me for the expenses later.”
“And your address?” I asked.
“The phone number is all you’ll need,” she told me. “It’s an unlisted number. And here is all I know about the date Jean was supposed to have had.” She handed me a page of single-spaced information.
Then she stood up. She stood well, shoulders back and chin high. There is something that gets me about attractive and successful women in any line; I admired her as she stood there.
She smiled, studying me. “I’m not that attractive.”
“Success always impresses me,” I explained. “I must have a lot of Rotary in me.”
She continued to smile. “Well, if you ever get a hundred or two you don’t know what to do with—” She looked at the bills still on the desk.
“I’m a poor man, Mrs. Diggert,” I said sadly. “I can only afford the amateurs.”
She left and I sat there, studying the picture of Jean Talsman. It was a highly attractive face, sensitive, faintly defiant. If I were a girl, I wondered, would I sell out? If I were a girl, I would be a two hundred and nine pound girl and it was doubtful if I would find a buyer even if I did make the ultimate surrender.
• • •
It was now noon; I had lunch before driving over to the office of George Ryerson. Mr. Ryerson was a C.P.A. and had his own small but busy firm of accountants. It seemed unlikely that an accountant named George could be responsible for Miss Talsman’s disappearance, but it seemed more unlikely that he would have phoned for a call girl in the first place. And he had.
The office was on Wilshire, on the second floor of a new building in a good district. The waiting room was conservatively and tastefully furnished and the red-headed receptionist a perfect example of brick-house Irish. This George was doing all right.
The redhead wanted me to state my business. I told her it was personal.
“Does Mr. Ryerson know you by name?”
I shook my head. “Nor by sight. Just run in and tell him Mrs. Diggert sent me.”
She frowned. “Mrs. Diggert—? I’m not familiar with that name.”
“I’m glad. But maybe Mr. Ryerson is? Why don’t you trot in and ask him?”
She picked up the phone on her desk, threw a key, and said, “Mr. Ryerson, a Mr. Puma is here, sent here by a Mrs. Diggert. I have no record of any appointment for him.”
Silence for a second and then, “Yes, sir, I’ll send him right in.”
She looked at me blandly and explained it was the office at the end of the hall and went back to her own concerns.
The office at the end of the hall was the big one, naturally, and George had furnished it in masculine leather and masculine Bellows prints and a masculine portable bar. I would think a man in his business would get some female trade out here but the room didn’t look like he expected any.
He was a tall, faintly beefy man with thinning hair and excellent tailoring. He got up to shake my hand and seat me and then went back to sit behind his desk.
From there, he asked, “How can I help you, Mr. Puma?”
“By telling me what happened to Jean Talsman.”
He frowned. “Jean—Talsman—? Is she one of Dora’s girls?”
“She’s the one you ordered,” I said, “two nights ago.”
He shook his head empathically. “I asked for no girl by name. Has something happened to Miss Talsman?”
“Mrs. Diggert specifically stated that you asked for Jean by name. And asked her to come to the Beverly Canyon Motel. Didn’t you tell Mrs. Diggert that the girl didn’t show up?”
He nodded. “I told her that, yes. But I didn’t mention any name.”
“According to Mrs. Diggert, you never asked for Jean Talsman or any other girl before. Where did you learn about her?”
“Mr. Puma,” he said patiently, “I don’t like to contradict Mrs. Diggert, but I didn’t ask for any Jean Talsman. I said I’d take any girl.” He was blushing now.
“How long did you wait for her?” I asked.
He said stiffly, “I fail to see how that’s important.”
I said, “The girl is missing. Let me decide what’s important.”
His voice was cold. “Don’t be insolent, Mr. Puma. You’re not the police, you know. You have no official position.”
“Right,” I agreed. “Perhaps it would be better if we went to the police with this.”
He looked at his desk top. “That wouldn’t do Mrs. Diggert’s business any good, would it?”
“It would hurt it less than it would hurt yours,” I pointed out. “Dora’s clientele aren’t real fussy about her reputation, but I’m sure your clients might be disturbed.”
He said nothing.
“Also,” I went on, “Dora’s divorced. You’re not, are you, Mr. Ryerson?”
He glared at me. “Are you threatening me with disclosure?”
“Not exactly. I’m simply trying to get some cooperation out of you.”
“I have told Mrs. Diggert all I know.”
“You mean you answered some questions she asked. She had to phone you to ask them, didn’t she? You never complained that the girl hadn’t shown up, not until Mrs. Diggert phoned. Why not?”
“Because it wasn’t important.”
“You’re a businessman, Mr. Ryerson. Do you mean to say you don’t put in a complaint when a supplier fails to deliver?”
He expelled his breath and looked at me acidly. “You’re being absurd. This was after business hours. This had nothing to do with business.”
I threw out a random shot on a hunch. “Perhaps you weren’t even waiting at the motel. Perhaps you ordered the girl for one of your clients?”
His gaze was blank. “Perhaps.”
“Who was the client?”
“I said ‘perhaps.’ Mr. Puma, I’ve told you and Mrs. Diggert all I know. You’ll have to decide what to do with it.”
I said honestly, “It’s not our decision to make. If we feel that she is actually missing and not of her own free will, we will automatically have to go to the police.” I stood up. “That is no threat, believe me. I don’t and can’t exist in opposition to the Police Department.”
He said doubtfully, “Dora Diggert will never go running to the police. It would ruin her.”
“I doubt it. But it would ruin me if I were given a missing persons case and did not notify them of it eventually. If you want to ruin me, Mr. Ryerson, phone them and tell them what I just asked you.”
He stood up. “Sorry I couldn’t be of more help, Mr. Puma. Good day.”
“Good afternoon,” I said. “I hope I don’t have to come back.”
I went back down the hall and past the redhead in the reception room and out to my car. My next stop would be the motel, but I wasn’t thinking of that.
I was thinking that George Ryerson had made quite an issue of an apparently unimportant incident. What importance could there be in the fact that he had asked for a specific girl? Why had he denied it?
This was the first time he had used the services of Dora Diggert; so it was logical to assume he knew Jean through some other social medium. Had he met her recently or known her for a longer length of time?
Of course there was always the possibility that he was telling the truth and Mrs. Diggert was lying. One fact seemed certain; one of them was lying. A lie must have a reason and reasons are often revealing.
A third thought came to me. Perhaps George didn’t know Jean Talsman but his client did and George had ordered her by name for the client. Which could indicate that the girl wouldn’t have gone if she had known who the true customer was.
In these days of saturation taxation, C.P.A.’s get a variety of accounts and not all of them are socially respectable. The Internal Revenue boys had picked up too many hoodlums that the F.B.I. had failed on. It was smart for racketeers these days to hire the best accounting brains they could find.
But this was all speculation. Facts were my business.
• • •
At the Beverly Canyon Motel, I found the manager in his office. It was a luxury motel with an eighty foot pool, with a putting green and a first-rate restaurant attached. It was logical to expect that the manager of such a snooty spot would not be unduly cooperative with anything as plebian as a private investigator.
He lived up to the pattern. He wouldn’t even tell me if a George Reimers had rented a unit two evenings back. That was the name Ryerson was supposed to have used at the motel.
I said, “A woman who was supposed to have come here to meet Mr. Reimers is missing, sir. We’re not looking for scandal, only a missing woman.”
His eyebrows rose. “Scandal? Who mentioned scandal?”
“I did. The word shouldn’t be unfamiliar to a motel manager.”
He stared at me thoughtfully.
I said, “I’m here in lieu of the police. If I don’t find this girl, rest assured that the police will be your next visitors. I repeat, I’m not looking for trouble.”
He continued to stare at me for a few seconds. Then he picked up the phone on his desk. He asked for the clerk and told him, “A Mr. Puma would like to check our guest cards for night before last. He is on the way there now.”
He didn’t say any more to me, not even good-bye.
The desk clerk was an elderly man in a conservative suit but sporting a spectacular tie and a slight odor of lavender. He had the registration cards ready for me when I arrived at the desk.
George Reimers has been assigned to number 22-A. His signature didn’t look like the careful writing one would expect from a C.P.A.
I asked the clerk, “Do you remember the man?”
He nodded. “Fairly short man, but stocky.”
That description didn’t fit George Ryerson. I asked, “Thinning hair?”
“Oh, no. A full head of black hair.”
“Are you sure? How about his tailoring?”
“I’m sure. His tailoring was … well, I suppose it could be called expensive. But … rather, oh … George Raftish, if you know what I mean.”
“Did he have any visitors?”
He nodded immediately. “Ah, yes. A beautiful girl. They sat in the patio, of course. We don’t have visitors in the rooms unless—”
I interrupted him by taking out the picture of Jean Talsman. “Would you recognize the girl?” I put the portrait on the desk.
He held it up and looked at it for a few seconds. Then he said quietly, “That’s the girl. I’m certain of it.” “How long did she stay?”
The clerk frowned. “I don’t remember when she left.
Nor he. He didn’t have any luggage, so he paid in advance and we have no record of his check-out time.”
“Was there anything else about them you noticed?”
He looked at me skeptically. “Noticed …?”
“You remember them both so well I thought you might have given them a little—extra interest.”
“I remember a great number of our guests. But I don’t pry, Mr. Puma.”
“Nothing more you can tell me, then?”
“Nothing,” he said primly.
I thanked him and went into the bar off the lobby. I ordered a bottle of Eastern beer and put together what I had learned. Ryerson had lied. He’d lied twice.
He was not the man Jean Talsman was supposed to meet here, but the girl had come here to meet a man, a man registered under the name Ryerson was supposed to have used.
This could have happened: Ryerson arranged the meeting for one of his clients at the client’s request. The client had known Jean Talsman, but preferred to use a different name, for some reason. Jean had come here and met the man. And gone off with him? That I didn’t know.
But when Dora phoned Ryerson, he was on a spot. He didn’t know what had happened at the motel, so had tried to divorce himself from any involvement by claiming the girl had not fulfilled the date. For some reason, he couldn’t reveal the name of his client, and this flimsy lie had been his first response.
I phoned him from a booth in the bar.
The girl who answered the phone told me he had just left for lunch and she didn’t know when he would be back. I left my name.
I phoned Dora at her unlisted number and told her, “I’m at a temporary dead end.” I told her what I had learned.
“That miserable Ryerson,” she fumed. “I didn’t think he’d know what to do with a girl. I should have been suspicious when he phoned for one.”
“How did he happen to have your number, Dora?”
“He’s done some work for me, income tax work.”
“How about Jean’s friends?” I asked. “Is there any girl she’s particularly close to?”
“The girl she lives with. The address is on that paper I gave you. She and I aren’t friends so I don’t know whether she lied to me or not when I phoned about Jean.” “Is this girl home during the day?”
“Some days. She’s a model. Aren’t you going back to ask Ryerson why he lied?”
“He just left for lunch. I’ll get back at him as soon as possible. I don’t want to waste any time waiting.”
“Good boy, Puma. And keep my name out of it.”
I didn’t promise that. I could try to, but I couldn’t promise I’d be successful. I climbed into the Plymouth and drove over to San Vicente Boulevard. In an eight-unit apartment building there, built around a blue tile pool, I found the apartment of Jean Talsman.
And Mary Cefalu, the mailboxes in the lobby informed me. That would be a paisan, Mary Cefalu, and I hoped she would like me better than she did Dora.
• • •
She was a tall girl and thin. She had a thin face with brown eyes as big as Italian olives and a thin-lipped wide mouth. She probably wouldn’t qualify as pretty but she would attract all the truly masculine eyes within range. “My name is Puma,” I said.
She stood in the doorway of her apartment and looked at me without interest. “Is that supposed to mean something to me?”
“I guess not. I’m looking for Jean Talsman.”
“Why?”
“She’s missing. Do you know where she is?”
“I think I do. You’re not the police, are you? God knows, you’re big enough to be.”
“In a way, I’m a policeman,” I admitted, “though I’m licensed by the state.” I took out the photostat of my license.
She looked at it and said, “A private detective. Good day to you, sir.” She started to close the door.
“Wait!” I said sharply.
She stood there, the door half closed.
“I can come back with a policeman,” I explained, “and he’ll want to know what Jean was doing the night she disappeared. I’ll have to tell them all about the engagement she had. And you’ll make all the papers as her roommate. Now, Miss Cefalu, how much modeling work do you think you’ll get after that happens?”
Her chin lifted. She looked like nothing below a duchess. “Are you presuming to threaten me, Mr. Puma?”
“Believe me, paisan, I’m not. I’m leveling.”
“Dora Diggert sent you, didn’t she? You’re working for her.”
“At the moment. I’m in business for myself, not Mrs. Diggert.”
She stood in the doorway appraising me in indecision for seconds. Then she said quietly, “Come in.”
The apartment was furnished in wrought iron and glass and bright nubby fabrics. The dining area overlooked the pool.
Mary Cefalu closed the door behind me and stood there, still skeptical. Then she asked, “Where are you from?”
“Fresno, originally,” I answered. “Why?”
“You have that—peasant look. I’m from Tulare, myself.”
“And you have that princess look,” I said. “Well, that’s the way the mop flops.” I sighed.
She laughed and the room seemed warmer. She said, “I’ve just put some coffee on. Would you like a cup?”
“Thanks,” I said, and went over to sit at the wrought-iron and glass table in the dining area.
She was in the kitchenette, reaching up for a cookie jar, when she said, “Dora and I don’t get along. I blame Dora for what happened to Jean.”
“You know what happened to Jean?”
She turned to stare at me. And then her face lightened. “Oh, I meant what happened—you know, why Jean got into—that line of work.”
“I understand. Dora didn’t twist her arm, did she?”
“No. But she introduced Jean to some of those cowtown billionaires and Jean is entirely too vulnerable to that kind of living.”
“You mean she was used to living well?” “About as much as you and I are. But she had a brother who got involved with the Syndicate and he began to live high off the hog. She thought a lot of that brother.”
“And she went to work for Dora in rebellion?” Mary Cefalu paused in the act of putting some cookies on a plate. “Maybe. You know, I never thought of it that way, but it could be …”
She brought the cookies over. The electric percolator on the table was through perking and she poured us two cups of coffee.
“Cream?” she asked. “Sugar?”
“Neither, thank you,” I said. “You told me before that you thought you knew where Jean was. Has she been in touch with you?”
“Not directly. Her brother phoned.”
“Oh? And—”
“He was the man who was waiting for Jean at the Beverly Canyon Motel.” “God!” I said. “What’s the matter?”
“I was just thinking of how horrible that must have been. Imagine going to an assignation and discovering it’s your brother waiting for you.”
“He told me it was the only way he could get to talk with her. She hated him ever since he became a mobster. He thought the shame of her being discovered might make her listen to reason.”
“He told you this on the phone?”
Mary Cefalu nodded.
“Do you know him? Did you recognize his voice?”
She shook her head. “I never met him. Jean has told me about him. Why did you ask that?”
“Because it means you can’t be sure it was her brother who phoned. What did he tell you?”
“That he and Jean were going to Palm Springs for a couple of days.”
“And why couldn’t you have told Dora Diggert that when she called?”
Her thin face stiffened. “I wouldn’t tell Dora Diggert anything. I despise that woman!”
I sipped my coffee and ate a cookie. I said, “It’s phoney. If Miss Talsman was going to Palm Springs, she would have come home for some clothes, first. And she would have phoned you.”
“She did come home for some clothes,” Mary said. “That same night. I was out.”
“In that case,” I said, “this seems like a voluntary disappearance.” I waited for her to look at me. “Do you think it is?”
She nodded, looking at me doubtfully. “If I didn’t, I would have gone to the police yesterday.”
The phone rang and she went to answer it. It was for me.
It was Dora Diggert. “That redhead from Ryerson’s office just phoned me. You told her I’d sent you over there, didn’t you?”
“That’s right. I thought it would help to get me in to see Ryerson if I used your name.”
“Well, the girl says she didn’t tell the police you were sent by me. But she did tell them you talked with George this morning.”
“The police—? What are they bothering her about?”
“Because George was just found dead, that’s why. He was murdered.”