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Subject: {ASSM} Rough Cut: Chap 8 by Desdmona (Hard-Boiled Mystery)
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Date: Sat, 28 Feb 2004 14:10:04 -0500
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The following story contains scenes that may be offensive to some. Read at
your own peril.
The year is 1940. Tailing Kitty Winslow was supposed to be an easy gig.
Cincinnati dick Moe Gafferson finds out that nothing is ever easy.
*******************************************************************
Rough Cut - A Moe Gafferson Mystery
Written by Desdmona
Edited by Poison Ivan
Chapter 8
Moe thanked the bourbon. Why else would Mona still be in his bed when he woke
up the next morning? He did a Houdini to get out of the tangle of arms and
legs. Mona just grunted and rolled over on her stomach. Moe stood and stared.
There ought to be a law against dames looking like Mona did in the morning -
fire hair flaming across Moe's pillow, gams stretched long and bare with a sheet
that forgot to cover her naked ass. How could a man keep his mind on a daily
grind if he had to leave a portrait like that? He should wake her, say, -Good
Morning, - or turn her over and make love to her. But instead he crept around
the joint like a thief, hunting for pants and a shirt, and staring at her
sleeping in his bed, all milk and honey and fire.
When he finally tiptoed into the front room, the bourbon was still sitting on
his desk. He considered tossing back the shot Mona hadn't finished, but a cup
of hot brew seemed like a better idea. He walked out the front door wondering
if Mona would still be there when he got back. He considered leaving a note,
but Moe wasn't much of a writer. He'd give her a buzz later on the telephone.
A quick stop at the local diner and Moe was gnawing toast and sipping java.
The dry bread and steaming black coffee did nothing to wash away the sweet
image of a naked Mona. Her pleadings from the night before - "do, Moe, do" -
muzzied up his brain and threatened to stir the fire Moe was failing to bank.
It was hard driving around the block to get breakfast. It was even harder
driving clear across town to attend to business. By the time he pulled into Dutch
and Kitty Winslow's gated driveway, Moe was still thinking about the curve of
the nurse's back. He should've kissed that dimpled spot right above her ass.
He shook his head and forced himself to study the mansion laid out in front
of him.
Men like Dutch and Moe didn't spin in the same social circles. Dutch and Moe
maintained a relationship that depended on a place like Flamingo's. Moe was
more comfortable in a joint where a man could get lost in a sea of faces
bellying up to a bar. Dutch had never invited Moe to his home, and Moe had never
thought to come. Houses this big required too many people to keep it clean, and
Moe didn't like worrying about dirt on his shoes.
The gate was electronic - a brassy contraption that had Moe pushing a red
button. A couple of seconds later, the gate snuck open. Moe followed the paved
driveway around a fountain and stopped at the front of the house. The massive
oak door yawned, and a greeter in a monkey suit ushered Moe into the foyer
before Moe could finish straightening his tie. White gardenias, arranged in a
Tiffany vase, donned an entryway table, but the smell of Johnson Wax was the
strongest scent in the space. An entire forest had lost its life in order to
decorate the inside of the Winslow mansion. Solid oak lined the paneled walls and the
massive winding staircase.
"Mrs. Winslow requests that you wait for her in the library."
Moe followed the working stiff into a small room where leather-bound books
lined the walls from the Persian rugs all the way up to the Italian crown
molding. The wood shelves gleamed to such a high polish, a man could shave his face
in the reflection. A couple of Chesterfield chairs sat on either side of a
marbled fireplace. Moe ran an eye over the reading material. Perfectly spined
books such as Kipling's _Captain Courageous_, Dickens's _Great Expectations_,
and Stevenson's _Kidnapped_ packed the shelves. Pristine editions of old
classics. The room smelled more new than used.
"Do you read, Mr. Gafferson?"
Moe swung around to see Kitty Winslow leaning against the doorjamb, her satin
dressing gown flowing off her hips like syrup. Most dames saved their glamour
for nighttime. Apparently, Kitty liked starting the day off with it. Around
her neck she wore oyster fruit and on her feet, clicking slip-on heels with
powder puffs the same pink color as the gown.
"Me, read?" Moe nodded toward the shelves. "Nothing like these books. Not
since the nuns insisted on it. Give me a five cent blab sheet. They're more my
speed."
"Dutch insisted we have a library." Kitty paused, gazing off in the distance
before adding, "Dutch insists on a lot of things."
"Where is Mr. Winslow?" Moe hoped to find Dutch home too. It was one of the
reasons he was up and visiting before noon. The idea of working for Kitty
without Dutch knowing gave Moe a sick feeling in his belly. A man's got to be
careful how he treats his friends. Maybe there was a chance the three of them
could get on the same page.
"Dutch has already gone to Flamingo's."
"Too bad. I wouldn't have minded making this a threesome this morning."
Kitty batted her eyelashes and forced a smile, but it wasn't heartfelt. "I
haven't told him I've hired you."
"I figured as much."
"He's still deciding on whether to forgive me."
"Hiring me behind his back might sway his decision in a way you're not ready
for."
"That's a chance I have to take," she sighed.
"Why?"
"You know why, Mr. Gafferson. I loved Peter."
The smell of this conversation was too glossy for Moe's tastes. Kitty lived
in a make-believe world, all pretty and gussied up, but underneath it all she
was getting no use - like a library with brand new books and no fingerprints.
Kitty needed some black and white reality.
"Mrs. Winslow, Peter Schmidt wasn't on the up and up."
Kitty made her way to one of the Chesterfields, gripping its back like a
handrail and following it to its front.. "Don't say that," she whimpered. Leather
crunched as she slumped into the seat. "You didn't know him like I did." She
bowed her head and closed her eyes. Moe half-expected a crying jag, but when
she straightened, her face was pale and without tears. "Do you know this for
sure?"
"It's more than a hunch."
Somewhere deep, Kitty must have suspected what kind of man Schmidt was, she
was just hoping for a different sketch. "It seems I don't have much intuition
when it comes to men, Mr. Gafferson."
Moe looked around the room. The smell of quality leather and high-polished
wood was eclipsed only by the smell of money. He leaned back against the
bookshelf and crossed his arms. "I don't know, Mrs. Winslow. You're not slumming as
far as I can tell."
"Wealth can't replace feeling, Moe."
"Maybe not, but most folks wouldn't mind testing the theory."
Kitty stared hard at Moe. "You think I'm ungrateful for what Dutch has given
me."
"I don't spend my time moralizing about husbands and wives, Mrs. Winslow. I'
d be out of a job if they all got along."
Kitty stood and swished her way over to where Moe leaned against the
bookshelf. She ran a delicate, well-manicured finger along the spine of _Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales_.
"And what _have_ you been spending your time doing?"
"Tracking down the German thug that knifed me."
"What does he have to do with Peter?"
"Still connecting the dots, babe. But I'd give ten-to-one odds he's also the
one who killed your precious lover boy."
Kitty focused her face toward Moe, her obsidian eyes squinting. "German? Does
this German thug have a name?"
Moe dug through the change in his pocket and found his lucky shell casing.
Fiddling the warm edges of the metal helped him think. The idea of a lovesick
woman out for revenge bumping noses with a no-account hood like Metzger didn't
sit well. Moe decided to play it safe. The client didn't have to know
everything, especially if the insight would just get her into trouble. "Nobody you
know, doll. He's just the dirty front man."
"But why kill Peter?"
"I don't know. Maybe Peter was a double-crosser."
"I don't believe that." Kitty still clung to her fairy tale romance with
Prince Charming. Schmidt's death only added to the drama. Moe could understand.
No one liked being taken for a sucker.
"There's some things I wanted to go over with you again, Mrs. Winslow. Do
you mind?"
"I've told you everything I know."
"Could be, but a thing or two isn't panning out like it should. For
instance, Chang's isn't in business any more."
"The laundry? That's impossible. I was just there a week ago."
"Maybe we could sit down for a bit?"
Kitty didn't have much more information to offer. Chang's seemed like every
Chinese laundry she had ever been in. An elderly Chinaman had taken the
bundles of clothes and given her a ticket.
Moe asked Kitty to let him see the things that Schmidt had given her. The
only thing she could show him was the gold necklace hiding beneath the white
marbles around her neck. Moe studied it, but it was just a simple chain.
"What about the other stuff?"
"Dutch took it. He stormed into my dressing area a few days after Peter was
killed and demanded I give him anything that Peter had given me."
"How is it you still have the necklace?"
Kitty rolled the gold chain between her thumb and forefinger. "Dutch was only
after clothes."
"What do you mean?"
"He specifically said to hand over anything Peter had given me to wear. I
gave him the mink stole and the new dress." Kitty's eyes glossed over and a
raindrop-sized tear spilled out.
"What did he do with the duds?"
"I don't know."
"Does Dutch usually keep that close an eye on your wardrobe?"
"Never." She looked up at him accusingly. "I figured you had told him about
the things Peter had given me."
"He didn't hear about them from me, doll."
* * *
Back in his car, Moe took a deep breath. The door stuck on the old Buick, the
AM radio only worked a fourth of the time, and the floorboards had enough
dirt to build a mud pie, but Moe relaxed. His mess was comfortable and real. The
high gloss of the Winslow mansion could blind a man.
He tapped out a cigarette and waited for the lighter to heat up. The more he
talked to Kitty, the less he figured her for a dame with an agenda. She wore
the signs of grief as flamboyantly as she wore her satin. On the other hand,
there was Dutch. Why would he care about the flashy duds Schmidt gave to Kitty?
Jealousy didn't fit. Dutch had already spelled out his feelings for Kitty: she
was his and love had nothing to do with it.
Moe inhaled a couple of deep drags off his cigarette and shifted the car into
first. It was time for a visit to the swanky dress shop. It was a cinch
Maxwell Singer wouldn't bust a gut to talk, but the Lois broad had given Mona an
earful. He hoped she wasn't done chatting.
Moe wanted to get a feel for the crowd before going in the upscale dress
shop. He parked his Buick catty-cornered from Singer's and made friends with a
lamppost. The place was relatively quiet. Two gals had entered in the time Moe
was keeping an eye out. One of them had already left. When the door opened the
second time, he expected to see the other broad making her exit. Instead a
short, fat man with a monocle, fitting Mona's description of Maxwell Singer,
toddled out. He lifted a pudgy hand into the air and a dark blue sedan eased in
front of the store. The fat man rolled into the backseat, and the late model
Packard sped away. Paydirt! Suddenly, Moe liked his chances with gabby Lois. With
the fat cat away, the mouse could play.
Moe flicked his cigarette and tightened his tie. He hadn't been in a lady's
dress shop since he was a kid, holding his mom's hand and blushing at the
undergarments. A man could get a rash from all the fancy threads. A tiny bell
tinkled when Moe opened the glass door.
Luckily, there were only two palominos in the place, and it was easy to tell
which one was Lois. She was the one down on her knees, pinning up a hem for
the society dame preening in the mirrors. The kneeling seamstress glanced up at
Moe and gave him a quick smile.
"Could you excuse me for a moment, Mrs. Tudor?"
"I don't have all day, young lady."
"Yes, ma'am. I'll just be a minute."
Moe dithered a silk nightie and tried to shake the image of his mother
wearing something so frilly. The sales clerk made her way over to Moe. With straight
pins stuck between her lips, she showed miraculous verbal dexterity in
talking around them.
"May I help you sir?"
"Aren't you afraid you'll swallow those?" Moe asked, pointing to the
straight pins.
She sneaked a peek at the society dame and then peeled the pins from her
lips. "Are you looking for something special for a lady friend?"
"You could say that. Are you Lois?"
"Why, yes, yes I am. What can I do for you?"
Lois couldn't have been more than nineteen. Probably been working since she
was sixteen, supplementing some middlebrow family somewhere, maybe helping to
pay her college fees.
"Young woman," the old biddy bellowed. "I don't have time for you to
dilly-dally."
The society dame was the type who knew the world revolved around her. Moe
could feel the breeze coming off her shoulder all the way across the room. "How
long before you finish with the largemouth bass over there?"
Lois smiled, showing off pink apple cheeks. Moe figured he'd just found
himself a co-conspirator.
"Five minutes." She cupped her hand and whispered, "Four if she holds still."
It took eight minutes before the battleaxe was dressed and gone, leaving just
Moe and Lois in the shop.
"Thank you for waiting."
"How'd you keep from sticking those pins of yours in her legs?"
Lois giggled, the kind of giggle only young girls get away with. "Mrs. Tudor
really isn't so bad. She has a wedding to attend in two weeks, and she always
gets testy when her order isn't at least three weeks ahead of schedule. Now
what can I help you with?"
Moe might have tried to butter Lois up, but too much time was ticking off the
clock. Maxwell Singer could come waltzing back any minute. So he went
straight to the guts of his visit.
"A friend of mine was in here a few days ago asking about a black dress. She
was tall, about five-eight, red hair?"
"Yes, I remember her. She was a size six. Are you looking to buy her
something?"
The thought of buying something for Mona hadn't entered Moe's mind, but
thinking of her in one of the frillies this place offered was a lot sweeter than
thinking of his mother.
"Sure. That white number over there." Moe pointed to the nightie he'd been
fingering earlier.
"She'll look beautiful."
Mona Dale couldn't help looking beautiful, nightie or no nightie. Moe
deliberately pushed the image of her lying naked in his bed from his mind and
directed the conversation down the main route.
"But what about that black number with the strapless back?"
Lois's eyes darted around as if the walls were watching and listening. "I
wouldn't know. Mr. Singer took care of that."
"Sure, but you know what goes on around here as much as he does. I bet he
wouldn't have remembered my friend was a size six."
Lois smiled her young girl smile again. "No, he wouldn't have remembered. He
never remembers things like that."
"Good thing he has you around."
It was easy to see the look of self-importance that blossomed on Lois's face.
Moe knew how to take advantage.
"My friend told me she asked Mr. Singer about the dress, but he didn't know
anything. She said _you_ knew everything that went on in this store." Moe said.
"Mr. Singer was lying. There's no way he would forget about that dress. He
fretted over it for days after that creepy man came to visit the second time."
"This creepy man, my friend said his name was Rolf?"
"Yes, that's him. He gave me the heebie-jeebies."
"So Rolf was here twice?"
"Yes. Mr. Singer was very nervous. He made me go to lunch at ten thirty in
the morning when that Rolf man came in the second time. Can you imagine?" She
looked up at Moe with clear blue eyes the color of cornflowers. "I'd just had
breakfast at eight."
"So this Rolf wanted a dress or two. What was so different?"
"Well, Mr. Singer didn't want me to sew them. I've been the seamstress here
for a long time." Lois beamed. "And my mother was the seamstress before me.
All Mr. Singer does any more is the books."
"But he took a personal interest in this dress," Moe observed. "If Singer
was doing the sewing, how'd you see the dresses?"
Lois nodded. "Mr. Singer knows how to sew, but he doesn't know anything
about the haute couture patterns. I had to show him what to do. And when the
dresses were picked up, the ladies tried them on and modeled them over there in
front of the mirrors, just like Mrs. Tudor was doing a minute ago."
"You said ladies. So it wasn't the same dame who picked up both dresses?"
"No. This last time it was a Mrs. Winslow. She's a size six, just like your
friend. The first time it was a blond - a size four."
"But both times this Rolf character had placed the order?"
Lois nodded again, her sandy blond curls bobbing up and down with the
movement of her head.
"Has Rolf been in the shop any other time?"
"Not while I was here. Thank goodness."
"How about the first dame, you got a name?"
Lois scratched her forehead, looking thoughtful. "She had a very unusual
name. It was ... Danja, yes, that's it. Such an interesting name, don't you think?
"
"Danja? Did she have a last name?"
"I don't remember. It was several months ago. She was pretty. Though I
thought the black dress looked too severe on her. She needed a different fabric."
Lois's pencil-thin brows knitted together. "Oh, but I could look up her name."
"You're a peach, Lois."
She sifted through a small file with the nimbleness of someone used to
working fast with her hands.
"By the way, Lois, has Mr. Winslow ever come into the shop?"
She kept her gaze on the card file as she spoke. "You mean Mrs. Winslow's
husband?"
"Yeah."
"No, not that I've ever known." She pulled out a card from the box. "Here
it is," she said.
Another society dame came into the shop, and Lois smiled at her in
recognition. Luckily for Moe, Lois was a people pleaser. She hurriedly wrote the name
and address on another card and handed it to Moe before excusing herself to help
the new arrival.
Moe was across the street and heading back to his Buick before he realized he'
d forgotten to get the nightie for Mona. Another time, maybe. In the car, he
studied the card Lois had jotted the information on. Danja was a Miss Danja
Bittners. And yes, it was an interesting name. But it wasn't the name that
caught Moe's attention. It was the address. Moe had been at that address once
before, exactly one week ago. And Moe's blood probably still stained the pavement
of its backside walkway.
To be continued...
******************************************************
This story was originally posted and illustrated at
http://www.ruthiesclub.com.
My eternal gratitude goes to Alexey for bringing Moe to life.
--
Pursuant to the Berne Convention, this work is copyright with all rights
reserved by its author unless explicitly indicated.
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