“I don’t know. My food doesn’t taste right though. Hell of a note.” He sighed heavily. “Be seeing ya.”
Larry got out of the car and watched him drive away.
Chapter VII
He was looking for a match when he found it. He was still standing at the corner of Canal and Madison, an unlighted cigarette in his lips when he found the match folder on which the dice girl had scribbled her phone number.
He stared at it for a moment, trying to assimilate all the things it meant. First, he wasn’t crazy. Second, he had been in the
And both Tonelli and the bartender had lied about it. They were trying to convince him he had been drunk. And they had both known he wasn’t. Why? That was a big why.
He turned into a drugstore. He knew a number, maintained by the telephone company for the use of its maintenance crews which would give the street address of any listed telephone number.
He dialed it, gave the operator the dice girl’s telephone number and in a few seconds she gave him the address of the phone. It was on the North side, near Wilson avenue. He thanked her and hung up.
He went outside and looked for a cab. He felt a queer feeling of excitement. He felt he had finally succeeded in clutching one of the ravelled ends of this mystery.
Where it led he had no idea. But it was something. The shadows were taking form. Soon there might be something tangible in his hands.
A cab stopped and he climbed in and gave the driver the address on the North side. His hands were shaking as he lit a cigarette...
The house was a six-flat, brownstone front, with bay windows and an incongruously ornate canopy leading from the curb to the doorway. A flight of worn steps led to the double glass doors.
He paid the driver and went up the steps. It was ten thirty by his wrist watch.
The lobby had a vaguely dirty smell. There were a few overstuffed chairs, a phony marble fireplace and a worn wooden floor needed a good a good scrubbing.
The desk clerk was a tired old man with white hair, and over worked adam’s apple and rheumy blue eyes.
“I want to see Corinne,” Larry said.
The old man looked at him. “Corinne who?”
“How the hell do I know,” Larry said. “She gave me her phone number and address. I don’t need her last name. I’m not going to introduce her to anybody.”
The old man grinned crookedly. “Corinne ain’t as bad as some of them. But you guys are all the same. A dame is just something to kick around, treat like dirt. You wouldn’t do it to your wives ’cause you’re scared. That’s why you chase these tramps around. But Corinne ain’t no tramp. Her room is three ten. If she gave you her number it’s because she likes you.”
“Thanks,” Larry said.
He crossed the lobby to the self-service elevator and went up to the third floor. Three ten was three doors from the elevator.
He knocked and waited. A moment later he heard light footsteps and then the door opened.
She didn’t recognize him at first. When she did she tried to slam the door. But he got his foot in the way.
“I want to talk to you, Corinne,” he said.
“I got nothing to say,” she said. She was panting and her face looked pinched and scared. “You’re poison. Get out of here and let me alone.”
He pushed the door open, stepped in and swung it shut behind him. She backed away from him, her eyes wide with terror.
“Get out of here!” she whispered.
“Not until we talk a little,” he said.
The room was shabbily furnished. There were a few chairs with worn upholstery, a day bed with a red quilt thrown over it, and a dusty gray rug. A lamp was on above the day bed and there was an open magazine on the floor.
He sat on one of the chairs and pulled out his cigarettes. He offered her the pack and she refused with a jerk of her head. She was wearing a faded blue silk house coat and blue slippers. Her dark hair was drawn into a bun at the nape of her neck and her skin, without make-up, was white and drawn.
“I’m sorry I barged in,” he said. “But I’ve got to talk to you. I want to know who that girl was I met in the
“You saw Tonelli?” her voice was still a whisper.
“Just left him,” Larry said. “He claims you never worked there.”
“You fool! You simple fool! What are you sticking your neck out for? You’re out of it now. Stay out of it. Get out of here and forget you ever saw me.”
She spoke in a tense, frightened voice that was close to the breaking point of hysteria.
“I can’t,” Larry said. “That girl I met in the
The girl sat down on the day bed as if her legs had lost their strength. She stared dully at him. “Murdered? Velma dead?”
“Her name was Velma?”
“Yes.” She answered like a person in a daze. “Velma Dare.”
“Who was she?”
Corinne stood up suddenly. “Get out of here!” she screamed suddenly. “You’re dragging me into this too. I didn’t know what it was. You’re poison.”