Read Jitterbug Online

Authors: Loren D. Estleman

Tags: #Historical, #Detroit (Mich.) - Fiction, #Detective and Mystery Stories, #Police, #Historical Fiction, #World War; 1939-1945, #Michigan, #Detroit, #Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Police - Michigan - Detroit - Fiction, #World War; 1939-1945 - Michigan - Detroit - Fiction, #Detroit (Mich.), #General

Jitterbug (24 page)

Burke, who cleaned and maintained the car, swore and smacked the steering knob with the heel of his hand. “Why don’t they drive trucks? Even the dairy companies are selling their nags for glue.”

“Why make the investment?” Canal asked. “Everybody’s getting Frigidaires come peacetime.”

“Not me. Katy can go on dumping out the pan. That’s five minutes she’s not busting my balls ’cause I’m not commissioner.”

“You tell her it’s because you signed your last sergeant’s exam with an X?”

Zagreb stepped down onto the sidewalk. “You boys stay here and duke it out. Baldy and I are going in with Rembrandt.” He tipped his head toward the lanky plainclothesman unfolding his articulated legs from the backseat. He was carrying a flat tin of charcoals and a sketch pad the size of a billboard.

Canal said, “Burke and me ain’t good enough for Redford?”

“You guessed it, Starv,” McReary said. “I can’t figure out why everybody calls you a dumb Polack.”

“Me neither. My grandfather wiped Polack off his saber every Sunday.”

Zagreb slammed the door and leaned on the sill. “This is a girl who still lives with her mother. I don’t want to scare her off by coming in with a pair of gorillas.”

“Go ahead. Me and Canal’ll sit here and pick fleas off our backs.” Burke popped the glove compartment and took out a flat pint of Bushmill’s. Suddenly he grinned at the back of the ice wagon. “Hey, we can have this panther piss on the rocks.”

The three men who had gotten out started up the stoop of the little brick house. The sketch artist asked Zagreb if his men always did their drinking right out on the street.

“Just since we confiscated six cases from a market operation on Watson.” He grinned. “You want to join the Racket Squad, Officer?”

The man shook his head gravely. “I’m M.R.A.”

“I thought the Supreme Court threw that out,” McReary said.

Zagreb was still grinning. “Not NRA.
M
.R.A. Moral Rearmament. You know, keep Mae West off the screen.”

“That’s the Catholic Church,” said the artist. “We’re more serious. We started the national defense movement in 1939. People make fun of us, but if we got started ten years sooner, we wouldn’t have this mess in Europe.”

McReary said, “Don’t forget Japan.”

“The Japs were a lost cause from the start. Did you know there’s no word for morality in any of the Oriental languages?”

“Did you know Lana Turner spelled backwards is Anal Renrut?”

“Okay, cut it out. Time to serve and protect.” The lieutenant knocked on the door.

It was opened almost immediately by a stocky young man in a Detroit police uniform. Zagreb introduced him as Officer Bertriel, who filled them in from the contents of his pocket notebook and led them into the living room. The lieutenant shook hands with Mrs. Dooley, a tiny woman in her early fifties with finger-waved hair washed in a silver-blue rinse, seated in an armchair in a gray dress closed at the throat with a small emerald clasp. Cathleen, her daughter, was sitting on the end of the davenport. She was larger than her mother and dark-haired, wearing a white blouse and gray calf-length skirt, strap sandals on her bare feet, and leg makeup to simulate nylons. She nodded at each of the three newcomers, but kept her hands folded in her lap. She looked pale.

The living room was almost antiseptically clean. Seating himself, Zagreb suspected the plastic slipcovers had just been removed from the upholstered furniture. A fifteen-year-old radio stood in a corner on spindled legs under a beaded scarf and a bowl of wax fruit. On the wall above the armchairs hung a large plaster crucifix across from one of those trick pictures of Christ whose eyes were open or closed depending on the angle one looked at it. McReary, the son of Protestant parents who hadn’t seen the inside of a church since he was ten, got up from his armchair and sat on the end of the davenport opposite Cathleen Dooley so he couldn’t see it. It
was
sort of spooky. A jumble of family pictures in silver frames crowded the mantel of the imitation fireplace, and a low Chippendale-style tea table displayed copies of
Collier’s
,
Life
, and
The Michigan Catholic.

“I told the policeman I don’t think that young man killed anyone,” Cathleen Dooley said. “He was a soldier.”

“Not a sailor,” Zagreb prompted.

“No. They wear white caps and those cute bell-bottoms. He had on a cap with a shiny visor and a cape.”

“Cape?”

“One of those waterproof things, rubber or something. It was raining, or it had been. The street was wet when I went outside.”

“Was he carrying a briefcase?”

“No.”

“No he wasn’t or no you didn’t see one?”

She frowned, concentrating. She wore bright red lipstick, and it exaggerated both the expression and her pale coloring. “I suppose he might have had something under his cape. But he was too good-looking to kill anyone. Killers are small and ugly, like Peter Lorre.”

“We’ll get to that. What color was his uniform?”

“Brown.”

“Brown like army?”

“I think so. I don’t know.”

“Officer? Enlisted man? Did you see any gold?”

“I don’t know.”

“The slicker would’ve covered his insignia.” McReary sounded smitten. He admired large-boned women with slim ankles.

“Tall or short?”

“Oh, tall.”

“Very tall?”

“Very. Not like a giant, I don’t mean that. Just nice and tall.”

“How tall are you, Cathleen?” Zagreb asked.

She hesitated. “Five-six.”

“Tell the truth, dear.” Mrs. Dooley looked at the lieutenant. “She’s five-eight. Her father was six feet five. He laid the bricks for this house without help. I keep telling her she should be proud of her height. It’s no picnic going through life having to ask strangers to take things down from shelves.”

Zagreb kept his attention on the girl. “How much taller was he than you?”

“I don’t know.”

Shit. “If he didn’t do it, that will come out. We just want to talk to him. He might have seen something.”

“I wasn’t being stubborn. I couldn’t tell how much taller he was because I was looking down at him. I was on a stepladder. I was putting up a curtain display.”

“Then how do you know he was tall?”

“He looked tall. He was very slim and everything was in—proportion.” Her cheeks showed color for the first time. She looked down at her hands. “He said he was getting married next month.”

Zagreb was glad he’d left Burke and Canal in the car. Canal would have broken something by now.

“Cathleen, this is Officer Gleason. He’s a police artist. You can help him draw a picture of the man you saw.”

“Really? Just like on
Gangbusters
?”

“Just like that, only less noisy. But you have to give him a description. Don’t just say he was good-looking. Some women probably think Peter Lorre’s good-looking.”


Blind
women,” McReary said.

“Shut up. I mean quiet. Cathleen?”

The lanky artist pulled up an ottoman and sat down, bracing the open pad against his raised knees. He placed a squat piece of charcoal against the paper.

“He looked like a movie star.”

“Cathleen!”

She looked at Zagreb. Her lips made a defiant red line, like a Kilroy cut. “I mean a
specific
movie star. I just can’t think of his name.” She turned. “Ma, you remember.
Billy the Kid.
We saw it last summer.”

“I can’t help you, child. All the actors look alike to me since Valentino died. I cried for a week.”

“Robert Taylor.”

They all looked at Officer Bertriel standing next to the blinking Christ.

“I like Westerns,” he said.

Cathleen Dooley went up to her room and came back with an armload of copies of
Photoplay
and
Screen World.
She and Zagreb and McReary and Bertriel went through them while Mrs. Dooley went to the kitchen to put on a pot of coffee. It was McReary who came up with a picture of Robert Taylor in uniform, smoking a cigarette on the set of
Waterloo Bridge.
Cathleen shrieked when she saw it.

“That’s him!” Then her forehead wrinkled. “You don’t suppose it really was him?”

McReary, whose miswired scowl said he was pleased with himself for finding the shot, said he’d be sure and get her an autograph at the booking.

The page was torn out and Gleason, the artist, clipped it to the top of his pad with a borrowed hairpin. Cathleen, swept up into the hunt, stood behind him. Together they put a visored cap on Taylor’s sleek head, lightened the hair at his temples, and increased the space between his eyes. After Gleason had erased and drawn the chin along slightly weaker lines she pronounced it a fair likeness.

Back in the car, Zagreb passed the sheet over the seat for Burke and Canal to admire.

“Wait a minute.” Canal sat up straight. “I seen this guy somewhere.”

“See
Bataan
?” Zagreb asked.

“Holy shit.”

Burke grinned. “This mean we get a trip to Hollywood?”

McReary said, “Forget it. Those gunboats of yours won’t fit inside King Kong’s footprints at Grauman’s.”

They dropped Gleason off at 1300. Zagreb told Burke to drive on.

“Where to?”

“Go up Jefferson. Maybe we can catch a breeze off the river.”

“Ain’t we going to get copies made?’ Burke asked.

Zagreb said, “Let’s talk about that.”

“What’s to talk about? We got the asshole’s picture.”

“Put yourself in the asshole’s place.”’

McReary said, “That’s a stretch.”

“Shut the fuck up. That horse isn’t around now. You can stop trying to impress her.”

“You’re talking about the woman I love.”

“You’re Kilroy,” Zagreb told Burke. “You get back home tonight from a good day’s slashing, pick up your milk and the
News
, open the paper, and there’s your kisser on the front page. What do you do?”

“You mean after I shit a brick?” Burke waited for the light to change at Jefferson. “Go underground.”

“Anybody would, and ordinarily that’d be good enough for me. That was before this fucker took his act to fucking Hudson’s downtown. That’s like sticking it up our ass and breaking it off. I want him walking around where we can get at him. I want a name and address to go with his picture. I want to pull him out of his house and throw him down on the sidewalk on his face and stand on his neck and yank his wrists behind him and hook the cuffs on and make ’em bite. That won’t happen if we put him in tonight’s early edition.”

“Sounds personal.”

“You’re goddamn right it’s personal. First time I’ve felt like this since December ’41.”

Canal uncovered his teeth, but it only made him look wolfish. “You felt that way, how come you ain’t out busting Japs?”

“Roberta and I were together then. I thought I was needed at home.” Zagreb watched the scenery roll past. “Nobody needs me now.”

They were passing the sprawling Stroh’s brewery, chimneys pouring charcoal smoke into the sky to rival the coke ovens at Rouge. Canal cranked his window down the rest of the way to smell the river, or maybe the hops. “You’re counting plenty on those fingerprints being on file. Even then it’ll take time. Meanwhile all we got is his briefcase and bayonet scabbard. He’s still got the part that cuts.”

“We’ll hoof his picture around the recruiting centers like I said. Then if the FBI craps out too we’ll go public.”

McReary groaned. “Drop me off at Woolworth’s. I’m out of Dr. Scholl’s.”

Burke said, “If he slices up another old lady and it gets out we had his picture and didn’t circulate it, Witherspoon will see us off on the next troop ship to the Aleutians. Be jitterbugging with polar bears come Christmas.”

They drove along with this vision past the Belle Isle bridge, already shuddering under the weight of cars. In a rationed economy the island offered the only escape from the dead-hammer heat of the city.

Canal broke the silence. “Trouble is we ain’t got the manpower. Department’s got more holes in it than the Maginot Line. Three days ain’t what it was before Pearl.”

“I’ve got an idea where we can find recruits,” Zagreb said.

chapter twenty-seven

G
IDGY KEPT HIS CAR
spotless from habit, but when he got the call from Frankie Orr’s receptionist—English white woman, could talk with a cock in her mouth and make it sound like caviar—he drove it out of the garage on Hastings where he paid an exorbitant fee to the Greek who owned the place to keep it safe from thieves, vandals, and pigeon shit and washed it again in the vacant truck bay of a place he owned a piece of on the East Side. He used a clean bucket and bubble bath, then two coats of Johnson’s Wax, eradicating smudges from the whitewalls with white shoe polish.

The car was a 1939 Auburn, bottle green with black fenders and running boards, side-mounted spare, and exhaust pipes exposed like plates of ribs on both sides of the hood. He’d taken over the title from a bookie on Fourteenth who didn’t have any use for it on the bottom of Lake Erie with a Chevrolet short block tied around his neck. Gidgy had replaced the garish custom leopard skin upholstery with full-grain black leather, chromed the pipes, and tied a little suede pouch to the gearshift containing the wing bones of an African eagle, his family legacy, smuggled across the Atlantic in a slave ship in the rectum of his great-great-grandfather, the second most powerful witch doctor in his village. The
most
powerful witch doctor had spiked his broth with toadstools and sold him to white traders while he was insensible.

That was the legend among the Gitchfields, in any case. Gidgy suspected the old man was a dock laborer who had gotten drunk and fallen into the hold, and that the bones belonged to a chicken that had perished no earlier than 1900, and no farther east than a kitchen in Baltimore. But when your family tree was kindling you snatched at twigs. The pouch had gone with him every place he’d lived since he was fifteen.

He took Mack to Cadieux, wanting to let the twelve cylinders speak their piece but not daring to. It wasn’t the gasoline; he had twelve forty-gallon drums sitting in a private garage on Michigan. He didn’t want to call attention to a colored man driving a nice car through neighborhoods so white they hurt his eyes. He didn’t admire the houses as they got bigger nor the lawns as they turned a bluer shade of green. That would be like a Jew from the Warsaw Ghetto admiring Goering’s garden.

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