Read Live Girls Online

Authors: Ray Garton

Tags: #Stripteasers, #Vampires, #Horror, #General, #Erotic stories, #Fiction, #Horror tales

Live Girls (21 page)

“We're not in right now,” the man's recorded voice droned, “but if you'll leave a message, we'll get back to you. Thanks."

After the beep, Casey said, “This is Casey Thorne. Davey's friend. Davey Owen. You left your number. He said your wife is a doctor and I think ... Davey's very sick and I think he's in trouble. Big trouble. He needs help. I left him just a few minutes ago. Um, right now it's...” She looked at her watch and started to say “seven twenty-two,” but the machine cut itself off and a dial tone hummed coldly in her ear. She slammed the receiver down and pushed out of the booth. She had to do
something
, but she was not certain
what
.

After several seconds of thought, Casey hurried to a corner to catch a bus to Times Square.

 

 

11

____________________________

W
ITH HIS MOUTH DRY AS A DESERT ROCK,
B
ENEDEK
stared at the closed door for a long time. The blond waitress walked before him on her way to another table.

“Miss,” he said.

She spun around and approached him, smiling.

Taking a quick sip of his drink, Benedek stood and said, “Where's the rest room?"

She pointed a finger and said, “Right back there, sir."

To the left of the entrance, Benedek saw a door with a small sign above that read, in blue neon letters, RESTROOMS.

Resisting the urge to break into a run, Benedek walked across the room and went through the door. On the other side was a softly lit corridor; the ladies’ room was to the left, the men's to the right. At the end of the corridor was a door. There was no sign, not even a NO ADMITTANCE or EMPLOYEES ONLY.

Moving quickly, Benedek fished a small leather pouch from his breast pocket. He took out two thin, flexible pieces of metal

lock picks

and replaced the pouch. The picks had been given to him twelve years before by his friend Grover Dumont on the occasion of Dumont's retirement from the police force.

“I've used these puppies plenty of times in the pursuit of justice,” Dumont had told him with the twinkle of experience in his eye. “Maybe you can use ‘em in the pursuit of truth, huh?"

Taking a cautious look over his shoulder, Benedek tried the knob. Finding it locked, as he'd expected, he slipped the picks smoothly into the lock and jiggled them delicately, precisely.

The door at the other end of the corridor opened with a whisper and the music from the main room thundered in. Benedek jerked the picks from the lock, clutched them in his fist, spun around, and started back up the corridor at a casual pace.

A short, dowdy woman in a long blue dress and a cream shawl came through the door, turned to the ladies’ room, and stopped to look at Benedek. She raised a brow, sniffed, and pushed through the door, ignoring his pleasant smile.

“Jesus,” he breathed, returning immediately to the lock, working it until he heard the familiar click. The knob turned, the door opened, and he stepped through. Hoping there was no one on the other side to discover him, he closed the door silently.

Widely spaced lights glowed a soft purple overhead. The corridor, lined with closed doors on each side, went left and right with thick carpet that would silence the footsteps of anyone coming around a corner.

Benedek could feel his pulse throbbing in his throat; he turned to the left and began walking, hoping the corridor would lead him to the door through which he'd seen Vernon.

A sound up ahead made him stop and listen.

A giggle.

From behind him, a sigh.

A long and lusty moan.

Benedek looked behind him. Pools of gentle light spilled on the carpet before door after door after door.

Pressing a hand to the wall, he leaned toward the closest door and cocked his head.

“Yes, yes,
suck
me...” He couldn't tell if the muffled voice was male or female. But he had no doubt what was going on behind the door.

Prostitutes? Probably. That might explain the Asian man's nervousness. But what about the woman he'd seen escorted through the door earlier? Male prostitutes were not uncommon, but they were, more often than not, gay.

In any case, there was more than just drinks being sold at the Midnight Club. That made sense considering its connection with Live Girls. But how many people knew? Surely not
all
of the patrons. Maybe just the members.

Too many questions,
Benedek thought as the voice behind the door began to cry out.

“I'm coming! Don't stop, I'm coming!” It was still muffled to the level of a whisper, like a disembodied voice in a half-remembered dream. Something about it made Benedek uneasy.

He moved ahead to an intersecting corridor. To the left was a door

the door leading into the main room, he was sure

and at his right, a wall of darkness. Ahead, the corridor led around a corner.

Benedek heard a door open behind him and ducked into the blackness, hoping it would conceal him.

Hushed voices from around the corner came closer; a door closed quietly.

“...incredible as usual,” a woman purred. “Oh God, I'm weak-kneed.” She giggled.

“The pleasure was all mine,” a deep male voice said.

“Here, here, let me...” the woman breathed, rustling something.

“But you already..."

“No, no, this is for you, Cedric. And there's more where that came from. I've reserved a table for a week from next Friday. Will you be here?"

“I'm
always
here.” Benedek could hear Cedric's smile.

“My friend Pamela doesn't know what she's missing,” the woman went on. “She seems to prefer that black fellow."

They were coming closer and Benedek pressed his back hard against the wall, willing the darkness to swallow him. His stomach was tight with fear as he held his breath.

Turning left at the intersection, they approached the door with their backs to Benedek. He recognized the tall, sandy-haired woman from the main room.

“Well,” Cedric said, reaching for the doorknob, “to each his own."

Cedric opened the door, and the woman's laughter was drowned out by the music.

Benedek let out a long breath once the door was closed again. He slid his hands over the wall behind him. The corridor ended just a couple feet to his right. Facing the back wall, Benedek lifted his hands and passed them over the smooth surface before him, looking for...

A door. It swung open just a crack beneath his big hands. Finding the knob, he turned it; the door had been locked. Apparently, it had not been completely shut.

A soft, fluorescent glow came through the narrow opening. Benedek could hear no movement, but there was a low, almost inaudible hum beyond the door. With a gentle push, the door swung open further.

There was a small, square room on the other side. On a table against the far wall were two metal trays holding rows of glass tubes. The tubes had red stoppers and were empty except for a filmy gloss along the sides, as if they'd recently been emptied of a dark fluid.

Light poured through an open doorway to the left.

Benedek stepped into the room, his eyes darting around him cautiously. Except for the table, the room was absolutely bare. Walking on the balls of his feet, he went to the open door. The hum became louder and he could hear a soft clicking. No, it was a steady, rapid drip.

Through the doorway, Benedek saw a refrigerator. As he drew nearer, he saw another.

A
kitchen?
he wondered. The white linoleum floor and white walls shone beneath fluorescent lights.

Across from the doorway was a row of cupboards above a white tile counter and sink. The faucet was dripping. There were more trays on the counter holding more glass tubes, but these were filled with a very dark red liquid. Benedek put a hand on the doorjamb and started to step inside when he heard footsteps. He pulled back from the doorway. There was someone in the room.

He heard clattering; the faucet was turned on.

Peering around the doorjamb, Benedek saw a man standing at the sink, head bowed, arms moving vigorously before him as he washed his hands. After turning off the water, the man spun around and smiled.

“Walter,” Vernon Macy said, drying his hands on his white, red-stained smock, “I've been expecting you."

Casey stood before a brightly lit hot-dog stand a few yards from Live Girls smoking a cigarette. A plastic clown's head with fat red smiling lips hung above the service window; a light flashed on and off behind the face, silhouetting the tiny insects that crawled and jumped behind the round cheeks.

Her hand trembled as she raised her cigarette to her lips. Now that she'd arrived in Times Square, she wasn't quite sure why she'd come. She certainly had no right to be angry at the people in Live Girls because Davey had caught something from one of their girls, did she? What had Davey expected? It was his problem.

No,
she thought,
no, it's their problem, too. One of their girls is spreading something around, and they should
do
something about it!

Thinking that she was probably being very naive, Casey tossed her cigarette to the sidewalk and hurried into the cold wind toward Live Girls.

She pushed aside the black curtain and stepped into darkness. The damp air and dirty, musky odor made her wince.

The darkness began to thin as her eyes adjusted and she saw the bars to her right.

“Hello?” she said, leaning toward the cage. “Is anybody

"

“Tokens?"

The deep female voice startled her and she pulled back.

“Uh, I'm sorry?"

“Would you like some tokens?” The voice sounded mildly impatient.

“Tokens?” Casey asked, confused. She squinted, but could still see no one. “Uh, no, no, I'm here to

"

“Then please go away."

“No, wait a second. I have to talk to someone about one of the girls working here."

“I'm asking you to

"

“Believe me, I don't
want
to be here. Just give me a second. A friend of mine came in here a couple days ago. He claims that one of your girls...” She paused; it sounded so ludicrous. “He says she bit him. Since then, he's gotten sick. I mean, he's
very
sick. I'm worried for him. I think maybe your girl has

"

“If you don't leave, I'm going to have someone take you out,” the woman said firmly.

Feeling a jolt of anger, Casey stepped forward and snapped, “I'm not leaving until I'm
finished!
You've got a very sick girl in here and she's probably spreading some

"

Casey stopped midsentence when she heard a sudden movement in the darkness before her. Her inability to see the woman made her feel very vulnerable, like swimming in dark, still waters, unable to feel bottom. She reached into her coat pocket, pulled out her butane lighter, and flicked it.

There was a flash of white and red and, with a throaty hiss, a hand shot between the bars and clutched Casey's wrist in an iron grip. The light of the quivering flame flickered briefly over a long white face with blood-red eyes centered with pinpricks of black, an upturned, flattened nose

a snout,
Casey thought wildly,
dear Jesus, it looks like a snout!

above ruby lips and long white teeth that glistened wetly and narrowed to fine points; white hair fell around her face in long shiny waves through which two long tapered ears protruded and her eyes

large and almond-shaped, of a pure, deep red marred only by the tiny black pupils

seemed to pull on Casey's eyes like magnets, sparkling as if with a light of their own.

The cigarette lighter slipped from Casey's fingers and clattered to the floor. The woman leaned forward so that her face became visible through the bars even in the heavy darkness. With shocking ease, she pulled Casey's arm through the bars so hard that her face almost slammed against them.

“Let go of, of
—”
Casey made a gagging sound as the fingers tightened on her wrist like steel cables; she clenched her eyes in anticipation of the dull crack of her wrist.

It never came. But the fingers tightened more and the pain shot up Casey's arm and caught in her throat like a lump of tough, dry meat. When she opened her eyes, she saw the woman's other hand sliding between the bars, felt the fingers wrap around her coat collar. She pulled Casey's face against the damp, rusty bars.

Other books

What Color Is Your Parachute? by Carol Christen, Jean M. Blomquist, Richard N. Bolles
Beauty and the Greek by Kim Lawrence
So Now You're Back by Heidi Rice
Killers by Howie Carr
Unchosen by Vail, Michele
The year She Fell by Alicia Rasley
Up Country by Nelson DeMille
A Deadly Affection by Cuyler Overholt
The Infection by Craig Dilouie