“How close does she have to work? What’ll the lighting be?”
“Daylight, but a long way off. Say a hundred feet.”
“So the face is important, but what has got to be right is posture, the way she moves, the way she walks.” He pressed the lever on his intercom and said, “Liz, bring me in the specialty book, the one the cover is green on.”
In a few moments the secretary came in and put a thick album bound in green leather in front of her diminutive boss. He flipped the pages rapidly. The photographs were eight-by-ten glossies, in clear acetate sleeves, with the pertinent information about each one on the facing page.
He stopped at one, studied it, held Vangie’s picture beside it, looked from one to the other and said, “Just right.”
He spun the book around and we stared at it and saw a smiling, clear-faced, brown-eyed, Nordic blonde.
“Is this a rib?” I asked him.
He stood up, leaned across the desk, pointed the features out one by one, with an air of great patience. “Shape of the face. High cheekbones. Same type mouth. Same type eyes once Kretoffski gets through with her. How many wigs we own? Maybe two thousand? So relax. Read the stats.”
Miss Merrimay Lane. Twenty-three, Five seven. One twenty-three. Specialty dancer: Interpretive, comedy, acrobatic, tap, chorus, exotic.
“A dancer is best,” Jake said. “Body control. This chick was working on the Beach, then they closed out for the season May fifteen. Let’s hope she stayed put.” He gave his secretary the phone number.
After a few minutes, at the sound of a little musical bong, Jake lifted the phone and in a slower and deeper voice said, “Merrimay, sweetheart! Would you be free for a little daytime one-shot?” He listened, winked at me, and said, “Darling girl, don’t you know by now that Uncle Jake will squeeze the client for the final peso? No, dear. Not dancing. No audition required. So wrap something around it, precious girl, and put it in a cab and hustle it on down here to my office. Twenty minutes? You are such a delight, I mean it, dear.” He hung up and spoke into the box, telling his secretary to get Kretoffski to report to him in thirty minutes.
He looked at me and said, “Boychick, an arm you can have. A leg you can have. But one of my people getting hurt? That’s out.”
“Did you have to say that, Jake?”
“For the record only.”
“She starts work in Lauderdale at eight o’clock Tuesday morning. But I want to take her up there for a briefing tomorrow. There’s an off-chance she might have to go with me up to Broward Beach sometime on Tuesday or Wednesday. But that will be it. How does five hundred sound, plus expenses?”
“In January, February, it isn’t such great arithmetic. In June it is a lover’s kiss.”
Merrimay Lane was announced and made an extravagant entrance. She came sweeping in wearing an orange strapless sunback dress, white gloves, purse and shoes, gigantic false lashes, a cloud of spicy perfume, a funny little hat in orange-colored straw balanced atop blonde tresses. She covered space with the effortless ease of the dancer, made glad cries at Jake, kissed his cheek, whirled and looked with pert expectancy at us.
“The giant there, darling girl, that is Mr. Travis McGee, a very personal dear friend who I would trust with all six of my lovely daughters, if you start thinking anything is strange about what he wants done, you shouldn’t worry. And his associate, Mr. Meyer. What I can say is this beautiful young girl is one of the hardest reliable workers you want to meet, strictly pro, and no temper tantrums, and she learns routines like lightning. And what it is he wants you to do, sweetheart, I think afterward you keep your mouth shut. I have people waiting to see me on the next floor down, so the talking you can do here. Feel free. Take your time. When Kretoffski comes, Liz will send him right in.”
“Maybe if she could hold him until we cover the part he doesn’t have to know?”
“On the way out, I will tell her that.”
When the door shut, Merrimay said, “Well, it certainly sounds terribly mysterious.”
I handed her one of the pictures of Vangie. “You have to be mistaken for this girl, at a distance, a good distance, in daylight.”
She studied it, turned her head this way and that.
“Hmm. If my mother had married a Chinese, or a half Chinese. My size?”
“Very close.”
“I suppose the big question is why.”
I had delayed making up my mind until that moment, but I had respect for the intelligence I saw in her eyes. “Some people tried to kill her. It was a very good try. They thought they had. She had a miraculous escape. So when she showed up again, it had to be a very nasty shock. They made absolutely certain the next time. So if one of them should see her again … we might make some good use of the reaction.”
She stared at me, swallowed visibly, put her fingertips to her throat. “Couldn’t it turn out to be a nasty shock to me, too?”
“There’ll be no way for him to get near you. That is absolutely guaranteed. You’ll understand when we show you the physical layout. And if at that point, you want to say no, you’ll still get the five hundred.”
She looked at the picture again. “She’s very interesting looking. But it is sort of a cheap pose, actually. Do you know how she held herself, how she walked, all that?”
“Mr. Meyer and I spent two days with her.”
“She was about twenty-five?”
“Twenty-six.”
“What did she do?”
“She’d been a prostitute for twelve years.”
Merrimay’s brown eyes widened. “My word, that’s quite an early start, isn’t it?”
“For a time she was a five-hundred-dollar call girl in New York.”
She looked incredulous. “They make that much?”
“A few of them.”
She shrugged. “Okay, then. It’s a deal, provided I can back out if there’s something I don’t want to do. But I don’t want to know any more about her until Si Kretoffski gets me fixed up.”
“The sun poisoned her,” Meyer said. “She was quite pale.”
“I can see that. It’s no problem. What about clothes?”
“I think,” Meyer said, “what she was wearing the first time they tried.” He looked at me and I nodded. “Miss Lane, it was an oyster white wraparound skirt in that Orlon fleece material, and a sleeveless blouse, raw silk, natural, with sort of a Chinese collar effect in front, and cut halfway down the back, a circular cut.”
She frowned. “Wardrobe might have it. How much time is there?”
“It will happen early Tuesday morning.”
“Oh, then if they don’t have it, I can find something close enough. You’ll pay expenses?”
“Of course.”
By quarter of five that Saturday afternoon, we were ready to demonstrate the final result to Jake Karlo.
Merrimay wanted time to freshen her make-up, so we went to Jake’s office. Meyer said, “Mr. Karlo, you have some fantastic talents available to you. And that girl may be better than you know. I am exhausted. She bled us of every shred of information. Every habitual gesture we could remember. She even worked on the voice, saying that she knew she wouldn’t need it, but it would make her feel more like the other girl. Travis, she deserves a bonus.”
“Approved.”
She tapped on the door and came in. The clothing was almost exact, and the shoes she had picked to go with it were what I could imagine Vangie picking. Kretoffski had worked a miracle on her eyes. Only the color was wrong, too deep and soft a brown.
It was Vangie’s walk, that tautly controlled sway, swing and tilt of hip, toeing in slightly. It was Vangie’s pallor, and her way of looking at you, head lowered, a look of brooding challenge. She tilted her head to thumb back a wing of the dark hair, and, pitching her voice deeper, she came very close to achieving that same richness.
She stood, hipshot, in front of the desk. “They said you boys wanted me in here. I’m Vangie, it’s short for Evangeline. Bellemer. Honest
to God, it’s getting to be a real drag hanging around here the whole damn day long, I mean I’m like used to more action.” She turned away, did a vague slow dance step, turned and dropped into a chair and scowled at us. “Trav, honey, the very least you could do is break out some good bourbon for Vangie, I mean it’s coming up that time of day, isn’t it?” She ran her tonguetip along her underlip. I’d seen Vangie do that, just as slowly, forty times.
It wasn’t quite right, of course. She wasn’t Vangie, but she was so close, so heartbreakingly close it chilled the nape of my neck. I hadn’t realized how much all that hard work had accomplished.
Jake tore a sheet of paper off his desk pad, folded it once and held it up. “Sweetheart, I have written a word on this piece of paper. It is a word of great meaning. It is a word I have respected all my life. I am a fool. This word was in front of me and I couldn’t read it. Monday it will be added to your file, lovely girl. Later in the week we will take new pictures of you.” He trotted over to her. “I give you this piece of paper. Jake Karlo never writes anything foolish about something so great and wonderful and beautiful.”
She opened the piece of paper. She stared up at him with Vangie’s mocking smile. “Actress! Where have you been, honey? Don’t they let you out? Listen, you want to turn a five-hundred-dollar trick and have the john ask for you the next time he hits town, you got to be an actress. Right?”
Jake, beaming, turned and held his arms wide. “See? See?”
“Jake, darling,” she said. “Please don’t. You’ll make me cry, and it will spoil the eyes. And … all day I’ve been getting closer and closer to tears. For Vangie, I guess. There but for the grace of God, or something. The poor, sad, simple bitch. Jake, you make me very happy. Damn, damn, damn. I’m going to cry.” She got up and ran out of the room.
“We can use her a lot closer than I’d have thought possible,” I said.
“Not too close,” Jake said. “Not close to trouble.” He thumped the desk top with his little fist. “A man gets so busy he doesn’t look good at his own people. A sweet child like that, all of a sudden a hundred and ten per cent floozy. And she photographs like a dream. If she doesn’t freeze up, if she doesn’t choke when the lights go on, I can merchandise that dear little package. Discipline she’s got. What I got to do is set up a test, something where say she’s dancing, she comes running off stage, big applause. She’s happy. The guy is waiting there. He tells her something that breaks her heart. She gives it a very slow take. She can’t believe it. Then say she thinks it’s a joke and tries to laugh. Extreme closeup. Say she’s just made it. Real big. And the tests have come back. Leukemia.” He hit the desk again. “A take like that, in ten minutes I can sell her to Max on a seven-year deal, script approval, good options. I make her twenty-one years old. Merrimay Lane. It sounds good. Already you can hear it’s got star quality.”
Though he said goodby to us, and walked us to the elevators, I had the feeling we were getting not more than ten per cent of his attention.
On the fast ride down I said to Meyer, “Was she that good?”
“Believe me, boychick, the broad was colossal.”
Eleven
At ten-thirty on that hot bright breezy Monday morning, the black taxi brought us in from the airport, down Nassau Street and east on Bay Street, to let us off at Rawson Square. I knew from the look of Bay Street that no cruise ships were in. In the hot months when there are no cruise ships tied up at Prince George Wharf or anchored out in the harbor beyond the lighthouse, Bay Street slows to a walk. The pretty little shopgirls stroll and chatter. Drivers in their cabs. Traffic is sparse and stately. The fat dark women yawn and gossip in the straw markets as they weave the tourist goods.
It is the rest period for that big machine which is Bay Street. The components of the machine are the heavily stocked shops with luxury items from all over the world. Solomon’s Mines, Trade Winds, John Bull, Cellars Wineshop, the Island Shop, the English China House, Kelly’s, Lightbourns, M’Lords, Mademoiselle, The Nassau Shop, the Perfume Box, Robertson and Symonette, Sue Nan’s, Vanity Fair.
A quiet time, when the locals can shop in thoughtful and leisurely relaxation, and when the long bars in Dirty Dick’s, the Junkanoo and Blackbeard’s Tavern are empty.
We walked past the straw market and the rental boats out to the wharf area, carrying our minimal luggage.
“I never really believed you’d ever take me on a cruise, dear,” Meyer said.
“How did you get so lucky?”
I found an official-looking mustachioed fellow who told me that the Monica D. would tie up at the wharf about one o’clock, and a Dutch boat was due in the evening. We checked the bags at the Prince George Hotel, and then we went shopping for some little remembrance for Ans Terry and his lady. Meyer was dubious about our being able to find anything of sufficient symbolic impact. I said we’d look around, buy what we found and then, after meeting the gentleman, decide whether or not it was reasonable to expect a useful reaction. The more off balance he was by tomorrow morning, the more deadly would be the effect of seeing Vangie.
It was Meyer who spotted the display of dolls in a case in Solomon’s Mines, beckoned me over and pointed one out. Dolls of all nations. And the Japanese one bore a faint resemblance to Vangie. She was about five inches tall, beautifully made. The clerk took it out of the case for us. Black hair was glued in place, and the kimono was sewn on. We bought it. At Kelly’s Hardware we bought a spool of fine wire, a piece of soft sculptor’s stone, a file and a carving knife.
We repaired to the pleasantly dark bar at the Carlton House on East Street. When the bartender had fixed us each one of their superb planter’s punches and moved away, Meyer said, “I am extremely nervous, Trav. This is a long way from economic theory. I’m certain I’m going to make some terrible blunder.”
I realized he could not function in a vacuum and play it by ear as we went along. People need an identity, a place to stand. I said, “McGee and Meyer are both from Fort Lauderdale. They came over separately. Meyer had some talks with people on the Nassau Development Board about the economic consequences of a change in the corporate tax structure or some damn thing, at your usual per diem and expenses. McGee came over with a batch of people joining a big party going on at Paradise Beach, and now that the party is running out of charge, he’s heading home. We ran into each other on Bay Street. We’re casual acquaintances. We’re going back on the same ship, but you bore me. I’m more interested in lining up some dainty lollipop. Maybe I can get some mileage out of you by sticking your thumb in Ans Terry’s buttonhole while I cut his lollipop out of the pack. Or maybe it might work the other way. The legendary Meyer charm might work well on the lollipop, while I trick Ans into going down to your squalid accommodations where I can thump his head and lace him to your bunk. Anyway, we establish a message center and get to work giving them the eerie feeling there is something gone wrong in the world, a warp in reality, some cogs slipping in their skulls. They’re ice cold, Meyer. Heartless and murderous. But any savage animal gets bad nerves when confronted with the inexplicable. We just give them a Halloween party, with a few goblins to think about.”
“That particular smile, McGee. I am very glad you have no good reason to come looking for one Meyer. Okay, I feel better. Skoal!”
We stood in the dusty shade and watched them, with casual skill, latch the Monica D. to the wharf. She was dressed up to come in, flapping with as many pennants and flags and banners as three new gas stations on opening day. Deck crew in whites, and the packed, expectant, gaudy, gabbling pack of passengers crowding the starboard side of B Deck where the gangplank would be affixed. This was the last romantic port of call, and I could well imagine that their cruise director had made some dampening comments about shopping on Bay Street. This is standard procedure. The cruise directors hawk the marvels of the wares at those ports where they have set up a kickback from the shops. At St. Thomas and Curaçao and Kingston the cruise directors give glowing recommendations ab
out specific shops. But they can’t pry any kickbacks out of Bay Street because it is too well, too solidly established, too world renowned to give a hoot. The big machine chews up the people, but it gives fair value.
Four hours ashore at the mercy of the machine. Five big taxis were waiting, an indication that there were a few who had signed up for a tour of the island.
The chain was dropped, and as the harried staff checked them off, the folk came hurrying down the gangplank. In the lead was an overstrength platoon of the same beefy and resolute women you see bursting into department stores on sale days the instant the doors are unlocked. Great hams bulged the lurid shorts.
“Attention please, attention please. Passengers taking the tour will please board the limousines off to your left as you debark. Thank you.”
The ship’s last cruise of the season, a short one, at the lowest rates. Yet it was at only a little more than half capacity, they had told me. During the height of the season, in the first three months of any year, when these small cruise ships that ply the Caribbean are at capacity, a good two-thirds of the passenger list is made up of what a friend of mine who worked aboard one for a season called the “mother” trade. To explain what he meant, he would give you a big expansive smile and say, “I always promised mother that some day I’d take her on a cruise. Well, sir, with the kids married off and the store sold, I said to her, I said, ‘Mother, you better start packing, because we’re a-going on that cruise.’ ”
So they fill up the little ships, eat the spiced and stylized cruise food, get seasick, sunburned. They take afternoon dance lessons in the Neapolitan Ballroom, play organized deck games, splosh about in the small pool on the sundeck, play bridge, get a little tiddly and giggly, dress up for dinner and appraise the dresses of the other women, get totally confused about which port is which, take fragmentary language lessons, vigorously applaud the meager talents of the ship’s floor show, take all the tours, write and mail scores of postcards, compete for prizes in the costume ball, spend a dutiful amount of time each day at sea in the rental deck chair.
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