Right You Are, Mr. Moto

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Right You Are, Mr. Moto Page 18

by John P. Marquand


  “You’re goin’ out in a minute, friend,” he could hear Big Ben saying. “You might as well go out easy and not fight, mightn’t you, since you’re goin’ out anyway, friend? Easy’s better than hard, isn’t it? And I’ve got no hard feelings. I’ll he’p you if you go out easy, and I’ll be right with you, friend. Now swallow these pills. They won’t hurt nobody. Just get them down or I have to make you. Swallow them, and then there’ll be the needle, and you and I know that it won’t hurt at all. Don’t make me be rough, Mac, because it won’t gain you anything. I know that poison kit you folks carry. In case you’re curious, it’s what you call Shot Number Two.”

  The soft imaginary voice of Big Ben mingled with the music from the ballroom, and Jack Rhyce knew it was time to pull himself together.

  “I’m against alcohol as a crutch on general principles,” he said, “but I think you and I could do with two good doubles in that bar right now, don’t you?”

  “I agree with you for once, darling,” she said. He felt her shiver, and he shook her in a rough playful way.

  “For God’s sake pull yourself together,” he said. “The show’s on the road.”

  “All right,” she said. “So it’s on the road, and stop being a space cadet.”

  He straightened his blue coat and felt his belt. He might not be carrying a weapon but, given the showdown, a properly fixed belt was a good substitute. His was fixed. He wished that he could slash his belt across Big Ben’s face just once. Twice would be better—twice and Big Ben’s closest relative wouldn’t know him.

  XIV

  The atmosphere in the Main Bar had changed since he and Ruth Bogart had been there last, for the better as far as hotel receipts were concerned. There was no doubt any longer, if there ever had been previously, that the patrons—aside from their Japanese girl friends, who were trying to enter into the fun as vigorously as Madame Butterfly had in another generation—realized that they were far away from home. Their loneliness plus the dancing and the drinks had begun drawing them together, so that an alcoholic affection, plus an undercurrent of companionship in misery formed the motif for the now crowded bar. The flyers, the officers of the ground forces, the Navy personnel, the American civilians in and out of government jobs, and even a few Europeanized Japanese had begun to realize that they were all members of the Legion of the Lost Ones. No one had as yet started to sing “Gentlemen Rankers” or “The Road to Mandalay,” but several men by the bar were already drunk, and an American girl was doing a dramatic recitation in a corner to which no one in her party listened. A sea of smoke and spilled drinks and voices washed like a wave over Jack Rhyce and Ruth Bogart.

  “All right, honey,” he said, “we’re tight and full of fun, and we’ve got to check in here, honey, in a big way, and this is our night off. Why, lookit—there’s Big Ben, just where he said he’d be.” He leaned down until her hair brushed his cheek. “Just remember, he doesn’t know who we are,” he whispered. “Just hold that thought, sweet, and give me another kiss. It’s better that I’m all lipsticked up tonight.”

  It was common sense aside from anything else. There could never be anything sinister about a man if he was smeared with lipstick, and what was it Bill Gibson had said? There was safety in sex. Perhaps if Bill had practiced that maxim himself he would not have been a corpse in Chrysanthemum Rest.

  “Oh, Jack,” Ruth Bogart said, and her voice had the shrill note that fitted with that happy evening, “look at Ben. He’s got a man with a squeeze box with him. Aren’t you glad we haven’t gone to bed yet, darling?”

  It gave him an unpleasant twinge to observe the number of amused faces that turned toward them after Ruth Bogart had asked her last question. Naturally she did not need to tell him to look at Big Ben. Big Ben stood in the middle of a noisy group near the center of the room, and sure enough, a man with an accordion was with him. He had learned the tricks of holding attention that could only have been derived from the theater. In fact, at the moment Big Ben might have been master of ceremonies in a night club, and perhaps he had held such a position once.

  “Jack,” she whispered, “he’s changed his shirt.”

  She did not have to tell him. He had been wearing a white shirt when he had cut in on them on the dance floor, but now his shirt was blue.

  “That’s right,” Jack said. “He’s been having a busy evening, sweet. Wave to him. He’s seen us now.”

  “Hi, Ben,” she called.

  “Why, sweetness,” Big Ben called, and he shook his finger at her. “Say, whatever have you been doing to Oberlin? Honest, I couldn’t guess.”

  Ruth glanced at Jack’s face. She gave a stifled scream.

  “Oh, Jack,” she said, “I’m sorry. They told me in the States that it wouldn’t come off, darling.”

  Jack Rhyce grinned self-consciously at Big Ben and the boys and girls around him, then he pulled out a pocket handkerchief, wiped his cheeks and lips, and shook his head.

  “I guess the trouble is, dear, this isn’t the States. Maybe nothing’s kiss-proof in Japan.”

  It was a pretty good line, considering, and the laugh that greeted it confirmed this impression. A man with lipstick on him couldn’t help but be a nice guy, especially in a bar.

  The effort he was making made Jack Rhyce afraid that he might be overdoing things, until he saw there was no sharpness in Big Ben’s glance.

  “Say, boy,” Big Ben said, “come on over here. Let’s do a song number for the crowd. This fellow can really sing, folks.”

  “Oh, now,” Jack said. “I might break my larynx.”

  Now that they knew he had a comic streak everything he said was funny. Ruth Bogart gave him a playful push.

  “Oh, go ahead, Jack,” she said. “You can sing just as well as he can.”

  There is nothing harder in the world than to give a convincing imitation of being drunk. Jack Rhyce was wise enough not to try.

  “Well, let me have a double Scotch first,” he said, “so I can halfway catch up with things.”

  Big Ben gave a hearty whoop of laughter. Jack Rhyce tossed off the drink when it was handed to him in three quick swallows. He did not need to ask for another because someone immediately thrust a second into his hand, but those two quick slugs had surprisingly little effect. They only served to make everything more hideously grotesque, at the same time bringing the faces around him into clearer definition. Big Ben was holding a half-empty highball glass in exactly the expert way that an abstemious person handles a drink at a cocktail party. You could always pick a drinker from a nondrinker from the way he held his glass. Big Ben, in spite of all his noise, was cold sober, but his sobriety had been hard to detect because his spirits and elation were not normal. Elation was exactly the word, the sort that came after emergence from danger. The truth was that Big Ben was happy, and also he must have felt completely safe. Like Jack Rhyce, he must have examined the hotel guests and must have concluded that there was not a cough in a carload.

  “Well, I do feel better not,” Jack said.

  Big Ben patted his shoulder affectionately; in return Jack Rhyce gave him an affectionate punch on the chest—just two big boys roughhousing. There was no softness in Big Ben’s midsection, as he had observed already at Wake. He was more of a wrestler than a boxer, but these were not the right thoughts for the moment, when even a thought could be detected if it influenced attitude.

  “Say,” Big Ben said, and his voice had a wheedling note in it, “now you’ve got yourself lubricated up, how about a little harmonizing? Ted here can play almost anything on a squeeze box. How about a piece from The Red Mill? How about ‘Every Day Is Ladies’ Day with me’? Huh, Jack?”

  “Oh, say,” Jack Rhyce said, “why that old chestnut?”

  “Aw, come on,” Big Ben said. “It’s got real melody. It’s a swell song.”

  “Why is it you have this yen for The Red Mill,” Jack Rhyce asked, “when it was written before you and I were born, Ben?”

  Big Ben drew his hand acros
s his eyes.

  “I know,” he said. “It don’t sound reasonable, does it. Yet it’s a kind of a theme song with me. Will you sing it with me if I tell you why?”

  His invitation, which included the group around them again, had a professional tone. He was a born master of ceremonies, and in the relief he must have been feeling, he might have dropped his guard.

  “Why, sure,” Jack said, “if it’s a good yarn.”

  “Aw, shucks,” Big Ben said, “it isn’t much of a one—just kid stuff. You know how it is when you’re a kid, how things kind of happen so you don’t forget.” His voice was eager and appealing. “It was senior year in this Baptist college down South.… It’s a kind of corny yarn, now I think of it.… There was this banker in town—the local rich guy, and he had this pretty daughter with golden hair. Well, my folks were poor, in the missionary business actually, and I was sort of shy back then. For two years I used to walk past her house most every night, without daring to knock on the door, and then comes Senior year. That autumn when I’d sort of built up my ego by playing football, why I walked up the front stoop and rang the bell, and there she was all alone, and she asked me to come inside. Well, I was shy, but she asked me if I liked hearing music on the phonograph. It was one of those kind you wind with a crank, and there were lots of records belonging to the old man that went a long ways back. Well, we played them for a while, and then she put on this Red Mill record, and held my hand, and then—well, we kinda got to loving each other with that old Red Mill playing. Then her old man came in, and he kicked me the hell out, and I never saw her again, but that’s how I remember The Red Mill.” Big Ben’s voice grew softer. “And I haven’t forgot that old aristocratic bastard, either.”

  He had completely held his audience, and there were sympathetic murmurs applauding his tale of young frustration. The pride and sensitiveness that had run all through the incident had revealed themselves only in the last sentence. Something had happened then, something more than was told, of course, but The Red Mill was its monument to a new beginning, and the music of early youth was always the best music.

  Big Ben shrugged his shoulders. “Then after that, before the war, I was with a sort of musical caravan, and what should happen—there was The Red Mill. Anyway, it kind of stays with me.”

  “That’s quite a story, Ben,” Jack Rhyce said, and he meant it. He had learned a lot from the story.

  “Well,” Big Ben said, “let’s make a quick switch. Stand up here, fella. Let’s show ’em. Strike up the band. ‘Every Day Is Ladies’ Day with Me.’”

  Bill Gibson was dead at Chrysanthemum Rest. Their arms were draped over each other’s shoulders as they sang, and Jack knew the words better than Big Ben.

  And my pleasure it is double if they come to me in trouble,

  For I always find a way to make them smile, the little darlings!

  Applause came from all over the bar when they had finished. Show business was written all over Big Ben when he took in the applause.

  “Say, Jack,” he said, “if we only had straw hats and canes, we could soft-shoe it, couldn’t we?”

  If you played the game you had to play it through.

  “We don’t need hats and canes,” Jack Rhyce said.

  “Why, we don’t sure enough,” Big Ben said. “Come on. Strike up the band.”

  It wasn’t a bad show either. Jack Rhyce had to admit that they both had an unusual gift of comic interpolation. In fact there was one moment when he was almost tempted to join in the laughter of the crowd as he watched Big Ben slip deliberately and recover himself. Actually his impulse to laugh died when he saw Ruth Bogart’s expression as she watched them. Then an instant later he picked out the face of Mr. Moto. Mr. Moto was standing near the street entrance of the bar. Jack Rhyce remembered being ashamed of Mr. Moto’s seeing him making a deliberate fool of himself, but then there was no reason why Mr. Moto should not have been there since he had been given the evening off. After all, enough was enough. Jack Rhyce was never surer of the truth of that aphorism than when the dance was over. He looked once toward the spot where Mr. Moto had been standing, but the Japanese was gone and Jack Rhyce could hardly blame him.

  “Well, folks,” Jack Rhyce said, “it’s been nice seeing you. Come on, Ruth. Let’s say good night.”

  They had done what was necessary. They had showed up in the bar and the clock showed it was ten minutes to twelve. He could tell from the tight grip of her hand when they walked toward the Cozy Nook ell that her nervous resistance was wearing thin.

  “Jack,” she said, as they closed the door of their room. They had not spent much time there, but the edges of unfamiliarity had been rounded off already, and they were both through with cover for the moment.

  “Just a minute before you say anything,” he told her, removing his coat and tie. “Just let me wash the touch of that goon off me first. I’m sorry, Ruth.”

  “You needn’t be sorry,” she said. “Nobody could have done better than you did, Jack.”

  She was standing just where he had left her when he came back rubbing his face and shoulders with a bath towel.

  “Darling,” she said, “you’ve washed the lipstick off and now you won’t have anything to remember me by. Please unzip the back of my dress. I don’t know why people always sell unzippable dresses.”

  “Maybe they do it to get girls into trouble,” he said.

  “Jack,” she said, “don’t you think it would look better if we turned out the lights?”

  “How do you mean,” she asked, “look better?”

  “More conventional,” she said, “more what’s expected of us. We don’t know who’s watching or listening.”

  “Just get it into your head,” he said, “no one’s watching or listening. We’re out of this as of now.”

  “But it won’t be long,” she said. “And it would be better if you did turn out the lights. I must look like hell.”

  “Oh, no, you don’t at all,” he said.

  “Well, I feel like hell,” she answered.

  “All right,” he told her, “I don’t blame you. So do I. We haven’t exactly been playing charades tonight.”

  He turned out the lights, except the one in the bathroom, but he could still see her standing there.

  “We used to play charades at home,” she said. “Did you ever play them?”

  “If it’s just the same with you,” he said, “let’s not get reminiscing. Why, yes, I used to play charades with the banker’s daughter, dear, until the banker threw me out.”

  “Jack,” she said, “wasn’t it God-awful?”

  “Yes,” he said.

  “Jack,” she said, “I don’t know anything about Bill Gibson’s setup here, do you?”

  “No,” he answered, “and we won’t now Bill’s dead.”

  “Jack,” she said, “what are we going to do?”

  It was the question he had been asking himself for quite a while, because he was left with nothing, now that Bill Gibson was dead—no contacts, unless he communicated with home, and that was far too dangerous under the circumstances.

  “I don’t know,” he said, “but maybe we’ll think of something in the morning.”

  “Is that the best you can do?” she asked. “Come here. Come closer. I want to ask you something.”

  If only because they were in the same predicament, they were close enough already.

  “I haven’t got any bright answers,” he said. “I couldn’t win any giveaway show tonight.”

  “Why did they kill Bill?” she whispered.

  “Because he knew something they didn’t want passed on,” he said. “You know that. That’s always why we kill people in this racket.”

  “But what did he know?” she asked.

  “He didn’t tell us,” he said, “but we’ve got to try to find out, come morning.”

  “Jack,” she said, “wasn’t it awful?”

  He felt her arms steal around his neck, and she buried her face against his shoul
der.

  “Go ahead and cry if it does you any good,” he said. “I don’t blame you, Ruth.”

  “I’m not going to cry,” she said, “but I’m glad you’re here, Jack.”

  “I wish you weren’t,” he said.

  “Oh, Jack,” she said, “I don’t think that’s very polite, considering everything.”

  “I mean it’s too damn dangerous here,” he said. “Let’s face it. I mean I love you, Ruth—and I’m not pretending.”

  “Well,” she said. “I’d almost given up hoping that you’d ever say it.”

  “Well, I have,” he told her. “But it’s a damn fool thing for anyone like me to say.”

  He was right about that last statement. It was bad for business to fall in love, especially with anyone like her, but he had said it, and there they were, alone together with their secrets, miles away from any help except what they could give each other. Miles away from anything that made for common sense.…

  Hindsight was always simpler than foresight. Later it was easy enough to tell himself that no one should rely on convictions that had no solid foundation of fact—except that his belief that they were in the clear did have its own foundation: he could always return to the indisputable point that Bill Gibson would not have been killed in the way he had if anyone had suspected who Jack Rhyce and Ruth Bogart were. As a matter of fact, time was to prove that Rhyce had been right in these assumptions. But still he should have allowed for the unexpected. He should have been more alert, after finding the Japanese in his room, and particularly after the incident of the footstep on the temple path. The trouble was, there had been so much on his mind, that he had finally yielded to the temptation of blacking out the whole problem for a few hours that night, which had been inexcusable. You always paid for such a thing as that in some coin or other, but he never dreamed that he would pay so soon. In fact, he did not even bother to do anything about the lock on the bedroom door, because he was so sure that they would be undisturbed.

 

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