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Scarlet Imperial

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by Dorothy B. Hughes




  The Scarlet Imperial

  Dorothy B. Hughes

  Contents

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER ONE

  IT WAS RAINING. A dripping gray rain, more like autumn than spring. Only the flowered hats and the bright feathery veils scurrying beneath the marquees below, darting out to the bus stop, told it was April. She stood there at the window pressing her fingers against the wet cold pane.

  She didn’t like this job; she didn’t know why she should be wasted for six months in the office of Bryan Brewer, Importer and Exporter of Rare Objects, playing the part of a perfect secretary. She didn’t like being a secretary; there was no bite to it, no lovely excitement. She’d rather be an exquisite mannikin on the Parisienne boulevards; she’d rather be a part of the languorous adventure of a sunny Neapolitan street; she’d rather be a flowered hat and a giddy veil even in a downpour. She’d far rather be in the downpour than here in the office alone. Whether it was being alone in rainlight, or the incessant scratching of the rain on the window, or whether the monotony of the waiting had eaten into her nerves, she didn’t know. She knew only that she didn’t like the feel of this afternoon.

  She left the window and walked slowly across the thick bronze rug to the mirror, the magic mirror that had lost its magic. It no longer showed anything but the perfect secretary in the perfect secretarial uniform, black tailored suit, white blouse, a face no one would look at twice; it was the usual city pattern. Perfect complexion, perfect features, a scarlet lipstick mouth, slant dark eyes, the long lashes hidden by amber-rimmed eyeglasses, dark hair hidden in a smooth roll.

  She pulled off the glasses and her mouth made a gruesome mouth at the face in the mirror. That for the adventure of working in New York.

  She left the mirror and went to her desk but she didn’t go behind it to her chair. It was as if she didn’t want to be cornered there. She lifted again the noon paper and her forefinger followed her eyes down the arrivals. By ship. By plane. Where was he, while she sat at an office desk from nine to five daily, nine to twelve on Saturdays? In Paris or London, Rio or Buenos Aires, Mexico City? She hadn’t heard from him since the small typewritten note broke the monotony of sitting days on end in his Aunt Hortensia’s apartment on the Square, waiting for that note. The message wasn’t signed, he was economical of his signature. Postmarked Havana. It informed her that Bryan Brewer would need a private secretary on a certain morning. That was all. She knew what to do.

  She’d got the job. Bryan Brewer had been surprised that anyone was aware of the opening. She’d been surprised at how young, how attractive Bryan Brewer was. Not yet thirty; tall, dark; the kind of man she had wished she knew while she wasted youth on Towner and his friends. It wasn’t like Towner to send her to anyone like Brewer; the others had been as old or older than Towner himself, and as unattractive. She’d thought on first meeting that working with Bry might lead to something amusing. She didn’t know then about Feather. Perhaps Towner did know.

  Brewer had received the resignation of Miss Grinswold, her predecessor, in the mail only that morning. Eliza didn’t tell him how she knew Miss Grinswold was gone. She didn’t tell him that this wasn’t the first time Towner Clay had known of things before they happened. She got the job and she was the perfect secretary from nine to five, from November to April. But if she didn’t hear from Towner soon, she would … She would go on being Bryan Brewer’s perfect secretary. There was nothing else she could do. Until she heard from Towner Clay.

  Her fingers dropped the paper quickly, almost with guilt. Behind her shoulder across the room the door had been flung open. She knew it wasn’t Bry before she turned. He didn’t fling open a door; he put his hand on a knob, turned it and walked in on steady feet. Yet automatically her fingers folded the paper.

  Standing there was a man with the bluest eyes she’d ever looked into, dark sapphire blue. For a fleet moment she had the hope he was from Towner. For the moment before he spoke.

  “Where’s Bry?”

  The man was young and tall and wet; his coat was rain slashed, the rim of his wet hat was turned down all around, to meet his turned up collar. The streets of New York were crowded with men fending off the rain in that same fashion. Yet something quickened her pulse, something not in his dress nor in his natural question. Something perhaps in his eyes. Something of danger. She recognized him as a man not made of the stuff of Manhattan streets. She knew him as someone from her own world. And she was alert. Until now it had been too easy; it was never that easy.

  Her wits had quickened with her pulse and she said in her best secretarial voice, “Mr. Brewer isn’t in right now. May I help you?”

  The blue-eyed man looked her over from her neat black hair all the way down to her black alligator pumps. All the way down and all the way up again. He smiled when he finished his survey. He had a cocky, sure-of-himself smile on his square face. She held her apprehension quiet behind her secretarial mask.

  “Where is he?” he asked. He shifted the box under his arm. It was a white box, wrapped in white paper, the shape of a florist’s box. It wasn’t wet.

  She said, “I really don’t know.” Her heels were brisk rounding her desk. She sat down behind it, took up some papers as if they were important. “Is there anything I can do for you?”

  “When will he be back?”

  She said, “I don’t know.”

  He’d followed her to the desk, dripping rain on Bryan Brewer’s bronze rug, and he stood there looking down at her. His eyes were cut like sapphires too, flecked with bright and dark. She didn’t like his smile.

  She said, “He may be in before five and he may not. He didn’t say, when he left this morning.” She rolled a sheet of white paper into the typewriter. She didn’t want him to wait here for Bryan Brewer. He might recognize her for what she actually was.

  He was watching her. The smile in his eyes didn’t match the smile on his mouth. “What’s your name?” he demanded suddenly. The voice went with his eyes.

  “Eliza Williams,” she answered briskly. It was a nice ordinary name, Towner had invented it. “I’m Mr. Brewer’s secretary. If I can be of any assistance, Mr.—”

  “No.” Then quickly he smiled again, as if he’d come to a decision. “Yes.” He thrust the white box at her. “There. Put that on ice for me. I’ll be in for it later.”

  She’d passed the test. He believed in her secretarial performance. But she didn’t like his lordly attitude. She quieted temper. She began coldly, “We have no ice chest here, Mr.—”

  He grinned, “Your desk is cold enough, sweetheart.” Then he made his grin into a smile, what he doubtless thought was a charming smile. “Mind you take good care of it. Don’t be giving it to anybody else but me.” He was gone before she could answer him, before she could inform him that Bryan Brewer’s was accustomed to dealing in rare objects and that his florist’s box would be perfectly safe here. He dashed out as he had dashed in, leaving no trace but the damp treads on the carpet, the box on her desk.

  She took it up, thrust it into the deep lower drawer. She didn’t sigh; she released her breath slowly. He was gone. He wasn’t someone sent to spy on her; he wasn’t someone sent to tell tales to Bry Brewer. His footmarks evaporated from the rug. Outside the rain wept wearily to the window. Inside Eliza Williams waited alone.

  The wet gray sky dropped lower over Madison Avenue and the lamps blinked on. The street lamps were pale fruit looking down on them from the window, here on the twelfth floor. Shrouded with the darkening rain, they hung suspended in the dim ghost light of the Avenue.

&
nbsp; Eliza stepped back from the window. There was no reason to be chilled. The reception room of Bryan Brewer was rich and warm, safe from rain and ghost light. It looked shadowed only because of the early saffron darkness outside, because the lone desk lamp was too small for this hour of rainy evening. She’d never been in the office this late before.

  She didn’t have to stay any longer. The blue-eyed man certainly wouldn’t return tonight for the package he’d left. He was doubtless across in Longchamp’s bar at this very moment surrounded by exquisite women and soft laughter, the box entirely forgotten. As forgotten as Brewer’s secretary. What was she waiting for? If he came in, he’d grab the box, say thank you, and go again that quickly. He wouldn’t appreciate it that she’d stayed after hours to give it into his hands.

  Bryan Brewer certainly wasn’t coming in again. If he did he wouldn’t recognize her as something exquisite; he wouldn’t ask her to have a drink at Longchamp’s, and go on to dinner, maybe dancing. He would never know that there was once an Eliza Williams … She set her lips. She wasn’t seventeen any longer; the moon world of seventeen was long ago and far away.

  If the box held a priceless lapis lazuli tea set, the blue-eyed man shouldn’t have left it here. It was probably a box of candy. Too heavy for a corsage. A box of candy for Feather Prentiss. He wouldn’t know that men didn’t give Feather candy; they sent rare ivory orchids, or primroses in January; boxes of uncut rubies, all the perfumes of Arabia. That’s what Bry Brewer would send Feather if he could pawn his soul for them. That was why he didn’t even know what Eliza Williams looked like after her six months in his office, taking his dictation, ordering his theatre tickets, reserving his tables at Toots and Morocco.

  Six-fifteen. The sky growing darker and wetter. The building growing emptier and more vast. She wouldn’t wait any longer. The man could get his box tomorrow. She was going home. The smart of disappointment because she didn’t want to go home wasn’t anything new. Someday she’d give up hoping; she’d accept the dull evenings, the empty apartment. She’d give up expecting white orchids and Arabian perfumes, settle herself into the pattern of the efficient secretary she portrayed, growing grayer and more brittle by the year. Like Miss Grinswold who’d gone on to a more important secretaryship somewhere in the city. She’d even give up expecting Towner Clay to reappear. He had what he wanted and he’d found another girl to run his errands. He’d have turned up before now otherwise. This was her fate from now on. Waiting around a lonely office to deliver a parcel. Going out alone in the rain at night. Alone. Respectable. Lonely. Loneliness. And self-pity.

  She looked at her watch again. Six-twenty. Slowly she put on her small black hat. She took out her lipstick savagely and put more red on her thrice reddened lips. From the mirror she saw the man shape against the door.

  She knew before the door opened that it wasn’t the blue-eyed man returning. How she knew, she couldn’t say but she knew and she swiveled slowly, a small, cold wind blowing across her heart. There was no reason for it; there must be other late workers in the building. Furthermore, this was a modern, efficient building, derelicts couldn’t wander in at night. There was a man downstairs on duty, a register to sign. No one in New York knew who she was, why she was here. There was certainly nothing in the business of Bryan Brewer to draw danger to its doors. The sound of the phrase Importers and Exporters of Rare Objects might bring romantical notions to a romantical mind; one who rattled a typewriter forty hours a week knew better than to expect Polynesian thuggees lurking in dark corners.

  It wasn’t the man she’d been waiting for because he would have flung open the door and dashed in, not fumbled outside. The blue-eyed man was that kind. She held the lipstick tightly waiting. So tightly that her thumb and forefinger ached. Then the knob turned and the person outside was in the room. Her hand trembled with relief. It was a messenger boy, his black rain cape glistened; his cap, too big for him, pushed down damply over his ears. He said, “Package for Mr. Keane.” He had a worried voice and a worried face; he wasn’t a boy, he was a miserable man, rain wet, his broken shoes soggy with rain.

  She said, “You have the wrong office. This is Bryan Brewer.” She was sorry for him, for the additional lines her dismissal grooved on his face.

  He shook his head. “Bryan Brewer. That’s right.”

  She said, “There’s no Mr. Keane here.” It was when she spoke the name that she knew. In his mouth she hadn’t recognized it. It had happened at last. She’d been slow-witted not to have realized it earlier.

  Her job was over. The messenger didn’t know the exaltation hidden behind her words. “I’m sorry. You’d better ask the night man downstairs. You could probably leave the package with him and save yourself another trip.”

  He didn’t move. He just stood there, the water sliding down the slick black rubber of his cape to the bronze rug, his shoes soaking into the rug. Again he shook his head. He said in the same mildly worried voice, “I don’t have no package. I’m to get a package. Mr. Keane left it here.”

  If he’d spoken another name, she might have given it over. But there couldn’t be two men named Keane carrying a package to Brewer. And if she hadn’t been looking at his shoes, regretting their damage to Bryan Brewer’s fine rug, it wouldn’t have come to her that no messenger service would send out a boy without his rubbers on a night like this. There were messengers in and out all day, always in boots and rubbered. She’d never seen one with broken shoes, shoes that looked as if they tramped the streets looking for work, not working shoes. She raised her eyes slowly to the man’s colorless face. “Did you say you were sent for a package?” she asked. She asked the question briskly, the efficient secretary voice.

  “Mr. Keane sent me for a package he left here.” He spoke the line as if he’d memorized it, as if he’d finally remembered what he was to say. He hadn’t come from Keane.

  She shook her head. “There’s no package here. Perhaps Mr. Keane left one with Mr. Brewer but he isn’t here and his office is locked. You come back in the morning.”

  She was afraid he wasn’t going to leave. He didn’t seem to know what to do. He stood there, looking more uncertain, more lost.

  She suggested, “Can’t Mr. Keane call Mr. Brewer at home if he must have it tonight? He’s in the book. You tell him to do that.”

  “I’ll tell him.” He didn’t want to go but he went then; uncertain, unhappy, he went.

  She waited only until his shadow passed the door before crossing swiftly. She turned the bolt and she stood there trying to quiet her quick breath. The blue-eyed man was Gavin Keane. He hadn’t sent the false messenger. He might be returning himself any minute; she must get away from here quickly. With the box, the box that wasn’t candy or flowers. That wasn’t for Feather Prentiss.

  She took her black coat from the closet quickly. And then she realized. Someone else was after the box. Someone who wanted it enough to hire a derelict to impersonate a messenger boy. A derelict who was expendable? She put on her coat, buttoned it to her throat. The wool didn’t warm her. She opened the lower drawer of her desk, lifted out the box. Her hands were iced with excitement. There was no time to look into it now. The box wasn’t one you could disguise easily, it was too square, too deep for that. A plain package wrapped in white paper. The best she could do was cover it in the folds of a newspaper. If the worried messenger was waiting outside in the corridor, he’d know what it was she carried. Or if those who sent him were watching.

  She couldn’t go out alone into the corridor, wait for the long climb of the elevator. She didn’t dare risk it alone. Even now knowing the door was locked, her skin was crawling. She took the noon paper from the desk, folded it over the box. She laid her purse on top it. She lifted the phone, called the night watchman’s office. She could hear the long ringing. She waited; eventually he would answer. He must. She had to get out of the building, get to the safety of her apartment. It wasn’t a place now that she was loathe to reach; it was haven.

  She grasped at Cha
rlie’s voice. “This is Miss Williams—Bryan Brewer’s. Would you mind coming up, Charlie?”

  He’d mind. He’d grumble but he’d come. He always grumbled. She had to have some excuse. She thought of it quickly; it wasn’t too good but it would do.

  She went to the door of Bryan Brewer’s private office, opened it, fearful of what might be in the darkness beyond. She set the latch and closed it. Her upper lip was wet when she sat down again to wait, the newspaper package cradled in her arm. She waited in silence, broken only by the shuffling of the rain against the windows. When she heard the clop of Charlie’s shoes on the long tiled corridor, she didn’t move. Not until she saw his shadow against the door. She called out then, “Who is it?”

  “It’s Charlie. Who you think?”

  She knew his accent, his intonation. She unlocked the door.

  “What you want?” he demanded.

  She smiled at him, smiled as if he were a white winged angel, not an unlovely little man with a scowl between his black toothbrush brows. She closed the door behind him as she spoke. “I was afraid the windows in Mr. Brewer’s offices might have been left open, Charlie. He went home early—and I forgot my key this morning.”

  “All right. I’ll see.” He stumped across the rug, shaking his master key from his key chain.

  She walked on his heels. He flashed on the light, went to the windows in both rooms. He snuffed, “All closed.”

  She said, “Thanks, Charlie. Wait a minute and I’ll ride down with you. I’m leaving now.”

  She knew he would wait. He wouldn’t want to bring the elevator up again to twelfth for her. She turned out the light, held the newspaper close against her as she closed the door.

  She followed him down the dim lit corridor, not looking into the cross corridors as they passed. She kept talking because their steps echoed too loudly without words to soften them. “I came out without an umbrella or raincoat this morning. It looked like such a lovely day. Is it still pouring?”

 

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