Mildred Pierce (33 page)

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Authors: James M. Cain

BOOK: Mildred Pierce
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‘I
never
in all my
life
—!’

‘Now, Mother, nobody was asking any help from you, and as Wally has taken my case as a great favour to me, I think the least you can do is let him tell us what to do, as I imagine he knows much more about such things than you do.’

As Mildred subsided, a little frightened at Veda’s tone, Wally resumed in the casual way he had begun. ‘Well, so far as his doing anything goes, I’d say the next move was up to them. Way I look at it, we’ve taken Round 1. When we got out that warrant, that showed we meant business. On a morals charge, all the jury wants to know is the age of the girl – after that it’s dead open and shut. When they got him under cover quick, that shows they know what they’re up against. And what they’re up against is tough. So long as that warrant is out against him, he dare not come back to the state of California, he can’t go back to college, or even use his right name. Course there’s a couple of other things we might do, like sueing the mother, but then we’re in the newspapers, and that’s not so good. I’d say leave it like it is. Sooner or later they got to lead to us, and the more we act like we don’t care, the prettier we’re sitting.’

‘But Wally!’

Mildred’s voice was a despairing wail. ‘
Wally
! Time is going on! Days are passing, and look at this girl’s condition! We can’t wait! We—’

‘I think we can leave it to Wally.’

Veda’s cool tone ended the discussion, but all that day and all
that night Mildred fretted, and by next morning she had worked herself into a rage. When Tommy reported, at noon, she had him drive her over to Mrs Lenhardt’s, to ‘have it out with her’. But as they whirled up the drive, she saw the house man that had let her in, that morning long ago, talking to the driver of a delivery truck. She knew perfectly well
he
would remember her, and she called shrilly to Tommy to drive on, she had changed her mind. As the car rolled around the loop in front of the house, she leaned far back, so she wouldn’t be seen. Then she had Tommy drive her to Ida’s, and telephoned Bert. Leaving Tommy in Beverly, she again picked up Bert at Mrs Biederhof’s corner, and headed up to the hills.

Bert listened, and began shaking his head. ‘Gee Mildred, I wish you’d told me you had Wally Burgan in mind. I’m telling you, I don’t like the guy, and I don’t like the way he does business. Telling him to step on the gas is like – well, he’s been liquidating Pierce Homes for eight years now, hasn’t he? And they’re not liquidated yet. He’s not trying to get Veda married. He’s just running up a bill.’

They rode along, each trying to think of something, and suddenly Bert had it. ‘To hell with him! What we want is to find that boy, isn’t it? Isn’t that right?’

‘That’s it! Instead of—’

‘What this needs is a private detective.’

A hot, savage thrill shot through Mildred. At last she knew they were getting somewhere. Excitedly they talked about it, and then Bert told her to get him to a drugstore, or any place where he could get to a phone book. She stopped in San Fernando, and Bert hopped out before the car stopped rolling. He was back in a minute or two, a slip of paper in his hands. ‘Here’s three, with phone numbers and addresses. I’d say let’s go first to this Simons agency. I’ve heard of it, for one thing, and it’s right here in Hollywood, not too far away.’

The Simons Detective Agency was located in a small, one-story office on Vine Street, and Mr Simons turned out to be a friendly little man with bushy black hair. He listened attentively as Bert stated the problem, and refrained from asking embarrassing questions. Then he tilted back in his chair and said he saw
no particular difficulty. He got jobs of this sort all the time, and on most of them was able to show results. However, since time seemed to be of the essence, there would be certain expenses, and he would have to ask for an advance. ‘I’d have to have two fifty before I can start at all. First, to get the young man’s picture, and other information I’ll need. I’ll have to put an operative to work, and he’ll cost me ten dollars a day. Then I’ll have to offer a reward, and—’

‘Reward?’

Mildred suddenly had visions of a horrible picture tacked up in the post offices. ‘Oh, don’t worry, Mrs Pierce.’ Mr Simons seemed to divine her fear. ‘This is all strictly confidential, and nobody’ll know anything. Just the same, we work through our connections, and they’re not in business for their health. I’d say, on this, a fifty dollar reward should be ample. Then there’s the printing of our fliers, and the pay of a girl to address a couple thousand envelopes, and . . .’

Bert suggested that half the advance should be paid now, the other half when the boy was found, but Mr Simons shook his head. ‘This is all money I’ll have to pay out before I can start at all. Mind, I haven’t said anything yet about my services. Of course, other places may do it cheaper, and you’re perfectly welcome to go where you please. But, as I always say, the cheaper the slower in this business – and, the riskier.’

Mildred wrote the cheque. On the way home, both of them applauded themselves handsomely for what they had done, and agreed it should be between themselves, with nothing said to Wally or Veda until they had something to ‘lay on the line’, as Bert put it. So for several days Mildred was ducking into phone booths and talking in guarded tones to Mr Simons. Then one afternoon he told her to come in. She picked up Bert, and together they drove to the little frame office. Mr Simons was all smiles. ‘We had a little luck. Of course it wasn’t really luck. In business, you can’t be too thorough. We found out that when he left town, the young man was driving one of his stepfather’s cars, and just because I was able to put that information on the flier, now we’ve got something. Here’s the itemised bill, and if you’ll
just let me have the cheque while the girl is typing out the address for you . . .’

Mildred wrote a cheque for 125 dollars, mainly for ‘services’. Mr Simons put a card in her hand, with an address on it. ‘That’s a dude ranch near Winslow, Ariz. The young man is using his right name, and I don’t think you’ll have any trouble locating him.’

Driving back, they stared at one of Mr Simon’s fliers, bearing the weak, handsome face of the boy they had chosen for a sonin-law. Then, nervously, they discussed what was to be done, and came to the conclusion, in Bert’s phrase, that they had to ‘go through with it’. When Mildred dropped him off, they agreed that the time had come to get action out of Wally, and rather grimly Mildred drove home. Going to the kitchen, she sent Letty on another protracted errand. Then, when the girl had gone, she hurried into the den and called Wally. Shrilly, she told what she had done, and read him the address furnished by Mr Simons. He said hey wait a minute, till he got a pencil. Then he made her repeat the address slowly, and then said: ‘Swell. Say, that’s a help. It’s a good thing to have, just in case.’

‘What do you mean, in case?’

‘In case they get tough.’

‘Aren’t you calling the sheriff’s office?’

‘No use going off half-cocked. We’ve got them right where we want them, and as I said before, our play is to make them come to us. Just let it ride, and—’

‘Wally, I want that boy arrested.’

‘Mildred, why don’t you let me—’

Mildred slammed up the receiver and jumped up, her eyes blazing, her hat slightly askew. When she turned to dash out, Veda was at the door. At once she launched into a denunciation of Wally. ‘That man’s not even trying to do anything. I’ve told him where that boy is. I had a detective find out – and still he does nothing. Well, that’s the last he’ll hear from me! I’m going over to the Sheriff’s office myself !’

Quivering with her high, virtuous resolve, Mildred charged for the door. She collided with Veda, who seemed to have moved to
block her path. Then her wrist was caught in a grip like steel, and slowly, mercilessly, she was forced back, until she plunged down on the sofa. ‘You’ll do nothing of the kind.’

‘Let go of me! What are you pushing me for? What do you mean I’ll do nothing of the kind?’

‘If you go to the Sheriff’s office, they’ll bring young Mr Forrester back. And if they bring him back, he’ll want to marry me, and that doesn’t happen to suit me. It may interest you to know that he’s been back. He sneaked into town, twice, and a beautiful time I had of it, getting him to be a nice boy and stay where Mamma put him. He’s quite crazy about me. I saw to that. But as for matrimony, I beg to be excused. I’d much rather have the money.’

Mildred took off her hat, and stared at the cold, beautiful creature who had sat down opposite her, and who was now yawning, as though the whole subject were a bit of a bore. The events of the last few days began ticking themselves off in her mind, particularly the strange relationship that had sprung up between Veda and Wally. The squint appeared, and her face grew hard. ‘Now I know what that woman meant by blackmail. You’re just trying to shake her down, shake the whole family down, for money. You’re
not
pregnant, at all.’

‘Mother, at this stage it’s a matter of opinion, and in my opinion, I am.’

Veda’s eyes glinted as she spoke, and Mildred wanted to back down, to avoid one of those scenes from which she always emerged beaten, humiliated, and hurt. But something was swelling within her, something that began in the sick jealousy of a few nights before, something that felt as though it might presently choke her. Her voice shook as she spoke. ‘How could you do such a thing? If you had loved the boy, I wouldn’t have a word to say. So long as I thought you had loved him, I didn’t have a word to say, not one word to blame you. To love is a woman’s right, and when you do, I
hope
you give everything you have, brimming over. But just to pretend you loved him, to lead him on, to get money out of him –
how
could you do it?’

‘Merely following in my mother’s footsteps.’

‘What did you say?’

‘Oh, stop being so tiresome. There’s the date of your wedding, and there’s the date of my birth. Figure it out for yourself. The only difference is that you were a little younger at that time than I am now – a month or two anyway. I suppose it runs in families.’

‘Why do you think I married your father?’

‘I rather imagine he married you. If you mean why you got yourself knocked up, I suppose you did it for the same reason I did – for the money.’

‘What money?’

‘Mother, in another minute I’ll be getting annoyed. Of course, he has no money now, but at the time he was quite rich, and I’m sure you knew it. When the money was gone you kicked him out. And when you divorced him, and he was so down and out that the Biederhof had to keep him, you quite generously stripped him of the only thing he had left, meaning this lovely, incomparable, palatial hovel that we live in.’

‘That was his idea, not mine. He wanted to do his share, to contribute something for you and Ray. And it was all covered with mortgages, that he couldn’t even have paid the interest on, let alone—’

‘At any rate, you took it.’

By now, Mildred had sensed that Veda’s boredom was pure affectation. Actually she was enjoying the unhappiness she inflicted, and had probably rehearsed her main points in advance. This, ordinarily, would have been enough to make Mildred back down, seek a reconciliation, but this feeling within kept goading her. After trying to keep quiet, she lashed out: ‘But why?
Why
– will you tell me that? Don’t I give you everything that money can buy? Is there one single thing I ever denied you? If there was something you wanted, couldn’t you have come to me for it, instead of resorting to – blackmail. Because that woman was right! That’s all it is! Blackmail! Blackmail!
Blackmail
!’

In the silence that followed, Mildred felt first frightened, then coldly brave, as the feeling within drove her on. Veda puffed her cigarette, reflected, and asked: ‘Are you sure you want to know?’

‘I dare you to tell me.’

‘Well, since you ask, with enough money, I can get away from
you, you poor, half-witted mope. From you, and your pie wagon and your chickens, and your waffles, and your kitchens, and every thing that smells of grease. And from this shack, that you blackmailed out of my father with your threats about the Biederhof, and its neat little two-car garage, and its lousy furniture. And from Glendale, and its dollar days, and its furniture factories, and its women that wear uniforms and its men that wear smocks. From every rotten, stinking thing that even reminds me of the place – or you.’

‘I see.’

Mildred got up and put on her hat. ‘Well, it’s a good thing I found out, what you were up to, when I did. Because I can tell you right now if you had gone through with this, or even tried to go through with it, you’ve have been out of here a little sooner than you expected.’

She headed for the door, but Veda was there first. Mildred laughed, and tore up the card Mr Simons had given her. ‘Oh, you needn’t worry that I’ll go to the Sheriff’s office now. It’ll be a long time before they find out from me where the boy is hiding, or you do either.’

Again she started for the door, but Veda didn’t move. Mildred backed off and sat down. If Veda thought she would break, she was mistaken. Mildred sat motionless, her face hard, cold, and implacable. After a long time the silence was shattered by the phone. Veda jumped for it. After four or five brief, cryptic monosyllables, she hung up, turned to Mildred with a malicious smile. ‘That was Wally. You may be interested to know that they’re ready to settle.’

‘Are you?’

‘I’m meeting them at his office.’

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