Read Shamus In The Green Room Online
Authors: Susan Kandel
fice. Maybe if I could restore order there, I could restore order
elsewhere. Homeostasis. The maintenance of external balances
facilitates the maintenance of internal balances.
It’s a scientific principle.
After an hour of filing, however—followed by fifteen solid
minutes of dusting, and several of sneezing, which I wouldn’t
have had to endure if I’d dusted more regularly—I’d con-
cluded that the whole thing was a crock. Still, I’d done one
thing right: I’d waited until Vincent came home, and I’d
helped him talk Annie down from the state she’d worked her-
self into. While Alexander watched cartoons, and the two of
them went out for a walk, I’d put the house back together and
started dinner (no yeast). When they came home, arms locked
tightly around each other’s waist, they announced they were
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going to fight for joint custody. Roxana had a long way to go,
but Annie was no longer going to write her off as a lost cause.
Not for her sake, but for Alexander’s.
Two things right: I’d finally talked to Gambino, who’d re-
alized at some point during the day that he never had gotten
his eggs Benedict. There were fireworks, as I’d expected. Words
like gun had made a definite impact (Rafe’s gun, not Tina’s;
I still hadn’t broached the whole issue of Tina). Gambino didn’t
know Captain Donaldson, but he was familiar with Detective
Smarinsky. After a dinner of Indian takeout, Gambino got
him on the phone. They talked for a while. Both had meetings
all day tomorrow—Friday—but Smarinsky agreed to a sit-
down at the end of the day, with the caveat that it was shabbat,
and his wife was baking fresh challah, so the clock would be
ticking.
After they hung up, and because Gambino asked so nicely,
I swore on the latest issue of People (I was boycotting the rest
of them) that I was going to stay out of it from there on in. I had
every intention of sticking to my word. But in my defense, I’d
eaten so much garlic naan I couldn’t think straight.
That was hours ago, of course. Now I sat at my Lucite desk,
which I could actually see for the first time in years, wide awake
at two o’clock in the morning. It was too late to call anybody.
I could wake up Gambino, but he had a busy day ahead of
him. So I walked over to the bookshelf and pulled out the
Hammett biography I’d written all those years ago.
It was my second book, and the one that still meant the
most to me, probably because I admired Hammett so much,
both for his personal integrity and the beauty of his language.
I ran my fingers over the shiny white dust jacket with the stark
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black Roman letters. I’d struggled with the title for a long time.
Nothing had seemed right. For a while, I’d wanted to call it Ink
Is a Stain, which was the first line of a poem Hammett had
written early in his career. But I’d finally decided on The Man
Who Wasn’t There, after a verse he used to recite to his younger
daughter, Jo:
Yesterday, upon the stair
I saw a man who wasn’t there.
He wasn’t there again today.
Oh, how I wish he’d go away.
The man who wasn’t there. That was how I saw Hammett—
not as the thin man, who was so insubstantial he had to stand
in the same place twice to throw a shadow, but as someone far
more elusive: drinking at the Clover Club when he should have
been in his office at MGM; with his lover when he should have
been with his wife; in the army when he should have been in
the hospital; in jail when he should have been at his typewriter.
As a close friend of his, a screenwriter named Nunnally John-
son, once said, you could only live that way if you didn’t ex-
pect to be around much past Thursday. But Hammett lived to
sixty-six. He spent his whole life dodging a bullet that was
coming at him in slow motion.
My editor, Sally, had wanted a little-known black-and-
white photo of him for the cover. It was taken in San Fran-
cisco circa 1921, up on the roof of 620 Eddy Street, where
he’d lived while working for the Pinkerton office, when he was
first married. But I’d disliked that photograph, with Hammett
looking off into the distance, a pipe in his mouth, a large,
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black drainpipe leaning perilously close. It was so portentous,
somehow. Her second choice was a charcoal sketch of a bottle
being borne along the waves. She’d taken the idea from one of
the early biographers, who’d likened Hammett’s first stories
for Black Mask to letters in a bottle, set adrift in the hope
they’d be found by like-minded souls. I’d disliked that idea,
too, disliked the whole romantic mythology of Hammett as a
tortured hero.
Hammett could’ve kept writing, that was the thing, penned
dozens of Sam Spade rehashes, kept himself busy, out of trou-
ble. But he didn’t want to. He’d mastered the form: why repeat
himself? Over the years, pressured by his publisher, he’d an-
nounced titles of forthcoming novels, serious novels this time:
There Was a Young Man, The Hunting Boy, The Valley Sheep Are
Fatter. But none ever materialized. I flipped to the last chapter
of my book, and found a quote from the fragmentary Tulip,
which Hammett left behind at his death: “If you are tired, you
ought to rest, I think, and not try to fool yourself and your cus-
tomers with colored bubbles.”
You miss the story when you get caught up in the myth.
The myth is the story’s engine, not its conclusion. How well
Hammett knew this. Consider the legendary Maltese falcon:
when the thief, Caspar Gutman, finally gets his hands on it, he
turns the bird upside down and scrapes an edge of its base with
his knife: “Black enamel came off in tiny curls, exposing black-
ened metal beneath. Gutman’s knife-blade bit into the metal,
turning back a thin curved shaving. The inside of the shaving,
and the narrow plane its removal had left, had the soft gray
sheen of lead.”
It was a fake, a ruse—a myth.
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A myth takes you only so far, and not always in the direc-
tion of the truth. The truth is right there in front of you.
That’s what Captain Donaldson had said. But you have to be
ready to confront it.
I was ready, I suddenly realized.
All I had to do was open one more door.
It wasn’t made of glass, but when I slipped the key into the
lock, I half-expected it to shatter. Such are the perils of the
literary imagination. It was actually anticlimactic. No shattered
glass, no lightning bolt from on high, no little voice in my head
asking what the hell I was doing, which would have been a fine
thing to ask at four in the afternoon on this unusually bright
day in early fall.
I kissed the Playboy bunny for luck, slipped the key ring
back into my pocket, and opened the door to Rafe Simic’s
house.
No one was at home.
I knew that already, having called five times at five-minute
intervals, letting it ring until the machine picked up. I’d used a
prepaid, throwaway cell phone so the number couldn’t be
traced back to me, and remembered to pay in cash. Afterward,
the phone went into a Dumpster on the corner of Venice and
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Lincoln with thirty unused minutes, but what the hell. A find
like that would make somebody’s day, and god knows I could
use the karmic payback. Yes, I’d thought of everything.
“Hey!” someone called out. “Don’t shut that door!”
Make that almost everything.
I spun around slowly, giving myself enough time to wipe
the look of terror off my face.
“You’re Rafe’s friend, right?” It was the guy in the Rolling
Stones T-shirt from the other day. He was carrying two gro-
cery bags. “Remember me? I’m Sam the neighbor.”
“Hey, Sam the neighbor,” I said, doing my best to radiate
inner peace.
“Rafe went to the desert, didn’t he?”
“That’s right! In the desert for three more days!” Which is
why it was going to be no problem whatsoever getting into his
house. I peeled off my sweater. I was starting to perspire.
“Too bad. He borrowed something I need. Well, I guess I
don’t really need it. You know how that goes.”
“Sure.”
“Man, I’d love to get out of town. Some guys have all the
luck.”
I started to play with my wooden bangles. Most people take
this sort of thing as a hint, but not Sam.
“No such luck for me,” he continued. “I’m stuck here. Edit-
ing the movie from hell.”
He waited for me to ask for details. I didn’t want to ask for
details. I rocked back and forth on my heels. I played with my
bangles some more.
“Director’s a first-timer. Doesn’t know anything. So it’s all
on me. I just spent nineteen hours straight in the editing suite.
I could sure use a beer.”
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Go home then.
He waited expectantly.
I smiled innocuously.
He smiled back, but innocuous wasn’t his thing. Exactly
the opposite. His smile showed intent. His smile showed teeth.
His smile said wouldn’t it be great to have a beer in the movie
star’s house with the movie star’s girlfriend and then sleep with
her in the movie star’s bed while the movie star was out of
town? I really didn’t have time for this. Sam stroked his five-
o’clock shadow, which was one hour early. “Aren’t you going
to invite me in? I’m a thirsty guy.”
“It’s just that—”
“C’mon. You look like you could use one, too,” he said.
“I’m—”
“Rafe is always so hospitable.”
“Oh, fine,” I said, taking his arm.
That’s when the flashbulbs started popping.
There were three, no four, no five of them. It was like a bad
joke, these overweight guys in their safari jackets: man the
hunter stalks his prey, finds the perfect moment to strike.
I could see the headlines already: “Buxom Brunette Beauty
Cheats on Rafe!” “Rafe’s Faithless Girlfriend Caught in the
Act!” Only I wasn’t Rafe’s girlfriend, nor would I cheat on him
with Sam, of all people, if I were.
Oh, god: what was I wearing? None of the coral beads had
fallen off the bangles. The shoes were wood-grain print plat-
forms with ankle straps, from the forties and in perfect condi-
tion. But my chocolate ballet dress with the spaghetti straps?
What a pity I’d taken off my sweater. My arms were going to
look like ham hocks.
“Over here!”
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“Look this way!”
“Smile for Daddy!”
“Give us a wave!”
Sam started to wave.
“Are you out of your mind?” I yelled, slapping his hand down.
“Sorry, reflex.”
I dragged him inside Rafe’s house and slammed the door shut.
“Should we call someone?” Sam asked, making himself
comfortable on the sofa.
Good idea. The police could just take me away now. “Who’d
you have in mind, Sam?”
“Oh, I don’t know. How about that beer?”
I went into the kitchen and opened the stainless-steel fridge.
There was extra-firm tofu, soy milk, something horrible-
looking that bore a slight resemblance to bacon, a vat of sour
cream, a six-pack of Diet Coke, and beer, two kinds: Chimay,
from Belgium, and Budweiser. A Bud for Sam.
Speak of the devil, the door to the kitchen swung open and
there he was, proffering a tub of sweating ice cream as if it
were a dozen red roses.
“I’m lactose intolerant,” I said.
“Too bad. It’s vanilla bean.” He maneuvered himself be-
hind me—which would have been desirable only if I’d been
choking and he were performing the Heimlich—then started
shimmying down to open the freezer. “Don’t want it to melt,”
he murmured, “but as for you . . .” I feinted left, then dodged
the bullet by sliding sideways out of his embrace.
“Beer in the living room!” I cried gaily.
I choked once, on onion soup gratinée. It was in the kitchen
of the faculty club at the University of Chicago, where I
worked as a hostess while my ex-husband went up for tenure.
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But instead of Heimliching me, the chef put down the chops
he was Frenching and stuck his hand down my throat to re-
move the offending cheese. Gruyère.
Sam found his spot on the couch. “So.” He took a slug of
his beer.
“So,” I replied, perching myself on the arm of a leather
chair that looked like it could take it.
“You’re awfully far away,” he said.
“I’m comfortable, thanks.” Of course, I wasn’t, so I sort of
slid into the chair proper, landing with a thud. He didn’t care.
“How long have you known Rafe?”
“It seems like forever. Another Bud?” Maybe he’d pass out,
and I could go about my business undisturbed.
“I’m fine.” He got up to look out the window. “Looks like
the photographers are gone.”
“Oh, good,” I said.
“Rafe’s got problems I can’t even imagine.”
“So true.”
He shook his head. “Paparazzi.”
I nodded.
“They’ll eat you alive,” he said authoritatively.
“Tear your flesh off in chunks.”