Read Shamus In The Green Room Online
Authors: Susan Kandel
security and streamed in over the original gate.
Rafe got out of the car and stuck his cap on his head. “Did
you know Charles Bronson took his new name from this gate?”
“Alfred A. Knopf wanted Hammett to change his name.
He thought it was too hard for people to pronounce.”
“They wanted me to change my name, too. Robert Simon
was their idea of a good name.”
“Sounds like a lawyer.”
“Lee Majors, the star of The Six Million Dollar Man, was
born Harvey Lee Yeary. I met him a long time ago in the green
room, waiting to go on with Jay Leno. Man, I’d have changed
that name, too.”
“Jay Leno?”
“Harvey Lee Yeary.”
We sat on the hood of his car, looking north. There were
billboards as far as the eye could see. Spearmint Rhino, an up-
scale gentlemen’s club. Citibank. A horror movie featuring a
girl in a towel wielding a knife. California avocados. In the dis-
tance were the snowcapped San Gabriel Mountains. I won-
dered how different it’d looked here in 1930. That was the year
Hammett had arrived in Hollywood, fresh from writing four
best-selling novels. David O. Selznick decided Hammett would
class up the joint—write screenplays, doctor scripts, finesse
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dialogue. What neither of them knew, of course, was that
Hammett’s best work was already behind him.
“While he was at Paramount,” I said out loud, “Hammett
finished The Thin Man. That was the last book he’d ever
write.”
It was the part of his life most people couldn’t fathom.
Hammett lived for almost thirty years after The Thin Man
without ever finishing another book. Just before he died, he
was visited by a reporter who asked him why he kept three Un-
derwood typewriters. Still in his pajamas at noon, the tall,
gaunt, by then toothless man answered by saying he wanted to
remind himself that he used to be a writer.
“What went wrong?” asked Rafe.
“I don’t know,” I answered. “He lived fast. He spent money
like it was water. He liked women and alcohol, and he went
through a lot of both.”
“Did Hollywood ruin him?” Interesting question coming
from an actor.
“He was sick. He was a drunk. He felt like a hack and
wanted to be taken seriously.” I paused. “Maybe he was already
ruined.”
“I get it,” said Rafe, in a way that made me wonder.
t
L a
t e r t h a
t n i g h t I b r
o u g h t t h e s c r a p -
book into bed with me.
“Look at this,” I said to Gambino.
“Do I have to? I saw the guy in person and wasn’t very im-
pressed. And I’m busy here.” Ever the optimist, he was scraping
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up the crystallized remains of a quart of Häagen-Dazs coffee
ice cream.
“Oh, c’mon. You liked his car at least.”
“ ‘I’m an idiot with money to burn.’ That’s what that car
says.”
“So what would you have bought?” I took the carton out of
his hand, lifted up his arm, and draped it across my shoulders.
Gambino pulled me in close. He was so big he made me feel
tiny. I am 5 feet 11 and 144 pounds. I like to feel tiny. Jayne
Mansfield, with whom I am obsessed, said it best: “I’m a big
girl and I have to have a big guy.”
“So, what kind of car?” I repeated.
“I’m thinking here.” He peeled off his wire-rimmed glasses
and shut his eyes for a moment. “Well, I would’ve said a 1971
Hemi Cuda convertible, which is the greatest muscle car De-
troit ever built.”
“But?”
“Nash Bridges already took it.”
“He’s a TV cop,” I murmured consolingly, “but you’re the
real thing.”
“What did Annie say when you dug up this thing?” he
asked, changing the subject.
“She was mortified.”
“Lusting after total strangers. You can’t lust after people you
actually know when you’re a kid. It’s too scary.”
“Don’t tell me you had a crush on some movie star.” He
didn’t seem like the type. He was solid as a rock, salt of the
earth. A little defensive, sometimes, but who isn’t?
“I had the poster of Farrah Fawcett in the red one-piece
bathing suit,” he admitted.
“You remember what color bathing suit she was wearing?”
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“What planet do you live on, Cece? That poster united a
generation of teenage boys.”
I sat straight up.
“What?”
“I just realized we’ve never gone swimming together.” Late
at night, this sort of thing could easily assume massive propor-
tions. Gambino knew me well enough to nip it in the bud. He
took my chin in his hand.
“We’ve also never taken a plane together. We’ve never
packed a suitcase together. We’ve never purchased a major ap-
pliance together. It’s okay. It really is.”
“We should buy a refrigerator. I have a terrible refrigerator.”
“First thing in the morning.” He pulled me under the covers.
“Wait a second.” I got out of bed, wriggled out of my
sweats, and opened my chest of drawers.
Farrah Fawcett was not the only woman to ever make good
use of a red one-piece bathing suit.
One hour later Gambino was in dreamland, but I was wide
awake, with something on my mind. I looked at the clock:
11:34 p.m. I picked up the phone and called Annie.
“Did I wake you?” I whispered. “Oh, how unfortunate,” I
said, leaning down to pick up the ice-cream carton. “The ants
are back.”
“I told you to try the organic stuff. It works better. It
doesn’t kill them. It relocates them.” Annie loved animals
(bugs included) and was committed to deluding herself on
such matters. “So what’s going on?”
“Where’d you put the picture of the prom queen?”
“The who?”
“In the Rafe Simic scrapbook. You cut out her face and
stuck yours in instead.”
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“Check the pocket in the back. Sweet dreams, Mom.”
I shoved a couple of pillows behind my neck, flipped to the
back of the scrapbook, slid my hand into the pocket, and felt
around.
There it was.
You could count on Annie to never throw anything away.
I pulled out the tiny scrap and peered at it.
The girl in the picture was beautiful, but not in an obvious
sort of way. She had wide-spaced eyes, a broad, slightly cock-
eyed smile, small, pointy teeth, and a nose that looked like
maybe it had been broken once or twice. Dimples. A dark tan.
And no resemblance whatsoever to the dead woman
wrapped up in sheets at 1104 North Mission Road.
Icalled Rafe at nine the next morning. He picked up on the
first ring, which caught me off guard since I’d been pretty
much planning to hang up.
“It’s Cece.”
“Hey, Cece. I’m a little crazed right now.”
He didn’t sound crazed. Nor surprised when I asked if I
could attend the scattering of Maren’s ashes.
“Do you need directions,” he asked, “or do you want to
come with me and Will?”
I lied and said I had something to do in the area afterward,
so I’d take my own car. But what exactly do you do in Palos
Verdes after you’ve watched the wrong person’s ashes being
flung out to sea?
I went over to the dryer, furiously yanked out the tangle of
towels, and started to fold them. End over frayed end. The pile
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grew tall, then taller, then so tall it toppled over, which was
perfect.
It was time for coffee. The ritual had a calming effect on
me. It’s like smokers with their cigarettes. Or hyperactive chil-
dren with their Ritalin. Like Rafe.
I poured the remains of yesterday’s pot into the sink. I
rinsed out the carafe. The gold filter was caked with saturated
grounds. I shook them out, then measured out ten cups’ worth
of freshly ground beans, dumped them into the freshly washed
filter, and hit the On switch. Immediately, the water started to
hiss and gurgle. I sat down at the kitchen table. The sound was
hypnotic. By the time I was on my third cup, I was able to see
the situation more clearly.
In the immortal words of Detective Smarinsky, what I had
was bupkes. Nothing to indicate the dead woman wasn’t
Maren. People who’ve been floating belly-up for twenty-four
hours do not maintain their Coppertone tans. What’s more,
the picture I’d seen of Maren had been reprinted from a year-
book. It was tiny. You couldn’t really see a thing. Not to men-
tion, Maren was a teenager then. People changed. They got
wrinkles. They dyed their hair. They gained weight. They lost
weight. I’d changed. Maren had, too. Nobody’s a prom queen
forever.
The clock over the stove read 10:07 a.m. I had to get going
if I didn’t want to be late, not that I wanted to go anymore, but
now I was obligated. Why was I always so quick to jump the
gun? Obviously, I craved drama. This was not a good character
trait. I dropped my terry-cloth robe into the hamper and went
into the bathroom to turn on the shower, which took precisely
three and a half minutes to warm up. Just enough time to pon-
der my wardrobe.
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I have to admit I was stumped when it came to appropriate
attire. My salt-and-pepper tweed suit with the peplum would
provide excellent camouflage in case a sudden gust of wind blew
the remains my way, but the thought was too morbid, even for
me. My Halston black jersey disco dress with the fluttery
sleeves would certainly do, but black was probably hyperbolic,
considering I’d never even met the deceased. I settled on some-
thing in between, an antique black-and-cream lace wrapper over
a pair of high-waisted gray trousers. I blotted my red lips on a
tissue, threw on my red crystal beads, and ran out to the office
to get my MapQuest directions. Good thing, because Buster
was trapped in there. I must’ve shut the door with him inside
earlier in the morning.
“Bad boy,” I said, smelling pee. Buster trained his wet
brown eyes upon me, convincingly woebegone. Oh, I suppose
it wasn’t his fault. I’d pamper him tonight with a long meander
around the neighborhood.
West Hollywood was doggie nirvana. As per local ordi-
nance, you can’t “own” a dog in this town; you can only be a
“guardian.” Literally thousands of them (dogs, not guardians)
were concentrated in the four-block radius around my house:
fat ones, skinny ones, ones that looked like rodents or minia-
ture lions. Between the hours of five and seven p.m., they were
out in full force. You really had to watch where you stepped.
I studied my directions. I’d requested multiple options.
Zoom Out showed the Palos Verdes Peninsula as a bump
along the coastline somewhere southwest of L.A. and north of
Long Beach. That much I already knew.
Zoom In was somewhat more informative, though it did
leave out the choice details—the fact that the area boasted
one of the highest per capita incomes in the United States, for
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example, and that if you lived there, you didn’t have to lock
your door at night, because you were so isolated from the rest
of the city.
One road in, one road out.
It looked like I’d be taking the 405, which was always bad
news. Fifty-one minutes was the estimate, but I’d allotted two
hours, and it was a good thing, too. Traffic was backed to the air-
port, and didn’t ease up until I exited at Hawthorne Boulevard,
which is not coterminous with the city of Hawthorne (ditto
Artesia Boulevard and Artesia).
L.A. geography is notoriously tricky. It can take years to
master. That is why the Thomas Guide exists. The Thomas
Guide is a thick map book you purchase when you move to
L.A. You buy it at the gas station and you must get a new one
every few years because inevitably the page you need has gone
missing. You keep it in your car at all times. It is especially
useful when your MapQuest directions are counterintuitive.
For instance, who would believe that Palos Verdes Drive
North segues directly into Palos Verdes Drive West, no turns
required?
You live, you learn.
One road in, one road out.
The hills, dotted with red-roofed Spanish-style houses, rose
behind me as I wound my way down to Paseo del Mar, which
offered dazzling views of the blue-green water of the Pacific.
Times like these called for a convertible. The back window on
my Camry’s passenger side was stuck halfway, so I rolled down
the other windows. It basically counted.
The air smelled nice. Briny. All you could hear was the
screeching of the gulls and the low-pitched hum of multiple
pool heaters, trilling in unison. A gang of little girls in helmets
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and pastel-colored Lacoste shirts whooshed past on their bikes.
Then their brothers, tan and handsome. A million bucks in or-
thodontia. I felt like I was in another world. Big houses. Big
smiles. No punks with devil horns.
Rafe had said they’d be where Paseo del Mar meets Via Ar-
royo. I found the parking area beyond a secluded church. It
was empty except for a few cars, which made sense since it