Read Shamus In The Green Room Online
Authors: Susan Kandel
I checked the glove compartment for candy, but no such luck.
I listened to Santana. Then Neil Young. Then ABBA came
on, and my patience was shot.
I leaned out my window like everybody else and yelled up
to the driver of the big rig, “What’s going on?”
He turned his head and yelled back, “Accident just past the
Wayfarer’s Chapel.”
The Wayfarer’s Chapel. That was where Jayne Mansfield
married bulging muscleman Mickey Hargitay in 1958. Talk
about signs.
Twenty minutes later I pulled into the parking lot, which
was nestled in a dense hillside. The traffic would probably be
unsnarled by the time I left.
I’d read about this place for years, but had never quite real-
ized where it was located. It was built in the forties by Lloyd
76
Wright (Frank’s son) out of triangular segments of glass,
framed by aged redwood timbers. Wright used thirty- and
sixty-degree angles throughout because they occurred natu-
rally in snowflakes, crystals, and tree branches. It was so po-
etic, that idea.
I swung open the heavy door.
The chapel was empty.
Not unusual for a Wednesday.
I was halfway down the aisle before I realized what I was
doing. That would be walking down the aisle. By the time I
stopped in front of the altar, my legs were feeling pretty shaky.
I looked through the glass at those trees. Pine? Pepper? My
knees started to give out. The branches seemed as if they were
grabbing at me. I couldn’t breathe. I’d been imprisoned inside
a crystal. Was this what Lloyd Wright was going for? Or was
this me? Jayne Mansfield had stood on this very spot. I won-
dered how she’d felt on her wedding day. She wore pink lace
and Mickey’s ten-carat diamond, but they still didn’t make it
till death do us part.
Gambino had wanted to buy me a diamond. But I’d had a
diamond the first time around, and we all know how that
worked out. So I chose an emerald instead. It was tiny but per-
fect. I looked down at my hand and my breathing started to re-
turn to normal. I even broke into a tiny smile. Then, a tourist
in a visor and shorts with many pockets bounced over cheer-
fully, asking if I’d please move because happy as I seemed, I
was standing in the way of his picture.
It was time to go anyway.
Back to the car.
The traffic had cleared.
Back down the hill.
77
In search of Maren and Lisa.
They would have gone this same way, I was sure of it. But
where exactly? All I saw were cargo cranes dotting the skyline,
a stream of 99¢ Only stores, a handful of taquerias, and fi-
nally, a sign reading: Come Back to San Pedro.
I hung a U-turn at the next corner. A block later, I drove
past a sign reading: Welcome to San Pedro.
They say the second time’s the charm.
In Hammett’s day, San Pedro was a center of union activ-
ity. Today, not only was it the home of the biggest cargo
terminal in the United States, it was also the port of Los An-
geles’s world-cruise center. At any given moment, thousands of
retirees were plunking down their life’s savings to sail on ships
departing from one of its numerous berths, where they’d be
stuffed full of rich food that would hasten their deaths, not
to mention those small cabins with notoriously bad air circu-
lation.
All this I learned from the woman manning the desk at
Limo San Pedro. I didn’t need a limo, of course, but their
blinking neon sign (“Serving lax at reasonable prices”) struck
me at the time as amusing. Also, there was a parking space out
front. At the mere mention of the word tattoo, the woman
whipped off her pale blue cardigan, her “Hi, I’m Ruth” button
clattering noisily to the floor, and showed me her fairy tattoo.
It was large. After I’d admired it sufficiently, she directed me to
the tattoo parlor on the corner of Mesa and Pacific, which she
said had been there forever.
Tattu du Jour, however, was not the place I was looking for.
It was run by a young man from Paris who’d made a typing
mistake when applying for his Fulbright and had wound up at
Cal State Long Beach instead of UCLA. Turned out he liked
78
the sea air and cheap rents, and had always dreamed of having
his own business. He kept saying, “Be calm,” to me, which I
thought was a little rude, but as it turned out he was telling
me to go to Beacon Street. There were a couple of tattoo par-
lors there.
No luck at ACME Deluxe Tattoos. The owner was out and
the help was surly. He looked at me like I was crazy when I
asked how long they’d been in business and if they kept any
kind of records.
The place next door didn’t appear to have a name, although
there was a sign over the register, handwritten in ornate,
Gothic letters, which read: St. Sabrina in Purgatory. A
Hell’s Angels–type with a long, grizzled beard was sitting be-
hind the counter.
“Is the owner here?” I asked him.
“Who wants to know?” he asked, stroking his beard.
“Cece Ribisi.” Which is the actual name of one of my spin-
ster aunts.
He pointed to the sign. “Saint Sabrina is in Purgatory.”
Of course she is. I tried to slink out the door, but he let out
a belly laugh and said, “Just kidding. I’m the owner. Name’s
Frank. How you doing, Ms. Ribisi? Lemme guess. You want a
butterfly.”
My aunt Cece would never pick a butterfly. A crucifix,
maybe? A cannoli? She was extremely overweight. “I’m not ac-
tually shopping for a tattoo today,” I said, “but if I wanted one,
I’d absolutely want a butterfly, and this would absolutely be the
place.”
“Cut the shit. You a cop? I do everything by the book here.
Send the health inspector if you want. Go right ahead, missy.
You aren’t going to find anything—”
79
“Hold on a minute,” I interrupted. “I am not a cop. A cop!”
I laughed. “Hardly.”
He looked dubious.
“You can tell by my shoes.”
He ambled out from behind the counter, belly first, and
studied my water-stained silk sandals with the amber Lucite
heels.
“Cops never get their shoes wet, am I right, Frank?”
He gave me a grudging nod and went back to his seat be-
hind the counter. “What do you want, then?”
“I’m trying to figure out where two girls from Palos Verdes
would go if they wanted to get a really unusual tattoo and it
was the seventies.”
“You asking hypothetically?”
“It’s kind of a complicated story.”
He clasped his hands, eager as a schoolboy. “I like stories.”
“It’s not pretty.”
“Do I look like I shock easy?”
“My husband’s been cheating on me—”
“No way,” he interrupted.
“With two women.”
“Come on.”
I nodded. “The only thing I know about them is that they
grew up in Palos Verdes, and when they were kids, they got
matching hourglass tattoos. Really beautiful. Special. On their
shoulders. Right around here.” I pulled back my silk wrapper
and revealed a glimpse of my turquoise lace bra strap. I
thought this might incline Frank toward my cause.
He smiled, revealing some very creative dental work. “I’ve
been here since ’seventy-five, and it don’t ring any bells, Ms.
Ribisi.”
80
“Too bad,” I said. “I’d really like these women’s names.”
“Sluts.” He shook his head. “Well, if the place still exists,
there are release forms. They’d tell you their names.”
“Who’s been in town for a while? Doing really unique
work?”
When he didn’t answer, I reached into my purse and took
out one of my business cards, which I’d designed myself to re-
semble a Tiffany’s box. I’d gotten a deal on a thousand of
them, which just goes to show there are no deals.
“Would you call me, Frank, if anything comes to you?”
“And to think,” he said, gold teeth glinting, “I thought you
were going to slip me a twenty.”
“Would that help?”
“Might.”
I pulled one out and gave it to him. He pocketed it, then
turned his attention to my card.
“Caruso? Thought you said it was Ribisi.”
“I’ve gone back to my maiden name,” I said, “on account
of—”
“Makes sense.” He clapped his hands. “I’m sending you to
see the Mayor, Ms. Caruso.”
That seemed extreme.
“The Mayor runs this town. Knows everybody and every-
thing. You describe the tattoo, Mayor’ll give you the who,
what, when, and where.” Frank looked at his watch. “It’s five
o’clock. Why don’t you head on over to the Spot? Say Frank
sent you.”
The Spot turned out to be a bar located in a little cottage
with a big satellite dish. The “S” of the sign had flamed out, so
if you didn’t know, you’d think you were heading to “The
81
Pot.” The “O” was a bull’s-eye, with an arrow shot through it.
I hoped it was a good omen.
The Spot smelled the way certain bars do, a stomach-
churning goulash of stale beer, sweat, and cheese. There was a
basketball game playing on a big screen behind the pool table,
but all eyes were instantly on me. Good thing there were only
four of them. One pair belonged to the bartender, the other to
a sixtyish woman channeling Dynasty-era Joan Collins in a
spangly royal-blue turban and matching pants suit. She was
seated at the far end of the bar, under the Corona banner, eat-
ing peanuts while doing a crossword puzzle.
“What can I do you for?” asked the bartender.
“I’ll have a club soda.”
“You got it.”
“With lime,” I added, going for broke.
He squirted the club soda into a dirty glass, stuck a slice of
lime on the rim, and slid it toward me, along with a bowl of
pretzels. Guess you had to be a regular to get the nuts.
“Thanks,” I said.
He watched me not drink.
“Something else you need?”
“Actually, I’m looking for the Mayor.”
Silence.
“Frank sent me.” I sounded like a bad movie.
“ ‘Path of virtuous conduct, to some,’ ” the woman said
out loud.
“Kosher!” shouted the bartender.
“Three letters. What about humble, also three letters?”
“Shy?” he offered.
“Pie,” I said. And I should know.
82
“Ooh, yes,” she said, erasing something furiously. When
she was done, she smiled at me. “Hear you’re looking for the
Mayor.” She wiped the lipstick from the corners of her mouth
and came over. “That would be me. Duly elected, sworn in,
and officiating twenty-four/seven. Always available for my con-
stituents. Will you vouch for me, Andy?”
“You have to ask, Mayor?”
The Mayor looked like she might have been pretty once,
movie-star pretty. Those women go one of two ways. Either
they live in denial, with overreaching hairdos and makeup, or
they give up the ghost. The Mayor was in denial. “How’s
Frank these days?” she asked me.
I squirmed a little. “About the same.”
“I worry about that boy. He’s too giving, I keep telling him.
You gotta keep some things for yourself. So. What are you in
the market for?”
“Information,” I said quickly.
“Don’t worry, honey. We only sell drugs to folks we know.
Laugh, Andy!” she commanded. “Tell this lady I’m joking!”
“You’re a real joker, Mayor.”
“What kind of information are we talking about?” she
asked, serious now.
I explained the situation to the Mayor, going into as much
detail as I could. I’d only seen Lisa’s tattoo for a split second.
The hourglass was tipped on its side and swathed in something
satiny. The glass was what had struck me as so amazing. It was
translucent, yet seemed to distort the skin underneath, like sea
glass does.
The Mayor rubbed her chin, her nose, her forehead. She
shook her head and massaged her neck. Finally, she said she
had a couple of ideas. Could she look into them and call me?
83
I handed her a card and told her how much I’d appreciate it.
Then she led me off to the ladies’ bathroom. I told her I didn’t
need to use the facilities, but she said she had something to
show me. We crammed into the small space, then she shut the
door and peeled off her jacket.
Turned out she wanted to show off her own tattoos.
Over her right breast was a sexy devil pinup, with yellow
flames licking at a pair of trim ankles. On her left arm there
was a Celtic cross stretching from shoulder to elbow. It shim-
mered, like a stained-glass window.
“The first Mayor did them,” she said proudly. “My late
husband.”
“Beautiful,” I murmured.
She wanted more.
“He must’ve loved you a lot,” I said.
“Thanks, sweetie.” She put her jacket back on and hugged
me good-bye. Her face felt cool and papery.
I tried not to think on the ride home, just to focus on the
road.
Detective Smarinsky wasn’t available the first time I tried
him that evening. Or the second. The third time the