The Case of the Angry Actress: A Masao Masuto Mystery

BOOK: The Case of the Angry Actress: A Masao Masuto Mystery
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The Case of the Angry Actress

A Masao Masuto Mystery

Howard Fast writing as E. V. Cunningham

To the memory of

Nat Goldstone

good friend

The Main Cast

STOCKHOLDERS IN NORTHEASTERN FILMS

Al Greenberg, who is married to Phoebe
Murphy Anderson, who is married to Stacy
Sidney Burke, who is married to Trude
Jack Cotter, who is married to Arlene
Mike Tulley, who is married to Lenore

POLICEMEN

Beverly Hills:

Detective Sergeant Masao Masuto (Kati, his wife)

Detective Sy Beckman
Officer Frank Seaton

Medical Examiner Dr. Sam Baxter

Los Angeles:
Lieutenant Pete Bones
Detective Kelly

And numerous others who appear in good time and without confusion.

CHAPTER ONE

Al Greenberg

I
N
Beverly Hills, as in so many of the cities, towns and villages of the United States, there is a right and a wrong side of the tracks. The tracks in this case belong to the Southern Pacific Railroad, and they bisect the town from west to east, departing, as they say, no more than a whoop and a holler from the Pacific Ocean. North of Santa Monica Boulevard—upon which the railroad runs—is possibly the most compact conglomeration of rich people that exists anywhere in the world. Southward, to Wilshire Boulevard, is a very posh little shopping area, and south from Wilshire Boulevard lies the “poor” section of Beverly Hills, where you can still buy a one-family house for forty-five thousand dollars.

Detective Sergeant Masao Masuto, of the Beverly Hills Police Force, did not live in the “poor” section of Beverly Hills. He lived in a cottage in Culver City and considered himself most fortunate to be possessed of the cottage, a good wife, three children, and a rose garden upon which he lavished both love and toil. He secretly dreamed of himself as a gardener who devoted all of his working hours to his garden.

He was driving home this evening and dreaming this particular and favorite dream, when the radiotelephone in the car flickered. He picked up the telephone and was informed by the sergeant in charge of dispatching that evening that a man named Al Greenberg was dead in a house on North Canon Drive, and that the circumstances under which the death had occurred might be regarded as somewhat suspicious.

Would he go directly there?

He would. He was on Pico Boulevard, and now he swung into Beverly Drive—a matter of minutes from the address on North Canon Drive.

Detective Masuto knew the address, the place, the house, just as he knew almost every address, place and house in Beverly Hills. This was not as much of an achievement as it sounds. Where he entered Beverly Hills from the south, driving from Pico across Olympic and then up to Wilshire, the city was only thirty-five blocks wide, and that was about its greatest width, even though it extended a long finger into the foothills of the Santa Monica range. North of Santa Monica Boulevard there were the great elegant streets with their palms, their perfect lawns and their quarter-of-a-million-dollar houses, and these streets Detective Masuto could visualize and name, from Trenton Drive on the west, to Walden, Linden, Roxbury, Bedford, Camden, Rodeo, Beverly and Canon—and after Canon, moving east, Crescent, Rex-ford, Alpine, Foothill, Elm, Maple, Palm, Hillcrest, Arden, Alta, Sierra and Oakhurst—and there the city within a city ended and became Los Angeles. In Los Angeles, there were people and poverty and poolrooms and whorehouses and high-rise apartments and various other ordinary, publicly owned urban equipment. In Beverly Hills, there were property, money and some people.

As his chief of police had explained it to him once, “This is like no other place in the world, Masao. The money is God; the property is sacred; and the people are to be handled with kid gloves until you know who they are—and mostly they are the kind of people you handle with kid gloves after you know who they are.”

“Kid gloves.” He was a California-born Japanese, and therefore he was an Oriental and not a white man by any means, but excellent with kid gloves.

“The hell with that,” he said to himself now. “You have a job, my boy—not a bad job.”

He knew the house on North Canon, and he knew who lived there and when they had moved in and how much they had paid for the house and what it was worth today, three years later. Naturally. He knew every house. He knew that “Canon” without accent or similar indication was pronounced “Cannon” by some natives—if you can speak of dwellers in Beverly Hills as natives—and “Canyon” by others. He used the latter pronounciation, as had Al Greenberg, who now lay dead in the house on North Canon. He remembered a small conversation he had with Greenberg concerning the word “Canon.” Greenberg, very rich, had also been very curious, and Masuto could not help liking curious people—he was so hopelessly curious himself.

Now Greenberg was dead, a short, stout wistful man of sixty-two or three, in a great antebellum type of house with outside pillars two stories high, a proper part of a
Gone with the Wind
sound stage dropped between a Spanish Colonial and an eighteen-room Irish cottage. Greenberg had never been greatly at ease in that house, as Masuto remembered. He had sensitivity, and there was always a shred of shame hanging out of his pocket as if he had never answered the question as to what a small Jew, born and brought up in Bensonhurst in Brooklyn, was doing here in this garden of dreams, repose and dolce vita. It was certainly not de rigueur to be seen on your front lawn at any hour of the day if you lived in Beverly Hills and north of Santa Monica, but Detective Masuto could remember many a late afternoon when he saw Al Greenberg standing in front of the misplaced plantation house, puffing a cigar and regarding the green palm and ivy world that surrounded him with wonder and disbelief.

No more wonder and no more disbelief. Al Greenberg was dead, and they had called the cops.

Masuto double-parked in front of the huge Southern-Colonial plantation house on North Canon. In the driveway of the house were three cars, and five more were parked in front and two more already double-parked; among them, as Masuto noticed, two police cars and two medical cars, one of them belonging to Dr. Sam Baxter, the medical examiner. When Masuto got out of his car, he was met by Detective Sy Beckman, who informed him that Officer Frank Seaton was inside the house and another officer stationed at the door.

“What was it? What went on here tonight?”

“Dinner party—black tie, old buddies, but very formal. Four couples and the host and wife. That's Al Greenberg. He's dead.”

“I know. I got that in the car. How was he killed?”

“He wasn't killed. Maybe. He died.”

“Of what?” Masuto asked as he and Beckman walked up the path to the house. The planting was old and good, and the air was full of the sweet smell of jasmine. Masuto was never unaware of a planting, and he tasted the cool evening air, mingling his pleasure at the smell with his forlorn reaction to death.

“A heart attack. Baxter's inside and so is Dr. Meyer, Greenberg's physician. I think you better talk to both of them.”

“Oh?”

“I mean before you talk to the others.”

“All there?”

“They want out, but I'm holding them for you. Nothing has leaked yet, unless some smart reporter was listening on the radio band. There was nobody up at headquarters, and the boss is of the opinion that we should keep it absolutely quiet until we know something.”

“What?”

“That it's murder or not murder.”

“You said he died of a heart attack.”

“That's what the doctors say. One of the guests says different.

“Who?”

Detective Beckman peered at his pad in the poor light that seeped from the windows onto the veranda.

“Feller named Jack Cotter.”

Masuto nodded, and then the door was opened by a young and very pretty strawberry blonde, who silently and with a funereal air ushered them into the house. Officer Seaton, a tall uniformed patrolman, came up then and apologized for his partner, who was using the bathroom at the back of the house.

“The doctors are in the living room there,” he said, pointing over his shoulder. “The rest of them are in the viewing room.”

The viewing room was par for this particular course, Masuto reflected, hardly listening to the blonde's explanation that this was where “poor Al” showed films. He was looking at the stately double staircase and the spread of the living room beyond, and without even glancing at the blonde, he asked her name.

“Trade Burke—Mrs. Sidney Burke.”

“Then would you join the others in the viewing room, Mrs. Burke, and tell them that I would like to talk to them in a few minutes.”

“You're very official, aren't you, Detective—?”

“Masuto.”

“I thought you were Japanese. Good-looking. You know—”

“Please do as I say, Mrs. Burke.”

“I just thought I'd be here to greet the big brass and let them know that there's no murder, and it is all a lot of nonsense, and suppose we all go home and leave poor Phoebe with her grief, such as it is.”

“Please do as I say, and later you can tell me all about that.”

The other officer came back to the front door. Masuto regarded him without pleasure, waited for Trude Burke to disappear, and then followed Beckman into the living room, where two middle-aged physicians were restlessly observing their wrist watches. Dr. Baxter, the medical examiner—tall, skinny, gray, and tired—shook hands with Masuto and introduced him to Dr. Meyer. Masuto had heard about Meyer, successful, reputable, and expensive.

“What happened?”

“Tell him,” Dr. Baxter said impatiently. “The facts, not the nonsense. Beckman can feed him the nonsense after you and I go about our business.”

“Mr. Greenberg was a patient of mine,” Dr. Meyer said. “He has suffered for many years from angina. Quite bad. Tonight he had an attack and he died. Very quickly.”

“What kind of an attack?” Masuto asked him.

“A heart attack, of course. Coronary. There was a myocardial infarction, and he passed away.”

“Quickly?”

“Yes. Before he could reach his medicine.”

Masuto turned to Baxter. “Do you agree, doctor?”

“Absolutely.”

“No other possibility?”

“There is none that I can see, officer,” Meyer said. “No other is being offered. Jack Cotter, who is here and who is Mr. Greenberg's business associate, has made a very serious accusation—namely that Mr. Greenberg was threatened and frightened to death. He calls it murder. I have no desire to comment on the legal aspect or even on the social aspect concerning what happened in this house. I came here. My friend and patient was dead. I examined him and did what I could—which was nothing. This is not a house I enjoy being in at this moment, and there is no grief here for me to assuage. So I wish to go.”

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