Talmage Powell
Corpus Delectable
One
She was late.
She’d been a musical voice on the telephone identifying herself as one Jean Putnam. The music had been overlaid with strain and urgency when she’d asked for an immediate appointment.
“I’ll detour on my way to the Claverys’ party,” she’d said. “I can be there in thirty minutes. I’ve got to see you, Mr. Rivers.”
“What about?”
“It’s a little complicated to try to explain on the phone. I’ve got to know whether or not a certain thing is true.”
“I’ll wait for you,” I’d said.
Nearly an hour had passed.
There was nothing else at the moment to keep me in the office. But I decided to give Jean Putnam a little longer. People never call a private detective merely for the exercise of lifting the phone.
Energetic brass-band music filtered into the office from outside. I ambled to the window and idled a few minutes with glimpses of the glittering parade passing the intersection a couple of blocks away. The floats were elegant, the girls gorgeous, the pirates fearsome. The packed masses of spectators over there had a common bond, a carefree, festive spirit.
Tampa, Florida, where I operate, is the only city in the country to be captured every year by pirates. The capitulation is a joyous one. It started back in 1904 when somebody got the happy idea of a fun week dedicated to the legendary José Gaspar, who roamed these Gulf waters back when buccaneers were for real.
The current invasion of Tampa had started this morning, when the three-hundred-ton replica of old José‘s flagship had sailed into the Hillsborough River, which slices Tampa in half.
Followed by a vast fleet of pleasure boats, the José Gaspar’s rigging and masts had swarmed with Florida lovelies and Tampa businessmen in pirate regalia. As the ship had neared downtown Tampa, the cannons had started roaring. Scores of thousands of tourists and Floridians had cheered almost as loudly.
With the ship at dock, Ye Mystic Krewe, as it’s dubbed, had poured gaily ashore, brandishing cutlass and pistol. The mayor had issued the proclamation of capitulation to Ye Mystic Krewe, and the Jolly Roger had been run up on the City Hall flagstaff to usher in the week-long wing-ding known as the Gasparilla Festival.
As I turned from the window, nearly a million people heard seventy-six trombones jar the buildings on Franklin Street. The call of the music brought an off-key whistle of accompaniment from me. The building housing my office, on a grubby side street, seemed all the more drab and deserted.
I gave up, let the seventy-six trombones have the field, and wandered to the office doorway, where the lettering reads: NATIONWIDE DETECTIVE AGENCY, Southeastern Division, Agent in Charge, ED RIVERS.
I palmed the knob, debating whether or not to close up and join the rest of the building’s denizens in the pursuit of piratical pleasures.
I assumed that the Clavery blast, which Jean Putnam had promised to detour, was one of those endless parties for which Gasparilla provides a unique and offbeat reason. I’d never met or heard of the girl before. For all I knew, she had decided the party wouldn’t wait, but the private cop would always be around.
I pushed back my cuff and looked at my watch in its heavy nest of oily-looking hairs. More than an hour now since Jean Putnam’s voice had made its thirty-minutes promise.
Give her five more minutes, I thought.
She needed another thirty or forty seconds. As I started to turn back into the office, I gave the corridor a final glance, and she was suddenly there, a still life framed in the stairwell several yards away.
She was a still life that vibrated, like atomic particles molded in about five-six of female perfection. She was dressed in a very fetching pirate costume that accented her firm, flowing, youthful lines. The delicate loveliness of her face was topped by a red silk scarf turbaned on her head. The purposely ragged bottoms of her scarlet pants reached just below the hips. Her legs were bare from that point down to where the black oilcloth boots began.
“Miss Putnam?” I inquired.
She nodded vaguely. Her mouth opened slightly. She still hadn’t moved, and a frown crept between my heavy brows.
And a new sensation blew cold across the back of my neck.
I lunged from the doorway. When I was halfway to her, she made a weak gesture toward me. She crumpled and disappeared into the yawning stairwell. She fell with the cruel sounds of tissue and bone striking uncontrollably against inanimate stairs and iron railing.
I reached the break in the corridor and went down the stairs skidding on my heels. She was a twisted mass of creamy flesh and crimson cloth on the landing.
When I reached her and dropped to one knee, I saw that not all of the redness was in her costume. A bullet had struck her in the back near her left shoulder blade. It had angled deep in her body. It hadn’t come out through her right breast, because it had struck bone, ricocheting briefly inside of her and tearing the hell out of her chest cavity. Bleeding to death inside, she shouldn’t even have had the strength to drag herself upright in the stairwell.
Turning her, I knew an emergency ambulance ride wasn’t going to help her. The young violet eyes were already going murky as the life left her.
She was trying to speak. She made little actual sound, more a suggestion of words. “Are you... Rivers?”
No need to tell her to take it easy. She hadn’t a clock tick left.
“Yes,” I said. “Who did this to you?”
“Man... Strange man...”
“Someone hired to do it?”
“Yes...”
“Why?”
“I... Incense...”
It came to her then that she was face to face with the darkest of all mysteries. She summoned her reserves to fight it. Her hand clutched my arm. Her mouth twisted in a frightened, childlike plea for help. A brief fire came to her eyes. Then she went limp. She was gone.
I let her shoulders slide from my fingers. Over on Franklin Street, in another world, the seventy-six trombones had passed on, and the mammoth parade continued.
Here, the silence crimped tight with unpleasant meaning. She couldn’t have carried the slug far. She must have been okay when she’d come off the street...
As I turned from her, a silenced gun burped in the corridor below, and a slug put a neat round in the wall behind my head. I dropped behind a square newel post, reaching for the .38 I carry as a part of my armament. The rest of the equipment consists of a knife in a hidden sheath at the nape of my neck.
I heard his footsteps in the corridor, heavy but fast. Swinging around the newel post, I dropped from the landing.
The second I showed my puss in the lower corridor the silenced gun made another nasty, anti-Rivers sound. I jerked back into the cover of the stairway.
My body felt as if it were smothering in its own sweat. Part of it came from being plain scared, but not all. I wanted a chance to talk back to the crumb’s whispering gun with the honestly loud voice of the .38.
I dropped low and plunged across the corridor, ready to fire at anything that moved.
Flattened against the far wall, I jerked some breath into my lungs. The corridor was silent and empty. I shoved myself away from the wall, racing toward the double glass doors.
When I reached the sidewalk, a drum and bugle corps on Franklin Street let go with a concussion that poured through the narrow canyons formed by buildings.
Diagonally across the street from me, I glimpsed movement. I got an impression of a big man wearing a dark-gray suit and coconut straw hat. Then he was out of sight, disappearing into an alley.
Not a pedestrian was in sight. Nothing else moved on the narrow, deserted back street. Cars were parked in every available space. I eeled between a couple of them and ran to the far sidewalk. At the entrance to the alley, I stopped and plastered myself against the corner of the building for a second. I’d have given five bills for the sight of a cop.