"Honey Bare" - читать интересную книгу автора (Coral King)

Chapter Four

The following morning I’d been awake for about a half hour before Sarah stirred and broke out of the web of sleep. I’d been listening to a couple of cars going by on the street outside. The way the tires were hissing on the pavement and the water running off the eaves proved it was still raining.

For a full second Sarah stared at me wide-eyed as though trying to remember the night before. Suddenly she sat up, her glance going to the clock radio. My glance went to her lovely jutting pink breasts.

“Oh, I’ve still got to get packed!” she said.

She flung aside the sheet. The moment her bare feet hit the rug she was on her way to the bathroom. I got up and shuffled out to the front room. My clothes were still in a heap, just inside the door. When I picked up my trousers they felt cold and clammy in my hands and they were a mass of wrinkles. I fumbled through the rest of my clothes and discovered that they were all soggy and damp.

“Will you take me out to the airport, Lincoln?”

Sarah had come out to the front room, moving quietly on her bare feet. She’d washed her face, combed her hair, and she’d slipped into the same shift she’d been wearing yesterday.

“Certainly,” I said. “How soon will you have to leave?”

“In a couple of hours,” she said. Suddenly her glance went to the heap of clothing at my feet. “Oh, dear. I can’t even offer you a change of clothing.” A quick smile replaced the concern in her face. “But you’ll have time to run home for a fresh change.”

“No,” I said, “I made a deal. I won’t leave your side until you’re on that plane.”

“I feel better now. It’s a, new day. I feel safe, with the doors locked.”

“I’ll help you pack, Sarah. And then we’ll stop off at my apartment on the way to the airport.”

“I’ll be all right,” she said. “Please don’t worry about me. I’ll finish packing while you’re out, and then we’ll both be ready at the same time.”

I wanted to believe her, I wanted to think that my first analysis of her had been correct. There wasn’t really anybody eager to kill her. Then I remembered the phone calls the night before. She hadn’t even been aware of the last one.

“Someone called again – after you fell asleep,” I told her. “But when I picked up the phone, nobody answered. Same routine. Only silence.”

“Maybe it was Lee,” she said lightly. “He used to pull that on me.”

“Lee? Who’s that?”

“Lee Harmon,” she said. “My ex-husband. It probably shock him to hear a man answering my phone.”

“Might he want to kill you?”

“Lee?” she laughed. “Not my ex-husband. Definitely not Lee. Now will you please get out of here before I rape you again?”

I saw her glance moving slowly up and down the front of me and then I realized that we’d been having our discussion while I’d been standing in the nude. I picked up my trench coat and slipped it on.

“You’ve got to promise me one thing, Sarah.”

“I’ll promise you anything.”

“Keep the doors locked, and don’t let anyone into the apartment while I’m gone.”

Her finger traced the outline of a huge X over her left breast. “I can assure you no one will enter this apartment.” She smiled. “I won’t have time to talk – I’ll be too busy packing.”

After I’d slipped into my wet shoes with some difficulty, I rolled the rest of my clothes into a ball and shoes them under my arm. Then Sarah was holding the door open for me and the sound of rain was filling her apartment.

I said, “I’ll be back as quickly as possible. In about an hour.”

“Don’t worry,” she said. “I’ll be waiting for you.”

The moment I’d stepped outside she closed the door after me. I remained there for several seconds until I heard her slipping the chain lock into place.

And then I was trotting out towards the street, keeping the trench coat wrapped around me so that my bare legs wouldn’t be too obvious. There wasn’t anyone on the sidewalks, and at the moment there weren’t even any cars going by.

I slid under the wheel of my car. With the light traffic it didn’t take me long to get home. After a quick shower and shave, I slipped into a new change of clothes. Then I was headed back to Sarah’s apartment again.

During my absence a couple of cars which had been parked at the curb ‘were now gone; and I was able to park much nearer the apartment house entrance than before. The rain had continued to come down steadily while I’d been driving so the moment I was out of the car, I ran up the walk. I bounded up the stairway to the door of Sarah’s apartment.

The moment I hit the landing my right foot skidded on something slick.

Momentarily I was off balance, I lurched forward, my hands outstretched to break my fall. The second my hands hit Sarah’s door, I felt it giving under the force of my fall. I tried to recover but I was off balance and the next instant I was stretched out on my stomach. The door was wide open and the sill of the doorway was in my middle.

“Sarah!” The sodden knit dress was still on the rug but the front room was empty. I jumped to my feet and sprint towards her bedroom.

When I got to the doorway of the bedroom I saw her. She was lying on her back on the bed, in the center of the disheveled stack of clothing that she’d wanted to pack. But where she’d gone she wouldn’t need any suitcase.

There was a nylon stocking around her neck. It had turned her lovely face into a terrible sight. She’d fought her attacker, I could tell, because the hem of her shift had worked itself lip to the juncture of her thighs. Then the thought came to me that her murderer might still be in her apartment. He wasn’t.

A quick tour proved that there was no one there. Nothing seemed to be disturbed. Her purse was still in the bedroom, closed, the way she’d left it the night before. I didn’t touch it. I didn’t touch a thing. With my back turned to her so that I wouldn’t have to look at her face I called the police.

I asked for Jenks, then I went out into the front room to wait.

I’d been away from her apartment slightly more than an hour. She’d promised me not to let anyone inside and not to unlock the door. No one broken it open.

That meant that Sarah had known her caller and for some reason she’d let the murderer into her apartment. Furthermore the sight of her caller must not have upset her because she and her caller must have gone into the bedroom while they talked. Remembering Sarah’s determination to get packed that was probably what she was doing when the murderer picked one of her nylons off the bed and strangled her.

She’d been murdered because I hadn’t really believed her, and I hadn’t done my job. When the police arrived that was the way I explained it to Jenks. He’d been in Homicide so long he only had a couple of more years to go before he retired. I’d known him for a long time. His son had passed the Bar and had been sworn in the same time as I.

Now Jenks was sitting in the chair in Sarah’s front room, staring across the coffee table at me. I was sitting on the couch, the way Sarah had sat yesterday evening when she’d offered me the five hundred to protect her from a murderer.

The police had checked for prints, taken pictures, investigated the entire apartment and already taken Sarah away.

Jenks said, “So that makes you the prime suspect, Link.”

“I wondered how long it would take you to tell me that,” I said.

“Unfortunately, I don’t have any proof,” he said. “Until I get the results from the lab.”

“I didn’t kill her.”

He nodded solemnly. “All right. But don’t try to leave town.” With a quick smile he added, “Barrister. I may want to recheck a few things with you.”

“Don’t worry,” I said. “I’ll be around. I’d like to check out a few things myself.”

“We don’t appreciate that kind of help.”

“I know you don’t. Normally I wouldn’t get involved in this, but I feel responsible for her death.”

“We’ll work on it,” he said. “Why don’t you go home, stay out of the rain and just take it easy? No need for you to get wet, too.”

“Sure,” I said.

He got to his feet and then slipped into his wet trench coat. We left her apartment together, walked down to the street, and then paused on the sidewalk before parting for our separate cars. Jenks said, “I wonder who they’ll get to replace her in that TV series?”

I shrugged. “I haven’t even thought about that. Is that your angle? The possible motive?”

“You never know,” he said.

And then he was walking down the sidewalk towards his car, the back of his neck tucked down into his collar to keep out the rain.

While I was driving back to my apartment I thought about the phone calls the night before, trying to remember any minor thing that could tip off who might have been calling. There hadn’t been any noise audible in the background. I hadn’t even heard the sound of the caller breathing.

Last night the phone calls had frightened her. This morning she’d passed them off a bit lightly, it seemed. It was strange that she had mentioned the name of her ex-husband, Lee Harmon. Now I was glad that she’d told me about him. If he’d been married to her before, he probably knew a few things about Sarah that she hadn’t told me.

After I’d returned to my apartment I got on the phone. It took me a lot longer than I’d expected but after a number of calls I’d finally acquired Lee Harmon’s address. I slipped on my damp trench coat and went downstairs and got into my car.

It was already mid-afternoon. Saturday afternoon. I was positive the police had already checked out Harmon. Jenks had probably dropped by to see Lee himself. I wasn’t optimistic about my planned visit and I didn’t expect to come up with something that Jenks might have missed. But there was always a chance that Harmon might mention a name or give me a lead that he’d forgotten to give the police.

Anyway, I felt that I had to talk to somebody. I couldn’t sit around in the apartment, stare out at the rainy streets, and forget that I hadn’t taken Sarah Leighton’s story seriously.

According to my source, Lee Harmon lived in one of the new high-rise apartment buildings that had sprouted up on Los Feliz within the last year. After I’d found a parking spot at the curb I got out of the car and then squinted through the rain up at the building.

Apparently every apartment had a balcony that faced to the South and from street level the building resembled hundreds of cave openings visible on the side of a steep cliff. I shoved open one of the glass doors and stepped inside.

Two men had been talking in the lobby. The one with the attachй case, hat and trench coat suddenly turned away and walked towards the elevator. The other one said, “I’ll take care of it, Mr. Harmon.”

“Fine.” He stepped inside the elevator and then the doors slid shut.

As I padded across the carpet the other man was waiting for me “Can I help you, sir?”

“I came to see Lee Harmon,” I said. “I’ll grab the other elevator and take it up.”

“Better take it down,” he said. “He’s headed for his car in the basement.”

“Thanks.” I hurried towards the elevator and punched the button. Fortunately it was there, waiting to be used. I slid inside, thumbed the basement button and then I was going down. The instant it stopped and the door slid open, I was outside the elevator, glancing around the huge underground parking lot.

Over near the west wall I caught sight of Lee Harmon. He had tossed his attachй case into a white Caddie and now he was slipping out of his coat. He’d just placed it in the Caddie when I pulled up beside him.

“Lee Harmon?”

He whirled around fast, as though I’d surprised him. And for a man his size it was quite impressive. He was heavy-set, with a square face and iron-grey hair.

His eyes were about the same shade as his hair – and they were cold and guarded.

“What do you want?”

His voice was like gravel rattling over a board. That and the fact he had to be in his late forties surprised me. Somehow I couldn’t visualize him having been married to Sarah.

I said, “I’d like to talk to you – if you have a minute.”

“Oh, Sure,” he said, as though he’d been expecting me. “What’s on your mind?”

“Well, it’s a long story. If you’re leaving, maybe I’ll come back when you return.”

Only his mouth relaxed. Not his eyes. They were still probing into mine. “No need to do that,” he said. “I was just planning to drop by my office. I won’t be there long. We can talk on the way there and back here again.” He was moving to the other side of the Caddie. “Come on, hop in.”

I went around the back of the car. Harmon had the door open, and he was holding it for me to enter. “Thanks,” I said. “I appreciate it.”

I leaned forward to get into the car. Then I thought the entire building had suddenly collapsed. Right on the back of my neck. I felt myself falling, and I grabbed at the back of the seat. I managed to get a grip and shove myself upwards. At that second another blow landed.

It seemed much harder than the first one. Vaguely I realized that the building hadn’t collapsed because I couldn’t smell any crumbling dust. It had been Lee Harmon who’d chopped me in the back of the neck.

That was the thing that was running through my mind as I became conscious again. The back of my neck and head ached and I was having difficulty getting my arms and legs to move. It seemed as though I wasn’t as concerned about them as I was about Lee Harmon.

I knew I’d been cursing out loud, even though I didn’t know whether he might still be around. I was lying face down on a cement floor with my right shoulders up against a concrete wall. I shoved myself to my feet and I was barely able to squeeze my left shoulder past a car’s front bumper. As I straightened up I realized that I was still in the underground parking lot where I’d been suckered by Harmon.

As I twisted around and leaned forward over the hood of the car, I saw the chick standing by the car door, watching me.

She said, “If you’re going to get sick, please don’t on my car.”

I swiveled my head around and studied the garage. There was no one around but she and I. Harmon’s white Caddie was gone.

“Don’t worry about Lee,” she said. “He’s not around.”

Now I concentrated on her. She was a brunette, tall and slender in the raincoat, a few brown curls peeking out from under her matching rain hat. Nice mouth, with an impish smile. A few freckles sprinkled across the bridge of her nose, I asked, “When will he be back?”

“I would imagine some time tomorrow.”

As I shoved myself away from the hood of felt the pain jolt the back of my head. I began to massage the spot. “Great,” I said. “That is just wonderful.”

“May I offer you an aspirin?” she asked, the humor putting sparks in her eyes.

“Why?”

“You seem to have a headache,” she said. “One that was apparently caused by Lee. The least I can do is to help you get rid of it.”

It didn’t make sense. Why should she be good to me? I was a stranger who’d crawled out from under the bumper of a car. I eyed her suspiciously.

“I’m Lee Harmon’s wife,” she said.

“Well, in that case,” I said. “I’ll take a couple of aspirins.”