Corpses in the Cellar Read online




  THE HOOK—

  HE CAN KILL IN AN INSTANT

  AND LOVE ALL NIGHT!

  “Coup de grace,” Lockwood explained, and then whipped in the famed left hook that had given him his nickname.

  Griese went down, all the furniture in the room jumping an inch as he hit. Once on the floor, he looked as if he’d been planted there permanently.

  Lockwood looked at Tawny, and she looked back at him.

  She stood by the door, watching Lockwood haul the hood away. “You know,” she said, “you can fight as well as you can….” She paused a moment, then concluded, eyelids lowered suggestively:

  “Almost.”

  Books by Brad Latham

  Hook #1: The Gilded Canary

  Hook #2: Sight Unseen

  Hook #3: Hate Is Thicker Than Blood

  Hook #4: The Death of Lorenzo Jones

  Hook #5: Corpses In The Cellar

  Published by

  WARNER BOOKS

  Copyright

  WARNER BOOKS EDITION

  Copyright © 1982 by Warner Books, Inc.

  All rights reserved.

  Warner Books, Inc.

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue

  New York, NY 10017

  Visit our website at www.HachetteBookGroup.com

  First eBook Edition: September 2009

  ISBN: 978-0-446-56606-3

  Contents

  THE HOOK—HE CAN KILL IN AN INSTANT AND LOVE ALL NIGHT!

  Books by Brad Latham

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter One

  Whoever she was, she was certainly dressed for the weather.

  She was holding the apartment door halfway open, staring out at him, her bare right breast glistening as it reflected the harsh light of the steaming hallway.

  “Yes?” she asked.

  “My name is Bill Lockwood. I’m with the Transatlantic Underwriters Company. I’m looking for Mr. Grand.”

  “He’s… indisposed.”

  “It’s important,” he told her. “My company insured his night club. I’m their investigator.”

  She stared up at him, saying nothing.

  “I have to find out all I can about the fire. I thought I’d begin with Mr. Grand.”

  Her blue eyes flashed. “How do I know you’re who you say you are?”

  He reached into his breast pocket and pulled out a wallet. “Here’s my ID,” he told her.

  She opened the door wider and he now saw her left breast was naked too. She stood there for a moment checking out his credentials, while he responded in kind.

  “Come in,” she said, finally. “I can tell you all there is to know.”

  They went through a small foyer into a living room the size of most people’s houses. Everything in it was strictly up to the minute; all shining steel and glass.

  Halfway in, she turned to him and motioned toward the couch. “Have a seat,” she said.

  He nodded, sat, and looked her over. She was small, about five foot four inches, her looks a perfect representation of the all-American girl, which made the contrast between that aspect of her and the lusciously round, generously endowed mounds of flesh that stood out in their unashamed glory even more jarring than it would normally have been in this rigid, repressed year of 1938.

  She caught the direction of his glance and stiffened. “Now don’t get any ideas, Mr. Lockwood,” she told him, her voice girlish. “I’m from Cape Cod. There’s a lake we all swim in in weather like this. No one wears anything, and there’s no funny business, either. It’s what I’m used to, but it doesn’t mean anything, no matter what it looks like. I’m just cooler this way.”

  Lockwood nodded, impassively, and asked, “Are you related to Mack Grand?”

  “I’m his wife,” she said, offhandedly, then asked, “Would you like a cold drink?”

  “No thanks.”

  “I’ll have one myself then,” she said, gracefully picking up a pair of silver tongs, removing three ice cubes from a gleaming steel bucket, and dropping them into a crystal glass. He watched as she sprayed the glass full of soda. He’d heard Mack Grand had a young wife. He hadn’t been aware she was this young. Nineteen at the most, alive, vital, her skin radiant and firm, blooming. Grand was somewhere in his mid-sixties.

  She sat down at the other end of the couch, and looked at him directly. Her stare was frank and open. Nothing shy or recessive about this one. “Well, what do you want to find out?”

  “First, I’d like to know if I can speak to your husband.”

  “Not now. Oh, gee, the fire last night was a big shock to him. He’s not a strong man as it is, anyway. I’ve made him lie down.”

  “I see,” Lockwood said, and pulled out a pack of Camels. “Would you like one?” he asked.

  She shook her head. “Oh, golly, no. Not me. But, gee, feel free to smoke yourself.”

  As he drew out the black and silver Dunhill lighter and applied the flame to the tip of the cigarette, her eyes never left him. Nothing suggestive about it, nothing seductive. She simply had the directness of the unafraid. One of the appeals of the all-American girl next door, Lockwood reflected. Everything about that kind was positive, all rah-rah and push straight-ahead. And this one was the quintessential type, if you discounted those riveting circles with the smaller rings of pink flush in the center of them. Hard thing to do, though, just on the pull of aesthetics alone.

  With an effort, he fixed a gaze on her face. “All right, then, perhaps you can tell me what you know about the fire. What your husband told you.”

  “Okay. Well, I was there when he got the call. They said it started around three-thirty this morning. It must have been very quick.” She twisted her mouth wryly, in the humorously attractive way a Queen of the Campus might do. “If he hadn’t called the place The Palms, it probably never would have happened.”

  Lockwood nodded. “You mean the fake palm leaves that covered the walls and ceilings?”

  She nodded. “Yes. The man who originally sold them to Mack told him they were flameproof, or he’d never have put them in. From what the police said, they were like tinder.”

  “I suppose your husband can sue the company who installed them.”

  She shrugged. “Mack says they went out of business a month after they did the job. Another casualty of the Depression. One of the better ones, I guess.”

  “I’ve been told eight people died.”

  “Yes.” She looked away. “I knew some of them. Boy, when it happens to someone you actually know…” She shivered.

  He took a puff on the cigarette, and waited a moment, giving her time. “Can you tell me who they were?”

  She shrugged. He had a job to do, and she’d help him with it. That was the American way. “Sure. There was a waiter—I think his name was Charlie, and the head bartender, Beechie McMahon. Two of the girls in the chorus line—Wanda Winninger, she was new, I didn’t really know her, and then Joy Mellon. She was a great kid, really great. We’d danced together.”

  “That’s right, you’d been in a Broadway show, hadn’t you, Mrs. Grand?”

  “Call me Debbie. Right. My first audition, my first show. That’s where I met Mack. Isn’t that something? He knew the show would be closing—it was a big flop—and he ca
me to look it over for dancers he might be able to use at the club. But when he found me”—she shrugged, and grimaced, clownishly—“instead of hiring me, he married me.”

  Lockwood nodded. “And the other four?”

  “Oh. Right. Well, I guess the worst—the other three were tourists, all from out of town from what they tell me, the worst was Nettie, the bookkeeper. She was Mack’s sister. Phew. I still can’t believe it,” she said in her cheerleader accent.

  “Three-thirty A.M. Isn’t that a little late for a bookkeeper?”

  “No. Oh, gosh no. She and Mack always checked over the books about then—” she stopped short, realizing she’d let it slip.

  “You’re saying Mack was there every night at three-thirty?”

  She stared at him in some confusion, eyes almost imploring, and then shrugged. “Most nights.”

  “I take it he wasn’t there last night.”

  She got up and shot some more soda into the glass, then swished it around, the ice cubes tinkling as they cooled the liquid.

  Finally, she looked at him. “No.”

  “Was he home with you?”

  She looked at him for a long time. “No,” she said finally, “I don’t know where he was.”

  Lockwood crushed out the cigarette.

  “Do you think the fire was an accident?”

  She hadn’t returned to the couch, instead had moved near the window, and was looking out. “I—gee, I don’t know. I just don’t know,” she said, quietly.

  “What about your husband? What did he have to say?”

  “Just—’My God’, when they told him. Just ‘My God’, over and over, over and over.”

  His eyes ran down her bare back, over her firm behind, along the well-shaped thighs outlined in the white linen skirt that sheathed them, and down the symmetrical curves of her legs. Nothing like combining business with pleasure, he reflected. If there was anything imperfect about her, he had yet to find it. “And after?” he asked. “After he got off the phone?”

  She swung back toward him, still unself-conscious and direct, still half-clothed. “He just told me what had happened. That was all.”

  “No theories.”

  “No—no theories.”

  “I see.” Lockwood rose, rebuttoning the Brooks Brothers lightweight flannel suit jacket that framed his slender, athletic body. “I’m sorry to have bothered you at a time like this, Debbie, but you see, it’s my job to investigate any claims which appear to have a suspicious origin.”

  She stared hard at him. “Suspicious—the police say the fire was suspicious?”

  “No. Sorry. In lay terms, I may have overstated it a bit. But in the insurance business—well, if you’re going to pay out thousands of dollars on a claim, you have to get the reputation for checking carefully into that claim. It helps dissuade people from trying to make a quick, easy buck.” He shrugged. “And then, sometimes of course, when you investigate, there are those occasions when you find people who haven’t been stopped.”

  The sun was behind her now, and he found it hard to see her, to read her expression. “I can’t believe anyone could have done anything that horrible on purpose,” she said, a shudder in her voice.

  “It is hard to believe,” he agreed. “It’s always hard to believe—even when the evidence is in front of your eyes.” He picked his hat off the table in the foyer. “Thank you for your time. I’ll undoubtedly come by again to see your husband. But for the moment, I’ve got to move on.”

  “Where are you going?” she asked, as he opened the door.

  He turned back for one last look. Luscious. Cheerleader luscious. “To The Palms. To search for evidence.”

  Chapter Two

  The Palms was a cellar club in the West Forties. It wasn’t surprising that the three customers who’d died in the fire were from out of town. It was that kind of place, shrieking its New Yorkness so loudly that the real New Yorker, the Manhattanite, at any rate, generally shunned the place, with its loud, brassy music, loud, brassy comedians, and loud, brassy chorines. The odd thing was that Mack Grand was nothing like that himself. A quiet man, maybe even a little shy, intelligent, probably sensitive. Go try to figure people. Somewhere along the line, if you stayed with them long enough, they’d trip you up. That’s what made this business so fascinating. And so tough.

  An officer he’d seen around was standing at the door, stolidly urging the curious along as they paused to rubberneck.

  The cop obviously recognized him, too. “Hello, Hook.”

  Lockwood nodded, acknowledging the nickname. “You have someone around in charge?”

  The cop bobbed his head in turn. “Down there,” he said, pointing into the blackened entrance. “Brannigan.”

  Lockwood wasn’t surprised, but he was pleased. Lieutenant Jimbo Brannigan of the Midtown Precinct was a longtime friend, professionally speaking. One of the best in the business, though better perhaps as an enforcer than as an investigator. It would be good to see him again.

  The cop stood aside as Lockwood went down through the doors, their small glass windows smoked, their black-streaked backs stark evidence of the destruction that the untouched front surfaces belied.

  The stairs were steep and damp and musty, the carpeted treads squishing as he descended, still choked with the water that had spewed from the firemen’s hoses a few hours before. Here and there a blackened fragment of an artificial palm frond could be seen on the wall or the ceiling, a fragile reminder of the holocaust that had destroyed most of its brothers.

  Brannigan was standing in the middle of the club, oblivious to the room-wide, inch-deep puddle that surrounded him. His hat was on the back of his head and he was staring down at the floor, at the charred remnants of a human being. As Lockwood’s eyes became accustomed to the light, he saw the rest of them, all the other bodies, grotesquely sprawled in the muck and debris. A police photographer was putting away his camera.

  “You got all you need?” Brannigan asked, voice rasping out of his great Irish bulk.

  “Yeah. You can cover ’em up and take ’em away now,” the cameraman replied; then he saw Lockwood. “Company,” he said quietly.

  Brannigan turned around casually. The light in the place wasn’t good, and it took him a few seconds to distinguish the figure at the base of the stairs. “Lockwood!” he boomed finally. “Christ, Hooky-boy, you do get all the pretty ones, don’t you?”

  “Hello, Jimbo.” Lockwood picked his way through the destruction, searching for dry spots. “They must have used the whole Croton reservoir on this one.”

  Brannigan snorted out a laugh. “You can’t say the boys with the red suspenders aren’t thorough. Transatlantic insured this one, I suppose.”

  “You ought to be a detective.” Lockwood deadpanned. “What’s it look like to you?”

  “Who knows?” Brannigan said. “It’ll take days to go through all this stuff. Weeks perhaps.”

  “Mmm. Where’d it start?” Lockwood’s eyes never rested, taking it all in as he spoke.

  “Storage room, most likely. Oily-rags.”

  “Over there?” Brannigan nodded, and Lockwood moved in that direction, followed by the hulking detective.

  “Where were the bodies?”

  “All down here.”

  “The bookkeeper, too?”

  “Yep.”

  “Everyone in the main room. Interesting,” Lockwood replied, as he stood in the storage closet, looking down at the charred remnants of a rag.

  “Must’ve been awfully fast,” Brannigan volunteered. “Coroner says they were all asphyxiated.”

  “Poisonous fumes from the palm fronds, maybe? Quick-killing?”

  “I can ask him to check. That bothers you, huh? Everyone in the main room, nowhere near the exits?”

  “Makes me wonder a little,” Lockwood acknowledged. “No bruises, no bulletholes?”

  “No. That I’m sure of. At least as far as the preliminaries go. Our good friend the coroner has been known to overlook things
once in a while.”

  Lockwood shrugged. “Not likely. Do you know where the books are?”

  Brannigan stared at him. “You think Grand set the fire himself for the insurance?”

  “Everything’s possible in this best of all possible worlds,” Lockwood reminded him. “Mainly I want to check everything while it’s all still here. Amazing how quickly evidence can disappear.”

  Brannigan led him to the small office that had been used by Grand and his bookkeeper. The books had survived, singed and yellowed and soggy with water, but Lockwood could make out most of the figures.

  After a few moments he straightened up. “What about the register?”

  “Over there.”

  The register tape had survived, too. Lockwood studied it. “Checks with the books,” he murmured as Brannigan looked on with less than keen interest.

  “What about the people who died? Any of them have a record?”

  “Not likely. We’ll be having their prints checked, what prints they’ve got left, that is, but I don’t figure on coming up with anything.”

  “Probably not. Who called in the alarm?”

  “Eddie Black. The patrolman on the beat.”

  “Black. Do I know him?”

  “Could be. On the force five years. Husky, good-looking kid. Big dark eyebrows.”

  “Yeah, I think I’ve seen him around. Was he the first one here?”

  “That’s right.” Brannigan drew out a bedraggled pack of Kools and offered one to Lockwood, who smilingly turned him down, in favor of one of his own.

  “Don’t care what you smoke, do you?” he said, lighting them both up.

  “Hell, it’s all smoke, anyway,” Brannigan mumbled. “Found ’em on the bar. Besides, down here, this menthol stuff kind of helps.”

  Lockwood, coughing, dropped his cigarette into the muck. “Could be you’re right. Let me give it a try. Did Black spot anything suspicious?” he asked as he lit the cork-edged cigarette.

  “Nope. Just saw the smoke comin’ out of the doors, tried to run in, but the flames pushed him back. Then he turned in the alarm.”