When she came out of the bathroom, she was wearing a shower cap, a pair of slippers, and nothing else. We eyed each other. The surprise was mutual. She hadn't expected to find a stranger seated in her bedroom and I hadn't expected to see her in her birthday suit.
The note Moose had made about her breasts had been accurate. They were exceptional. Everything about her body was exceptional She made Raquel Welch look like a teen-age boy.
"Hey, how did you get in?" she said.
"By the back door. I picked the lock."
"You aren't a burglar, are you?"
"I'm Ned Harper. The man you didn't want to see."
"The one who talked to Liz on the telephone?" She plucked off the shower cap and shook out her hair. "You must be some kind of operator if you got her to tell you how to find me."
"We happened to hit it off."
"You know the reason I didn't want to see you. Hoyle told me you were prying into things that are none of your business. He said if you showed up, I was to avoid you and get the word to him."
"And you handled it rather neatly."
"Not neatly enough. That's obvious." She opened a closet and took out a dressing robe. "Okay if I put this on? I hate to talk business while I'm naked. Later on, if you want, I'll take it off again."
"I doubt that we'll get that friendly."
"You never know. Did you happen to run into Hoyle by any chance?"
"Yeah," I said.
"I was afraid of that. What happened to him? Nothing good, I'll bet."
"He won't be coming back."
She took the news without flinching. "He said he could take care of you by himself. I didn't believe him. They tried to kill you once and you came through it. You handled Rondo. I'd say you're pretty tough."
I wondered if I was supposed to be flattered. I said, "You know quite a lot about me."
"All that Hoyle knew. He was a big talker." She had belted the robe and was standing in front of my chair. "You're pretty talkative yourself."
"I always talk a lot when I'm scared," she confessed, "I'm afraid you'll kill me too."
I said, "I rarely kill women."
"You want a drink? I've got some liquor in the other room."
"No, thanks."
She stepped closer to my chair and opened the robe. When I didn't move, she caught my hand and placed it on her body. Apparently she believed the best defense was a good offense.
"Let's bargain," she said softly.
"What are we bargaining for?"
"My life, and anything else I can get."
"I want to know where Moose is."
Pouting a little, she pulled the robe together again. "Hoyle came to San Francisco alone. Moose is on the road somewhere."
"That isn't what Hoyle said. He said Moose was here."
"He lied to you. Moose didn't come. He let Hoyle come alone. That was a mistake. They underestimated you."
Hoyle had obviously made up the story about taking me to meet Moose. He had been stalling for time, waiting for an opportunity to go for his gun.
"Who is Moose's connection in the Mob?" I asked Penny.
"He never told anybody that. There is a man, sure, a big wheel he's had dealings with. The Organization as a whole frowns on Moose because they think he's crazy and uncontrollable. But there was one man high up who financed some heists for Moose, as a private deal between the two of them. Moose said they did each other some favors."
"You know something, Penny? You're saying a lot, but you're telling me very little."
She bit her lip. "I'm doing my best to help you. I want to save my skin." She pawed through her hair. "Let me think. They've been backtracking, trying to follow Sheila Brant's trail. They're trying to find the money she stole. But I swear to you, Hoyle didn't tell me where Moose and Craddock are now."
"Craddock," I repeated. "Tell me about Craddock."
"Sid Craddock is the third man who was in on some of Moose's heists. He took part in the Abruze kill. He's a slender man with curly hair and a baby face. That's all I can remember about him."
She had provided one piece of information of some use. I encouraged her. "Hoyle must have confided in you a lot."
"He was boasting — trying to impress me. He had the hots for me even back when I was Moose's favorite pastime," she said. "He showed good taste, Harper. I'm sensational in the sack."
"I believe it."
"Can I make you a proposition?"
I grinned at her. "I thought you already had."
"There's a big bundle of money around somewhere. Two hundred thousand dollars. That's how much they got when they hit Abruze." She pursed her lips. "It gives me the hots to think about that. I'd like to have it all changed into ones and wallow in it naked. Two hundred thousand one-dollar bills. Would you like to lay on me on a two-hundred-thousand-dollar mattress, lover?"
"I don't have your kind of imagination."
"They left it with Sheila. They split up after the Florida job and entrusted it to her. Hoyle told me that."
"Moose and his friends were wrong about Sheila. She didn't make off with the money."
"Then what happened to it?"
"She never had a chance to tell me. My guess is that it was taken from her. She was afraid to face Moose, so she ran."
Apparently I had learned everything from Penny that I was going to. I got out of my chair. She followed me to the back steps, where I put on my shoes.
She hadn't asked me any more questions about Hoyle. She wasn't exactly grieving for him, I thought.
"Hey, listen, Harper. Suppose you happen to find the money while you're trying to run Moose down. What do you do with it?"
"I haven't given it any thought."
"Two hundred thousand. It boggles the mind."
I laced my shoes. "Are you about to suggest I give it to you?"
"Well, we could share it anyway. It's Mafia money. Listen, I know about that book of Moose's that you have. You've been looking up the girls whose names were in it. I could help you out. I know my way around whorehouses real good."
"You said you were afraid of me."
"For two hundred grand. I'll walk a bed of coals, dance naked on the White House lawn, and lay the First Cavalry Division. Take me along. Harper, and let's look for the money. We could do a lot with it, and I could give you sex like you've never had before."
"No, thanks," I told her. "You forgot Hoyle much too easily."
Nine
I was back to the little black book and to the list of names, now narrowed to four. They were Janice, Eve, Barbara, and Cora, I decided to drive up to Portland and look for Janice first. If I drew a blank there, I would swing back down to Reno, to Denver, and to Las Vegas, where the other girls were supposed to be.
Moose knew I had his address book. He knew I was running through the list of girls, hoping to get a lead to his whereabouts. When he learned that I had killed his pal Hoyle, he wouldn't sit still, I thought. Somewhere along the way, in one of those four cities, I would find Moose or he would find me.
The bordello in Portland was an old house located in a fading residential block near the meatpacking district. I knocked on the door early in the morning and asked for Janice. A yawning girl with tousled hair waved me in.
A cathouse early in the morning is not as fragrant as a rose garden. It smells of the night before, of bodies and sex and sometimes booze, and if the maids are already cleaning up, the scent is like that of an army latrine.
The girl with the tousled hair weaved through the maids, her shorty nightgown swinging with the motion of her hips. The maids looked me over, apparently wondering why I couldn't postpone my lust until the nighttime hours.
Rapping on a door, the girl said, "Janice. It's the man who called."
Janice responded sleepily. "All right." The girl who had brought me to the door smiled and patted my cheek and swung on down the hallway.