They found Dawson backstage watching Callahan perform another set.
Dash glanced at the packed house, checked out Callahan doing a song-and-dance routine, and said, “And tell me again how you’re not the luckiest sap on earth, Archer?”
“It’s complicated.”
“In my day, it wouldn’t have been.” Dash eyed Dawson. “Okay, Mabel, we need to talk.”
“Not now. I’m busy.”
“There have been two more murders.”
“Here?” she snapped.
“No, but they’re connected. Now, why did you kick Guy Parnell loose early?”
Dawson slowly turned to look at him as Callahan belted out Dinah Shore’s “I’ll Walk Alone.”
Archer thought, Well that song fits her to a T.
Dawson said, “I... I guess he had a change of plan.”
Dash shook his head. “It’s what we in the business call a rhetorical question, Mabel, because I already know the answer. I dropped enough coins to talk to Parnell long distance. He’s in Detroit with an extra five hundred bucks in his pocket on top of his full seasonal wages courtesy of you.”
She licked her suddenly dry lips. “I... I don’t recall.”
“Sure you do. Armstrong told you to do it, and so you did what you always do when Armstrong tells you to do something. Now the question is why he wanted you to do it.”
“Is this another rhetorical question?” asked Dawson, looking ill now.
“Yeah, it is. They needed his room to kill Fraser and Sheen. They transported Fraser from that room to hers after she was dead using the connecting attic space between the two rooms. They left Sheen in Parnell’s old room after the poor guy was murdered.”
Dawson took a deliberate step back. “I don’t know nothing about that.”
Dash shook his head and smiled. “Come on, Mabel, you’re up to your baby blues in this, honey. See, you told us Fraser liked rich men. Now, who’s the richest of all in this town and a widower and available to boot?”
“You’re nuts. Armstrong’s almost old enough to be her grandfather.”
“You’d be surprised at how millions in dough can make people seem a lot younger. So you arranged for poor Ruby to meet up with Armstrong in Parnell’s old room, only it was Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum in there and not Armstrong. They pretended her throat was a steak, and then they deposited the lady in her own room through the crawlspace after cleaning up the blood. When you went looking for her, why do I think you skipped Parnell’s old digs? If you had opened that door and seen them cutting up poor Ruby, they might have had to kill you, too.”
“This is crazy talk, Willie,” said Dawson.
“Then why are your eyebrows sweating? Armstrong already knows what I’m about to tell you and here it is: You are what we call in the business a loose end. He’s had four people killed so far. What’s one more, sweetie? You get my drift, or are you under the delusion that you’re actually something special?”
Dawson plopped down in a chair that Archer had hastily drawn up for her while Callahan launched into Sinatra’s “Five Minutes More.”
Dash knelt down next to her and gently patted her hand. “Come on, Mabel, I got nothing against you. And I bet you didn’t know what they were going to do to poor Ruby.”
She shook her head and said in a hushed voice, “I didn’t. I swear to God. I thought I was doing her a favor. You know, hooking her up with money. The poor kid. Why... why would they do that to her?”
“She was just a murder to pin on somebody else,” said Dash. “Look, you got someplace safe out of town you can go to for a few days?”
“My sister’s. In Long Beach.”
“Okay, but first, we’re going to my office. I’m going to have an affidavit typed up and you’re going to sign it.”
“What affidavit?” she said, her eyes bugging out at the man.
“Just saying what you already told us. I’ll get my secretary to come in, type it up, and notarize it.”
“But then I’ll be—”
“What you’ll be is smart. You’ll get a deal. No jail time. And your story is memorialized for all to see if need be.”
“You swear?”
“So long as you’ve been square with me on your involvement, yeah, I swear. I’ll fix it with the DA. Now go pack a bag and we can drop you off at the bus station after we go by my office. Memory serves, there’s a southbound bus that leaves in about two hours that stops in Long Beach. You give me your sister’s phone number and I’ll be in contact. Okay?”
She nodded dumbly.
Archer went with her while she packed a bag, then they drove to Dash’s office. He had phoned Morrison from Midnight Moods and she was already there, waiting.
Archer looked at Morrison, all efficiency and professionally outfitted at this time of night, and wondered if she just waited by the phone all night for a call from Dash to say he needed her.
Dash and Dawson wrote out what she was willing to say, and Morrison typed it up in triplicate. Dawson signed three times and Morrison notarized all of them.
After that they drove Dawson to the Greyhound terminal.
She said, “Since I signed that paper, will you still need me?”
“We’ll have to see how it plays out. If it goes to trial, I’ll personally come and get you.”
They watched her get on the bus ten minutes later.
Archer said, “So, we can bring it all down with her affidavit?”
“Not even close, Archer. He said, she said. And unfortunately Armstrong’s words will carry far greater weight than a dame who runs a burlesque.”
“So why’d you have her do it?”
“Every little bit helps, and it was a way to scare her into getting to a safe place.”
“That was good of you, Willie.”
“I don’t have much good in me, Archer. But when it does come out, it feels pretty swell. Can I take another pull on your flask?”
Archer handed it to him. After Dash gave it back, Archer stared down at it as something occurred to him. An awful something. He said, “Look, I just had a thought and need to run it down. You going to be okay?”
“When Pickett and his clowns finish there, I’m going back to the doc’s office.”
“Why’s that?”
“To figure out why somebody needed to kill Myron O’Donnell.”