Lucas had wanted me to take part in a panel discussion on creating believable female detectives in fiction, but I begged off, agreeing instead to join one the next morning on the relative merits of small-town settings versus big cities.
I couldn’t get the vision of the battered face I’d seen in the Wapping police headquarters out of my mind, nor could I ignore Maria’s comments about Jason Harris’s stepbrother, David Simpson. I’ve always prided myself on my ability to maintain order in my life. Like any writer who’s made a living at it, discipline has been the key, and I’ve had to be a disciplined person.
There are times, however, when, hard as I try, I am drawn to something like a moth to a summer candle. That’s what was happening as I mulled over the circumstances of Jason’s death. How had the police known to contact David Simpson in the middle of the night? I should have asked that. Perhaps Jason carried a card that indicated in the event of emergency, his stepbrother was to be called.
Each time I raised a question-and answered it-I was dissatisfied with my reply.
I went through the London Yellow Pages until I came to the Talent Agent section, which told me to look at Booking Agents. I did, and found an agency in the listing: Simpson Talent Bookers, located on Dean Street, in Soho. I noted the address and phone number on a piece of paper and decided I needed a leisurely walk in London to help clear my mind. It might as well be to Soho. Besides, I’ve often found that simply dropping in on someone can be more effective than trying to arrange a meeting in advance. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t, but it was the approach I decided to take.
It was a lovely afternoon as I strolled the streets of Soho. It had, like New York ’s Times Square, deteriorated because of a proliferation of striptease clubs and sex shops, but they seemed relatively innocuous in the daylight. Unlike the case with Times Square, legitimate business hadn’t fled the area, and Soho was still filled with quaint restaurants, fascinating newsstands, and boutiques.
I stopped in at St. Anne’s Church, bombed during the war, its tower and clock now faithfully restored. Behind it, in simple graves, were buried Dorothy Sayers, a churchwarden and no relation to the writer, and the other Hazlitt, William, no relationship to my friend Seth.
I stopped for tea at the York Minster Pub, known as the French Pub because its owners are probably the only French pub owners in all of Great Britain. Frank and I had enjoyed a beer there before going on to hear jazz at Ronnie Scott’s club on Frith Street. Afterward we’d had a scrumptious dinner in the Neal Street Restaurant; I could almost taste the grilled calf kidney I’d had that night, and a dessert I have never experienced again called tiramisu. Those were good memories but, because they could never be repeated, there was also a sense of sadness as I stood in front of the restaurant and looked through the window at the very table we’d shared.
Enough of that, I told myself, continuing my walk. I lingered in Soho Square, then went to Dean Street and looked for the address of Simpson Talent Bookers. I found it easily enough; it was above a strip club called Nell Gwynne’s. If the lurid photographs in the window were any indication of what went on inside, it was not a place I was likely to frequent.
I walked up a narrow set of stairs to the floor above the club. The door bearing the name of the agency was open, and I went inside. It was a waiting room, with cheap red and yellow vinyl chairs lined up along the walls, a few occupied by young women dressed either in trendy outfits or in jeans and T shirts. A middle-aged woman with orange hair and long red fingernails tipped with black sat behind a desk reading a magazine. She glanced up, and went back to her page. I approached her and said pleasantly, “My name is Jessica Fletcher. I would appreciate having a few minutes with Mr. Simpson, if he’s available.
She looked up, shifted gum from one side of her mouth to the other, pointed to a chair, and said, “Wait your turn.”
I cocked my head, was about to say something, then simply followed her instructions and sat, the new handbag Lucas had bought me at Harrods on my lap.
Ten minutes later, a door opened behind the receptionist and a handsome young man stood in the doorway. He wore gray slacks, an expensive, custom-tailored burgundy blazer with gold buttons, a white silk shirt, and a variegated ascot of primarily burgundy and blue. Black hair was carefully arranged on his head. His features were chiseled, and while he certainly was good-looking, there was a discernible cruelty to his mouth.
He looked around the room (undressed everyone is more like it) until his eyes rested upon me. He shook his head and said, “Sorry, I don’t have anything for you today.”
I got up and approached him, smiled, and said, “Mr. Simpson-”
“Look, I don’t know what your gimmick is, but you’re a little long in the tooth for what I have open. Sorry, I’d like to help you out but-”
“Mr. Simpson, I am not here looking for a job as a stripper. My name is Jessica Fletcher, and I would like to speak with you about the death of your stepbrother, Jason Harris.”
His expression changed now. He narrowed his eyes and asked, “What are you, a wopsie?”
“I don’t think so, but if you would tell me what that means, I might reconsider.”
He shook his head. “A policewoman?”
I laughed. “Heavens, no, I am not a policewoman, although I have known some. I am a writer of murder mysteries. I was one of Marjorie Ainsworth’s good friends and was unfortunate enough to have been the one to discover her body. I have been in touch with your stepbrother’s companion, Maria Giacona.” I was pleased he gave me the time to get all that out.
“Look, Mrs. Fletcher, you can see I’m busy. I’ve got jobs to fill tonight and not enough birds to fill them.”
“I can see you’re busy, and I don’t wish to intrude for more than a few minutes. Couldn’t you find those few minutes for me?”
He said to the others in the room, “Are you all available tonight?”
There was a chorus of “Yes.”
He said to his receptionist, “Carmela, send these two to Joey over at Raymond’s. Then get on the phone and see who you can hustle for these other openings. Come on,” he said to me. “Five minutes, no more.”
His office was larger than I thought it would be. The walls were covered with the sort of photographs that adorned the windows downstairs, only some of them were much bigger, life-size. In one corner of the room was a small circular platform. Spotlights covered with blue and red gel were trained on it. I assumed that was where young women auditioned for him, to stretch the use of the word. The thing about the office that gained my immediate attention, however, was the overpowering combination of perfume, cologne, makeup, and incense that burned in a bowl on his desk.
“Okay,” he said, “what is it you want to talk to me about?”
“As I said, I wanted to discuss Jason Harris’s murder. I understand you were called in last night to identify the body.”
He sat back in a chair and looked at the ceiling. “Christ, that was something I didn’t need. I couldn’t believe what they’d done to him.”
“Yes, I know, I saw the body this morning.”
He sat up straight. “Why did you look at his body?”
“Because I was with Maria Giacona. I took her to the police station this morning. She was, as you can imagine, terribly upset.”
“Yes, I dare say she would be. They’d been lovers for a while. You met Jason?”
“As a matter of fact, I did, at Marjorie Ainsworth’s house the weekend she was killed. Actually, I was to meet him again at his flat. Maria wanted me to talk to him about an allegation that he’d played some part in helping Marjorie Ainsworth write her latest novel, Gin and Daggers.”
His laugh was small and unpleasant. He lighted a cigarette, drew deeply on it, exhaled the blue smoke into the room-adding yet another odor-and said, “Mrs. Fletcher, Jason didn’t help her. He wrote the whole bloody thing.”
“I can’t believe that,” I said.
“Believe what you want, but it’s true. I told him he was daft to do it, that he ought to cut himself a better deal, get some kind of credit or at least get a piece of the action. He didn’t listen to me. She paid him a bloody pittance to lend his talent to that book, and look where it got him. He’s dead, nobody will ever know what a good writer he was, and her estate will make millions off his hard work. I think that stinks, Mrs. Fletcher, and I don’t mind telling you that.”
“If what you say is true, Mr. Simpson, I can understand your anger-and Maria’s too-but whether he did as much with the novel as you claim remains to be seen, at least for me. Under what circumstances did you and Jason become stepbrothers?”
“Simple. Jason’s father, an American, married my mother, a Brit.”
“And where are they?”
“Both dead, an automobile accident in the States.”
“No other family on either side?”
“I have cousins scattered about, but Jason had absolutely no one else. That’s why he carried a card indicating that if anything ever happened to him, I was to be called.”
“Of course. I’d already assumed that. Were you and Jason involved professionally, in a business sense?”
Simpson looked around his office and laughed. “Jason get involved in this business? No, he stayed far away. We kept our relationship purely social.”
“You were good friends, then, as well as stepbrothers.”
“Yes.”
I thought of Maria’s comment about them not liking each other.
“You don’t benefit from any success his writing might achieve, do you?”
“Hell, no. Why do you ask that?”
“I don’t know. I suppose I’m trying to find out as much as I can about Jason, about his life. Maria tells me that Jason used a number of names and incidents from his own life in Gin and Daggers as a way of proving his involvement with it. She says he made notations on the pages of the manuscript, but the manuscript seems to be missing. You wouldn’t have a copy of it, would you?”
Simpson shook his head. The door opened and his receptionist said, “I’ve got a couple more out here.”
“Yeah, one minute, don’t let them get away.” He said to me, “I’m afraid this is all the time I have, Mrs. Fletcher. It gets this way every afternoon. More clubs open up and need talent, and I make a living providing it.”
“Judging from the number of such establishments I’ve seen in Soho today like the one downstairs, you must be kept very busy. Are they… I mean, do you only supply striptease artists?”
“We don’t call them that anymore. They’re exotic dancers.”
“Exotic. Of course. They certainly are.”
“I also book ethnic musical groups. If you ever need the best Greek or Arabic band in London, give me a call.”
“I will, although I don’t think I’ll be in the market for that in the near future.” I stood and extended my hand. “Thank you, Mr. Simpson. You’ve been very gracious.”
“No problem, Mrs. Fletcher. I’ll tell you one thing.”
“What’s that?”
“That if you want to do something worthwhile in this world, let it be known that my brother wrote Gin and Daggers.”
“I’ll certainly think about that. Thank you again.”
As I crossed the waiting room, two girls who looked hardly older than teenagers giggled. I stopped, looked at them, and said with as much dignity as I could muster, “I have a gimmick.”
I decided to continue my leisurely stroll rather than return right away to the Savoy. Eventually I drifted into neighboring Mayfair, whose quiet elegance contrasted sharply with the more frenetic pace of Soho. I would have attempted to walk back to the Savoy, but I was running late for my drink with Seth and Morton. Besides, as sensible as my shoes were, my feet were beginning to feel the effects of the pavement.
“Well, Jessica, what kind of day did you have?” Seth asked as we sat in the Thames Foyer bar and sipped drinks.
“Absolutely lovely. I took the afternoon to be by myself and to walk around London. Do you know what was especially wonderful? No one recognized me, not a soul.”
Morton made a gagging sound.
“What’s the matter?” I asked.
“This isn’t a martini.”
I looked at Seth, and we both started to laugh. I should have warned Morton that when a martini is ordered in London, you generally get a glass of vermouth. The fact that he had specified a dry martini only meant that the vermouth poured over the ice cubes was of the dry variety. “You have to ask for a martini cocktail,” I said, feeling slightly superior at that knowledge. We motioned for a waiter and put in the new order.
“Tell me what you did and saw today,” I said to them.
“Morton wanted to see if we could get a tour of Scotland Yard, but I convinced him we ought to seek out a little more culture while in London. We spent the afternoon at the British Museum.”
“Isn’t it marvelous?” I said.
Morton, who obviously had not found an afternoon in the sprawling British Museum to be his cup of tea, shook his head and said, “You’ve seen one museum, you’ve seen them all, Jess.” He looked at Seth: “I wouldn’t mind seeing that famous wax museum they’ve got here in London.”
“Madame Tussaud’s on Marylebone Road,” I said. “I’ve been there. It’s interesting, but I wouldn’t put it high on my list of priorities.”
After discussing other possibilities for them to visit the next day, they asked what I was doing for dinner. I told them I was free. “Tell you what,” I said, “I’ll dream up a place for dinner and make a reservation for seven. We’ll meet here in the lobby at six-thirty.” I had La Tante Claire in mind, a restaurant I’d heard so much about over the years but had never had the opportunity to visit. I also knew it was small and had probably been booked for weeks. I said to Morton as we walked from the bar, “Morton, you will have to change out of your uniform and put on a suit. You did bring a suit with you?”
“Of course I did, Jess, but like I told Seth, having me in uniform will keep us out of trouble on the streets, keep the pickpockets away.”
“What a… splendid idea. See you at six-thirty.”
I called La Tante Claire. “My name is Jessica Fletcher,” I said, “and I was wondering whether you could accommodate three people this evening at seven.”
“Jessica Fletcher, the famous writer?” he asked in a French accent.
“Yes.”
“We keep one table open until six for important customers, Mrs. Fletcher. It is for you, of course.”
“Well, I… that’s very nice of you. Thank you… very much.”
Morton had changed into a nice brown suit, white shirt, and tie. Seth was his usual well-groomed self; he was always dressed properly, even to go to his drive-way in the morning to pick up the newspaper.
We climbed into a cab and told the driver to take us to La Tante Claire, on Royal Hospital Road. I was feeling very relaxed. Lucas had called as I was getting ready for dinner to admonish me for spending so much time away from the ISMW conference. I tried to explain that circumstances had changed, and that they would dictate, to some extent, how I spent the rest of my week. I sounded forthright and full of conviction, but I knew he was right. I promised that I would try to focus more on the conference in the days ahead.
As the cab pulled away from the curb and headed for the Strand, I noticed a large automobile, whose lights had been on, make a three-point U-turn and fall in behind us. It was a Cadillac, originally white but now battered and discolored. It had caught my attention because of its size; you seldom see automobiles like that on London streets. Then, as we happily talked about the gastronomic treat awaiting us, I completely forgot about it.
We pulled up in front of La Tante Claire. Seth, who was now adept at handling British currency, paid the driver, and we moved toward the door of the restaurant. I glanced back; the large white Cadillac had pulled up behind cars half a block away, and the lights had been turned off.
“Strange,” I muttered.
“What?” Morton asked.
“Nothing. Come, let’s enjoy a wonderful meal together.”
“Thank you for accommodating us at the last minute,” I told the maître d’hôtel.
“My pleasure, Mrs. Fletcher,” he said in his charming accent. “I have been following events surrounding you very carefully. By the way, my wife has read all the French translations of your books.”
“How flattering.”
“I had one delivered to me when I knew you would be dining with us. I thought perhaps…”
He obviously wasn’t sure whether he was out of place to be requesting an autograph. He wasn’t, of course, and I told him I would be happy to inscribe the book to his wife.
We were shown to what was obviously a prime table. There were only a dozen of them, and ours was in a corner, offering an unobstructed view of the beautiful room, basically white, with some blond wood, blue curtains, lavender-gray armchairs, and portraits of lovely ladies on the walls. The maître d’hôtel handed us expensively printed menus. He also handed me a copy of one of my novels that had been translated.
“What is your wife’s name?” I asked.
“Nicole.”
I wrote a long inscription, tossing in an occasional French word that I happened to know, and handed it back to him. He beamed and told me his wife would be extremely pleased.
“I don’t understand this menu,” Morton said.
“Neither do I,” I said, “But I intend to fake it.”
Seth laughed. He spoke serviceable French, and we allowed him to translate for us, although he did need the help of a waiter on a few items. I knew that Morton would have preferred a steak house where he could order mashed potatoes and corn on the cob. Instead, we had scallop and oyster ragout studded with truffles as an appetizer. “The monkfish with saffron, capers, and celery root sounds wonderful to me,” I said. Seth decided to be adventurous and try the fillet of hare with bitter chocolate and raspberry sauce. We both looked at Morton, whose face was screwed up in debate with himself. He decided on lamb with parsley and garlic, and asked timidly, as though he expected to be attacked for asking, “Do you have any mashed potatoes?”
“Oui. ”
We had a wonderful meal together. Being with them represented something familiar and solid to hold on to, and I reveled in the laughter, the gossip about people in Cabot Cove, and Seth’s and Morton’s reaction to my recounting again everything that had happened since arriving in London.
We all enjoyed crème brûlée and petits fours with coffee to end the glorious meal, and Morton proclaimed the mashed potatoes the best he’d ever eaten.
When we stepped outside into the clear, fresh air, I breathed deeply and said, “Let’s take a walk. I’m in the mood.”
We started arm in arm down Royal Hospital Road, almost giddy enough to break into a song and dance. I didn’t tell them that my reason for wanting the walk had nothing to do with a need to exercise off some of the dinner. I was aware the moment we had come out of the restaurant that we were being watched by a man across the street. He stood behind the white Cadillac, and I couldn’t see him well enough to determine anything about him.
I led the trio around a corner, stopped, and said, “Indulge me a moment. Keep walking. Don’t look back. Just keep walking. I’ll catch up with you in a second.”
They looked quizzically at each other, but did what I asked. I stepped behind a wall that defined the property of a large house and waited. I saw my friends continue up the street, then heard footsteps rounding the corner, stopping for a second, then moving at an accelerated rate. The minute the feet passed me, I stepped out and said, “Excuse me, are you following us?”
Jimmy Biggers turned and looked at me.
“Mr. Biggers, what a pleasant surprise,” I said.
“Mrs. Fletcher, I…” He smiled and shuffled from one foot to the other. “I was just out taking a walk in the neighborhood.”
“I would think your neighborhood walks would take place in Wapping.”
“Well, nice to change the scenery every once in a while. What are you doing here?”
“We had dinner at La Tante Claire. Didn’t you notice?”
“No, I just got here.”
“My friends from Maine and I are taking a walk. We’ll probably end up in some pub or hotel bar, extending the evening. Would you care to join us?”
By this time Seth and Morton had decided they’d gone far enough and were on their way back to where Biggers and I stood.
“Are you all right, Jess?” Morton asked, placing himself between Biggers and me. “You’re the fella we met this morning in that Red Feather pub,” he said.
“Right you are, mate,” said Biggers.
I announced my plans for the rest of the evening and suggested we move on.
“No argument from me,” Morton said. “I get the creeps out here on the street at night.”
“You should have worn your uniform.”
“That’s what I said, but you told me to wear a suit.”
“And you’re a darling to do it for me. What do you say we find an archetypal British pub and have ourselves a shandy for a nightcap?”
“What’s a shandy?” Seth asked.
“Half a bitter, half lemonade,” Biggers said. “Come on, I’ll drive us to one of my favorites.”
Our vehicle was, of course, the battered white Cadillac.
“We’re on Wapping Wall,” I said after we’d driven for fifteen minutes.
“Right you are, Mrs. Fletcher, my neighborhood. I feel comfortable over here.” We pulled up in front of a pub called the Prospect of Whitby. “The manager’s a chum o’ mine,” Biggers said as he held open the door for me. “I think you’ll enjoy it.”
Because the pub sat directly on the Thames, and because it dated back to the sixteenth century (the area on which it sat was once known as the “hanging dock,” where the infamous Judge Jeffreys would approve of the bodies of his victims hanging in chains, and then enter the tavern to feast), it was dripping with atmosphere and packed with customers, most of them American.
Biggers was greeted warmly and we were led to a scarred table in the darts room. A bouncy, pleasant young waitress, who threatened to burst through her white blouse, gave Biggers a kiss on the cheek and asked what we would be having.
“Friends from America,” Biggers said. “Let’s give ’em a taste of the good stuff, best bitter for everyone.”
“I thought you’d be taking us to the Red Feather,” I said.
“Have to admit I’m partial to it, Mrs. Fletcher. Never see a tourist there, but I thought you’d enjoy this place. Lots of postcards sent back to the States from here.”
Biggers proved to be an amiable and entertaining drinking companion, although Morton Metzger didn’t seem to be enthralled, judging by the perpetual sour expression on his face. Seth, on the other hand, seemed to be enjoying the little Cockney private detective, and they were soon talking, laughing, and slapping each other’s backs like old fraternity brothers.
Eventually, after the third round of best bitter had been served (I’d switched to a shandy because I knew I couldn’t handle another straight beer), I brought up the subject of Jason Harris’s murder.
“Nasty business, that,” Biggers said. “Learn anything startling at the coppers this morning?”
“No, just what I mentioned to you at the Red Feather.”
“What did that sack o’ manure Simpson tell you?”
“Simpson?” I sat back and scrutinized him across the table. “How did you know I saw David Simpson?”
“Me gut told me.”
“You’ve been following me all day, Mr. Biggers.”
“Just the latter part of it,” he said, “after you woke me up and I put me act together. Simpson’s no good, a slimy one, if you catch my drift.”
“Because of the business he’s in? Yes, I would agree.”
“More than that. He’s connected.”
“Connected? You mean with organized crime?”
“That’s what I mean. Tell me, you seem to have become a mother hen of sorts to the Giacona girl.”
“Oh no, but I do feel sorry for her. She’s a nice person.”
“Is she now?”
“Yes… she is.”
Seth and Morton listened closely to our conversation.
“Mrs. Fletcher-can I call you Jessica?-I had a fling with a bird named Jessica once, lovely thing, but mean-spirited when she drank.”
“Yes, call me Jessica.”
“All right then, Jessica, you might ask Miss Giacona about David Simpson.”
“She’s already spoken to me of him. He’s her dead lover’s stepbrother.”
“That may be true, Jessica, but Simpson was also her lover.”
“The two of them?”
“Not at once.” He laughed loudly, and we all smiled. “She did a bit o’ dancin’ for Mr. Simpson and he took a shine to her, sort of a favorite.”
“She was a stripper… exotic dancer?”
“Good, too, real popular. Beautiful bird.”
“Yes, she is.”
“Yup, David Simpson and she had quite a fling. She didn’t mention that to you?”
“No, she didn’t.”
“Probably a bit embarrassed. More bitter?”
“No, I think it’s time we leave.”
I insisted upon paying the check, and Biggers drove us back to the Savoy.
“Thank you for escorting us,” I said. “It’s been a pleasant and educational evening.”
“My pleasure, Jessica.” He said to Seth, “Enjoyed your company, sir.” And to Morton: “I’m really a likable chap once you get to know me.”
“I like you.”
“Yeah, well, good night, everyone. Sleep well. See you soon.”
“I don’t like him,” Morton said as we entered the hotel.
“I do,” said Seth.
I said, “I’m not sure whether I like him or not, but I have a feeling I’m going to learn a lot more from him before this little London escapade is over.”