Chapter Twenty-Two A vanishing act

For some hours he hadn’t given a thought to food; now, suddenly, he was ravenously hungry. He drove to Dinty’s, found the corner table vacant, ordered an outsize sirloin.

While he waited for the chef to broil it, Pedley made inquiries about Hal Kelsey. The orchestra leader’s hotel said Mister Kelsey wasn’t in, they expected he’d be at the studio. At the International Broadcasting Company, somebody in the production department said the marshal could talk to the control room in Studio 8H.

That didn’t help; the anonymous voice from the control room was obviously disturbed, but Kelsey wasn’t there, they didn’t know when he’d get there or if he would.

It struck Pedley as peculiar; after he’d mused over the steak and French fries it began to appear significant. He went up to the skyscraper city where the IBC broadcast originated.

He came into Studio 8H through a door marked Do Not Enter When Red Light Is On. The red light wasn’t on, but beside it a frosted panel proclaimed Rehearsal.

The auditorium was empty, except for two actors playing gin rummy in the front row, and a scattering of visitors in the rear. The stage was a clutter of activity.

Against the huge gold backcurtain with its black sequin message — Winn’s, the Coffee of Connoisseurs — a score of shirt-sleeved musicians picked at violin strings, blew experimental scales on woodwinds, tuned up guitars and bass viols, rustled score sheets on their racks. The sweatered individual on the podium, consulting with a trombonist, wasn’t Hal Kelsey.

At one side of the stage, an angular brunette addressed a microphone with a full-throated ah-ah-ah-ah to the tune of do, mi, sol, do, casting an anxious eye toward the control room.

Four young men in tuxedos put their heads together, nodding and emitting sounds like hodel-e-yo, hodel-oh. At the center microphone Wes Toleman enunciated inaudibly with one eye on the sweep second hand of the control-room clock.

The talk-back emitted a sepulchral, “Quiet, people.” It was Chuck Gaydel’s voice. “We’ll take it straight through for time. Thirty seconds.”

Through the rectangle of plate glass at the side of the stage, Gaydel’s expression was tautly apprehensive, Pedley thought. Maybe that was just rehearsal tension.

The studio bedlam died away. The sweatered man turned half around so he could see the producer. Gaydel’s hand went up. The baton rapped twice, was raised aloft. The second hand of the clock circled to vertical.

Gaydel flipped a finger at the leader. The baton swung down. The orchestra hit the opening bars of the signature. Wes Toleman lifted his script, poised for his cue.

Ollie came through a door beside the stage, searched the studio as if looking for someone. She saw Pedley; her gaze met the marshal’s blankly; she tiptoed a few steps, craned her neck at the stage, fluttered a hand at Toleman — and smiled entrancingly.

After a moment, she tiptoed back to the door, went out. Pedley waited until Toleman had announced, “Patsy Ludlow, the singing star of ‘Rainbow Every Morning’” — and Patsy began her throaty blues:

“Ah been sick, a-layin’ in a bed

Ain’t had nobody for to hold my head

De road am rocky, de sun am hot

Oh, mah Lawdy, what trouble Ah got.”

Then he made his way inconspicuously to the door through which the tall girl had disappeared.

She was waiting for him; held out her hands.

“I thought it was about time you were showing up, darling.”

“How’s my favorite undieworld character?”

“Doing as well as might be expected of an alleged grass widow with a susceptible nature. I just phoned your office. Barney said you were officially off the reservation.”

“The commissioner wishes to relieve me from active duty.”

“He does?”

Olive’s eyes opened very wide.

“Doesn’t think I’m fitten to be up and about my chores.”

“I hadn’t heard a word about it, Ben. Honest. City Hall must be acting up.”

“The broadcasting boys are afraid I’ll make a wreck out of a million dollar baby. So-o-o, I’m a zombi, time being. Dead on my feet but still capable of giving folks the jeebies.”

She patted his arm reassuringly. “Let’s go up to my royal box — I’ve found something, but I’ll be an old woman in a shoe if I know what it is.”

On the way, he told her about Kim.

“I read about it, Ben.” Her warm, friendly eyes were disconsolate. “There was a paragraph about the rescue. I thought that might have been you.”

“No.” He followed her through a long hall, up a flight of stairs. “I should have saved her before the fire. I let her get away from me. Killer followed her down to the Village — or made her go down to her place with him.”

They went into the client’s booth. There were big easy-chairs, a cigar stand, a loudspeaker. They looked down on the stage through a duplicate of the control-room window.

“Sponsor’s pew, isn’t it, Ollie? How’d you rate this?” he asked.

She threw back her coat, crossed nice legs. “Sit at the side there, darling. With the lights off in here, they won’t see you.” She let him light a cigarette for her. “I’m supposed to be the niece of the vice-president in charge of coffee-bean bags or something. Wesley’s so anxious to please anyone connected with the Winn account that I didn’t have to go into details.”

“You always were a fast worker.”

“Toleman’s so easy. We’re going places this evening. To dance, he says. I think his attentions are somewhat less honorable.”

“That wasn’t your great discovery, I hope?”

“Oh, no. Did you notice an air of consternation among the control-room biggies down there?”

“Gaydel’s tense as a fiddlestring. Anything more than show-strain?”

“Kelsey’s done a vanishing act. No one’s seen hide nor seek of him since he left his hotel after breakfast this morning.”

“Um.” Pedley listened to the Wasson arrangement of “Make Believe.”

“Any ideas as to where he might be?”

“Not exactly. But half an hour ago, just before the rehearsal started, my lustful cavalier confided that he doesn’t think Kelsey’s going to show up at all.”

“What’s his angle?”

“Wesley has his doubts whether our orchestra leader will ever be seen around these parts again.”

“Reasons, if any?”

“That’s as far as we got when he had to go preach the merits of the fresh-roasted morning cup of joy.”

“He suggested that Kelsey was behind those fires?”

“No. Is he?”

“No savvy.” He patted her knee, casually. “No ketch-um one piece evidence. You findum.”

“That leather thingumabob Barney mentioned?”

“Pandora’s box. Belongs to Leila.”

Olive leaned toward him. “Is she really as stunning as they make out?”

He nodded solemnly. “Only female I ever met who can hold a candle to you.” He bent over and kissed her ear. “Keep on with that illicit romance. I haven’t checked little Wesley off the list yet. I’m going down and ask him a couple of leading questions now.”

The quartet was laying into some four-part harmony; nothing but the rhythm section was playing when he came into the studio again. Wes Toleman sat on a folding chair beside the stage, reading Radio Daily.

Pedley walked up behind him, laid a hand on his shoulder. The announcer’s eyes swiveled to the left, his head and neck remained rigid. When he caught sight of the marshal’s overcoat, he relaxed, turned around.

“Did you find my pencil?” he whispered.

Pedley shook his head, pointed toward the control room. “You don’t have to spiel for a few minutes, do you?”

“No.” Toleman followed him to the passageway leading to the control room.

After the soundproof door had closed behind them, Pedley said, “What’s with this Kelsey lad?”

“That’s one for ‘Information, Please.’”

“Hasn’t called up to say what’s delayed him?”

“No!” The network man was vehement. “And if anyone should ask me, I don’t believe he will.”

“Think he’s flew the coop?”

The announcer flashed his eyes nervously at the control-room door. “It’s just one man’s opinion. I really haven’t a thing to go on except I know Hal’s been eager to be top dog in the show and it was Ned who always threw him for a loss.”

“Why wouldn’t he put Leila out of the running instead of lighting a fire under her brother?”

“That wouldn’t have done any good,” Toleman explained earnestly. “Ned would still have the contracts with Winn. It isn’t Leila who matters. I probably wouldn’t have thought anything about Hal if it hadn’t been that he and Kim Wasson got along so badly. But when she got so terribly burned, too—”

“If Kelsey was in on that one, he must have one of those dual personalities. He was up at the Starlight Roof when the blaze was primed.”

“He could have had someone helping him, couldn’t he?”

“Wouldn’t put it past him. What are you holding out?”

“Sir?”

“You’ve some reason for tying Kelsey into these crimes. What is it? Does he have the ax out for you, too?”

Toleman held himself primly erect. “It’s a matter of complete indifference to me what Hal Kelsey thinks. Whether he likes my announcing or not won’t affect my standing with the network. It isn’t that at all!”

“You’re warming up. Get hot.”

“Well, there is something. It didn’t seem of any particular importance at the time. But since he hasn’t seen fit to come to the studio today—”

Pedley controlled an impulse to swing on the announcer’s chin. “I’m tuned in. Proceed.”

“Everybody on the show knew better than to offer Ned Lownes a drink of anything stronger than root beer. It’s been kind of an unwritten code that when the folks stop at a bar before rehearsal, they’d all avoid taking Ned with them. He always wound up with a jag and nearly always caused trouble. Yet yesterday afternoon Hal was at the Telebar with Ned, buying liquor for him as fast as Ned could put it away.”

“You were there?”

“Yes. I saw them. And my personal opinion is that anyone who’d pull a filthy trick like that would do anything. And if he’s gone further with his schemes than he originally meant to, he’ll be afraid to show up again.”

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