A Gambling Man (Archer #2)(80)
“Dammit, can’t you leave me in peace?” she moaned.
Dash sat in the chair across from her. “So Ruby liked rich men, huh?”
Dawson poured out three fingers of the gin and slowly spun the cap back while glaring at Archer. She poured in a smidgen of tonic, drank down a finger, tongued her lips, and said, “What young woman doesn’t?”
“Don’t play that game with me, Mabel. I’m trying to find a killer.”
“What do I know about anything?”
“I think a lot more than you let on.”
She let out a sigh so long it seemed to Archer like her dying breath. She lit up a Camel and blew smoke all over Dash, who just sat there and absorbed it, like a sponge.
“You private dicks are all alike, nag, nag, nag. Mark my words, in another life you’re coming back as some poor schmuck’s mother-in-law.”
“That’s a good description, actually. So, rich men?”
She tapped ash and polished off a second finger, holding the glass to her forehead after, as though she might get the final liquid dollop inside her via absorption.
“Tell me who your client is.”
Dash didn’t hesitate. “You already know.”
“How?”
“We came here yesterday and pretty much told Ruby who it was. And there is no way you didn’t get that out of the girl, because as soon as we left, you had a little talk with her, didn’t you? I mean, you said that was your job: the girls?”
She took another puff of her smoke and eyed the man warily. “I know what you’re thinking and maybe what you want me to say, but I never saw Douglas Kemper with Ruby, not once. She wasn’t in his class. She was a kid from Kansas or Missouri or one of those places with more cows than people.”
“So she did tell you we were asking about Kemper?”
“She . . . I mean . . . yeah, she did.”
“Thanks for clearing that up. And she told us she was from Illinois, but they got cows there, too, so go ahead. What else?”
“She was pretty, she had a decent voice, and she was okay playing the dumb broad in the comedy skits. And that was it. She was not the second coming of Carole Lombard, trust me. She didn’t have the brains or ambition for moving high up the social ladder.”
“We heard different, at least about her and Kemper.”
“Then you heard wrong, as far as I’m concerned.”
“What if his wife thinks he might have been cheating with Ruby?” said Dash.
“Then maybe she knows something I don’t. But if she can’t keep her man happy it’s her problem not mine.”
“Can you think of anyone who might want to hurt Ruby?” asked Archer.
“We get all kinds in here, drunks, powder puffs, big men, small men, weak men, and mostly men who think way too much of themselves. But as far as I know, we don’t have gents who like chopping a girl’s head off, and I hope we never do.”
“Well, you have at least one,” pointed out Archer, drawing a glare from Dawson.
“Was Ruby seeing anybody, rich or not?” asked Dash.
“Truth is she didn’t have nobody special. Working here doesn’t really allow for that, does it? Part of the job is making all the men feel special. Hard to do that if you’re gaga over somebody. Takes away your, um, generous spirit.”
“I thought she was a performer on the stage, not a bedspring squeaker,” replied Dash.
“And maybe she was making one guy feel special and then she stopped and he didn’t like it,” opined Archer.
“Well, I have no clue as to who that might be. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have some serious drinking to do.”
Outside in the sunshine Dash looked around and said, “I remember when this was just an empty field.”
“I guess it’s good business for Sawyer Armstrong.”
“He’s always been able to sniff out the dollars.”
“You said you’ve known him a long time.”
“Sometimes I think too long. With him, one minute it’s honey, the next a shotgun.”
Archer rubbed his injured face. “It was pretty easy for me to figure that out last night.”
“That was just him sniffing around the shrubs seeing if someone dropped something of value, Archer. Don’t read too much into it.”
“He really didn’t like that we questioned his daughter.”
“I’m sure he didn’t, especially seeing as how she thinks her hubby is guilty as charged.”
“And that might derail Kemper’s mayoral run, you mean?”
“Well, I could see Armstrong thinking that way, sure.”
“With Ruby dead, you think the newspapers will get wind of this?”
“I think whoever killed Ruby certainly hopes so.”
“Again, to queer Kemper’s shot at the mayor’s office?”
“Maybe.”
“You don’t sound sure.”
“We been working this case for one day. I’m not sure of a damn thing, except that Mabel Dawson knows more than she’s letting on. Let’s take a walk around back.”
The rear grounds were made up of upper and lower terraces, paved courtyards, open spaces and private ones rimmed with hedges, along with tables, chairs, chaises, freestanding umbrellas to shield the sun’s rays, and a large fountain on the top terrace that bled water down into a series of cast stone pods to form a gentle waterfall that somehow ended in a firepit before the water was recirculated to the top. At this hour of the day there were few patrons back here, but some of the staff were wiping off the furniture and others were restocking a large bar set on wheels that sat under a large circus-tent-sized pavilion.