Part 40 (1/2)

”But we did all right,” Jill said. Her eyes turned hard, bitter. ”We had all the qualifications for our chosen work...I'm not bad to look at, am I?”

She was wearing a green sheath dress that hid her figure as effectively as Saran wrap. She had long legs, and they were crossed at the knee now so that I could see their shape, which was fine. Her b.r.e.a.s.t.s pushed out at me in a way that would keep her out of bounds for the fas.h.i.+on photographers but undeniably in bounds for any red-blooded man between the ages of eighteen and eighty. And she was beautiful to boot.

”Pretty,” she said. She rolled the word on her tongue and her eyes clouded. ”Our looks were our downfall. It's an easy life for a lazy girl, with looks and a figure, Ed. It doesn't take any talent at all. The men come and they tell their friends about you and pretty soon you have a date every night, and every date is at least a fifty-dollar bill and maybe a hundred, and no income tax out of that, either...Would you pay me fifty, Ed?”

She laughed softly. She was playing Little Miss Desirable now, running her tongue over her lower lip, pouting a little, arranging herself in the chair to make herself appear the personification of commercial l.u.s.t. The act drained away her sorrow, and her fear. She got caught up in it and part of the reality of Jackie's death left her for the moment.

”It was handy,” she said. ”Jackie and I had good times together. We were closer than sisters, Ed. You...well, you say how much we looked alike. We've always been able to pa.s.s for twins. That was an a.s.set in business, you know.”

”Why?”

”Because we could cover each other's dates.” She smiled, remembering. ”If Jackie had two dates at the same time and I was free, I would take one of them and pretend I was Jackie. The tricks never knew the difference. They couldn't even tell us apart in bed.”

”Handy.”

”Uh-huh. Sometimes we would take a trick together. You know, a man would want to go to bed with both of us at once. A real sister act.” She closed her blue eyes. ”Men get their kicks in funny ways. Some need two girls in order to get their jollies. Men are all sick, Ed.”

”You get a distorted picture.”

”Do I?”

”Yes. You just meet the men who pay you. The straight ones, the sane ones, they're home with their wives in front of a television set with a can of beer close by. But you don't get to see that kind.”

Her eyebrows went up a notch. ”And you? Have you got a wife, Ed London?”

”I don't even have a television set. But let's forget my s.e.x life for the time being.

”Let's take it from the top,” I said. ”You're both call girls and you live together. That is, lived together. Someone is trying to kill you and you don't know who or why. Any ideas at all?”

”None.”

”Were you blackmailing anyone?”

”No.”

”Was Jackie?”

”If she was, she didn't tell me about it.”

”Okay. How about men? Any boyfriends?”

”The only men in my life are customers, Ed.”

It was a sort of hopeless line of questioning. All she knew was that her sister had been shot and she was next in line.

”Why didn't you go to the police?” I asked Jill Baron.

”You should know that by now. Call girls don't look for help from the law. The police leave you alone if you live a quiet life and stay out of trouble, but if you draw them a map of who you are and where you live and how you earn your living, you might as well hang out a sign. The crooked cops come with their hands out and the honest ones haul you off to jail.”

She worked on her coffee. ”Jackie didn't even want to call in a private detective. She said you couldn't trust them. But your name had been mentioned somewhere, and I heard you were honest. So I insisted we call you.”

”Well, now's a good time to go to the police, Jill. Whoever is after you is playing for keeps.”

She shook her head. ”But they'll just ask me questions,” she said. ”Questions, questions, questions, and I don't know any of the answers that count. So what good will it do me?”

Her voice broke off and her eyes dropped. I took one of her small hands in mine. Her flesh was cold.

”Ed, help me,” she pleaded. ”If you help me maybe we can find out what it's all about and then go to the police. It won't do any good to go to them now.”

She had a point. She couldn't give the cops anything much to work on.

”Jill.”

She looked at me.

”Think, now. Were you or Jackie ever arrested? I mean for any offense at all.”

”Just a traffic ticket once. Nothing more.”

”Did they fingerprint you?”

”No, I just got a ticket.”

”Were either of you ever fingerprinted for anything? A government job? Anything?”

”I turned a trick with a UN diplomat once. But you don't get fingerprinted for that sort of thing. Why the questions?”

I filled a pipe and lit a match. Without prints, it was going to take them awhile to identify Jackie Baron's body. A corpse without identification is a tricky thing, and although police routine always comes up with an answer, it takes time. They run through Missing Persons files, they s.h.i.+p the prints to Was.h.i.+ngton, they play games with laundry marks...

So we had time to dig around a little.

”All right,” I said. ”We'll leave the police out of things, at least for the time being.”

”And you'll help me, Ed?” ”I'll help you,” I said.

FOUR.

I put my gun in the shoulder rig where it belonged, went to the window, pulled back the shade, and peered across the street. A few old ladies were walking home. No one seemed to be lurking in the shadows.

”Did anyone follow you here?”

”No.”

”Are you sure?”

”No.”