“Touché, but that’s only part of it.”
“I know. Once you got the headline, you’d hide out and not read the papers.”
I sighed. “Jesus, I wish you weren’t so much smarter than me.
“And I wish you weren’t so cautious and complicated. Dwight, what is going to happen with us?”
“The three of us?”
“No, us.”
I looked around the living room, all wood and leather and Deco chromium. There was a glass-fronted mahogany cabinet; it was filled with Kay’s cashmere sweaters, all the shades of the rainbow at forty dollars a pop. The woman herself, South Dakota white trash molded by a cop’s love, sat across from me, and for once I said exactly what was on my mind. “You’d never leave him. You’d never leave this. Maybe if you did, maybe if Lee and I were quits as partners, maybe then we’d have a chance together. But you’d never give it all up.”
Kay took her time lighting a cigarette. Exhaling a breath of smoke, she said, “You know what he’s done for me?”
I said, “And for me.”
Kay tilted her head back and eyed the ceiling, brushed stucco with mahogany wainscoting. Blowing smoke rings, she said, “I had such a schoolgirl crush on you. Bobby De Witt and Lee used to drag me to the fights. I brought my sketch pad so I wouldn’t feel like one of those awful women buttering up their men by pretending they liked it. What I liked was you. The way you made fun of yourself with your teeth, the way you covered up so you wouldn’t get hit. Then you joined the Department, and Lee told me how he heard you informed on those Japanese friends of yours. I didn’t hate you for it, it just made you seem more real to me. The zoot suit thing, too. You were my storybook hero, only the stories were real, little bits and pieces here and there. Then the fight came along, and even though I hated the idea of it I told Lee to go ahead, because it seemed to mean the three of us were meant to be.”
I thought of a dozen things to say, all of them true, and just about the two of us. But I couldn’t, and ran to Lee for cover. “I don’t want you to worry about Bobby De Witt. When he gets out, I’ll lean on him. Hard. He’ll never come near you or Lee.”
Kay took her eyes off the ceiling and fixed me with a strange look, hard but sad underneath. “I’ve given up worrying about Bobby. Lee can handle him.”
“I think Lee’s afraid of him.”
“He is. But I think it’s because he knows so much about me, and Lee’s afraid he’ll let everyone know. Not that anyone cares.”
“I care. And if I lean on De Witt, he’ll be lucky to talk at all.” Kay stood up. “For a man with an up-for-grabs heart, you are such a hardcase. I’m going to bed. Good night, Dwight.”
When I heard a Schubert quartet coming from Kay’s bedroom, I took pen and paper from the stationery cupboard and wrote out my report on the questioning of Elizabeth Short’s father. I included mention of his “air tight” alibi, his account of the girl’s behavior when she lived with him in ‘43, the beating she got from a Camp Cooke soldier and her parade of nameless boyfriends. Padding the report with unnecessary details kept my mind most of the way off Kay, and when I finished I made myself two ham sandwiches, chased them with a glass of milk and fell asleep on the couch.
My dreams were mug shot flashes of recent bad guys, Ellis Loew representing the right side of the law with felony numbers stenciled across his chest. Betty Short joined him in black and white, full face and left profile views. Then all the faces dissolved into LAPD report forms rolling out endlessly as I tried to jot down information on Junior Nash’s whereabouts in the blank spaces. I woke up with a headache, knowing I was in for a very long day.
It was dawn. I walked out to the porch and picked up the morning Herald. The headline was “Hunt Boyfriends in Torture Killing,” a portrait photo of Elizabeth Short centered directly below it. It was captioned, “The Black Dahlia,” followed by, “Authorities today were searching into the love life of 22-year-old Elizabeth Short, victim of the ‘Werewolf Murder,’ whose romances had changed her, according to friends, from an innocent girl to a black-clad, man-crazy delinquent known as the Black Dahlia.”
I felt Kay beside me. She grabbed the paper, skimming the front page, giving a slight shudder. Handing it back, she asked, “Will all this be over soon?”
I flipped through the front section. Elizabeth Short took up six whole pages, most of the ink portraying her as a slinky femme fatale in a tight black dress. “No,” I said.
Chapter 9
Reporters were surrounding University Station. The parking lot was packed and the curb was lined with radio trucks, so I double-parked, stuck “Official Police Vehicle” signs under my wiper blades and pushed through the cordon of newshounds, ducking my head to avoid being recognized. It didn’t work; I heard “Buck-kee!” and “Blei-chert,” then hands grabbed at me. My jacket pocket was ripped loose, and I shoved myself the rest of the way inside. The entrance hall was filled with daywatch blues going on duty; a connecting door opened up into a bustling squadroom. Cots lined the walls; I saw Lee passed out on one of them, sheets of newspaper covering his legs. Phones were ringing at desks all around me, and my headache came back, the pounding twice as bad. Ellis Loew was tacking slips of paper to a bulletin board; I tapped him hard on the shoulder.
He turned around. I said, “I want out of this circus. I’m a Warrants officer, not a Homicide dick, and I’ve got priority fugitives. I want to get un-detached. Now.”
Loew hissed, “No. You work for me, and I want you on the Short case. That’s final, absolute and irrevocable. And I’ll brook no prima donna demands from you, Officer. Do you understand?”
“Ellis, goddamnit!”
“You get stripes on your sleeve before you call me that, Bleichert. Until then it’s Mr. Loew. Now go read Millard’s summary report.”
I stormed over to the rear of the squadroom. Russ Millard was asleep in a chair, his legs propped up on the desk in front of him. Four typed sheets of paper were tacked to the corkboard wall a few feet away. I read:
First Summary Report
187 P.C., Vict: Short, Elizabeth Ann, W.F.
D.O.B. 7/29/24. Filed 1/17/47 0600 Hrs.
Gentlemen—
Here’s the 1st summary on E. Short, D.O.D. 1/15/47,9th and Norton, Leimert Park.
1. 3 phony or probable phony confessions so far. Obviously innocent confessors have been released, incoherent and seriously imbalanced being held at City Jail awaiting alibi checks and sanity hearings. Known deviates being questioned by Dr. De River, consulting psychiatrist, with Det. Div. backup. Nothing solid yet.
2. Results of prlim. post mort. and follow-up: vict. choked to death on ear to ear knife slash thru mouth. No alcohol or narcotics in blood at time of death. (For det. see case file 14-187-47)
3. Boston P.D. doing background check on E. Short, family and old boyfriends and their whereabouts at time of murder. Father (C. Short) has valid alibi—he is eliminated as suspect.
4. Camp Cooke C.I.D. is checking out reports of beating E. Short received from soldier when she worked at P.X. in 9/43. E. Short arrested for underaged drinking in 9/43, C.I.D. says soldiers she was arrested with are all overseas, thus eliminated as suspects.
5. Sewers being dragged citywide for E. Short’s clothing. All women’s clothing found will be analyzed at Central Crime Lab. (See crime lab sum. rpts. for det.)
6. Citywide field interrogation rpts. 1/12/47—1/15/47 collated and read. One follow-up: Hollywood woman called in complaint about shouts of “weird sounding gibberish” in H.W. Hills nights of 1/13 and 1/14. Result of follow-up: put off as party revelers making noise. Field officers: disregard this occurrence.
7. From verified phone tips: E. Short lived most of 12/46 in San Diego, at home of Mrs. Elvera French. Vict. met Mrs. French’s daughter, Dorothy, at movie theater where Dorothy worked, told (unverified) story about being abandoned by husband. Frenches took her in, and E. Short told them conflicting stories: she was widow of air corps major; pregnant by navy pilot; engaged to army flyer. Vict. had many dates with different men during her stay at French house. (See 14-187-47 interviews for det.)
XXXXX8. E. Short left French house on 1/9/47 in company of man she called “Red.” (Desc. as: W.M., 25-30, tall, “handsome”, 170-180, red hair, blue eyes.) “Red” allegedly salesman. Drives a pre-war Dodge sedan with Huntington Park tags. Vehicle cross-check initiated. A.P.B. issued on “Red”.
9. Verified info: Val Gordon (W.F.) Riverside, Calif., called in, said she is sister of deceased air corps major Matt Gordon. Said: E. Short wrote to her and her parents in Fall of ‘46, shortly after Maj. Gordon died in plane crash. Lied about being Gordon’s fiancee, requested $ from them. Parents, Miss Gordon, denied request.
10. Trunk belonging to E. Short located at Railway Express office, downtown L.A. (R.E. clerk saw vict’s name and picture in papers, recalled her storing trunk in late 11/46). Trunk being gone over. Carbons of 100’s of love letters to various men (mostly servicemen) found, and (many fewer) mash notes written to her. Also, many photos of E. Short with servicemen in trunk. Letters being read, names and descriptions of men being collated.
11. Verified phone info: former Air Corps Lt. J.G. Fickling called from Mobile, Ala. when he saw E. Short’s name and picture in Mobile papers. Said he and vict. had “brief affair” in Boston in late ‘43, and “she had about 10 other boyfriends on line at all times.” Fickling has verified alibi for time of murder. Eliminated as suspect, also denies ever having been engaged to E. Short.
12. Numerous tips being phoned in to all L.A.P.D. and Sheriff’s divisions. Crank-sounding dismissed, others routed to applicable area squadrooms thru Cent. Homicide. All tips being cross-filed.
XXXXXX13. Address verified info: E. Short lived at these addresses in 1946. (Names following addresses are of caller or verified residents of same address. All but Linda Martin verified by D.M.V. records)
13-A-1611 N. Orange Dr., Hollywood. (Harold Costa, Donald Leyes, Marjorie Graham) 6024 Carlos Ave., Hollywood. 1842 N. Cherokee, Hollywood (Linda Martin, Sheryl Saddon) 53 Linden, Long Beach.
14. Results of SID findings in Leimert Park vact lots: no woman’s clothing found, numerous knives and knife blades found, all too rusted to be murder weapon. No blood found.
15. Results of Leimert Park canvasing (with mugs of E. Short): zero (all sightings obvious crank stuff.)
In conclusion: I believe all investigatory efforts should be centered around questionings of E. Short’s known associates, particularly her numerous boyfriends. Sergeant Sears and I will be going to San Diego to question her K.A.’s there. Between the APB on “Red” and the L.A. K.A. questionings we should get salient information.