Death Wears a Beauty Mask and Other Stories
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Contents
Acknowledgments
Death Wears a Beauty Mask
Stowaway
When the Bough Breaks
Voices in the Coalbin
The Cape Cod Masquerade
Definitely, a Crime of Passion
The Man Next Door
Haven’t We Met Before?
The Funniest Thing Has Been Happening Lately
The Tell-Tale Purr
About Mary Higgins Clark
Acknowledgments
In 1972 I began a novella that I called “Death Wears a Beauty Mask.” After fifty pages I was not sure how I would end it and put it aside to write Where Are the Children?
Going through old files, I came across it, decided I liked it and finished it this past summer. It was fun to work on it from the perspective of its setting in 1974.
This collection contains nine of my short stories including my first published story, “Stowaway.” This book represents my early years as a writer but I hope not yet the end.
Along the way there are people whom I am happy to recognize for their assistance. First and foremost, my editor and dear friend since the beginning, Michael Korda. He has steered the ship for all my writing and is indispensable.
I want to thank Marysue Rucci, V.P., editor-in-chief at Simon & Schuster. It has been wonderful working with her these last few years.
My home support group is Nadine Petry, my assistant; my son David Clark and my daughter Patty Clark. Thanks for all your support and suggestions.
And, of course, to my spouse extraordinaire, John Conheeney, who listens patiently as I tell him, “This book is not going well.” His response is, “I’ve heard that for the last thirty books.”
And many thanks to you, my dear readers, without whom I would not exist as a writer. I value each and every one of you. I hope you enjoy “Death Wears a Beauty Mask” and the other stories in this collection.
Cheers and Blessings,
Mary
IN MEMORY OF ANN MARA
Dear friend and magnificent lady
Death Wears a Beauty Mask
June 1974
The Pan American Clipper began its final descent into Kennedy Airport at 8:00 A.M. Janice pressed her forehead against the window as she tried to peer through the grayish clouds. Mike leaned over, fastened her seatbelt, gave a quick pat to her thigh and said, “You won’t be able to see your sister from here, honey.”
He stretched out his legs, which felt too long and cramped in the meager space allotted by the airline as suitable for tourist-class passengers. At thirty, Michael Broad, a deputy district attorney in Los Angeles, had retained the muscular leanness of his college track-team years. His brown hair was already showing liberal streaks of gray . . . a hereditary manifestation which secretly delighted him. His low-key personality didn’t fool the discerning for too long. His gray eyes had an almost constant expression of quizzical irony. Defense witnesses being cross-examined had come to fear the steely, penetrating quality of those eyes. They would not have believed the expression of tenderness he invariably showed when he looked at the girl sitting next to him.
Janice, his twenty-two-year-old bride of three weeks, was tanned, slender, narrow-hipped and long-legged. Her dark blonde hair stopped three inches past her shoulders. They had met a year ago when she escorted him to the stage at the University of Southern California, where he had been invited to lecture on student safety.
She smiled at Mike as she settled back in her seat. “You can’t see a darn thing,” she complained. “It’s so cloudy or smoggy or whatever. Oh, darling, I just can’t wait to see Alexandra. Do you realize it’s been nearly a year and she’s the only relative I have in the whole world?”
Mike pointed to his brand-new wedding ring. “What about me?” he said dryly. She grinned at him, then restlessly turned back to the window again. She knew it was hard for Mike to understand her eagerness. With a mother, father, two brothers and two sisters, he had always been surrounded by family.
With Janice it had been different. Her mother died when she was born. Her sister, Alexandra, older by six years, had taken over as substitute mother. Alexandra left Oregon and went to New York when Janice was twelve. For a long time she had managed to get home every few months. But then as her modeling career zoomed, the get-togethers became more and more scattered. The last one had been in New York when Janice had spent ten days with Alexandra last summer.
Alexandra had planned to attend Janice’s college graduation from USC. But she’d phoned to say that she had to go to Europe to do a commercial. When Janice told her that she and Mike had decided to have a small wedding—Mike’s family and twenty of their close friends—at the Church of the Good Shepherd church in Los Angeles right after her graduation and use Mike’s vacation time for a honeymoon, Alexandra made Janice promise that they’d spend the last week of it with her. This was the ideal time to visit. Mike would be going back to work and Janice would start her master’s degree in English in July. Since she was a child she had known she wanted to be a teacher.
“I’ll be at the airport with a brass band, darling,” Alexandra had said. “I’ve missed you so much. This damn, rotten job . . . I pleaded with them to delay the shoot but they can’t. I want to see you so much and meet Mike. He sounds wonderful. I’ll show you New York.”
“Mike knows New York inside out,” Janice said. “He went to Columbia Law School.”
“Well, I’ll show you places you just don’t go to when you’re a student. All right, darling . . . that’s June 24. I’ll be at the airport. Just look for the brass band.”
Janice turned back to Mike. “I can’t wait for you to meet Alexandra. You’ll love her.”
“I’m anxious to,” Mike said. “Although I must say I haven’t exactly missed having other people around the past few weeks.”
They’d spent the past three weeks in England and France. Janice thought of the out-of-the-way inns in Devon and Brittany with Mike’s arms around her. “Neither have I,” she admitted.
Thirty minutes later they were at the head of the line. An inspector studied their passports and stamped them. “Welcome back,” he said with a hint of a smile.
They hurried to the baggage area. “I know ours will be the last to come in,” Janice lamented as she watched bag after bag tumble onto the conveyor belt. She was almost right. Theirs were the next to last to arrive. Finally, as they came to the doors of the main terminal, Janice raced ahead. Friends and relatives of their fellow passengers were gathered in small welcoming groups.
Alexandra would have stood out in the crowd. In one this small it would be impossible to miss her. But she wasn’t there.
Janice’s look of anticipation wilted. Even her shoulders sagged as she said, “I guess the brass band got held up in traffic or something.”
Mike replied good-naturedly, “Lateness seems to run in your family.” Her habit of being at least fifteen minutes behind schedule everywhere had improved only slightly after a series of lectures when she’d kept him waiting.
The suggestion restored some of Janice’s equanimity. “Alexandra always is a little late,” she admitted. “She’ll probably be along any minute.”
But half an hour passed . . . then an hour. Three times Mike phoned Alexandra’s apartment. An answering service volu
nteered to take a message. He got coffee for them and they sipped it from paper cups, afraid to leave the area. At noon Mike said, “Look, honey, it doesn’t make sense to keep waiting. We’ll leave a message for Alexandra here and take a cab to her apartment. We can probably get the superintendent to let us in.”
Alexandra lived in an apartment building bordering the Henry Hudson Parkway on 74th Street. She had a private entrance and a terrace. Janice described it to Mike in the cab. “It’s just gorgeous. Wait until you see the views of the Hudson.”
The decision to go to the apartment had obviously picked up her spirits. Mike nodded encouragingly when Janice said that undoubtedly Alexandra had gotten stuck on an out-of-town modeling job and had probably sent a message they didn’t receive. But he had already sensed something could be very wrong.
When the cabbie reached 74th Street, Janice directed him around the back of the building where the private entrances faced the river. “Maybe she just got back from Europe and overslept.”
When Mike rang the bell, a short, stocky woman opened the door. Her hair was tied in a knot at the top of her head. Her blue eyes flashed like searchlights anchored in her plump face.
“You’ve got to be the sister,” she said abruptly. “Come in. Come in. I’m Emma Cooper.” The housekeeper, Mike thought. Janice had talked about her. Last year when she’d been in New York to visit Alexandra, the housekeeper had been on vacation, so they had never met.
Janice hadn’t exaggerated when she’d enthused about the apartment. Lime walls and carpeting made a subtle and elegant background for fine paintings and obviously expensive furnishings. Mike whistled softly. “Too bad you’re so homely, honey,” he said. “I’d send you out to model too.”
Janice wasn’t listening. “Where is my sister?” she asked the housekeeper eagerly.
A frown that might have been disapproval or worry added creases to the other woman’s forehead. “I don’t know,” she said. “I know she got in Monday evening but she didn’t come home and didn’t call. She was looking forward so much to your visit and talked about nothing else. I don’t know what she expects me to do. She redid the guest bedroom for you. The painter was here two days ago. ‘Was this the right shade?’ he asks me. What am I supposed to say? I told him to go ahead. She’ll probably decide it’s all wrong. Phone’s driving me crazy. Every ten minutes it’s been ringing. I stopped picking it up. Let the answering service have the job. Yesterday, Mr. Wilson, the agency guy, was practically shouting at me.”
“You mean my sister arrived in New York three days ago and you haven’t heard from her?” Janice demanded.
Emma shook her head. “She was due in from that Beauty Mask trip Monday evening. When that Wilson fellow called, he said that they all arrived on the chartered plane but separated at the airport. He told me Miss Alexandra was supposed to be driven home by the owner of the charter airline. He hasn’t seen her since. Nobody has. Not that that’s so unusual. Sometimes when Miss Alexandra has had enough of all the fuss, she takes off and gets a rest. One time it was to Cape Cod, another time to Maine. Then she shows up like it was yesterday she took off. A little inconsiderate when she’s doing all this decorating.”
Mike stopped the flow of words. “Is it possible Miss Saunders went on another job?”
Emma shook her head. “That Beauty Mask thing was all she was doing these past couple of months. Lots of pictures for magazines and them commercials.”
“Has she been reported missing?” Mike asked.
Emma shook her head vehemently. “Course not.”
“What are you trying to say?” Janice demanded.
“Nothing. I’m trying to say nothing. Please don’t go ’round reporting Miss Alexandra missing. Like I said, she sometimes ups and takes off and no explanations given or asked. . . . She don’t like anyone messing around her with questions.”
Janice turned to Mike. Her eyes seemed even larger when they were frightened. “Mike, what should we do?”
“First, get the messages from the answering service. See who’s been calling.”
The answering service at first refused to give any information about Alexandra’s phone messages. “Even though you are her sister,” the authoritative voice of an operator said, “we always give the messages directly to her. She has told us never to give them to anyone else who claims to be calling in her name.”
Mike took the phone from Janice’s hand. “This is Alexandra Saunders’s brother-in-law. She has not been heard from for three days and her family is terribly worried. Answer this, has she phoned in for her messages in these past three days?”
There was a pause. “I really don’t know if we should share that information—”
Mike interrupted. “If you don’t share it and if you don’t give me what messages she received, I am an attorney and I will get a court order to get them. Miss Saunders is missing. Can you understand that? She is missing! I am calling from her phone. You can call me back to verify that I am in her apartment.”
There was a notepad and pen by the phone. Less than a minute later he was jotting down names and phone numbers.
When he put down the phone, he said, “Grant Wilson called on average three times a day. So did a Larry Thompson—about the same. And several calls from a Mark Ambrose. Most of the others seem to be invitations to charity dinners, salon appointments, etc.”
Emma knew who the men were. “Grant Wilson. He’s the owner of the Wilson Modeling Agency that books Miss Alexandra. Larry Thompson, he’s the guy who does all those photo shoots and the commercials. Marcus Ambrose, he owns the charter plane service that took them over and flew them around in Europe.”
“We’ll start with Wilson,” Mike decided.
“Don’t worry about your bags,” Emma said. “I’ll put them in the guest room.”
“I don’t know what salary arrangements you had with Alexandra, but I want to make sure—”
“Don’t worry,” Emma interrupted, “I’m paid through the end of the month.”
• • •
Twenty minutes later they were at the General Motors Building on Fifth Avenue. As they stood at the entrance, Mike looked at it appreciatively. “They were just building this when I was in law school.”
Janice smiled forlornly. “When I was here six years ago, Alexandra took me to lunch at The Plaza.” She stared at the impressive old hotel across the street. “It was such fun; celebrities kept coming up to our table.”
Grant Wilson sat behind the massive desk in his corner office. The windows commanded a breathtaking panoramic view of Central Park. The office was furnished like a living room: deep blue carpeting, sofa and chairs covered in the same expensive brocade as the draperies; good paintings, a well-equipped bar, bookcases. It was the kind of office that signified top-of-the-ladder success in the Madison Avenue world. Grant had been successful. He’d come to New York twelve years before when he was twenty-eight. In those years he’d worked himself up to executive vice president in one of the most important modeling agencies in New York. Three years ago he’d opened his own agency.
Grant had a high-bridged nose, light brown eyes, the trim build of a man who works out frequently at the Athletic Club and a head of graying but abundant hair.
Right now he was badly frightened. He’d been at lunch at the Four Seasons. His meal had consisted of salmon with a salad and two gin martinis. The martinis were to calm his nerves. When he got back to his office, his secretary gave him several messages. The first was that Alexandra’s sister and her husband were on the way to see him. What did that mean? He’d forgotten Alexandra had said her sister was married. He had thought she was some college kid. What kind of questions would she ask about Alexandra? How should he answer them? He’d tell her he couldn’t understand how the hell anyone as familiar as Alexandra could just disappear. He’d say that you couldn’t open a magazine without seeing her face. And all those guest appearances on Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin. Surely somebody would notice her somewhere. But she migh
t as well have fallen through a crack in the earth.
There were other messages. Ken Fowler from Fowler Cosmetics, the company that owned Beauty Mask, had phoned three times. He still hadn’t paid the last invoices they’d submitted. If they didn’t immediately reshoot that last commercial in Venice, he would refuse to pay any of the outstanding invoices.
The intercom on his phone buzzed. It was the receptionist. “Mr. and Mrs. Broad to see you. Mrs. Broad is Alexandra Saunders’s sister.”
“I know who she is,” Grant snapped. “Bring them in immediately.” He slammed the phone down, rubbed his hands together to dry them and waited.
When his secretary came in with his visitors, Grant stood up, every inch the welcoming, gracious executive. He took both of Janice’s hands in his. “My dear, I’d have known you anywhere. You’re the image of your sister.” Then he shook Mike’s hand warmly.
He was, as a matter of fact, thrown off base by the appearance of the young couple. God knows what he’d expected—a pair of lunatic college kids with shaggy haircuts, flowers on their toes and granny glasses. But this Mike Broad was no lightweight kid. And as for the sister, he studied her carefully. What a knockout; not that ethereal look of Alexandra . . . more of a healthy kind of beauty. A bit taller . . . probably five or six pounds heavier but it looked good. He’d been warning Alexandra that you could overdo the stringbean look.
Janice was protesting. “Oh, I’m nothing like Alexandra. Well, there’s just no comparison.” Next to Alexandra’s chiseled beauty she had always felt like a peasant. “Do you know where my sister is?” she demanded.
As she finished the question, she realized that simultaneously Grant Wilson had been asking one of her. He’d said, “I hope you’re bringing news of Alexandra.”
Grant studied the narrowing of Michael Broad’s eyes, the crushing disappointment in the girl’s face. He felt the muscles in his own throat constrict.