Sharp 9th
By Sean Cronin
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About this ebook
Skinner Malloy is a former combat Marine who’d carved out a decent musical career - until he trashed the men who attacked his band mate, Gillian Carroll. He’s out on parole and gigs have dried up. As she tries to heal, Gillian needs the stability of her advertising job. But her client, Consolidated Insurance, has her fired. The charges are bogus. Worse, someone’s still spreading the lies. Gillian and Skinner search for the real reason she’s been fired. They find that people associated with Consolidated Insurance are dying of freak accidents that are anything but. They find government-insurance collusion, private security goons and crooked cops. They find the glimmer of feelings for each other. Then Gillian disappears.
Sean Cronin
Sean Cronin is a 5-star Amazon author, a Goodreads "Five out of Five Stars” novelist and winner of three EFFIE awards. He is the author of the critically acclaimed noir novel, Sharp 9th, a Skinner Malloy Mystery. Cronin, is a former Fortune 500 executive and holds an M.S. from the University of Chicago.
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Sharp 9th - Sean Cronin
Sharp 9th
A Skinner Malloy Mystery Novel
By Sean Cronin
Smashwords Edition
Copyright Sean Cronin, 2011
Smashwords Edition License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
ISBN: 9781456765545E-Book
Chapter 1
The I, Me, Mine Tavern is a converted factory of dark brick and black beams on the lower West Side, close to the river. It smelled damp and moldy when we loaded in early Sunday night. By midnight it was packed and the scent had changed to beer and sweat.
Gillian was singing under the bright stage lights in tight hip huggers and a designer ripped baby-tee. She hadn’t done a gig since she’d been attacked, but she seemed relaxed as she moved with the R&B rhythm. As usual, her hips had an affinity for the snare drum and I had an affinity for her hips.
Doc on the drum kit had a James Brown one-beat accent going for a song of mine. The tune never sounded so funky.
Gilli sort of whispered the last verse. It came from deep in her chest,
"There’s mist on the water, dark on the land
I’ll crawl to the river, I can’t hardly stand
My tears keep falling, the night fills with dew
But don’t think I’m thinking about you."
I moved stage front, picked out a girl in the audience with a lot of skin showing and smiled. She was stylish-Goth in strappy chrome heels, black fishnets and what looked like, in the dark room and the bright hope that springs eternal in men’s breasts, a black rubber mini skirt. She had long, thick, black hair and the requisite big dark eyes. She smiled back at me. I’m told Goths aren’t as somber as they used to be.
The audience came mostly from ad agencies, marketing outfits and investment firms, young, twenties and thirties, almost all dressed in traditional New York black-on-black. There was the mandatory smattering of post-modern punk attire – shiny blue camo. The sartorial stew was seasoned with a pinch of neo-Goth and a dash of stoner plaid. They all moved to the beat.
Most had come to see me, I guess. Some, the cognoscenti, were there for the heavyweights on drums, bass and keyboards. A few came to see Gilli. I hoped they were all there to donate to Saint Vincent Hospital’s children’s cancer charity, which was what the gig was for.
Couples danced and singles swayed in place. Light filtered down from track lights in the dark ceiling beams and flickered off Martini glasses and long-necked beer bottles.
It was a casual gig and the band was so good I didn’t have to lead it. No pressure. I had fun voicing horn-like triplets, trying to capture the great old soul sound. My 1960 Jazzmaster was plugged straight into an old, beat-up Super Reverb amplifier. The knife-edged shine of the notes flying from the amp hit me, cut past me, touched Gilli’s bare lower back, spread and soared into the crowd. R&B. You can’t ask for more than that.
She turned away from the mic, raised her hand above her head and nodded at me. Her smooth skin glowed under the red spotlights. Sweat on her forehead and cheekbones, her long auburn hair shining.
I turned toward Doc and he took the tempo down on the toms and ride cymbal. Terry on keyboards swelled the B3 sound into a ninth chord and J. J. on bass thumped out big, measured notes on the root and fifth. I bent a ninth up, added some B. B. King vibrato and felt the suffering that lives in a sharp ninth played against a major chord.
We held the chord as Gilli scat-sang an Ella-type riff, smooth and desolate. Then she shifted into her husky speaking voice and said into the mic, Thank you. Thank you from the children at Saint Vincent’s. Thank you so much for coming out tonight. You’re great, you’re generous, and you’re fighting childhood cancer. You rock.
Doc hit, smack, boom, boom, boom and the stage lights went out.
In the blinding bright circles of the spotlights’ afterimage, like the flares we tossed over the enemy, I felt Gilli’s soft, moist cheek against mine, caught the scent of soap in her hair. She lightly put her hand on my chest and whispered, Got to talk to you. Not good. They fired me.
Then she was gone into the crowd.
I stood at the bar with Paige Caldwell, the Goth. Early twenties. Skin radiantly white. A lovely moonlight white. I’ve had more experience than most guys in the arts of feminine skin care and makeup, but her super-white radiance was unprecedented, even for me.
Sadly, she’d marred her pretty athletic arms with a vine-like sheath of tats in a reptilian theme of dragons and serpents, with a couple of Maltese crosses tossed in. The amphibian exhibit on her arms was artistically counteracted by her minimalist sheer silk blouse, tied, very neatly, just below her perky breasts, which were noticeably tattoo-free and unencumbered by undergarments.
Skinner Malloy, right?
She said.
Yep. Hi.
I’ve heard of you. Never heard you play live. You’re good.
Thanks. I appreciate that.
You in the ‘Me’ just for the charity?
‘Me’ is the hip cat’s term for the I, Me, Mine Tavern. ‘Me’ trips more lightly off the tongue than Harrison’s full lyric after a few colored martinis, which are ubiquitous in the place.
I nodded and took a sip of beer.
She said, I liked the girl singer. You play with her a lot?
We’ve done a few charity things over the past few months. She doesn’t sing professionally anymore. She’s got a real job.
Hey, wait. Maybe two or three months ago. That rape in the news. Are you that army hero guy? Caught the…
Never been in the Army.
Okay, okay, don’t get aggressive. Just a thought. It will come to me. I’ve got a very good memory.
I smiled and said, You’ve got beautiful eyes, too.
They were very dark, almost black.
Well thank you, sir. But I do know you played in an Indy band. Glory Box, right?
Yep. Great band. Miss it sometimes.
Yeah. You guys were pretty big in the Indy scene. Why’d you split up?
The other guys grew up. I didn’t.
I’m sure there was more complexity to the demise. Personalities. Relationships.
Nope.
She rolled her eyes toward the high, dim ceiling. You’re not very forthcoming, are you?
I smiled at her sweetly.
Great,
she said. Okay, is this a real charity gig?
What the hell you think?
Money doesn’t always get to the people who need it.
You always so cynical? The band doesn’t take any money. Whatever we get from the cover charge we give to St. Vincent’s Hospital.
It’s sweet you do this.
An obligation, in a way.
Admirable impulse. You doing any real concerts? For money?
No touring for a while. Some studio stuff on and off.
Cool. You ever play with Brent Treynor?
she asked, looking up at me with her deep eyes.
No. Brent’s pretty much synth-based. Anyway, he’s a bit out of my age cohort.
Cohort?
You know, people of similar characteristics, usually…
I know what cohort means. I was just surprised you used the word.
I’m full of surprises.
She smiled a bit and lowered her head and eyes and I thought I saw a dim red blush spread along her cheekbones.
So how about the young guys, Mammoth Tusk, Dark Sacrifice? They’re in your cohort.
They’re real bands. They play their own instruments. They don’t need me.
So, Skinner, how do you make a living? Am I too pushy?
I said, Not really. Maybe a little aggressive. Oddly inquisitive.
I can live with that. So, how do you make a buck?
And persistent.
She smiled a warm, insincere smile and asked, So?
Some royalties. Sometimes studio work. Hired gun.
Gun?
Industry slang for musicians who help out on tour, in the studio, whatever.
So, who hires you?
She smiled.
I put out a new CD about a month ago,
I said, sidestepping that. Doing well online. Of course, you don’t make money online. You need some airplay. I heard one of the commercial radio networks might pick up one of my tunes. I’m not holding my breath.
I saw Gillian across the room. She was surrounded by a half dozen of the black-on-black crowd, all men. She tossed her silky hair and it glowed softly gold in the light from the Japanese-shaded lamps hanging from the ceiling twenty feet above. She managed to embrace all the guys in her laughter.
She your girlfriend?
Paige asked.
Huh?
The girl singer? The tall one with the gorgeous auburn hair? The one you’re staring at.
No, she’s just a friend.
Right,
she said.
Really.
Paige had a silver ring through her left nostril, which disrupted the aquiline flow of her nose. The ring in her purple lower lip couldn’t disguise her mildly insolent pout. The charcoal makeup around her dark eyes made her face look a bit cadaverous. I thought I’d tell her she wasn’t maximizing her physical assets, in a spirit of helpfulness. But then I looked her over some more.
She’d obviously decided to balance the top-heavy piercings by taking up the theme further down her body. There was an extensive expanse of toned, white skin below her breasts. A silver chain hung from her navel, snaked down her lower belly and clipped on a studded black leather belt that, ostensibly, held up her impossibly low cut, sprayed-on black mini skirt.
So, you’re not a rock star anymore,
she said, although it might have been a question.
Smoking is a wonderful social accessory. Buys you time. Unfortunately, the sovereign state of New York, along with most of the industrialized nations, no longer see it that way. But I’ve adapted. I pulled out a strip of nicotine gum, ran my thumbnail down the foil package, popped out a square and slipped it into my mouth. Cinnamon Surprise tastes like cumin mixed with aluminum flakes.
I’m one of those mid-level musicians virtually no one’s ever heard of,
I said savoring the noxious gum.
"But I’ve heard of you. Because I know music. Come on, test me.
Okay, where’d that line come from?
What?
"Test me, come on, and test me."
I just said it. Is this arcane repartee? Or are you just teasing me?
Paige, I’m not going to tease you, at least not with word games.
Her dark eyes seemed to get bigger, more luminous and I realized that maybe the makeup had functional advantages.
I said, "The line comes from a Dead song, ‘Bertha.’"
I’ve heard of the Dead. Everybody knows the Dead. You call this a quiz?
It’s a bit esoteric. But, you adumbrated the Dead. You have to – we all need to – know our antecedents.
You’re a bit didactic for a musician. Don’t preach to me. It’s a meaningless world. Lectures can’t change that.
I leaned down next to her ear and said softly, And you’re a bit too well spoken to be playing Goth. Your name is all wrong too, Paige.
She smelled of perspiration and light perfume. She blushed, just her cheekbones and chest.
Skinner?
came from somewhere far off. Then again, closer, Skinner? Earth to Skinner.
Gillian was standing behind Paige, looking at me with one hand on her hip, the other resting lightly against her face. A study in perplexed amusement, though her eyes weren’t in it somehow.
Hi, I’m Gillian Carroll,
she said to Paige, reaching out her hand.
Paige turned toward Gilli quickly, then slowly extended her hand.
I’m Paige Caldwell.
They shook hands and broke contact quickly.
Paige said, I was just talking to Skinner and…
I don’t own him. Be my guest. But I need him now.
I think this is my exit cue,
Paige said. Skinner, my email is Paige-dot-Caldwell
and the rest was unclear. She moved away on chrome stilettos with a sway of her hips.
Gilli came up close to me. She tried a smile that faded quickly.
Your place? About half an hour okay?
She asked.
Chapter 2
Gilli curled into a corner of my leather couch in front of the fire. It was about two a.m. The top leaves of the maple trees rooted into the sidewalk three floors below moved slowly against the tall windows that face east. The leaves were a slick yellow-green in the backlight from the streetlights that shined up through the high branches. The night sky above the maples was dark misty blue.
She’d put on a bulky gray sweatshirt of mine and a pair of pink and white slipper-socks she leaves at my place. Her hands were covered to her fingertips inside the thick fleecy cotton of the sweatshirt. Her legs were scrunched up tight under her on the butter-colored cushions. Her auburn hair flowed across her shoulders. One thick strand fell across the left side of her face.
I put two cups of espresso on the tin-topped coffee table, walked to the long wall of windows and looked down the street and across at the rooftops. Then I stood near the fireplace I’d built into the long brick wall running the length of my place on the south side.
Fired me, just like that. They told me Friday afternoon. I didn’t have a hint it was coming. Boss didn’t even have the nerve to face me. And listen to this. They had me escorted out of the building by security guards. Like a perp walk. That walk felt like it took hours.
I lit a Camel, breathed in deeply.
I said, What did they say you did?
Her eyes were a little red and there was moisture on her lower eyelids.
Insubordination to a client. I didn’t even know what they were talking about at first. It was like they were talking about someone else, or, I don’t know. I’ve only been there five months. But I got a great interim review. Then they come up with this. I could hardly look at my friends tonight. I could see it in their eyes. The word’s out. Damaged goods. And if you’re a woman the rumors will be ugly.
She picked up her coffee and took a sip. She put it down and slowly ran the tip of her pink tongue over her lips.
Know what my mother told me when I graduated from undergrad school? She said a girl needs at least six months of savings, just in case.
What do you have?
One month. Maybe.
Oh.
Yeah, I’m scared. Money, rent, food. I’m angry and embarrassed about being fired. It’s all jumbled. It shouldn’t be. I should be tougher than that now. But Friday and Saturday, I was a mess. You know, locked in my apartment, shades down, in bed, just sick, wouldn’t answer the phone.
That’s why I showed up in person.
Yes, but I didn’t want to see you. Or I did, I guess. I talked to you.
For two minutes. From behind your door.
I opened the door a little. I was a mess, Skinner.
You looked fine.
That’s not what I mean.
I know.
Although I did not look fine, and you know it. Thing is, since what happened, I can’t tell what’s making me weird. Maybe getting fired brings back feelings of when I was attacked. I don’t know. I’m screwed up.
Anyone would be.
I think I’m getting better and then it all falls apart. When I was in the hospital I finally admitted I can’t make it in music. So, time to act like a grown up. My master’s degree paid off and I got a good paying job. Got all my credit cards and school loans into one payment. The shrinks say it’s about regaining control of my life. A ‘process,’ they call it. I was feeling pretty good about things. Then bam. I’m fired.
There are other jobs.
That’s what I said to my mom when she was laid off. You know it’s been two years and she’s still looking for work.
The fire let out a soft hiss. Yellow flames weaved through the logs and put moving shadows on her face.
She said, I ought to quit whining. You’ve been through plenty, too.
Let’s stick to you for now.
Yeah. When I was attacked it affected everything. Maybe that’s too dramatic. But just walking home from the gig I was jumpy. Like someone was following me.
You didn’t take a cab?
No. I can walk six blocks.
Damn, Gilli.
It’s how I’ll get better. Control. Confidence. You can’t do it for me.
The logs settled softly in the fireplace.
She said, That’s why I did the gig tonight. It got me out. Out of ‘myself,’ as they say. Only relief I’ve had in two days. Glad you talked me into it.
She took another sip of espresso, put the little cup down and looked toward the windows, maybe out at the milky sky.
"I couldn’t stand the thought of all those people from work. But, they came for Saint Vincent’s. So, I put on a game face and socialized. I think I know what Hester Prynne felt like. Marked woman, ultimately with her head high. That’s courage.
"Well, based on the hints I heard tonight, the agency and the client are circulating stories about me. That means lies. That’s de rigueur with clients like Consolidated Insurance. But to see my friends look at me differently, like I was tainted or dirty or pitiable. That hurt."
I took the poker and stirred up the flames, sat on the couch and said, Your friends know you. Lies won’t stick.
Maybe, maybe not. That’s not what worries me the most. Hester could take it, so can I. Getting a job worries me. A lot. You ever been fired?
When I was fourteen. Candy Roberts kicked me out of her New Soul Review, for looking up her skirt. Allegedly.
Gilli smiled a little. Allegedly, huh?
I was, like, on my back, doing an alligator dance. I learned to dance in that group, you know. So anyway I was on my back like an alligator, performing a complex choreography of my own creation and Candy got the wrong idea.
Em.
I said, Feel like running the thing down for me, Gilli?
Sure. I’m out of work and I doubt I can get another job without a recommendation. Who knows what gossip is going around? I don’t know what to do. I want to punch someone – and no, Skinner, don’t even think about it.
Sure you don’t want a drink?
I’m good.
Just tell me what happened. Okay?
"Sure. Friday afternoon I got called into a conference room with Judy Hill,
from HR, and my boss, Katrina Palotova. There was a guy named Calder with them. Calder W. Sullivan. He’s a lawyer for the agency. No one said what the meeting was about."
Ambush.
Spoken like a true jarhead.
Semper Fi,
I said quietly and toasted the fire.
"They all looked so smug. Judy in a gray silk Chanel suit with pearls. Katrina in a black pantsuit, hands in her lap, so prim. Then there’s Sullivan wearing a dark blue pinstripe suit and a bottle tan. He checked out my legs as I walked in. Jeez.
As I’m sitting down Sullivan says, with locked-jaw intonation, ‘This is official termination of employment. For cause’.
Cold shot,
I said.
"Out of nowhere. So, like a doofus I ask, ‘What?’
Sullivan gets all Hollywood lawyer, ‘Didn’t you, on the fifth of June, yesterday, here at TTR, say the Consolidated Insurance media buys were unsound? That too much spending was concentrate in Universal Media properties. Didn’t you argue about this with Eric Hopkins, marketing chief of Consolidated Insurance Ltd? Didn’t you do this in the presence of Consolidated’s Chief Executive Officer, Edmond Wilson? And in effect, didn’t you insinuate they were inefficient in their advertising spend?’
Officious bastard,
I said.
Oh yeah. Then the officious bastard pointed his finger at my face. He asks, ‘Aren’t these the facts, Ms. Carroll?’ And the thing is, my report was factual. Just data. Media mix, Universal Media spend, that’s the media holding company most of Consolidated’s money goes to. I didn’t make comments or recommendations. There was no argument when I presented it, either.
You scared somebody?
Apparently. Sullivan said, with this little supercilious smile, ‘The charges you made undermined the credibility of the marketing people at Consolidated.’ Then he comes up with this accusation that media spending data are confidential. I had no right to access the data.
I cut in, What kind of data is it?
It’s what a company spends on advertising, broken out by TV, online, print, radio, outdoor. I told him all the agency people use the data. And his comeback? He said that in a ‘contentious termination’ no judge or arbitrator was going to believe a junior agency employee with an EAP file filled with psychiatric issues.
I crushed out my cigarette with more force than necessary.
Calm down,
she said. You can’t afford any more trouble. I don’t want to have to worry about you, too. Get it?
Yeah,
I said.
Hey, smile,
she said. This is rich. Sullivan slides some papers at me to sign. I tore them up, yelled in his face, called him an SOB, and started to walk out. I almost made it, but I had to stop at the door for the last word. I called them slimy bastards. Not very lady-like, but it felt good. I took a step out the door and tried to slam it for a dramatic exit. It hit me in the butt just as two uniformed guards were walking toward me. One says, ‘Shush, Miss,’ and they took me for the long perp walk out of the building.
I got up and stirred the smoldering fire. A few weak yellow flames came up from the red coals.
Skinner, I need to work. I’m scared.
I put my back against the brick wall and looked at her for a few seconds. Her arms were hugging her chest and she was rocking a little, like she was cold.
I’ll help if you want,
I said.
Sit and hold me a while?
Sure, Gilli. Sure.
Chapter 3
Tevye Snowden sipped Dunkin’ Donuts coffee from a twenty ounce Styrofoam cup. He had a Marlboro red going in the over-flowing ashtray on his desk. The smoke moved horizontally past him in a neat thin line to an air purifier on his windowsill. Probably once white, it was now a pleasant cocoa shade.
It was ten a.m. Monday and outside the window was a bright blue sky, a small slice of Columbus Circle, about half of Central Park and most of the upper West Side.
There was a faint smell of camphor in the small office. I knew from previous visits there was an industrial-strength humidifier under his desk filled with Evian water and Vick’s VapoRub.
Tivi , an abbreviation of Tevye and his preferred handle, was staring at a chocolate and sprinkle-covered donut in front of him on the cheap veneer of his desktop. He surveyed the donut carefully and pushed some of the little sprinkles around in the chocolate frosting with his pudgy fingers.
He said, Wrongful termination. That’s what you’re talking about, Skinner. And that’s what you have a union for.
Tivi?
Yeah, Skinner?
he asked as he picked up a minuscule sprinkle on the tip of his index finger and shook it in the direction of the wastebasket.
I’m not talking about me, Tivi. As I said, my friend got fired.
Em…I hate the blue ones.
The sprinkle wouldn’t budge despite increasingly vigorous hand shaking. It was probably glued to his fingertip by a mixture of chocolate frosting and sweat. In a larger sense, the recalcitrant sprinkle was, conceivably, controlled by surface tension, which I vaguely remembered was empirical verification of Einstein’s thoughts on specific relativity. I decided not to explore that line of inquiry, given Tivi’s hourly rate.
I said, Use a napkin, Tivi.
Ruins the ritual, Skinner. Ritual is essential, socially and individually. Yet so often overlooked. Yes. There. Nice.
The offending sprinkle, incased in its chocolate bonding agent, flew in the general direction of the window behind him.
Now, where were we?
His voice sounded like