Fascinating Rhythm
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About this ebook
Set in December of 1924, a senior editor at Healcroft House Frank Selby turns up dead in his apartment. Problem is, his secretary, Kathy Briscow, never mentioned that he hadn't been at work for the previous three days. Seems he only came in when he wanted, and since Kathy was doing his work for him, it didn't matter. But now, Kathy is the main suspect in his murder. Author and socialite Freddie Little finds out that Kathy has been editing his novel, and not Selby. Freddie also has reason to suspect someone else. So he convinces Kathy to work with him to find the real killer. Together, the two comb the streets and speakeasies of New York City to find a killer with obsession on the brain.
Anne Louise Bannon
Anne Louise Bannon is an author and journalist who wrote her first novel at age 15. Her journalistic work has appeared in Ladies' Home Journal, the Los Angeles Times, Wines and Vines, and in newspapers across the country. She was a TV critic for over 10 years, founded the YourFamliyViewer blog, and created the OddBallGrape.com wine education blog with her husband, Michael Holland. She also writes the romantic fiction serial WhiteHouseRhapsody.com. She and her husband live in Southern California with an assortment of critters.
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Fascinating Rhythm - Anne Louise Bannon
Fascinating Rhythm
By Anne Louise Bannon
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Sneak Peek at Bring Into Bondage
Acknowledgements
Copyright
Other books by Anne Louise Bannon
Connect with Anne Louise Bannon
About the Author
Dedication
To Michael and Corrie because you guys are the light of my life
And to my ex-husband Gary Klarner, who not only gave me a wonderful daughter but the space and time to write this book. Thanks.
AMDG
Got a little rhythm,
a rhythm
a rhythm
that pit-a-pats through my brain
So darned persistent
the day isn’t distant
when it will drive me insane…
Fascinatin’ Rhythm
Lyrics Ira Gershwin
Music George Gershwin
CHAPTER ONE
Deep into the night of December eighth, nineteen hundred and twenty-four, obsession took the life of Frank Selby. His passing was noted only by his killer, and that with the grim satisfaction of an unpleasant task properly carried out. Leaving Selby on the floor of his Murray Hill apartment, the killer stepped out into the city’s bright lights, and hid.
Two days later, Kathy Briscow held her breath as she gazed out the window at Broadway and 23rd below. Flivvers and buses fought with each other on the sleet-filled streets. People on the sidewalks hustled along, bundled tight against the December chill, thousands of them going the same way to different destinations.
I’ve got to do it,
Kathy murmured, twisting her handkerchief in her hands. She certainly had nothing to lose, no thanks to Frank Selby. The son of a bitch couldn’t even die without kicking her in the teeth one last time.
Traces of someone whistling slid in under the door and mingled with the faint rattle of the cars outside and the muted roar of the typewriters and adding machines inside. It was probably Evans. He was always whistling something. Kathy strained to catch the melody, then sighed.
It was that bouncy little number from the new show with the Astaires, 'Fascinating Rhythm'. That Gershwin fellow had written the music. Kathy had been humming the little ditty ever since she’d seen the show the previous Monday. Once soothing and cheerful, the merry little song now grated on her already raw nerves.
Kathy jumped as the door opened and the clatter of typewriters filled the room, then quieted as the door shut.
The head of Healcroft House, Publishers, entered his office and studied the woman at the window. She had a little healthy padding, and bosoms, a refreshing change from those blasted flappers. Still, like them, her straight brown hair was cut even with her chin. Even more unnerving were the brown eyes that missed little. Her waist-less dark suit was modest, and somewhat predictable. A cut above what the other secretaries were wearing, but more indicative of good taste than overspending.
Well?
he demanded.
Kathy gazed back, analyzing and evaluating. Mr. Healcroft was of medium build. His gray hair was slicked down. His starched collar was a little wide for the current fashion, and he still wore spats and buttoned shoes. Kathy wondered if he’d looked any different as a young man in the ‘nineties. He wasn’t very modern-minded, either. On the other hand, everyone said he was open to reason.
Mr. Healcroft, I realize today was a disaster,
Kathy began slowly.
It most certainly was.
He sat down behind the huge dark oak desk. What did you tell the police?
Kathy moved around front. The truth. What did they tell you?
All I know is that one of my senior editors was found dead in his apartment this morning, and from the evidence taken at the scene, he died no later than Monday evening. And here it is Wednesday, and you, his secretary, never mentioned that he hadn’t shown up for work either yesterday or today.
Mr. Healcroft glared at her, one iron-gray eyebrow lifted. Didn’t the police find that a little odd?
Kathy gulped, then pulled herself together. At first, yes. But I believe they were satisfied with my explanation.
And that was?
Kathy pressed her lips together. She looked past Mr. Healcroft to the windows behind him. The skies were as gray as his hair. There would be snow that night.
That Mr. Selby was in the habit of not coming into the office if he didn’t feel like it, but not in the habit of notifying me or anyone else,
she said finally.
And you didn’t question this habit of his, Miss Briscow?
Of course I questioned it.
Kathy resisted the urge to start pacing the faded Oriental carpet in front of the desk. But Mr. Selby insisted that all the senior editors did the same, and when I mentioned confirming it, he strongly hinted that I would find myself out of a job with Healcroft House.
Mr. Healcroft folded his arms. And you believed him.
I have no doubt in my mind that if it came down to my word against his, I would be the loser.
Her heart in her throat, Kathy caught the publisher’s eyes and held them.
Mr. Healcroft looked away. You’re how old, Miss Briscow?
Kathy swallowed her irritation. Twenty-seven. I’ve been with your company since 1919, when I graduated from college. That’s five and a half years now, six in June. I’ve been Mr. Selby’s secretary for almost two years.
Haven’t you ever thought about getting married?
Mr. Healcroft put on his most stern glare.
Kathy felt his disgust down to her toes. He’d never believe the truth.
Of course. I,
She thought fast. I almost have a couple times, but found good reason not to. I’m content to be an old maid.
Mr. Healcroft leaned back in his chair and gazed at Kathy with a perplexed frown on his face. That’s not exactly germane to the issue.
Kathy took a deep breath, secretly pleased. If Mr. Healcroft was going to dismiss her marital status, there was hope he’d hear her out.
She stood tall and took the plunge. Mr. Healcroft, it was no coincidence that Mr. Selby edited considerably more books after I came to him in spite of his absences.
Both of Mr. Healcroft’s eyebrows lifted. What are you trying to say?
I’ve been doing his work for him.
That’s ridiculous.
Mr. Healcroft chortled and shook his head. You’ve got some nerve, missy. Here the poor man is dead—
It’s the truth.
Kathy took another breath, then spoke again quickly. He started having me read his manuscripts almost right away. He,
Kathy grasped for a good lie, but chose a small part of the truth. He said he was having trouble with bad handwriting. Then a few months later, we got a wonderful manuscript. Mr. Selby didn’t like it. I told him it would sell with a few changes. He told me to take it over, and when it flopped, he would turn me over to you. Only it didn’t. It’s already gone into a third printing and made Mr. Lindsey’s career.
That made Mr. Healcroft sit up. Kathy noted his consternation with satisfaction.
Are you saying you accepted and edited The Young Night?
he sputtered.
I did. Only since it’s a bestseller, Mr. Selby took the credit for it. I’ve done most of his books since. I type during the day and edit at night in my room. Mr. Selby keeps, kept, the ones he liked, which were darned few. I did all the rest.
Mr. Healcroft coughed. This is very disturbing.
He looked at her, nervously. How closely did he work with you?
Kathy snorted. Not as closely as he wanted.
Young lady, must you?
Mr. Healcroft’s response was more perfunctory than appalled. His eyes darted nervously in the direction of Selby’s office.
Kathy bit her lip. I’m sorry, Mr. Healcroft. I wouldn’t have wished it on him, but at the same time I can’t honestly say I’m all that grieved by his passing. I’ve finally got a chance to get some credit for everything I’ve been doing.
Mr. Healcroft shifted in his seat. I thought someone else was working for him. But you?
I’m a good editor, as good as any man you’ve got.
Kathy paused, almost losing her nerve. That’s why I feel I should replace Mr. Selby. There’s no one else that knows his job better, because I’m the one doing it.
Mr. Healcroft went white. B-b-but, good gravy, young lady, have you no respect for the dead? They only found the man this morning.
I can’t afford proper sentiments,
snapped Kathy, twisting her handkerchief into a knot. And I’ve seen darned little of it in the junior editors’ room. The only reason they’re not all in here is that I am, and I want my fair chance at a job I deserve.
You?
Mr. Healcroft slowly recovered himself. Why... Eh... It-it’s completely impossible. After all, you... Eh... A lady editor?
Kathy fought to keep her voice calm. There’s Mrs. Chase over at Vogue. She runs that magazine, and there are plenty of others like her.
That’s a ladies’ magazine,
Mr. Healcroft sputtered. Books are different. We get all sorts of rough stories in here. They’re, they’re not for a woman’s delicate sensibilities.
This is the twentieth century, Mr. Healcroft!
Kathy groaned. I am fully aware of how rough these stories can get. I edited Pirates on the Main without blushing, I can promise you that.
Mr. Healcroft gaped. But, but, Selby let you see that?
Mr. Selby had no qualms about giving me objectionable material to read,
Kathy blurted out, then immediately regretted it.
What are you implying, missy?
Mr. Healcroft’s eyes narrowed.
Kathy paused, struggling to get a grip on herself. Nothing. In any case, it doesn’t matter how shocking a book is. I’ve already seen it. You should have seen all the awful things I cut out of Pirates. Like that rape scene. You’d have been horrified. I had Carter re-write it three times before it was acceptable.
You had Carter...
Mr. Healcroft gulped, then paused, his mind working. You truly did edit those books.
I did, and I deserve Selby’s job. I’m working on Mr. Little’s book right now, The Old Money Story. It’s a good book, and I can make it the wonderful novel it should be.
I see.
Mr. Healcroft fidgeted. And just how closely did Mr. Selby work with you?
If you think he was holding my hand at every page, you’d be seriously mistaken,
said Kathy, her pique rising again. Believe me, Mr. Healcroft, I was just as happy to be left alone. Sloth may have been chief among Mr. Selby’s vices, but it was only one among many, and I know the breadth of them.
At that, Mr. Healcroft went white again. Still fuming, Kathy didn’t notice. She was too annoyed at herself for saying so much. Mr. Healcroft swallowed, then got control of himself.
That’s very bold, missy. But I can’t promote you to senior editor. The junior editors would lynch me if I promoted a secretary, let alone a woman secretary, over them.
But the The Old Money Story?
Kathy leaned on the desk in front of him. You can’t let a total stranger take that over. I’ve just sent Mr. Little a letter telling him the changes he needs to make. Another editor will only confuse him.
Mr. Healcroft pulled back. A lady editor?
I’ve signed all my correspondence K. Briscow, when I didn’t use Mr. Selby’s name. No one needs to know.
Mr. Healcroft sighed. Poor Frank.
He brooded some more, then sat up straight. Miss Briscow, given this afternoon, to grant you a promotion now would be an untoward example to the other workers in this company. However, I, eh, cannot afford to lose a good editor, even if she is a woman. We’ll give the office a few weeks to forget this afternoon. After that, you’ll be made a junior editor.
But what about Mr. Little’s book?
Kathy yelped in spite of herself. I can’t give that up.
Mr. Healcroft went pale again for a second. No. No. Of course not.
He re-gained control of himself. I’ll expect you to continue your work on Mr. Little’s novel, in the name of your new boss. I’ll explain to him, as soon as I decide who Mr. Selby’s replacement will be. It shall remain between the three of us. As far as anyone else is concerned, you are just a secretary until you are duly promoted. And you have my word on that promotion.
Thank you, sir. You’ve been very generous.
You’re welcome. You’d better get back to your desk.
Mr. Healcroft paused. And, missy...
His eyes bore into her. I am counting on your discretion.
Of course, Mr. Healcroft.
Kathy hurried out. Though she hadn’t gotten all she wanted, she’d gotten more than she’d expected, and possibly more than she had a right to expect. She paused in the hallway to savor her victory. Her brain recounted the interview in exact detail, but her emotions lagged far behind. Reality didn’t seem to have sunk in, or perhaps she was still unnerved by Mr. Selby’s demise and the visit from the police.
Or perhaps it was Mr. Healcroft. He had seemed more frightened than shocked when she’d told him she’d been doing Mr. Selby’s work. But that didn’t make sense. Nor did the way he had promised her that promotion.
Kathy looked back at the office. He was probably hiding something, but what could it be that would make him give in to her requests? And how would her doing Mr. Selby’s work pose a threat to him? She could understand him being surprised, and given his stuffy attitudes, confused by it. But scared? Shaking her head, she took a deep breath and went on down the hall.
CHAPTER TWO
In the cluttered antechamber outside of Mr. Selby’s office, Frederick G. Little, III, sat and waited, smoking in long, relaxed drags. Seated on a battered dark leather sofa across from a series of filing cabinets, he was the picture of patience.
Freddie Little’s mind, however, was rapidly flitting from thought to thought to thought. He had intended to take advantage of the unexpected wait for Mr. Briscow to contemplate the installation of the new landing gear on his plane. The landing gear had failed the week before, causing no little damage to the belly of the plane, and Freddie desperately wanted to go out to the airfield to supervise the nice gentlemen from the Curtiss factory who were doing the actual repair. But there was also the problem of how to keep his friend Lowell’s ex-wife, Victoria, out of both his and Lowell’s hair. One didn’t want to be rude, butVictoria was definitely getting more and more pushy. And then there was the odd reaction from the office receptionist when he had asked for Mr. Briscow.
The receptionist, a young blonde with shingled hair, had first looked at him blankly and said that no Mr. Briscow worked there. Freddie had then explained that he was the author of The Old Money Story. The receptionist had paused again and explained that Mr. Selby was his editor, but that there had been a terrible accident and Mr. Selby was dead.
Oh, dear,
Freddie had said. I’m so sorry. But may I still talk to Mr. Briscow?
Who? Oh. You must mean...
the receptionist had replied with a puzzled frown on her face. Uh. Sure. Why not?
So she’d escorted him to Mr. Selby’s office, or rather the small outer office.
She’ll be right with you,
the receptionist said, nodding at the secretary’s desk. The secretary who should have been seated there was absent.
Freddie seated himself on a sofa facing the desk, glancing idly at the file cabinets on the side wall.
The firm was in quite a tizzy, because it quickly became evident that Mr. Selby’s accident had been no accident, which perhaps explained the receptionist’s behavior. As he waited and smoked, the rumors cascaded in through the open door, and largely centered on Mr. Selby and you know who.
It seemed that everyone knew that the unnamed young woman certainly did not mind working late, and that she was covering up for him. Of course, everyone knew how Mr. Selby was, so naturally that was why she killed him, although why Mr. Selby would take up with someone so full of herself was anybody’s guess.
Freddie had a fair idea of who you know who
was, or at least of her position at the publishers. He knew exactly when she approached the office. As the voices stilled, he snuffed his cigarette in the ashtray next to the battered leather sofa and put the cigarette holder in his suit coat.
Kathy was surprised to find she had a guest. She wasn’t sure if her jangled nerves were ready for dilettante millionaires, assuming the gentleman on the sofa was indeed the named author of The Old Money Story.
She’d seen Mr. Little’s picture time and again in the Sunday rotogravure of the Times. In the flesh, what little there was of it, he seemed calmer and more dignified than the roué one saw, and certainly taller. He had the figure of Abraham Lincoln, with contented gaiety replacing the haunted look of the former president. A crisply tailored dark gray three piece suit covered the long limbs and body that rested on the office couch. The strawberry blond hair, neatly parted down the middle and slicked down, had seemed darker in the rotogravure, too.
According to the society pages he had graduated summa cum laude from Harvard, class of ‘17. But high honors could be purchased, as could ghost writers, and Mr. Little had enough money to buy as many as he wanted. Then again, Kathy had decided it didn’t matter whose name went on the title page as long as the work itself was good.
The moment Mr. Little saw Kathy enter, he rose, curiously graceful for something that was all arms and legs.
May I help you?
Kathy asked as she came around to her side of the desk.
I’m Freddie Little. I’m looking for Mr. Briscow,
he said, rhyming the last syllable with how.
Oh.
Kathy forced a smile, wondering what she should do.
I got his letter yesterday. It was wonderful, but I’ve got a great many questions and I’d like to talk to him at his earliest convenience.
Oh.
Kathy sighed. She did not need this. Authors were supposed to stay away from the office, or at least only talk to the senior editor. Why, of all days, did this fellow not only have to come in, but ask for her and not Mr. Selby?
Freddie looked at her with a worried frown. Very well. Could you tell Mr. Briscow—
The phone on Kathy’s desk rang and she lunged for it, grabbing the candlestick base and putting the mouthpiece to her face even before getting the separate ear piece to her ear. Rumor had it the office was supposed to be getting new phones with the mouth and ear pieces all on one handset.
Mr. Selby’s office,
she said quickly. She smiled briefly at Mr. Little, then turned her back to attend to the call.
I need to speak to Selby,
growled the voice on the other end of the line.
Kathy all but broke into tears. Mr. Trimble ran the printing house most often used by the publisher. He only accepted orders directly from the senior editors and flatly refused to speak to secretaries beyond getting his calls put through. Which for Kathy made him an exceptionally sharp thorn in her side, since not only was Mr. Selby seldom around to take Trimble’s calls, Selby rarely knew what Trimble was calling about. Kathy took a deep breath and got her customary sang-froid back.
I’m afraid he’s not here,
she said.
He’s never there,
Trimble complained.
And he’s never going to be again,
Kathy said, wincing as she realized she was slipping again. I’m afraid he met with an unfortunate accident. We’ve only just found out. What did you need from Mr. Selby?
Who are you?
This is Miss Briscow, sir, as always.
Behind her, Kathy heard a soft chuckle. She bit back the whole canon of swear words.
I need someone who knows what’s going on.
I assure you, Mr. Trimble, I know everything that Mr. Selby was working on as well as he did.
Propping the earpiece against her shoulder, Kathy turned and began looking through the stacks of paper on her desk. Is there a problem with the print run on Mr. Dryer’s book?
Have Mr. Selby’s replacement call me back.
Mr. Trimble hung up.
Her heart in her throat, Kathy turned around. Mr. Little was still on his feet. His grin was a little smug, but delight danced in his green eyes. Kathy hung up the phone and put it back on her desk, on the corner next to the overflowing desk tray.
That solves one little mystery,
Mr. Little said. You are K. Briscow.
Kathy winced at the mispronunciation. It’s Briscow, with the long o. And obviously, it’s not mister. You, however, were not supposed to know that.
Whyever not?
Freddie paused. Oh. Is Mr. Healcroft afraid I might object to a woman as an editorial assistant?
Something like that.
Freddie nodded. And you wrote that letter yourself.
Yes, I did.
Annoyed at being doubted, Kathy straightened up and glared at Freddie. And if you have a great many questions, I am the one to ask.
Freddie stepped back. Miss Briscow was obviously distraught, as well she might be after the day’s discovery, but she was no wilting flower, either. Freddie wondered how far he could push her.
I’ll be...
he muttered. It was the best he could do. Swear words came to mind, but one simply did not swear in front of ladies.
He took another good look at her. She would not be easily fooled by his affectations. Slowly, a mischievous grin spread across his face.
I was going to tell you how intelligent I found your letter,
he said. "But I’m afraid now it would