The Lady in the Lake

The Lady in the Lake by Raymond Chandler

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Authors: Raymond Chandler
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kind of complicated, don’t you think? But there ain’t anything impossible about it. Not one bit impossible.”
    “When you get tired of it, let me know. I’ll have something else,” I said.
    “I’ll just be doggone sure you will,” he said, and for the first time since I had met him he laughed.
    I said goodnight and went on out, leaving him there moving his mind around with the ponderous energy of a homesteader digging up a stump.

 
    THIRTEEN
    At somewhere around eleven I got down to the bottom of the grade and parked in one of the diagonal slots at the side of the Prescott Hotel in San Bernardino. I pulled an overnight bag out of the boot and had taken three steps with it when a bellhop in braided pants and a white shirt and black bow tie yanked it out of my hand.
    The clerk on duty was an eggheaded man with no interest in me or in anything else. He wore parts of a white linen suit and he yawned as he handed me the desk pen and looked off into the distance as if remembering his childhood.
    The hop and I rode a four-by-four elevator to the second floor and walked a couple of blocks around corners. As we walked it got hotter and hotter. The hop unlocked a door into a boy’s size room with one window on an air-shaft. The air-conditioner inlet up in the corner of the ceiling was about the size of a woman’s handkerchief. The bit of ribbon tied to it fluttered weakly, just to show that something was moving.
    The hop was tall and thin and yellow and not young and as cool as a slice of chicken in aspic. He moved his gum around in his face, put my bag on a chair, looked up at the grating and then stood looking at me. He had eyes the color of a drink of water.
    “Maybe I ought to have asked for one of the dollar rooms,” I said. “This one seems a mite close-fitting.”
    “I reckon you’re lucky to get one at all. This town’s fair bulgin’ at the seams.”
    “Bring us up some ginger ale and glasses and ice,” I said.
    “Us?”
    “That is, if you happen to be a drinking man.”
    “I reckon I might take a chance this late.”
    He went out. I took off my coat, tie, shirt and undershirt and walked around in the warm draft from the open door. The draft smelled of hot iron. I went into the bathroom sideways—it was that kind of bathroom—and doused myself with tepid cold water. I was breathing a little more freely when the tall languid hop returned with a tray. He shut the door and I brought out a bottle of rye. He mixed a couple of drinks and we made the usual insincere smiles over them and drank. The perspiration started from the back of my neck down my spine and was halfway to my socks before I put the glass down. But I felt better all the same. I sat on the bed and looked at the hop.
    “How long can you stay?”
    “Doin’ what?”
    “Remembering.”
    “I ain’t a damn bit of use at it,” he said.
    “I have money to spend,” I said, “in my own peculiar way.” I got my wallet unstuck from the lower part of my back and spread tired-looking dollar bills along the bed.
    “I beg yore pardon,” the hop said. “I reckon you might be a dick.”
    “Don’t be silly,” I said. “You never saw a dick playing solitaire with his own money. You might call me an investigator.”
    “I’m interested,” he said. “The likker makes my mind work.”
    I gave him a dollar bill. “Try that on your mind. And can I call you Big Tex from Houston?”
    “Amarillo,” he said. “Not that it matters. And how do you like my Texas drawl? It makes me sick, but I find people go for it.”
    “Stay with it,” I said. “It never lost anybody a dollar yet.”
    He grinned and tucked the folded dollar neatly into the watch pocket of his pants.
    “What were you doing on Friday, June 12th?”I asked him. “Late afternoon or evening. It was a Friday.”
    He sipped his drink and thought, shaking the ice around gently and drinking past his gum. “I was right here, six to twelve shift,” he said.
    “A woman, slim, pretty

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