Murder at CPAC
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One: A Dame Walks In

It always starts when a dame in trouble walks into your office.

I shoved my hat back slowly, taking my time to look over the marvelous gams that connected her to the floor, then glanced up at her face. It wasn't the face of a dame in trouble; it was the face of a dame quickly losing her patience. I gave her my trademark slow grin and reached for the almost-empty bottle of scotch in my top left drawer.

"Well, sweetheart? Are you a breath of fresh air or trouble looking to find me?" I took my time pouring a couple of shots and shoved one across the desk. She tossed it off like a pro and grimaced, her long blonde hair shimmering with every movement.

"How many times did you water this stuff down?" Before I could get offended, she continued. "Look, a friend told me I could trust you, that you were one of the few poverty-stricken gumshoes who hadn't sold out for government health insurance and a monthly disability check for alcoholism."

I scowled. "I ain't no boozehound."

She gazed at me. "Riiight." Shaking her head, she tossed a briefcase on my desk and sat down. "There's a problem, a big problem, and you may be the only one who can help me."

"You come in here. You insult me. Then you ask for help."

That got me an impatient sigh. "Do you want to pay your rent this month or not?"

"This Atlas can't afford to shrug. Sing it, sweetheart. I'm all ears." I leaned back carefully in my antiquated green pleather chair--the tricky rocker mechanism sometimes tilted me over if I moved too fast--and put my arms behind my head.

Her perfect lips shaped the word "wow" before she opened the case just enough to slide something out. "You recognize this man?" She skimmed a photo across the desk, and I picked it up to take a look.

"Who doesn't? Global warming, General Motors, gun control--the man has the G's cornered in the documentary world." I looked again. The fat guy slumped in the chair had a couple holes in his trademark trucker hat--the kind with burn marks around the edge and a cherry-red center.

"He's dead. He's in my room. And I have no idea how he got there."

*

Her room, it turned out, was down the street at the Gaylord. The joint was full of conventioneers singing the praises of government reform, strong national defense, and freedom. I knew the type, always smiling and acting as if the world was a happy place instead of a shady mess of gray days and dark streets.

I was surprised, though, at the differences: Young Republicans dressed in business casual with a hundred variations on the red tie, politicians in suits glad-handing the crowd, older women with Sarah Palin glasses and sweater sets, even a sprinkling of guys dressed in Continental Army attire, their tricorn hats occasionally bumping against long rifle props painted safety orange and pink. The last group looked at home near the faux colonial homes that provided space for shops and restaurants.

At least I wouldn't get copped for my gat today--an M1911 brown-handled beauty. She nestled in my trench coat's inside pocket along with her triplet of .45 ACP cartridges. The folks here understood the world was a dangerous place, and that the police were rarely within reach when you really, really needed them. There was an arsenal fit for a militia here, tucked away in purses and coat pockets and concealed bra holsters.It felt good.But, I reminded myself, at least one of those weapons had been used in the wrong way today.

The dame led the way, giving me ample opportunity to observe that the rest of her was just as perfect as the gams and the kisser--if you went for the tall, slender type. Quite a few folks turned around to stare at her, poking each other and whispering. I couldn't blame them. The lady was a looker.

An older woman bent to whisper in my ear, "Young man, isn't that the girl from television?"

I shrugged. "She's just a dame, like a hundred other dames. They're all trouble, and trouble always walks through my door."

The matron edged away.I hurried after the dame until she stopped at the elevator, frowning at the closed door.An elevator arrived with a loud ding, doors sliding open a bit roughly, and the dame and I stepped on. Six or seven palookas piled in after us, ostentatiously ignoring her with perfect elevator manners. I leaned over toward my companion. "Hey, sweetheart, you have a name?"

"You can call me Ann."

I nodded. "That'll do. You can call me Max."

She turned and stared me down. Again. "I know that. Your office had a sign."

"Yeah, well, just makin' conversation here, sister."

Six or seven stops later, and we had hit the suite levels. I followed the dame--Ann--as she led the way to what turned out to be a heck of a nice setup. The room was tastefully decorated in cream, beige, and black, and I could see through a gap in the curtains to the balcony overlooking the atrium beyond. Ann's personal items were neatly stored, the suitcase tucked away in the closet beneath a series of pressed suits still in drycleaner bags, and she had a little office set up on the desk. The only thing out of place was the corpulent mook slumped in front of her computer, his sausage-like arms dangling down on either side of the chair.

Ann walked over and kicked the corpse in the leg. "See? Problem."

I shrugged. "You have an alibi?"

She sighed. "More or less. I was down in the bar."

"Alone?"

She nodded.

"Well, someone saw you."

"Look, I have six panels to be on, a debate, a book signing, several meetings--I don't have time to tell the cops that I have no idea how this piece of crap got in my room and turned into a corpse." She picked something up on the other side of the bed. "And they shot my pillow. MY pillow. The one I travel with."

I walked over and gingerly took the pillow from her hands--easily a thousand thread count, pure goose down, hypoallergenic. "Nice." I turned it until I found the holes. "Except for this little problem."

"Exactly!" A couple more feathers trickled through the blackened holes, drifting to the floor.

I handed the pillow back and went over to look at the body. It wore a typical red trucker hat with "oger & M" embroidered on it, the "R" and "e" obscured by the blood seeping out of two neat holes.

"Smallish wounds. No mess in the back. Maybe a .32? Hard to tell, considering they used your pillow as a silencer." I let the head drop down, noticing it fell slower than it should have. "He's already stiffening up. You need to call someone or you'll be down a chair."

"Call someone. Right. Why didn't I think of that?"

"Whadayya want me to do, then, sweetheart? Put lipstick on this pig and take him dancing?"

"I want you to get rid of it."

"Why? You didn't do nothing wrong. ... You didn't, right?"

She sighed and pulled a .44 Magnum partially out of her purse--way too much gun to leave those tiny holes. Or any head at all, for that matter. "No. I'm insulted." I shrugged and tried to look contrite. "I don't deserve what will happen if this--" she motioned toward the stiff "--is found in my room. My god, someone might ask if I were sleeping with him." She looked sick. "The cops'll have questions. My publisher will have questions. My book just came out--I don't need this." She turned and glared at him. "All I need is for that--THING--to disappear."

Like I said, dames and trouble. I sat down on the bed and rubbed a hand through my hair, then put the fedora back on. What would Uncle Mikey do? On the one hand, this was a bad idea. On the other, the stiff was already dead, and the dame. . . I gave her another once over. What can I say? Men are boobs when it comes to a looker like her.

"You're gonna need to move this body." I looked at the size of the corpse and winced. "You got a crane?"

"Oh, very funny."

I grinned charmingly at her. "Okay, get a towel. We need to lay him down. Unless you prefer moving a chair-shaped body?" While she did that, I closed the curtain and made a call to an associate--okay, an ex-girlfriend--who worked at a shipping company. When Ann came back, I wrapped the towel around the big guy's head, greatly improving his appearance, and we both worked to wrestle the corpse out of the chair and onto the floor.

Afterward, we sat on the edge of the bed, exhausted. I flopped backward. "He was even heavier than he looked."

"So now what?"

"We'll get a delivery in about an hour. We wrap him in bubble wrap and roll him into a box. I was thinking about shipping him to Borneo, but postage ain't cheap."

Ann frowned. "Why was he even in here to begin with?"

"Good question." I dragged myself off the bed, grabbed another towel, and tossed it over the desk chair before sitting down. "Well, he was at your computer. Let's see what he was doing."

Ann put in the password, and a few seconds later we were both staring at the screen. One word in a search box stood out.

"Veritas," murmured Ann.

"He was searching for truth?" I glanced up. She looked furious.

*
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Jamie is the owner of conservativefiction.com and a Navy wife and mother of five. She has always been a writer.

Review by DukeOfURL
Mar 27 2014
 
1 of 1 liked this
excellent pastiche
The only critical comment I have is: This cuts off too abruptly - it really is begging to be expanded to full novel size. For some reason, it makes me think of Jim Butcher's books about Magic/Chicago.
Review by ffleming
Mar 26 2014
 
1 of 1 liked this
Funny Noir Spoof
Funny spoof putting 1920s noir conventions at a modern CPAC. Really enjoyed it.
Review by rgriffis
Mar 17 2014
 
1 of 1 liked this
Very funny!
Ms. Wilson deftly pulls off a tough balancing act when she perfectly captures the pulp detective fiction voice while putting it in an entirely new setting: a conservative convention. The two contrasts make her satire the best kind: you wince at its sting as you laugh. Very nicely done.