He walked into my dungeon and knelt. His eyes looked through my boots, but didn't see the polished leather. I hate it when they came to me like this, filled with defeat instead of submission.
I used the pointed toe of one boot to lift his chin. It was a moment longer before his eyes also lifted. Whatever it was, this boy had it bad. He'd spill it to me sooner or later. They always do. Sometimes I think I should have been a bartender. This pays better though, and I get to have my fun with them too.
"Come along, Petey," I said.
I turned on my heel and left him to crawl after me down the dimly lit hall leading to my playroom. I figured Petey needed to spill his guts, and Petey broke down fastest when he was under the lash.
I didn't feel like spending hours on this, so I told him to strip. As son as he did, I chained him to the dark wooden frame against the wall. He groaned at the first burn of the leather across his shoulders. I love the tracing of red lines across muscles, especially when they were glowing under a wash of sweat. I used oil lamps in my playroom, so the light would bring it out for me.
Petey was bawling by the tenth lash. Even Petey usually did better than that. I took him down and let him spill both his tears and his sordid story across my lap. I hoped the stains would come out. I doubted Petey could afford a new pair of leather pants.
He said, "I'm sorry Mistress Jasmine, oh God, it's my sister. They killed her!"
That was unexpected. Killed her? Who would want to kill this low life's sister?
"Who's your sister, baby?" I asked.
I knew better than to ask. I didn't want to know this, didn't want to get involved in whatever the broad had going on that got her killed. But I had Petey sobbing on my lap, and my mouth moved before my brain could stop it.
"Satinne," he told me. "She was Satinne, and they killed her."
His arms tightened around my legs even as his shaking slowed and stopped. It was like speaking her name both hurt him and calmed him. I knew how that worked. I knew Satinne, too.
She was the Dane's prized possession. Satinne was a jazz singer. She was actually good, too. The looks didn't hurt any. Blond and sleek, with a body men would die for, and probably a few had. Now she had also died for it.
This had bad news written all over it. The Dane would tear the town apart for this. Unless, of course, he was the one who killed her. And even then, he might.
I got Petey more or less put back together, and then got dolled up myself. I didn't know what I could do, or why I was doing it. I guess I was just curious. I was a professional dominatrix, not a PI. I had no business getting involved in the murder of a gin joint moll. Still, there I was, blond hair sleeked back, in my second best slinky silk dress. I draped a long coat around me and headed over to the Glass Tulip.
I guess the Dane missed the flowers from home. It seemed to me making them out of glass wasn't much of a substitute. There were tulips etched in every mirror, and the Dane had a lot of mirrors scattered around. It must have cost him a fortune just to keep the glass cleaned of all the smoke that filled the place every night.
Today, it was too early for the normal fugue of smoke and sweat. I was surprised the Glass Tulip was opened so soon after the murder. Still, the Dane wasn't one to waste a chance for business. Not that there was much business there yet. The band was tuning up, a few customers scattered here and there. They were mostly the hard drinkers getting a start on the night.
The Dane wasn't there enjoying his flowers when I walked in. Brasso was. He is the Dane's second in command. He looked up from his drink when I stopped in front of his table.
"Jasmine. What do you want?" he asked.
"Hello, Brasso. Good to see you too." I took a chair without waiting for the invitation I knew would not come. Brasso didn't like me much.
I said, "Sorry to hear about Satinne. Where's your boss?"
"Bad news travels fast," he answered.
A redheaded waitress plunked a glass of gin on the table before me, sloshing some over the rim. She slid an arm across Brasso's shoulders and made a point of leaning against him. The front of her dress stretched tight across large round tits.
Brasso shrugged her off and said, "That attitude's gonna land you on your ass one day, Shirl. You don't have to like the customers, but you'll damn well be nice to 'em. All of 'em."
"Glad to hear she ain't taken your balls yet, Brasso," Shirl said to him. She walked away before he could answer. Her hips swayed, sending the metallic gold fringe at the bottom of her skirt to flash a counterpoint against her creamy thighs.
Brasso's stare followed her, hot and full of anger. Interesting. They had been an item since before Satinne met the Dane.
Brasso said, "That broad is full of herself."
He took another swig of gin and looked at me, really looked at me. "What do you want here, Jasmine? You know there ain't none of your kind of business around The Dane's joint."
I smiled at one of the rings that stained the table. He'd be surprised where a lot of my business came from, but this wasn't the time to rub his nose in it. I asked, "What happened to Satinne?"
Brasso's eyes dropped back to his drink, and he sucked some more of it down before growling, "What business is it of yours?"
"Her brother is a . . . friend of mine." I watched his face.
"That little pissant?" he asked. He looked surprised, and then smiled like he thought he was vindicated or something.
He said, "Figures he'd be one of yours. The Dane don't let him in here no more."
I hated letting Brasso think he was right about my clients, but as it happened I shared his opinion of Petey, so what could I say? The hardheaded lug would never believe anything else anyway. I asked, "What'd he do worse than the other low-lifes that come in here, Brasso?"
He said, "We run a class joint here! Petey used to come in and watch his sister, but the Dane didn't like the way he mooned over her. It just wasn't right, him lookin' at his sister like that. When the Dane found out Petey was in up to his short ones with Big Mike that was the end of it. Petey ain't been back in the doors. Now that the Dane's in jail, and Satinne won't be singin' for nobody but the angels, I don't see no reason to change it. Hell, the little weasel's probably the one as got her killed."
Brasso knocked back the rest of his drink.
I said, "The Dane's in jail? The police think he did it?" I sat back, thinking things over. "Why'd they think that?"
Brasso asked, "What you think, I read the cop's minds now? Guess it wasn't hard to figure out, seein' as how she died in her room in back, and the only one who went back there with her was the Dane. Guess she did somethin' to piss him off, and he stuck her good. Gonna take forever to get the room clean. Blood everywhere."
Brasso turned and bellowed for Shirl to bring him another drink. I got up to leave.
Before I could get away, Brasso said, "Jasmine, don't you go thinkin' just because the Dane ain't around that you can come in here lookin' for your customers. Ain't none of your kind come in here, and I ain't lettin' things change while the Dane is gone!"
Brasso looked belligerent. He looked that way most of the time anyway, with the crooked beak of a nose and those cold small eyes.
"Don't get yourself in a sweat Brasso," I said. "I don't cruise for clients. They come to me."
I gave him a thin smile, flipping my collar up against the evening mist as I walked out the door. I smiled at the tulip frosted into the door's glass. I hoped the Dane had a place to come back to when he got out. The Glass Tulip really wasn't bad. Not bad for a gin joint, that is.
So, Petey was in the hole to Big Mike. That was interesting. Maybe grief for his sister was only one of the reasons for his meltdown. If Satinne was helping her brother by paying off the owner of the Glass Tulip's major competition, the Dane would have been less than pleased. But would he be mad enough to kill her for it? It didn't add up.
If it was just a pay off, the Dane would stop it and let Petey fall where he would. I couldn't see him cutting up his number one show and his prized dame over some money that wasn't even his. Unless the payoff wasn't in money. If that sleaze Petey was pimping out his sister to hold off his debts, the Dane might kill Petey, but not Satinne.
I needed more information. The pieces to the puzzle weren't fitting. I thought I might as well talk to the big dog himself. I turned the wheel of my convertible toward the city jail.
The early evening was cloudy, and the streets still busy with the leftover traffic of commuters returning home from whatever lousy job they had worked at all day.
Driving through the city made me glad I made a living the way I did. I don't care if others don't understand it. Enough men like it to keep me in rent, food, leather and silks. That's more than most of the 9 to 5 people can say for themselves. I had to hand it to them, though. They get up and do it every day. That takes some kind of determination.
The smells of garbage and exhaust on the city streets weren't improved by the smell of antiseptic and piss at the city lockup. There is no other sound quite like the sound of cell doors closing; no other feeling like the one you got when those steel doors clanked shut behind you. I wondered why they bother to paint them. The paint always wears off at the same places, where the hands grip them time after time.
I wasn't sure the Dane would want to see me, but I guess if you're sitting in a jail cell waiting to go on trial for murder, you'd see just about anybody who asks.
"Jasmine," he said. The Dane stared at me through the scratched, dingy plastic. He'd always been hard to read. You'd think having blue eyes in that classic Nordic face under the blond hair would make him look soft. It didn't. He looked like an iceberg, cold and hard.