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(1941) Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
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Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
James Hadley Chase
Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
Table of Contents
Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief........................................................................................................................1
James Hadley Chase................................................................................................................................1
PROLOGUE............................................................................................................................................2
PART ONE..............................................................................................................................................6
1...............................................................................................................................................................7
2...............................................................................................................................................................9
3.............................................................................................................................................................11
4.............................................................................................................................................................13
5.............................................................................................................................................................16
6.............................................................................................................................................................20
7.............................................................................................................................................................21
8.............................................................................................................................................................23
9.............................................................................................................................................................27
10...........................................................................................................................................................30
11...........................................................................................................................................................33
12...........................................................................................................................................................35
13...........................................................................................................................................................37
14...........................................................................................................................................................40
15...........................................................................................................................................................42
16...........................................................................................................................................................43
17...........................................................................................................................................................47
18...........................................................................................................................................................48
19...........................................................................................................................................................50
20...........................................................................................................................................................53
21...........................................................................................................................................................56
PART TWO...........................................................................................................................................59
1.............................................................................................................................................................60
2.............................................................................................................................................................63
3.............................................................................................................................................................65
4.............................................................................................................................................................68
5.............................................................................................................................................................70
6.............................................................................................................................................................72
7.............................................................................................................................................................74
8.............................................................................................................................................................76
9.............................................................................................................................................................79
10...........................................................................................................................................................82
11...........................................................................................................................................................84
12...........................................................................................................................................................87
13...........................................................................................................................................................89
14...........................................................................................................................................................91
15...........................................................................................................................................................93
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19.........................................................................................................................................................102
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21.........................................................................................................................................................107
i
Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
Ja
mes Hadley Chase
This page copyright © 2010 Black Mask.
http://www.blackmask.com
Banned in the UK! Author and Publisher Fined! Not seen in 70 Years!
This is the story of Miss Callaghan. Not of any particular Miss Callaghan, but of the hundreds of Miss Callaghans who disappear from their homes suddenly and mysteriously and are seen no more by those who knew and loved them.
This is also the story of Raven, who played with clockwork trains, the leader of the White Slave Ring in East St. Louis, who was responsible for the keeping to full strength the army of women for the service of men.
James Hadley Chase needs no introduction now. He has established a reputation for unmitigated toughness and plain writing. Under his blunt treatment, the traffic of women in America is shown to be what it isa loathsome, corrupt stain on the pages of American history.
MISS CALLAGHAN COMES TO GRIEF
By
JAMES HADLEY CHASE
1
Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
PROLOGUE
IT WAS A HOT night. Oven−heat that baked the sweat out of the body and played hell with the dogs. It had been hot all day, and now the sun had gone down the streets still held the stifling heat.
Phillips of the St. Louis Banner sat in a remote corner of the Press Club getting good and drunk. He was a long, thin bird, with melancholy eyes and lank, unruly hair. Franklin, a visiting reporter, thought he looked like a bum poet.
Phillips dragged down his tie and undid his collar. The long highball slopped a little as he groped to put it on the table. He said, “What a night! What's the time, Franky?”
Franklin, his face white with exhaustion and his eyes heavy and red−lidded, peered at the face of his watch. “Just after twelve,” he said, letting his head fall back with a thud on the leather padding of his chair.
“After twelve, huh?” Phillips shifted uneasily. “That's bad. That's dug my grave good and deep. Know what I should be doin' right now?”
Franklin had to make an effort to shake his head.
“I gotta date to meet a dame tonight,” Phillips told him, blotting his face and neck with his handkerchief.
“Right now that babe is waiting for me. Is she goin' to be mad?”
Franklin groaned.
“Franky, pal, I couldn't do it. It's a low trick, but not on a night like this. No, sir, I couldn't do it.”
“Break it up,” Franklin pleaded, scooping sweat out of his neckband. “I want to freeze myself to death in a big refrigerator.”
Phillips raised himself slowly. A look of faint animation came over his thin face. Drunkenly, he patted Franklin on his back. “You've got somethin' there,” he said. “Gee! The guy's got brains. I've been doin' you dirt. Boy, you've certainly got somethin' there!”
Franklin pushed him away. “Sit down,” he said crossly; “you're tight.”
Phillips shook his head solemnly. “Come on, bud, you've given me an idea.”
“I ain't moving. I'm staying right here.”
Phillips grabbed his arm and hauled him out of the chair. “I'm goin' to save your life,” he said. “We'll take a cab an' spend the night in the morgue.”
Franklin gaped at him. “Wait a minute,” he said. “I ain't goin' to sleep with a lotta stiffs. You're crazy.”
“Aw, come on. What the hell? Stiffs ain't goin' to worry you. Think how cold it'll be.”
Franklin wavered. “Yeah,” he said, clinging to the table, “but I don't like it. Think you can get in?”
Phillips leered. “Sure I can get in. Know the guy there. He's a good guy. He won't mind. Now come on, let's get goin'.”
Franklin's face suddenly brightened. “Sure,” he said; “it ain't such a bad idea. Let's go.”
Out in the street they flagged a taxi. The driver looked at them suspiciously. “Where?” he demanded, not believing his ears.
Phillips shoved Franklin into the cab. “The County Morgue,” he repeated patiently. “We're passin' in our pails. This is just a matter of convenience, see, buddy?”
The driver climbed off his box. “Now listen, pal,” he said, “you guys don't want the morgue. You wantta go home. Just you take it easy. I'm useta handlin' drunks. You leave it to me. Where do you live? Now, come on. I'll have you in bed before you know it.”
Phillips peered at him, then put his head inside the cab. “Hi, Franky, this guy wants to go to bed with me.”
“Do you like him?” Franky asked.
Phillips turned his head and looked at the driver. “I don't know. He seems all right.”
The driver wiped his face with his sleeve. “Now listen, you guys,” he said pleadingly, “I ain't said nuttin'
about gettin' into bed wid youse.”
Phillips climbed into the cab. “He's changed his mind,” he said mournfully. “I've got a mind to slosh him in the puss.”
“Well, maybe you're lucky. I thought he'd got a foxy smell about him. I don't think you'd've liked that.”
The driver came close to the window. “Where to, boss?” he asked, in what he thought was a soothing 2
Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
voice. “This ain't the time to fool around. It's too goddam hot.”
“The County Morgue,” Phillips said, leaning out of the window. “Don't you understand? That's the one cold spot in this burg, an' we're headin' for it.”
The driver shook his head. “You'd never make it,” he said; “they wouldn't let you in.”
“Who said? They'll let me in all right. I know the guy there.”
“That on the level? Could you get me in too, boss?”
“Sure. I could get anyone in there. Don't stand around usin' up air. Get to it.”
Franklin was asleep when they got to the morgue. Phillips hauled him into the hot street and stood supporting him. He said to the driver, “What are you goin' to do with the heap?”
“I guess I'll leave it here. It'll be all right.”
They stumbled into the morgue, making a considerable row. The attendant was reading a newspaper behind a counter that divided the room from the vaults. He looked up, startled.
Phillips said, “Hyah, Joe, meet a couple of buddies.”
Joe laid down his newspaper. “What the hell's this?”
“We're spendin' the night here,” Phillips said. “Just look on us as three stiffs.”
Joe climbed to his feet. His big fleshy face showed just how mad he was. “You're all drunk,” he said. “You better scram outta here. I ain't got time to horse around with you boys now.”
The driver began to edge towards the door, but Phillips stopped him. “Listen, Joe,” he said; “who was the swell dame I saw you with last night?”
Joe's eyes popped. “You didn't see me with no dame last night,” he said uneasily.
Phillips smiled. “Don't talk bull. She was a dame with a chest that oughta have a muzzle on it, an' a pair of stems that cause street accidents. Gee! What a jane!” He turned to the other two. “You ain't seen nothin' like it. When I thought of that guy's poor wife, sittin' around at home doin' nothin', while this runt goes places with a hot number like that, I tell you, it got me.”
Joe undid the counter−bolt and pulled back the little door. “Okay,” he said wearily, “go on down. It's a goddam lie, an' you know it, but I ain't takin' chances. The old woman would just like to believe that yarn.”
Phillips grinned. “Down we go, boys,” he said.
They followed him down a long flight of marble steps. At the bottom there came to them a faint musty odour of decomposition. As Phillips pushed open a heavy steel door the pungent smell of formaldehyde was very strong. They all entered a large room.
The sudden icy atmosphere was almost too violent after the outside heat.
Franklin said, “Jeeze! There's hoar frost formin' on my chest hairs.”
On one side of the room were four long wooden benches. Round the other three walls were rows of black metal cabinets.
Philli
ps said, “If you don't think about it you'd never know there were a lotta stiffs in those cabinets. I like comin' here. I jest sit around an' cool off, an' it don't worry me at all.”
The driver took off his greasy cap and began twisting it in his hands. “That where they keep the corpses?”
he said, his voice sinking to a whisper.
Phillips nodded. He went over to one of the benches and laid down. “That's right,” he said. “You don't have to think about that. Just settle down an' go to sleep.”
With his eyes on the cabinets the driver sat down gingerly. Franklin stood hesitating.
“I wonder if Joe would stand for me phonin' my girl friend to come on down,” Phillips said sleepily. He shook his head. “No, I guess he wouldn't stand for it.” He sighed a little and settled himself more comfortably.
“Franky, put that light out, will you? It's tryin' my eyes.”
Franklin said, “If you think I'm goin' to stay here in the dark, you're crazy. This place gives me the heebies.
I don't mind stayin' here so long as I can see those cabinets, but in the darkwhy, hell, I'd be thinkin' they might be gettin' out an' lookin' me over.”
Phillips sat up. “What you mean, gettin' out? How the hell can a stiff do a thing like that?”
“I'm not sayin' that they'd do it. I'm sayin' what I think they might be doin'.”
“Don't be a nut.” Phillips swung his feet off the bench and got up. “Now I'll show you somethin'. Let's have a look at some of these guys.”
3
Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
Franklin backed away. “I don't want to see them,” he said hurriedly. “This burg's spooky enough without lookin' at corpses.”
Phillips went over to the cabinet and pulled out a drawer. It slid out silently on the roller−bearings. In the drawer was a big negro; his pale pink tongue lolled out of his mouth and his eyes seemed to be bursting out of his head. Phillips hastily slammed the drawer shut. “That guy was strangled,” he said shakily. “Let's try another or I'll dream about him.”
The driver edged close, but Franklin went over and sat on the bench. Phillips pulled another drawer open.
An elderly man, his face covered with a good half−inch stubble of beard, came into view.

Come Easy, Go Easy
Why Pick On ME?
The Dead Stay Dumb
Figure it Out For Yourself
1944 - Just the Way It Is
No Business Of Mine
1953 - The Sucker Punch
Cade
1973 - Have a Change of Scene
An Ace up my Sleeve
1968-An Ear to the Ground
1950 - Figure it Out for Yourself
1976 - Do Me a Favour Drop Dead
The Flesh of The Orchid
1974 - Goldfish Have No Hiding Place
Whiff of Money
1984 - Hit Them Where it Hurts
1971 - Want to Stay Alive
1980 - You Can Say That Again
1978 - Consider Yourself Dead
The Paw in The Bottle
Soft Centre
The Guilty Are Afraid
The Soft Centre
Have a Nice Night
1957 - The Guilty Are Afraid
1979 - You Must Be Kidding
Knock, Knock! Who's There?
1958 - The World in My Pocket
Get a Load of This
1958 - Not Safe to be Free
This Way for a Shroud
More Deadly Than the Male
Safer Dead
1945 - Blonde's Requiem
I'll Bury My Dead
1975 - The Joker in the Pack
1972 - Just a Matter of Time
1954 - Mission to Venice
Strictly for Cash
A COFFIN FROM HONG KONG
Lady—Here's Your Wreath
I Would Rather Stay Poor
Eve
Vulture Is a Patient Bird
1979 - A Can of Worms
1949 - You're Lonely When You Dead
1965 - This is for Real
(1941) Miss Callaghan Comes To Grief
What`s Better Than Money
This is For Real
Lay Her Among the Lilies vm-2
Knock Knock Whos There
1952 - The Wary Transgressor
1951 - But a Short Time to Live
1962 - A Coffin From Hong Kong
Tell It to the Birds
Well Now, My Pretty…
The World in My Pocket
A Lotus for Miss Quon
You Find Him, I'll Fix Him
Lay Her Among The Lilies
1951 - In a Vain Shadow
Miss Shumway Waves a Wand
1953 - This Way for a Shroud
1964 - The Soft Centre
You Can Say That Again
1975 - Believe This You'll Believe Anything
1954 - Safer Dead
1960 - Come Easy, Go Easy
Shock Treatment
1953 - I'll Bury My Dead
You Find Him – I'll Fix Him
Dead Stay Dumb
Just Another Sucker
Well Now My Pretty
You've Got It Coming
1972 - You're Dead Without Money
1955 - You Never Know With Women
Not My Thing
Hit and Run
1971 - An Ace Up My Sleeve
1970 - There's a Hippie on the Highway
1968 - An Ear to the Ground
1955 - You've Got It Coming
1963 - One Bright Summer Morning
1967 - Have This One on Me
He Won't Need It Now
1953 - The Things Men Do
Believed Violent
You Never Know With Women
Miss Callaghan Comes to Grief
Mission to Siena
What's Better Than Money
Trusted Like The Fox
I'll Get You for This
Figure It Out for Yourself vm-3
Like a Hole in the Head
1977 - I Hold the Four Aces
1969 - The Whiff of Money
1946 - More Deadly than the Male
1956 - There's Always a Price Tag
No Orchids for Miss Blandish
1977 - My Laugh Comes Last
1958 - Hit and Run
1981 - Hand Me a Fig Leaf
1966 - You Have Yourself a Deal
Tiger by the Tail