Out In Waldo’s World-Every Man’s World-With The Film Laura
In Mind
By Bart Webber
My old friend Sam Lowell, a guy married three times and who
has struck out three time and now “single” (meaning he has had a long-time
companion and has given up the idea of marriage although not the idea of love after
three sets of alimony, child support and college tuitions, that latter category
which almost broke him on the wheel) had been watching an old time film noir
from the 1940s, Laura, with his own Laura,
Laura Perkins, that long-time companion parenthetically mentioned above one
night. A few days later after that viewing he called me up for our weekly
session at Jack’s Grille and mentioned the film, knowing that I had seen it
several times and consider it one of the great noirs along with Gilda, Double Indemnity, The Maltese Falcon
and a few others. He said then, and we would get into more at Jack’s, a couple
of nights later, that you could never figure what will drive a guy off the deep
end but that six, two and even ninety-nine times out of one hundred it would be
over a dame. I begged to differ with him figuring the odds more like sixty to
forty on the dame reason but that only added fuel to his fire that night (that
and a few too many high end scotches since he was not driving that night but
staying at my place in Carver, our growing up home town down in Southeastern
Massachusetts). The difference in our calculations I figured out later being
that I have been with my one wife, the lovely Betsy Binstock, now for almost
thirty-seven years.
But Sam was on his high horse that night which meant that I
was in for a regular slugfest, a regular barrage of chatter about Waldo, Waldo
the guy who went over the edge for this dame, yeah, a dame, nice, pretty,
smart, a go-getting but still a dame, this Laura, Laura Hunt in case you needed
a last name. Here’s how Sam put the case, see Sam is nothing but a good country
lawyer and so he saw the whole thing in terms of a case in a court of law like
he was arguing for mercy for Waldo or something. Like maybe he was arguing the
case for real like he would plea out Waldo on some diminished capacity
foolishness just because the guy was skirt-addled.
As Sam was talking though I was putting my own two and two
together about Waldo, Waldo Lydecker if you needed a last name for a
skirt-addled guy although they are legion. Thinking back on the plot line that
I knew well I found myself trying to figure out how did it figure that a high
society guy, a well-known and syndicated newspaper columnist and radio
personality, an older guy, an older single guy, an older single guy who seemed
“light on his feet” if you asked me, you know seemed kind of “faggy” would
tumble to this Laura from nowhere. Let this fresh breeze young thing of which
there were about six million in New York City back in the day, break him. Make
him do weird (unlawful things as Sam would put it) that would have him winding
up facing downward on Laura’s apartment floor pledging his eternal love as the
life was bleeding out of him from about six slugs of copper guns.
(Sam, by the way, who works in the court system and has to
mind his Ps &Qs on sexual and ethnical stuff doesn’t like that term, those
terms, faggy and light on his feet, but the old ways die hard with some of us
old-time corner boys who grew up on the rough streets of the Acre in Carver and
who used to while idly hanging out in front of Jack Slack’s bowling alleys fag bait each other just for kicks to enhance
our own man-hoods, so faggy.)
But maybe I should start at the beginning while Sam is
drawing circles in the air with his hands just like if he was in the courtroom,
just like he was trying the case of Waldo
Lydecker vs. The State Of New York except not for murder, murder one, which
what the bastard would be up for if he wasn’t lying face down in that pool of
blood in that dame Laura’s apartment but for being a toy for some perfidious
dame. See Waldo was like I said a big time newspaper and radio guy, knew
everybody who counted in New York and Washington high society, had “drag” in
all the right places as my old Irish grandfather would say. Also knew all the
secret vices, and some not so secret, of those in the rarified air, knew that
they had to treat him something like a rattlesnake with very proper kid gloves,
knew they would be front and center in one of his columns, page one, if they
didn’t play ball. Yes so Waldo Lydecker was not one of the world’s noblemen,
was a bitch on wheels if anybody was asking around about him of late, not
hopefully looking to give him a certified good conduct certificate. It was kind
of funny because this guy had more dough than the King of Siam, had come from
wealth, good school, good breeding the whole nine yards so you would think that
being what really was a gossip columnist, a venomous one to boot would be
beneath him. But guys, people are funny about their occupations and in any case
the job, such as it was better than him sitting at home in palatial Westchester
clipping coupons.
Like I said before this Waldo as he aged, got to middle age,
maybe a little older was nothing but a bachelor, hadn’t been seen with a real
girlfriend, nothing serious anyway. So the talk around town, very discreetly
around town out of his earshot, was that he was either asexual, which was Sam’s
take on the matter, some guys are like that, maybe so hung up on their mothers
that no young dame could ever be good enough for them. Maybe something got lost
in the genes, something about attraction to any human relationship except to
hit hard at weak points. So no women, except he obvious mixing at his lavish parties,
you know ornaments. You know my take already, my position that he was gay,
maybe unconsciously, maybe he was hiding some guy, some fag, out in some
apartment far from the high end crowd you never know. Yeah, I liked that take
although Sam in one of his more compromising moments wished I would just call
him effete and let it go at that. Like effete didn’t mean in high tone language
noting but fag. I’ll stick with my old time corner boy expression if you
please, an expression that Sam was as likely to use in the old days as I was-if
anybody is asking.
So everybody was surprised when Waldo started being seen
around the clubs, the swanky clubs like the High Hat where the jazz was be-bop,
the drinks expensive and exotic and the smoke thick and the White Note where
the younger crowd hung out where the smoke was scented, was dope no question dope,
tea, hemp, ganja, to appease this Laura twist. But you could tell he was out of
his element there in that latter place, that Jimmy Jones’ be-bop band with Milt
Rosen blowing heavenly high white notes off the cuff ruled the night not him.
No question this Laura was a looker, a long tall brunette with those bright
eyes and sulky lips that guys went big for then and guys while not going big
for now looking for thin hipless dames with sneers these day could appreciate,
could see even an effete guy taking a run at even if just to have as a trophy,
or cover against that so-called discreet talk among the high society types
about his sexual habits (like a snoop like Waldo wasn’t “connected” into that
talk by a thousand snitches looking to keep their own hijinks out of the front
page and off the air).
The story Waldo told about their meeting, their fateful
meeting, take it for what it was worth after all that really happened, after he
wound up face down and very dead, was that Laura had purposely gone to his
table at his favorite lunch place (and daytime watering hole), Matty’s on 54th
Street across from the newspaper, and “accosted” him, that was his word, had
pestered him about endorsing some product, a pen. See this Laura was nothing
but a runt one of thousands, no, what did I say before, millions, of young
women trying to get ahead in the advertising racket, any New York City racket,
which is why young women, smart young women went to New York City from Buffalo,
Cleveland, Eire, hell, maybe the wheat fields of Kansas too, to grab fame and
fortune in one of the few serious upward mobile jobs for aspiring college
graduates. Or just gals with big dreams and some talents other than hitting the
silky sheets.
This is the oddest part. He blew her off, treated less
graciously than some six year old brat for disturbing milord’s solo lunch, but
something about her got under his skin, some ancient memory of some young woman
in that long gone time when he might have thought about an affair, that fatal
disease that has taken all the gold of more than one man. The blood too. Get this, get this for a guy who treated her
like a wayward child Waldo eventually went to her advertising agency, signed on
for the endorsement of that fucking pen. Laura’s career thereafter went through
the roof, he had called in plenty of chips to get guys and gals he knew around
town to throw business her way, or else.
Seeing her as a rough diamond, obviously not from his class, maybe even
then as a tramp with big “wanting habits” you never know about the Waldos of
the world and what drives them, although the smitten part is easy to explain, he
taught her a few things about style and poise, style and poise as interpreted
by high society just then. That was the fluff part, the public story.
Who knows what the real deal was. Sam’s lamo theory about mother
fixation, or mother dread is okay for okay country lawyers if they have to
defend some geek in court but that angle seems to have been worked to death and
I wouldn’t want to have to throw that to a jury but since I am merely a retired
printer and not a lawyer I don’t have to worry about that. Hell, the obvious is
that she was damn good-looking woman and that was that. Maybe it was the long
hair that always made every hat she wore in the days when women went in for
serious hats for fashion and not utility look just right, maybe it was those
sullen lips showing slightly parted pearly white teeth, hell, maybe it, like a
for a billion guys since Adam and maybe before, was the sandalwood scent she
gave off, that latter would be the downfall of more than one man. But he was
hooked on her, hooked as bad as a guy who couldn’t express such thoughts in
public could be, it was just not done in high society, could be hooked on a
dame (of course a guy like Waldo wouldn’t dream of calling a woman a dame, a
frail, a frill, a twist, names we used back in the day but like I said before
the old ways die hard with some guys like me).
Here’s the funny thing, here’s where the old guy, young dame
problem comes in, or maybe just Waldo’s whole freaking silly upbringing, he
never had sex with her, never went under the downy billows with her which is
the way Tom Wolfe put how the upper crust likes to call “hitting the satin
sheets.” The thing was strictly platonic with the unspoken proviso (Sam’s word
not mine) that she was his “property.” Waldo’s alone.
That didn’t play very well with Laura. Didn’t play well with
a young lustrous sexy woman like Laura who had big sexual appetites, liked men,
and lots of them as any young pretty woman who was grabbing lots of attention
from the young bucks would. (All the sex stuff as per usual in 1940s films was
either off the film or just implied but even a goof like Sam could read between
the lines that Laura was a sexual being. Hell, one night, no, one very early
morning, wacko Waldo in a fit “stalked” her apartment on West 56th
Street as one young buck, Jack Jacobs the well-known painter came strolling out
the front door of the building looking a little the worse for wear.) Waldo was
forever shooing guys away and as quickly as Laura, on Waldo’s fatherly, to her,
recommendation would ditch one guy another guy would pop up. That went on for a
while and Waldo, for his own nefarious reasons, thought he was home free. That
Laura was all his.
Then the roof caved in. Laura got caught up with this guy
Shelby, a ne’er do well, a guy from decayed Southern stock, meaning he was
broke and living off of women, living off of Laura’s aunt who liked the idea of
a “kept” man, liked a young stud around and could afford the freight. Problem
was Shelby like many another guy wanted to be around some young tail (ass) and
so despite his “kept” status with the aging and demanding aunt he made a run at
Laura, got her to the stage where marriage might be in the air. Got her to give
him a job at her ad agency where he actually flowered, brought some fresh light
into the office. Bad move, bad move on Laura’s part even thinking about marriage
to a gigolo like Shelby. That is when Waldo’s wheels started coming off, when his
better judgment took a back seat to his unspoken lust for Laura. He tried to
kill her, shoot her dead with a shotgun in her own apartment, the place which
would be his final resting place if he had only been prophetic rather than
blood-lustful. Problem though was Laura was not there that night of the murder,
had been upstate at a cozy country retreat thinking things through about the
possibilities of marriage to Shelby. When everything came out later, much later,
the girl who was killed had been one of Laura’s models at the ad agency, a
model whom Shelby was playing footsies with. Some guys, guys like Shelby, never
change, never get off the wagon even when easy street beckons (and that silly
aunt was still ready to move heaven and earth to get his silly ass back in her
crib under the principle that birds of a feather flock together-he was a tramp
and she was too so comingle their tainted blood.)
Well murder most foul done by gigolos, deadbeats, mass
murderers, ”hit” men or the lovelorn has to be investigated, especially in the
high rent district. Most especially in the high rent district after all what
the hell were they paying the public coppers for anyway. So they put
crackerjack homicide detective Mark, Mark McPherson, on the case. Oh yeah a
young, good-looking, didn’t miss a trick, knew the means streets as well as the
leafy streets to look closely, very closely into the Laura Hunt murder.
Naturally he got nothing but the backs of their hands from the Mayfair swells,
got nothing but grief and snide remarks from old Waldo who I will say held
himself together during the critical hours and days when McPherson was putting
the screws to the case, was giving everybody his cool modern scientific
detective shifting through all the evidence routine. Stayed cool enough and
cagey enough to throw a big shadow over Shelby as the fall guy. And why not he
had been playing footsies with that foxy model right in Laura’s apartment.
Yeah, I admit I liked him for it, liked him a lot when McPherson turned the
screws on. Didn’t like that he was two-three, who knows how many timing Laura, with
the poor dead model even the old battle ax aunt and who knows who else. Such
guys as Shelby in the old neighborhood as Sam would be the first to tell you
would be tailor-made for the big step-off and nobody except some poor old
bedraggled mother would shed tear one for such a guy. And that is a fact.
Then to break up the monotony of the run-down murder case
getting kind of cold by the minute and to ruin my theory about Shelby as the
fall guy who pops back into the picture. Laura. That’s when everybody found out
that the dead girl was the model at Laura’s agency (conveniently her face had
been blown off by the shotgun blast so the initial identification of Laura as
the victim had been based on the very important circumstantial evidence that
late at night the woman opening the door to Laura’s apartment would be, well,
Laura). Waldo held up even through all of that as Sam will admit if less than gladly
for his bogus love-addled insanity bit. Like I said before Laura was upstate
thinking stuff through around a possible marriage to Shelby and nobody thought
anything of it once she resurfaced. Still there was a murder to be solved now
that the true victim was known. McPherson was still on the case, still needed
to close out the case even if it now was a run of the mill model that was making
the case run and not some darling of the Mayfair swells.
Waldo might have held up pretty well through all of that, might
have slide through to old manhood but he flipped out when he sensed that the
tramp, Laura of his dreams, what else could you call her in his effete book,
was once again falling ofr any young guy in a suit, falling for Mark (and he
her). Yeah, Waldo again lost his judgment rather than moving on to the cocktail
circuit and forgetting about what could never be. See, and Sam in his more
sober moments would have to agree, Laura had gotten deep under his skin, as
deep as woman can a man who spent his whole life dishing it out and not taking
it. Shelby was a non-starter for Laura and Waldo could have pieced him off
easily enough but this Mark McPherson, this guy from the mean streets, from
Laura’s mean streets wasn’t going to be easy to dismiss.
Here is where Sam said Waldo made his mistake, the mistake
that would have made even a pretty good country lawyer like him have a hard
time selling a jury that Waldo was temporarily insane, needed to go to the
sicko hospital and not the death house. Waldo tempted fate one time too often
(that model murder would have hit the “cold” files soon enough now that Laura
was alive). He tried to kill Laura-again. No soap this time for the poor sap-he
was wasted in a hail of bullets by New York’s finest. Get this though-the guy
is lying face down in a pool of his own corrupted blood and his last words were
of undying devotion to Laura. What a sap. Leave it to Sam to get the last word
though and even I couldn’t say it better, although he said it more in sorrow than
anger. Waldo Lydecker was not the first guy nor will he be the last who got all
twisted around by some frail’s sandalwood scent. Maybe Sam’s 99.9 % number was not
so far off after all.
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