***Out In The Film Noir Night-With Robert Mitchum’s“Angel Face” In Mind -Take Two
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
...hey,
don’t believe everything you read in the newspapers about that Jeffers murder/ suicide,
the one that happened a while back, the one where the wife, the one with the
dough, big dough, backed up their Jaguar in the driveway of their country
estate at about eighty miles an hour and had them tumble down the hilly
embankment and done. They, the newspapers, or their reporters, or somebody got
a lot of it all balled up, all balled up big time. I know, I sure in hell know,
the real scoop, except for the end which they, the newspapers got right. Dead
right. See Frank Jeffers had been in my place, my little diner, Sammy’s,
located just on the outskirts of Santa Barbara that morning when it happened.
Frank
wanted to see what his old Bakersfield corner boy neighborhood and army buddy,
me, Sam James, had to say about his predicament, about whether he should pull
up stakes and leave her, leave Diane, leave Diane Tremont Jeffers and the dough
and cars, or just go back and face some kind of life with her. Even as a kid,
even back in front of Johnny’s Variety where we held up the wall on steamy
summer nights (and cooler winter nights too), committed a few larcenies and
other misdemeanors, strictly small time
stuff he would seek my advice on his
personal problems. Hell, who am I kidding, girl problems, everything else was easy
to work out. Frank Jeffers was skirt-addled even then. Same thing in the Army,
he would be cool, very cool under fire, under gun fire, but was like some
raggedly schoolboy once we were on liberty, once he had to face girl fire.
I
said to Frank from what I knew, from what I read, and from being at the trial
every day until they were freed, that she was poison, poison worse than his old
flame from the neighborhood, Mary, who almost got him killed when some bozo she
was freshly interested in, interested in after Frank did, or didn’t, do
something, decided that he wanted her for his exclusive company and was ready
to put Frank six feet under to enforce it. And Mary, well, Mary just laughed
that blonde bimbo laugh of hers all thrilled and maybe turned on too that
he-men were fighting over her. Christ, although that was child’s play compared
to his later troubles. Naturally Frank being Frank, didn’t want to listen to my
advice, as he could never stop chasing some skirt until he tumbled over, sorry
Frank, but that was the deal. Let me tell you what he told me and then maybe
you can see how he had to go back, go back and face the music, face the fate
his whole benighted life had prepared for him.
He
had been running, well half- running a garage, Jimmy’s Esso (his partner and a
guy he, we, also knew from the service although not a Bakersfield corner boy),
just a few miles from Santa Barbara on the other side of town from here, near
Route 101, when the call came in that one of the Tremont cars had blown a
gasket or something and needed to be either fixed on the spot, or towed to
Jimmy’s and worked on. So Frank, since he was the ace mechanic and the tow-
truck driver as well (Jimmy, was strictly a gas jockey, but a gas jockey who
had the start-up dough and was the brains of the operation, always figuring
ways to expand the business, bring in new customers, while Frank worried,
worried about some dame what else), trudged up the hills to the Tremont Estate.
A great big place, kind of secluded up a winding road, and like I said up in
the hills, those fatal hills. He got there, maybe spent an hour fixing this big
old Bentley, a beauty, the English sure knew how to make high-end cars when
wanted to, and was ready to leave when she, Diane she, came out of the house
and started asking questions about cars, and stuff like that. Then she showed
him her Jaguar and asked him if he could check something. Now this was no
ordinary Jag, but a specially built job, build just for her. He was hooked,
hooked not just on the car but her, something about her manner, her angel face
manner, was intriguing , something a little different.
Maybe
like with all women it was her scent, that jasmine stuff she wore, and maybe
she was kind of young and fresh and naïve, see she was only twenty and that won
him over. Maybe after corner boy girls, and whore house floozies he was ready
to take a step up. The car too, for sure, since he mainly handled nothing more
exotic than some souped-up hot rod. But mainly her, mainly that angel face. So
he took the ticket and took the ride. See too He had had a tough stretch of
luck with women since he got back from the service, a bunch of round heels and
two, maybe three-timers, especially the last one, a blonde as usual, who took
him for a ride, and then blew town with his dough, his car, and some guy named
Marty. So maybe it was that Diane was a brunette and he was looking to change
his luck. Maybe he should have stuck to blondes, harmless blondes who just took
your dough and at least left you breathing.
This
Tremont set-up by the way was all the step-mother’s dough, Dora, Dora Moore’s, not
hers, not hers directly. See her own mother had died young, and her father, a
novelist, a big time British novelist, David Tremont, you might have read on of
his books, Captain Smiley’s Revenge,
or something like that, had married into the Moore fortune, stocks and bonds
stuff. Diane was close, too close to the father if you know what I mean (she
told Frank one night some intimate stuff about her and the father but he
thought it was just so much trying to make him jealous, or some weird fantasy
like a lot of women have, or something, kid’s stuff) and hated the step-mother
with a passion, a deadly passion as it turned out.
She
kept needling Frank endlessly about how bad the step-mother was, and went on
and on about it. About some wicked witch of the west idea until Frank started
wising up that his sweet Diane, left to her own devices, was not above
murdering old Dora. Frank, maybe a fool in love choices was no fool when it
came to where he might fit in the set-up and so he decided a twenty- year old
brunette was nice but not nice enough to take the big step-off for. And so he bowed out, or tried to, but
before he could do so Diane carried out her little scheme, her little scheme of
fooling around with Dora’s old Bentley steering wheel. What Diane didn’t know,
couldn’t have figured on, was that the day Dora was to drive that beast, drive
it accelerator pedal to the floor down that fateful embankment that her father
would be in the car too.
Diane,
Frank did say, was full of remorse after that happened, after the father took
the big tumble and she even tried to take the rap alone for the murders. But see
Frank, ace auto mechanic Frank, no dough Frank, plenty of dough Diane (left by
that step-mother in her will since she didn’t trust old David to not run out
and spend it foolishly), was custom-built to fit the frame for doing the deed,
or helping. So Diane’s very expensive lawyer built the case to the cops, and
later to the jury, that Frank was up to his neck in the thing. And the outward
facts seemed to fit. The only way out of those murders, the big fall-off, as you know from the big newspaper splash at
the time was that they got married, married enough, to make the whole set-up
just some crime of passion, if anything. So, yah, they got off, runaway jury
got off the big step-off, murder one.
Frank
though had had enough; he didn’t want to be looking for angel faces behind his
back for the rest of his life. He wanted to get to Mexico, get somewhere far
from her. He went back to the Tremont place one night to pack his bags and give
his leaving speech. Then she sprang the car, dough, and maybe sponsoring a racing
team which he would lead on him (Frank was a very promising auto racer before
we headed to those Pacific island s and atolls to wipe up the Japs). He said
then, maybe jasmine scent said too always a factor when she was within ten feet
of him, that he would think it over. That next morning is when he told me the
skinny, and you already know my opinion. What you didn’t know, and it never
came out, was that Frank bought my argument, or maybe he just added mine to his
already made up mind, and was going back to tell Diane nix and that he was
heading south, heading south alone. According to Johnny, one of the house
servants who overheard it all, and who told me the real story later when I went
to check out what the hell happened, they had a row over him going. A big row,
no holds barred. Then she offered him a ride to the bus station. The rest you
do know. RIP Frank, RIP old buddy.
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