The Star Trap
By Robert Colby
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About this ebook
''Afraid you’ll stop,'' I said against the moist spread of her lips.
''I couldn’t,'' she answered, falling back on the divan, taking me with her. ''Not for a long, long time,'' she said beside me. She took my hand and guided it beneath her sweater to the warmth of bare breast. ''Feel my heart,'' she said. ''I’m a fast train on a down track to nowhere. And my heart says 'Couldn’t stop-wouldn’t stop-couldn’t if I would-wouldn’t if I could . . .
Robert Colby
Robert Colby was the author of more than a dozen crime thriller novels and short stories, most notably The Captain Must Die. Some of his other works include The Deadly Desire and Murder Mistress. He was also a prolific contributor of short stories to Alfred Hitchcock magazine and Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine—many were later published into two anthology collections.
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The Star Trap - Robert Colby
1 …
The phone was ringing by my bed. The sound came to me through the fuzz of sleep and too much alcohol. Hours earlier — how many I didn’t know — I had been in high flight from the inescapable truth: my small world was foundering badly.
The bell tinkled distantly, opening a tiny wedge in my consciousness. And then closed in, strong, shrill, demanding.
I groped for the lamp on the night table, found the switch, squinted at my watch. It was twenty-five minutes to three A.M. I fumbled for the phone.
My God,
I said into the mouthpiece, whoever you are, go way. You’ve just made an enemy.
Glenn! Is that you, Glenn?
The voice was female. It had the breathless quality of controlled hysteria.
Who is it?
I said.
Is this Glenn Harley?
Yes, yes. What do you want and who the hell —
This is Nancy Rhymer. Glenn, I — I need your help.
I swung my legs out of bed and sat up, wide awake. Nancy Rhymer! I had never heard her voice on the phone. And yet the sound of it, when connected with her name, was electric. She was of another world, the fringe of which I had barely touched, but the image of her, captured in those rare meetings, was etched in the secret recesses of my mind — where I kept unattainable treasures for inspection.
Is it really Nancy Rhymer?
I said. This is no time for a gag, three o’clock in the morning.
Four months ago, at the Key Club,
she said quickly. Remember?
I remembered. It’s a pleasant shock, Nancy. What can I do for you?
Glenn, dear, I’m in trouble.
She had never called me dear or anything like it. What kind of trouble, Nancy?
A very special kind that you can’t talk about on the phone. Can you come to my place?
Her voice sounded like thin glass cracking. Why do you need me, Nancy? You have so many friends.
Glenn, Glenn!
she cried. I’m in a jam. Will you come? Will you?
I’ll come, Nancy.
You remember the way?
I remember. In about … twenty minutes.
Make it fifteen. Or … or I’ll just fall apart. Do hurry!
Try to be calm, Nancy. I’m on the way.
I hung up.
And scrambled into my clothes.
2 …
My apartment was in a building on Franklin, just off Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. I raced downstairs into my aging Chevy and gunned over to the Strip. Traffic was light at that hour, the November air was cool and damp, and there was a suggestion of fog in the misty hue of street lamps. Watching for squad cars, I rammed ahead toward Beverly Hills.
Nancy Rhymer had a small house high up, on the very rim of Coldwater Canyon. From the picture window in her living room you looked straight down into the Canyon, a magic arena emblazoned with a million lights. There was a feeling that you hung suspended in the clouds. The view was fantastically beautiful.
I had been there only once before, at a party. Nancy was surrounded by the great and near-great of the movie industry. She invited me on a whim, that night about four months ago when I ran into her at the Key Club. And then she all but ignored me. As did everyone else. I was miserably lonely at the party, especially since I had come down with an incurable love sickness after my first exposure to Nancy. I had hoped that the party would give me at least a few minutes in some separate corner with her — long enough to make her more definitely aware of me. But she was always on stage, playing her scene to the VIP’s in the first row. I was just another anonymous face in the gallery.
At the height of the revelry I crept away without saying good-bye. And didn’t hear from Nancy again. Until now.
Nancy never got to be a star. She was a starlet, one of those bright shadows that dances onto the screen for a few empty lines, then dances off again into the oblivion between pictures. She was not terribly photogenic and her acting ability didn’t seem special — though who can tell in a few feet of film? But in person, from my view at least, she was more sweetly put together, more exciting, than any of her big-box-office sisters.
I first met her two years before when we both had walk-on bits in a television drama. She came from a small town near Denver, the name of which I’ve forgotten. There she had been big in Little Theatre, and had wanted to be big in Hollywood. The same old story. There are hundreds like her. Except that, even at twenty-two, she had a certain maturity. She didn’t just gaze off into the pink heavens of her future. She came knowing it was tough. She got a part-time job modeling in a dress shop over on Wilshire.
Ours was an odd, one-sided relationship. She was friendly, she talked shop with me, made dry, cynical comments on The Game. But I never could get very close to her at those unexpected times we met. She seemed not so much uninterested in me, as closed away in the vehicle she was riding so desperately toward the top. She had no time for minor-league players. If she was one herself, she thought of it as only temporary and circumstantial. When I asked her for a date she never said no, just Call me.
But when I did, someone always said she was out.
I kept wondering what would happen if she ever took one long look. And saw what was concealed in my eyes.
We were both members of the Key Club. Just a bar, really, with booths and a few tables. Your own key was admission to the front door. Dozens of places like it around the country. But here the trade was radio and TV, a few lesser movie people.
Sometimes I would find her alone at the bar, nursing a drink, looking thoughtful and a little sad. Men shouldered each other to get near her, but she preferred to be alone and could turn on a look that was like a yawn in the face. That did it most of the time. I knew she was not bored but self-protective. I made my conversation impersonal, and for this she tolerated me.
Sometimes she would get up and put a coin in the juke machine, and then I would be able to stare at her frankly. She was a little less than tall but carried herself as if reaching gracefully for stature. Her hair was long and brown with glistening overtones of red. Her face was heart-shaped, intense and utterly delicate. Her eyes were wide, deep brown and calmly, innocently provocative. Her mouth was a masterpiece of soft demand.
She was so slim, so narrow of waist and hip that her body was a showcase for the high mold of her breasts.
She seemed built for all things tender and sensual, while her eyes and manner intriguingly denied the knowledge of sex.
During the first two years that I knew Nancy, I had some small success as a TV actor. Perhaps more because I was a persistent knocker on doors than because of any great talent. I used to call at the ad agencies so frequently that sometimes I would walk in at the very moment when a director was looking through the files for a husky young actor like me with decent enough features to play second-string lover. Or tough guy. Or any character. I used to hang around the halls of CBS and NBC, outside the studios where the shows were in rehearsal. And corner the Wheel in charge when he came out.
I got parts. But I always felt they were handouts.
In that time, Nancy and I ran almost apace. She was a little behind, a little more hungry. She lived in a cheap boarding house, scrounged for meals and clothes. Then suddenly, overnight, she was in that house on the rim of the Canyon. A starlet. With a contract. And she seemed to have more possessions and money than she earned. More important people than you would expect came to her little parties. I seldom saw her at all.
But I used to wonder about her, and keep my ears open. Because no one suspected my real interest, I heard things. At first that she was a rare species in Hollywood, a gal who played it the hard way. No parking in cars. No sleeping around. She warmed no beds for her parts.
Some said she was a sweet little virgin. Some said she was frigid. Some even made bets about her. But no one could be found who really knew. And in the eyes of the cynical, every one-has-their-price wolves, she was an irritation. They seemed to have a compulsive need to undo her. To soil her as so many of the others were soiled.
Then, when she became a starlet, when she moved up the Canyon and I lost sight of her, I began to hear other things. That she was traveling with a fast crowd in the power clique. That she had changed. That some of her parties were openly wild. And others were secret and sordid. There were hints of orgies — with a wink and a sly smile to underline all that the name implied.
I believed none of this. Labeled it as the bitter gossip of the jealous. The party I had attended was wild enough — but not in any orgiastic sense. Not while I was there. And anyway, I wanted to believe in the picture of Nancy still uncompromised. More than that, I had seen something in her eyes. A determination to be above the shallow evil of bed-to-bed success. The undercurrents of her needing would take her to bed. But with the one guy she loved.
I tried to forget about her, tried to keep her from becoming a kind of morbid obsession that would upset the balance of my life. I told myself that I should know better, that I was a big boy now, not a mooning adolescent. It was unhealthy to torment myself with this silly goddam love dream of Nancy Rhymer and Glenn Harley riding off into the sunset on an eternal honeymoon.
I made myself busy with my work. I chased around with an assortment of well-stacked dames, one or two of them just as beautifully assembled as Nancy — and twice as willing. A week or two would go by when I didn’t give Nancy a thought. And then some idiot would drop her name casually into the garbage pail of small talk, or I would see some girl on the street who from a distance was her poor replica. In an instant I would fall silent and moody, that old scratchy record of abysmal longing for Nancy spinning crazily in my head.
Meanwhile, some of the shows in which I was occasionally performing changed sponsors. And producers. The ones who were hiring me. Other shows collapsed — were hurried into early graves by poor ratings from the little men who compile the big figures on public boredom. And at thirty-four, when I should have been climbing to some lofty niche, I was sliding dangerously. I was barely existing.
And then I got the call. Twenty-five minutes to three A.M. From