I
Manhattan, 1994
A pair of red stilettos I'd never forget.
They were found bathed in blood at the bottom of a six story apartment complex in Greenwich Village.
She had always wanted to make a great exit, uninterested in the grand entrances. It was a way to silence the pain and the voices she had been hearing since childhood, like Saint Joan-of-Arc. She had always been sad; her entire life had been filled with emptiness, and nothingness consumed her, ate her and pushed her into the arms of her last lover.
To her last boyfriend she had said "Death is a better lover than you".
Nothing saintly about Veronica North.
It was generally believed this last boyfriend was her assassin. And if not him, then certainly some other angry lover. I had been assigned to the case of the "Barbie Doll Murder". I was young, but skilled, and moved quickly. I interrogated everyone that knew Veronica, from her single mother to her last beau; and practically everyone who had crossed paths with her. It was a showy circus of people I had never imagined lived in New York; each with their own tales so crammed with emotion, violence and horror that it could have spewed from the pages of a gritty pulp fiction novel or popped out of a 1970's grind house theater. There are, as they say, a thousand stories in the naked city.
The places she had gone. Paris, Vienna, Brazil, Amsterdam, Hollywood, Miami, Belize. She had left lovers everywhere, and never sated, sought more and more, indiscriminately, even among members of her own female sex. Yes, she was a desperate, unfulfilled girl, seeking something indescribable, unattainable, unknowable.
"Perhaps she was seeking God," her mother's priest, Father McMahon had said, "perhaps in her own perverse way she was seeking to know Him through sexual intercourse, through holy orgasm, much like painted temple prostitutes of pagan origins; wanting to know the god of fertility, the goddess, merging with man and obtaining his power."
Sounds like the priest might have had a thing for her too, me thinks.
But the Father proved to be the best answer to the mystery of Veronica North. He had known her mother and Veronica when she was a little girl. Was she ever innocent? Was she ever so pure and so untouched by corrupt thoughts, that she was like some completely different person? Was Veronica girl who played with other girls, Barbie dolls, "house", tea party, who did all the classic, normal things girls must do such as friend's birthday parties and slumber parties? Was this blonde child a sweet tender thing to be protected, to be loved, to be nurtured, and to hope that nothing could ever harm her?
"Yes," said her mother, "she played Barbie."
More than that. It seemed as if she thought she was Barbie. She had apparently developed quite a huge collection of them. It was an obsession. Every Barbie ever manufactured was in the room she had occupied as a little girl. Blonde Aryan Barbies in pink, red, white dresses, skirts, tennis skirts, cocktail dresses and backless gowns. She had them all in her room, looking at anyone who entered with vapid, expressionless and eerie faces, and such eerie smiles. Did they know that their owner grew up to be a murderous whore?
Father McMahon, staunch Irish Catholic, proud, noble, peaceful, did not weep for her. He had received confessions from her as a pre-adolescent girl, a time of budding passions and vices.
"You must tell me, Father," I had implored, "you got to tell me everything you know about her."
"You are a detective; I'm a priest," was his dry response, "you want answers but I don't have them. I have only confessions of a troubled child that won't do any good. She killed out of weakness."
Did murderers do their thing out of weakness? Were they broken little people, little girls lost, directionless, like Veronica North. Was their real power in killing or nothing but absolute madness that rendered them powerless? Where did she lose her way? Who would tell her what she needed to know.
Veronica became my obsession; and for the first time I felt as if I was staring into the eyes of a little girl that reminded me a little of myself, of the person I had never wanted to be. No; I could never resemble Veronica North, not in the slightest. I am excellent Canadian stock, vintage female, Berkeley graduate with a thesis of unparalleled passion and philosophy, a novelist of crime drama that sold copies by the dozens. It was not possible for me to be mistaken for Veronica North. But there she was, the little girl from the same town in New Brunswick where I hads come from, the same blonde hair, the same eyes, the same shape of face, the same tristesse.
She was a ballad, the lines of a sad song on a paper carried in the wind; picked up by lusty, no-good men who binged on women like her.
Veronica, where are you now?
II
She was not in the apartment in Greenwich Village, her last known residence. It was here where many believed the murder occurred. The apartment was hers. She did not live with a roommate or a boyfriend, although many said she almost did live with him. There were so many who disagreed.
"She was an actress, a diva," a fellow actress had told me, "and like the major stars, did not know reality when she saw it."
I had seen this dark-haired girl in a hair product commercial, a Fitness informercial and in a horror movie directed by Wes Craven. She looked like an anorexic but I didn't say a word.
"Direct answers please. Are you implying she was a schizophrenic?"
"I wouldn't be surprised if she was. No one thought she was like that. She heard voices but only of the kind that called her to fame. She wanted to be big, I mean really big. And she was. Just not the way she probably wanted to be."
"How did you know her?"
"I was her make-up artist first. Then I got into the same school with her, the uh, Neighborhood Playhouse. We learned the Sanford Meisner technique. We were in many plays and student films. We had wonderful times. We wanted to go to Hollywood and conquer it. I didn't see it the way she did, though. I stayed in New York City. She came back here now and then but, it's just so hard to know what she was thinking, what she was doing. She was a vampire who only came out at night and I'm a day person."
"You sound like you really cared for her."
"I'll thank you not to inquire about the details of our relationship. Her boyfriend -"
"Yes; Chad Bartram?"
"Chad Bastard. He was never in love with her. He was using her too."
"Wasn't he a musician?"
"My ass. A wannabe rock star, total amateur, wrote crap. He thought he was the biggest thing since -"
"They were a perfect match then."
The rock star and the diva, interested in the conquest of Hollywood, where the sun glowed so fraudulently bright, where profane streets had to be crossed on your way to the better areas, where casting couches became beds of thorns slept by those brave enough to bleed.
"Was she a hooker?"
"An escort. It's not the same thing."