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James M. Cain - Three by Cain: Serenade; Loves Lovely Counterfeit; The Butterfly

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Books by James M Cain The Postman Always Rings Twice Mildred Pierce - photo 1

Books by James M. Cain


The Postman Always Rings Twice

Mildred Pierce

Double Indemnity

Three by Cain

FIRST VINTAGE BOOKS EDITION MAY 1989 Copyright 1989 by Alice Marie Piper - photo 2

FIRST VINTAGE BOOKS EDITION. MAY 1989

Copyright 1989 by Alice Marie Piper
Serenade copyright 1937 by James M. Cain
Copyright renewed 1964 by James M. Cain
The Butterfly copyright 1946 and renewed 1974 by James M. Cain
Loves Lovely Counterfeit copyright 1942 and renewed 1970 by James M. Cain

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright
Conventions. Published in the United States by Random House, Inc.,
New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada
Limited, Toronto. Serenade originally published, in hardcover, by Alfred
A. Knopf, Inc., New York, in 1937. The Butterfly originally published, in hardcover, by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., in 1947. Loves Lovely Counterfeit originally published, in hardcover, by Alfred A. Knopf. Inc., in 1942.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cain, James M. (James Mallahan), 18921977.
Three by Cain.1st Vintage Books ed.
p. cm.(Vintage crime)
Contents: SerenadeThe butterflyLoves lovely counterfeit.
eISBN: 978-0-307-79179-5
I. Title
PS3505.A3113A6 1989 88-40551
813.52dc19

v3.1

CONTENTS

Three by Cain Serenade Loves Lovely Counterfeit The Butterfly - image 3

Three by Cain Serenade Loves Lovely Counterfeit The Butterfly - image 4

Serenade
C H A P T E R

Three by Cain Serenade Loves Lovely Counterfeit The Butterfly - image 5

Picture 6

I was in the Tupinamba, having a bizcocho and coffee, when this girl came in. Everything about her said Indian, from the maroon rebozo to the black dress with purple flowers on it, to the swaying way she walked, that no woman ever got without carrying pots, bundles, and baskets on her head from the time she could crawl. But she wasnt any of the colors that Indians come in. She was almost white, with just the least dip of caf con leche. Her shape was Indian, but not ugly. Most Indian women have a rope of muscle over their hips that give them a high-waisted, mis-shapen look, thin, bunchy legs, and too much breast-works. She had plenty in that line, but her hips were round, and her legs had a soft line to them. She was slim, but there was something voluptuous about her, like in three or four years she would get fat. All that, though, I only half saw. What I noticed was her face. It was flat, like an Indians but the nose broke high, so it kind of went with the way she held her head, and the eyes werent dumb, with that shiny, shoe-button look. They were pretty big, and black, but they leveled out straight, and had kind of a sleepy, impudent look to them. Her lips were thick, but pretty, and of course had plenty of lipstick on them.

It was about nine oclock at night, and the place was pretty full, with bullfight managers, agents, newspaper men, pimps, cops and almost everybody you can think of, except somebody you would trust with your watch. She went to the bar and ordered a drink, then went to a table and sat down, and I had a stifled feeling I had had before, from the thin air up there, but that wasnt it this time. There hadnt been any woman in my life for quite some while, and I knew what this meant. Her drink came, and it was Coca-Cola and Scotch, and I thought that over. It might mean that she was just starting the evening, and it might mean she was just working up an appetite, and if it meant that I was sunk. The Tupinamba is more of a caf than a restaurant, but plenty of people eat there, and if that was what she expected to do, my last three pesos wouldnt go very far.

I had about decided to take a chance and go over there when she moved. She slipped over to a place about two tables away, and then she moved again, and I saw what she was up to. She was closing in on a bullfighter named Triesca, a kid I had seen a couple of times in the ring, once when he was on the card with Solorzano, that seemed to be their main ace at the time, and once after the main season was over, when he killed two bulls in a novillada they had one Sunday in the rain. He was a wow with the cape, and just moving up into the money. He had on the striped suit a Mexican thinks is pretty nifty, and a cream-colored hat. He was alone, but the managers, agents, and writers kept dropping by his table. She didnt have much of a chance, but every time three or four or five of them would shove off she would slip nearer. Pretty soon she dropped down beside him. He didnt take off his hat. That ought to have told me something, but it didnt. All I saw was a cluck too stuck on himself to know how to act. She spoke, and he nodded, and they talked a little bit, and it didnt look like she had ever seen him before. She drank out, and he let it ride for a minute, then he ordered another.

When I got it, what she was in there for, I tried to lose interest in her, but my eyes kept coming back to her. After a few minutes, I knew she felt me there, and I knew some of the other tables had tumbled to what was going on. She kept pulling her rebozo around her, like it was cold, and hunching one shoulder up, so she half had her back to me. All that did was throw her head up still higher, and I couldnt take my eyes off her at all. So of course a bullfighter is like any other ham, hes watching every table but his own, and he had no more sense than to see these looks that were going round. You understand, its a dead-pan place, a big caf with a lot of mugs sitting around with their hats on the back of their heads, eating, drinking, smoking, reading, and jabbering Spanish, and there wasnt any nudging, pointing, or hey-get-a-load-of-this. They strictly minded their business. Just the same, there would be a pair of eyes behind a newspaper that werent on the newspaper, or maybe a waitress would stop by somebody, and say something, and thered be a laugh just a little louder than a waitresss gag is generally worth. He sat there, with a kind of a foolish look on his face, snapping his fingernail against his glass, and then I felt a prickle go up my spine. He was getting up, he was coming over.

A guy with three pesos in his pocket doesnt want any trouble, and when the room froze like a stop-camera shot, I tried to tell myself to play it friendly, to get out of it without starting something I couldnt stop. But when he stood there in front of me he still had on that hat.

My table, he interest you, ha?

Yourwhat?

My table. You look, you seem interest, Seor.

Oh, now I understand.

I wasnt playing it friendly, I was playing it mean. I got up, with the best smile I could paste on my face, and waved at a chair. Of course. I shall explain. I shall gladly explain. Down there you make it simple, because spig reception isnt any too good. Please sit down.

He looked at me and he looked at the chair, but it looked like he had me on the run, so he sat down. I sat down. Then I did something I wanted to do for fifteen minutes. I lifted that cream hat off his head, like it was the nicest thing I knew to do for him, slipped a menu card under it, and put it on a chair. If he had moved I was going to let him have it, if they shot me for it. He didnt. It caught him by surprise. A buzz went over the room. The first round was mine.

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