The Wycherly Woman

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The Wycherly Woman Page 19

by Ross Macdonald


  “Will you please tell your husband I’m here? I promise to look after him as well as I can. If his heart kicks up I’ll take him to a doctor. But I think you’re borrowing trouble, Mrs. Trevor.”

  “I assure you I’m not. He looked like death itself when he came down from the city. He didn’t even take his nap, and he was up all last night.”

  “He can sleep in the car.”

  “You don’t care about him.”

  “I care in a different way. A man has to do what he has to do.”

  “You men!”

  It was a declaration of war. She turned abruptly and went into the house, not inviting me to go along. I leaned on the wall and looked across the weirdly shadowed lawn. A fuller moon than last night’s was rising behind the trees. It gleamed through their branches like a woman’s breast pressing against wrought iron.

  Trevor came out quickly, slamming the door. He nodded to me and glanced up at the moon as if its rising was an augury. His features had sharpened in the course of the day. His eyes were bright and dry.

  “I’m not so sure you should make this trip,” I said. “How are you feeling?”

  “Fine. I feel fine. Has Helen been putting bees in your bonnet, by any chance?”

  “She brought up the fact of your coronary.”

  “Nonsense. It’s completely healed.” He doubled his fist and struck out at the air, to demonstrate his fitness. “I ride, I swim. But she goes on trying to make a bloody invalid out of me. Let’s go, eh?”

  He practically raced me to the car. Inside, I could hear him breathing hard and trying to conceal it. His wife called from the veranda:

  “Carl? Have you got your digitalis?”

  He growled something inarticulate. Her voice rose to a bird’s scream: “Carl? Your digitalis?”

  “I have the damn stuff,” he muttered, and I amplified his answer: “He has it, Mrs. Trevor.”

  She watched us go, rigid and gray-faced. Following Trevor’s directions, I turned right out of the driveway onto a blacktop road that rose between black trees towards the moon.

  “It’s good of you to do this for me, Archer. I wouldn’t admit it to Helen but frankly I didn’t feel like driving to Medicine Stone by myself.”

  “I’m not doing it for you. I’m just as interested in the outcome as you are.”

  “How could you be? You don’t even know her.”

  “No. But I haven’t entirely given up hope of that.”

  “Then you don’t think it’s her car they found?”

  “We’d better wait and see. How far is it to Medicine Stone?”

  “Just about a hundred miles from my driveway.”

  The trees increased in size as we climbed into the hills. The road became a tunnel cut by my headlight beams out of branching darkness, which closed behind us. Trevor said after a while:

  “This killing you say you walked in on—is it connected with Phoebe in any way?”

  “In several ways. Through her mother, for one. I’d give a good deal to talk to Catherine Wycherly again.”

  “I thought you were going to have her looked for.”

  “Willie Mackey refused to take the assignment.”

  “Why?”

  “He’s too busy,” I said diplomatically. “Then other things came up. A lot of other things came up. I’ll get back to the problem of having her looked for tomorrow.”

  He turned towards me heavily. I could feel his straining eyes almost palpable on my face:

  “You think Catherine killed Ben Merriman, don’t you?”

  “And possibly Stanley Quillan, the record-shop proprietor.”

  “I can’t believe it. What motive would she have?”

  “They took her for her money. Merriman used his brother-in-law Quillan to buy the Mandeville house for less money than it was worth. They turned around and sold it to Catherine Wycherly for more money than it was worth.”

  “You don’t commit murder because somebody cheats you in a real-estate deal.”

  “It wasn’t just a real-estate deal. Merriman sold the house again the other day and forced Mrs. Wycherly to give him most of the money she got for it.”

  “How could he force her to do that?”

  “The obvious answer is blackmail.”

  “Blackmail for what?”

  “I only know what people tell me. I talked to a man in San Mateo today—manager of an apartment house called the Conquistador. Phoebe stayed there for some days after her disappearance, in an apartment which her mother had leased. Quillan lived in the apartment next door. He had Phoebe’s bedroom bugged. I don’t pretend to understand the situation, but it wasn’t a good one. The manager, Girston, told me further that Phoebe left the Conquistador in Merriman’s company.”

  “Where did they go?”

  “Apparently she was on her way to see her mother in Sacramento. She never got there, if Catherine Wycherly can be believed; which I doubt.”

  “All of this is new to me,” Trevor said thoughtfully. “At least it means that Phoebe has been seen alive since November second.”

  “I have several witnesses to that.”

  “You think she’s been killed since then?”

  “We’d better let the evidence tell us, when we get to it.”

  That held Trevor, as it was intended to. We had begun the long descent from the ridge. The trees fell away; the darkness opened; the sea spread out before us, paved down the middle with broken moonlight. We drove south on the coastal highway for over an hour, between bare fields and deserted beaches, through redwood forest that blotted out the sky, along rising bluffs. On our right the moon slid up the darkness, trailing its broken silver on the surface of the ocean.

  Trevor glanced at the water every now and then. “I can’t believe she’s in there,” he said once, but he was shivering.

  Medicine Stone was a wide place in the highway among the redwoods. It seemed to be largely composed of tourist lodges faced with unpeeled logs. Its main building was a combination of general store, gas station, motel, post office, and coffee shop. The coffee shop spilled light through its front window. Someone had scrawled in soap on the glass: Breakfast Twenty-four Hours. Above it a red neon sign, incongruous with the surrounding trees, bore the name Gayley.

  Trevor and I went in. The little café was empty, but I heard the slop and clatter of dishwashing in a back room. I rapped with a quarter on the formica counter. An old man came out of the back room wiping his hands on the front of his long white apron.

  “Sorry, gemmen,” he said around ill-fitting false teeth, “I can’t serve you. Mrs. Gayley’s cook, and she ain’t here. Nobody’s here ‘ceptin’ me, and they don’t let me cook. Account of I ain’t been checked by the County Health.” The spider-webs of senility dimmed his eyes and drew his mouth into a one-sided grin.

  Trevor said: “Where is everybody?”

  “Down at the beach. They’re trying to bring up a car that went over the cliff. That’s what they get for racing around in their roadsters. Bang. Kerplash.”

  “Can you tell us where the place is?” Trevor said impatiently.

  “Let’s see. You headed south?”

  “South.”

  “Then it’s the second turn on your right, about two miles down the road. Just follow it all the way. Only not too far all the way.” He guffawed. His false teeth slipped down and lent him a ghastly look, like a laughing skull.

  “Did the car go over at Painted Cove?”

  “That’s right. Take the road to Painted Cove. You know these parts?”

  “I have a summer cottage about halfway between here and Terranova.”

  “Thought I reckernized your physog.”

  I gave the old man the quarter, and we drove down the highway. The road to Painted Cove was rutted dirt eked out here and there with gravel. It wound interminably through redwood forest. The trees hung over us like pyramids held up by rough brown columns. Then there were lights beyond them.

  The road unwound onto a mesa which bro
ke off suddenly in a sheer sea cliff. A heavy tow truck had been backed to its edge. Several cars, official and unofficial, were parked near it, and twelve or fifteen people were standing rather aimlessly around. The crane on the back of the big truck stuck out over the cliff edge like a gallows, with a cable hanging from it.

  We walked towards it across the uneven ground. The truck had the legend, Gayley’s Garage, painted on the door of the cab. The only active man in sight was a uniformed deputy handling a searchlight on the rear end of the truck-bed. Its beam fell down the basalt face of the cliff and shone on the moving water thirty-five or forty feet below. A black head like a seal’s broke the surface; I caught the gleam of a diving mask. The diver submerged again.

  Trevor reached up and touched the deputy’s leg. “Did you get the car out, officer?”

  The man turned on him fiercely. “You don’t see it, do you? Stand back from the edge.”

  Trevor stepped back, and almost lost his balance. I took his arm. His muscles were like straining wood; a steady tremor ran through them under my fingers. I tried to pull him away. He wouldn’t budge. He stood sighting down the cable at the water, trying to penetrate its black-and-silver surface.

  A broad old man came up to us. He had a face like carved redwood burl under his wide-brimmed hat.

  “Mr. Trevor!”

  He offered Trevor his hand, and after a moment of complete blankness Trevor took it: “How are you, Sheriff?”

  “Tolerably well. I’m sorry to drag you away from home on an errand like this.”

  “It can’t be helped. You didn’t get the car out?”

  “Not yet. It’s wedged between two boulders and filled with sand. I’m commencing to think it’ll take a sky-hook to yank her.”

  “Is there anyone in it?”

  “There was.”

  “What do you mean, there was?”

  “We got her out of there and brought her up a couple hours ago.” He glanced down at the sea as if it was his personal enemy. “What was left of her.”

  “My niece?”

  “It sure looks like it, Mr. Trevor. It’s her car, and she was in it. I never knew the little lady myself.”

  Trevor thrust his peaked face towards him. “Where is she?”

  “Over there.”

  The sheriff pointed with a solemn arm towards a covered thing on the ground in the furthest zone of light. I saw as we moved towards it that it was a blanket-wrapped body strapped to a stretcher. The Sheriff said to Trevor:

  “If you feel up to looking at her, I’d sure appreciate it. We haven’t got a positive identification.”

  “Of course.”

  “It won’t be nice. She’s been in the water for a couple of months.”

  “Don’t beat around the bush. Show her to me.”

  The Sheriff uncovered her face and turned his flashlight on it. The sea-change she had undergone had aged her rapidly and horribly. She was beaten and bloated and ravaged. A blur of tears stung my eyes, and a blur of anger. The people stood around in absolute silence.

  “It’s Phoebe,” Trevor said.

  His face was bone-white, bone-hard. He looked around helplessly, as if he could feel the early shocks of an earthquake that was going to topple the cliff. The shocks went through him visibly. He fell to his knees beside her. I thought he was trying to pray. But his body continued its loose downward movement until his head struck the earth.

  He rolled onto his back, his upturned face turning blue, his white teeth shining in it. I kneeled beside him, slipped his tie, unbuttoned his button-down collar. He forced out words:

  “Digitalis. Right coat pocket.”

  I found the bottle and gave him a capsule from it, returning it to his pocket. He said through grinning teeth:

  “Thanks. Bad one. Oxygen.”

  I touched his left breast. His heart was pounding like the dull random blows of doom. The Sheriff bent over us, his jowls hanging out from the bone structures of his face:

  “Cardiac?”

  “Yes,” I said. “I shouldn’t have brought him here.”

  “I better rush him into Terranova Hospital. We might as well fold up this operation for tonight.”

  He brought his car to Trevor. We helped him in. The storm of pain had gone through him and left him terribly slack.

  “Good luck,” I said.

  He nodded and tried to smile. The Sheriff drove him away.

  chapter 21

  I WENT BACK to the cliff. The deputy on the truck-bed was switching his searchlight off and on. Down below, the black seal head broke water, and the diver turned his masked face up into the eye of the light. The deputy made scooping motions at him.

  A man wearing overalls over a red shirt climbed into the cab of the truck and started the motor. Slowly, the winch began to wind in the cable. It lifted the black-suited diver from the water. With both hands grasping the loop at the end of the cable, he walked up the cliff like a space man liberated from gravity. Some of the bystanders clapped as he stepped over the edge.

  I saw when he took off his mask that he was a boy of eighteen or nineteen. He reminded me of Bobby Doncaster. He was very big for his age, with swimmer’s shoulders exaggerated by his thick rubber suit. An aqualung was strapped to his back. A canvas bag, a long sheath knife, and a miniature crowbar swung from a web belt around his waist.

  The man in overalls got out of the truck and helped him remove his aqualung and other gear. He growled at the boy in pride:

  “Have you had your fill of the water for once?”

  “Can’t say I did, Dad.”

  The boy wasn’t breathing hard. He didn’t even look cold. He took off his flippers and swaggered around a little in his bare feet. The deputy interrupted his promenade:

  “Did you get the trunk open, Sam?”

  “Yep. There was nothing in it but some tools. I didn’t bother to bring ‘em up.”

  “What about the registration slip?”

  “I couldn’t find any sign of it. That doesn’t mean a thing, though. The wave-action down there is pretty terrific.”

  I said: “It’s a green Volkswagen, isn’t it?”

  “Used to be. Like I said, there’s a lot of wave action under the cliff. It sand-blasted most of the paint off of her already.”

  “Are you the one who brought the body out?”

  His face went sober. “Yessir.”

  “Was she in the front seat or the back?”

  “The back. She was wedged down on the floor between the front and back seats. I had to dig her out of the sand in there. The car’s chuck full of sand.”

  “Did you notice her clothes?”

  “She wasn’t wearing any,” the deputy said. “She was wrapped in a blanket. You got a special interest in her, mister?”

  “I’m a private detective, and I’ve been looking for the girl for some time. I came here with her uncle, Carl Trevor.” I turned to the boy: “Do you mind if I ask you some more questions, Sam?”

  Sam was willing, but his father intervened. “Let him get some dry clothes on first.”

  He helped his son to pull off his rubber suit, revealing long woollen underwear; and brought him jeans and a sweater from the truck. Sam’s big moment was fading. The onlookers were straggling back to their cars. I followed the deputy to his:

  “Do you have any witnesses to the accident?”

  “No direct witnesses.” He added grimly: “It was no accident, mister.”

  “I know that. Were there indirect witnesses?”

  “Jack Gayley and his son think they saw the Volksie the same night it went over. Of course there’s lots of green Volksies on the roads.”

  “Where did they see it?”

  “Going past their place in Medicine Stone, headed this way. This was a couple of months ago, along about midnight. They were just closing up their station for the night, and this guy went by in the Volksie. The thing is both of them knew him, or so they claim. Young Sam says he even yelled hullo at him, but the guy didn’
t stop. I guess he had his reasons, if he had the body in the back seat.”

  “Who was he?”

  “They don’t know his name, or where he’s from. He camped near Medicine Stone for a while last summer. Sam saw him at the beach a couple of times, and Jack says he was in their coffee shop more than once.”

  “Could they give you a description?”

  “Yeah. Sheriff Herman’s sending out an all-points on it. Young fellow with reddish hair, over six foot tall, good-looking, well-built.” He clucked. “The damnedest types are taking up murder these days. He probably got the girl in a jam and figured that this was a way out.”

  “Yeah,” I said absently. The description fitted Bobby Doncaster, who had been at Medicine Stone the previous August. He had met her here, I thought, and parted with her here.

  The deputy looked into my face: “This ring any bells for you?”

  It rang a dull dead tolling bell, but I denied it.

  I caught the Gayleys before they took off in their tow-truck. They confirmed the deputy’s story of the red-headed boy in the green Volkswagen driving through their little town at midnight. The boy said:

  “He was going like a bat out of hell.”

  “Watch your language, Sam,” his father put in.

  “Hell isn’t swearing.”

  “It is in my book. You don’t want to get too big for your britches just because you can swim good under water.”

  The boy grinned sheepishly. I said to both of them: “Are you certain of your identification?”

  “Pretty certain,” the boy said. His father nodded, and he went on: “We still had our bright lights going, they shone on his face. I shouted something at him, but he didn’t stop. He didn’t even look sideways.”

  “But it was definitely someone you knew?”

  “I wouldn’t say I knew him. I saw him on the beach a couple of times last summer. We said hello.”

  “When last summer?”

  “I think it was in August.”

  “Yeah,” Jack Gayley said. “It was in August, couple of weeks before Labor Day. I remember he came into the coffee shop.”

  “You have a good memory.”

  “A thing like this sharpens up the memory.”

  “Did you ever see him with the girl?” I asked them.

 

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