“But you and he still got along?”
“Yes. Ours was a business relationship. One does not have to like one’s business associates to have a mutually satisfactory arrangement.”
“You mentioned that he had affairs. Any woman in particular?”
“I don’t know. He seldom discussed his female friends.”
“How about Mrs. Purcell? Any man in particular?”
“Not to my knowledge.”
“Eldon Summerhayes, maybe? You know who he is?”
“Of course. Was he one of Alicia’s conquests, you mean?”
“Yes. Was he?”
“I really couldn’t say. You might ask her.”
“Would she tell me?”
“I wouldn’t be surprised.”
“How well do you know Summerhayes?”
“Mostly by reputation. He despises me, I’ve been told.”
“Is that so? Why?”
“Because I am wealthy, and a bisexual, and a Filipino.”
“Have you ever had any business dealings with him?”
“None. I despise him as much as he despises me.”
“Would you say he’s honest or dishonest?”
“A little of both. Aren’t we all?”
“Not necessarily. How did he and Kenneth get along, do you know?”
“If you are asking if I consider Summerhayes capable of murder,” Ozimas said, “the answer is yes. My candid opinion is that the man is capable of anything.”
Birds of a feather, I thought.
I asked him a few more questions, mainly about Melanie Purcell. None of his answers told me anything new, or gave me any fresh insights. As for the boyfriend, Richie Dessault, Ozimas claimed to know nothing about him, to have never met him. He seemed willing to sit there talking to me all morning, if that was what I wanted. It was the last thing I wanted; he and his apartment and his pretty, jealous, pouting houseboy and his spaced-out platinum blonde made me want to go home and take another shower. I hadn’t even touched the coffee the kid had poured for me. I did not want to drink Ozimas’s coffee and I did not want to put my mouth on one of his cups.
I stood up finally, and thanked him for his time, and he said, “Not at all. It was my pleasure. If Kenneth was also murdered I certainly want to see the person responsible brought to justice.”
“You believe in justice, do you?”
“Naturally.”
“Sure you do,” I said, and I left him laughing and showed myself out.
Eberhardt was still at the office when I got there. But he had nothing to tell me—there hadn’t been any calls or visitors—and he left after five minutes for San Rafael, to finish up the insurance investigation for Barney Rivera.
I called the Hall of Justice. Ben Klein was in but not very helpful. He didn’t know anything about Alejandro Ozimas; Ozimas’s name had not come up during his investigation into the Leonard Purcell homicide. He said he would run the name through the city, state, and FBI computers, and let me know if he turned up anything. He hadn’t talked to Margaret Prine—no need to, he said, considering her stature in the community—and he had no idea why she should have refused to see me. Unless, he said, she just didn’t want to be bothered by a private detective.
My second call was to Joe DeFalco, a Chronicle reporter and another poker buddy. He was away from his desk, but I left a message and he called back within five minutes. He didn’t know much offhand about Margaret Prine—just that she was a wealthy society matron whose late husband had been ambassador to China before the Communist takeover, and later on, in the fifties and sixties, a presidential advisor on Chinese affairs. But he said he would run a computer printout of her file for me and have it ready by mid-afternoon, if I wanted to stop by and pick it up. I said I would, and when I hung up I found myself thinking about how newspapers keep a file on everybody who has ever made news of any kind, so it’ll be handy for the obit writers when the person trundles off to his reward. Gives you a morbid little shiver when you think about things like that—or it does me, anyhow. I wondered what my file consisted of. Well, maybe I would ask DeFalco to run a printout one of these days. And maybe I wouldn’t; I was not sure I wanted to see it.
There wasn’t much else to do at the office. I locked up and got the car out of the garage and went to interview Kenneth Purcell’s horny widow.
Chapter Eleven
Moss Beach is a little town on the coast halfway between Pacifica and Half Moon Bay, some twenty-five miles south of San Francisco. There isn’t much to it: a few dozen homes on both sides of Highway 1, some stores, a couple of restaurants, a somewhat dilapidated motel, and a year-round population of about four hundred. Some of the oceanfront and near-oceanfront homes are pretty nice, surrounded by wooded acreage and with easy access to the highway. The weather isn’t the best down along there—the fog likes to come in often and hang around for a while—or else Moss Beach would be prime Bay Area real estate. Even as it is, you needed to make a very comfortable living wage to afford property on the ocean side of the highway.
The weather wasn’t bad today: sunny, with those thin streaky cloud swirls that make the sky look as if it had been stirred by a giant stick. There was a sign where California Avenue intersected Highway 1 that told you to turn there to get to the James V. Fitzgerald Marine Reserve. I turned there and drove maybe a fifth of a mile, at which point California Avenue dead-ended at an unpaved road mysteriously called North Lake Street. If you turned right you ended up at the Marine Reserve—a long beach above which towered high sandstone bluffs and wooded parkland, and along which were rocky tidepools where you could take a close-up look at tiny mollusks, crustaceans, anemones, and other marine life. I went the other way on North Lake, south past some nice-looking houses on one side and the thickly wooded slopes of the park on the other.
Why Lake Street? I thought as I drove. There wasn’t any lake around here; just the ocean and the trees and the highway not far away. And why North Lake when there wasn’t any South Lake in the vicinity? Another of life’s little mysteries to annoy hell out of people like me, people with trivial minds, people who did too much thinking for their own good.
I came around a bend in the road, and on the right a narrow private drive, also unpaved, angled up through the growth of cypress and fir trees on the hillside. There was no name on the postbox at the drive’s entrance, but the number was the one I wanted; I swung past it, onto the narrow roadbed. After about a hundred yards, the drive leveled off into a gravel parking area big enough for maybe a dozen cars. The far end of it was bordered by a whitewashed stucco wall that curved away into the woods on both sides. The wall was about eight feet high, so that you couldn’t see over it, but the double-doored gate in the middle was made out of filigreed wrought iron and gave you a clear view of what lay within: a garden dominated by rosebushes and big ferns and a modernistic two-story house. The house, as far as I could tell, was all the same whitewashed stucco as the wall, with roofing that was part redwood shake and part Spanish tile. There was a squat, tower-like thing on the far side, and some odd angles here and there—as if its architect had begun taking hallucinogenic drugs halfway through the drafting of the plans.
I put the car up next to the gate and got out. Two other cars were parked there—a dust-streaked but new BMW and an elderly Fiat that needed body work and that may or may not have belonged to the maid/housekeeper. Set into the wall on one side was a bell-button and one of those speaker things. I pushed the button. Pretty soon a woman’s voice—the housekeeper’s, I thought—came through the speaker, asking me who I was and what I wanted. I told her. Nothing happened for maybe thirty seconds; then there was a buzzing and a click and the gate parted inward in the middle, an odd effect like something solid and substantial breaking open. Before I could take a step, the woman’s voice said imperiously, “Please close the gate again when you come through.”
I went in and closed the gate. A crushed-shell path bisected the garden to the front entrance. On both sides of th
e house, I saw as I followed the path, more cypress and fir trees rose up to give the place an even more secluded feel. But there were no trees to the rear; the ones that had grown there had been cleared off so as not to spoil the sea view. The other thing I noted was that the path branched near the front door, with the branch leading around on the north side to a kind of covered porch. Another path led away from the porch at right angles, into the woods.
The door opened just before I got to it and the housekeeper looked out. You’d have known she was a housekeeper anywhere you saw her; she was about fifty, she was dumpy, she had fat ankles and gray hair and the kind of mouth that seems always to be on the verge of shaping the words “Wipe your feet,” and she was wearing the kind of shapeless, nondescript dress nobody but a domestic would wear. She said, “Come in, please,” in the same imperious way she’d told me to close the gate. I went in, smiling at her on the way as a sort of experiment. It proved out, too: she didn’t smile back.
She led me down a hall to the back of the house, into the sort of room people like Alicia Purcell would call the “sun room.” There was no sun in it now, but there would be plenty later in the day, splashing in through a wide set of sliding glass doors. Outside the doors was a cobblestone terrace with a swimming pool at the far end and, closer in, some funny-looking tubular outdoor furniture—the umbrella over one of the tables had an artistically crooked pole and was made out of sparkly cloth the color of a loaded diaper. Nobody was on the terrace. Nobody was in the sun room, either, except the housekeeper and me.
Just me five seconds later. She said, “Mrs. Purcell will see you shortly,” and went away without waiting for a response.
I crossed to the glass doors and looked out. Fishing boats on the ocean, the tip of a point to the south—that was about all you could see of the surroundings from in there. Beyond the terrace were some scrub cypress and then the cliff that fell away to the sea. The land bellied out to the north, though, where the woods were thickest, to provide another hundred yards or so of clifftop in that direction.
It was quiet in there; whatever Alicia Purcell and the housekeeper were doing, they weren’t making any noise in the process. When I turned from the window my shoes made faint hollow thumps on the hardwood floor.
The furniture was all modernistic, and for my taste just as weird-looking as the outdoor stuff. The paintings on the walls were modernistic, too—abstracts or whatever. One of them caught my eye. Smacked my eye might be a better term. It was of a being with two heads. One of the heads was human enough and had red squiggles splashed down over the nose and mouth and chin; what the squiggles looked like was blood dripping from a wound on his forehead. The other head was that of a green horse. The name Chagall was painted in big childish blue letters across the bottom. If the two-headed thing was supposed to signify something profound, I couldn’t even begin to figure out what it was. And if this was great art you could have it and welcome. I’ll take vanilla.
I was still studying this monstrosity, with some of the same awe a little boy feels at the sight of his first potato bug, when the footsteps sounded in the hall. The woman who came in was in her early thirties, dressed in a black suede skirt and jacket, a white frilly blouse, and knee-high black boots. I could understand why some men would find her seductive. She was tall and leggy and on the regal side. Coal-black hair, eyes like black olives, pale skin, lipstick the color of blood. Sexy as hell, all right, if you liked your women looking as though they’d just crawled out of a coffin after a hard night of biting necks. She didn’t do much of anything for me, which was a good thing for several reasons. One of them being that I never did like having my neck bitten.
She came forward with her hand extended and a smile on her bright crimson mouth. “I’m sorry to have kept you waiting,” she said as we clasped hands. Hers was soft, almost silky, and tipped by blunt nails stained the same crimson color as her mouth; the pressure of her fingers was somehow intimate, sensual. “I was attending to some personal business.”
“Quite all right, Mrs. Purcell.”
“I’m afraid I was a bit snappish on the phone last night and I’d like to apologize.”
“Apology accepted.” Evidently she had decided to be civil and cooperative—a point in her favor.
“It’s just that everything has been such a strain the past six months. My husband’s accident, the period of readjustment, and now the terrible thing that happened to Leonard … I’m sure you understand.”
“Yes.”
“Well. Would you like some coffee? Tea?”
“Nothing, thanks.”
“Shall we sit down, then?”
We sat on the weird-looking furniture. She got what looked to be a couch; I got a chair that appeared to have been made out of a bunch of twisted-up coat hangers and had a funny off-color orange cushion that seemed to massage my rear end as I lowered into it, as if it were something sentient and perverted bent on playing grab-ass. I almost came up out of the thing in reaction. As it was I managed to curb my imagination and stay put—but I sat gingerly, with no squirming around. I did not want to give the chair any ideas.
Mrs. Purcell crossed one leg over the other. They were nice legs, and she was letting me see plenty of them under the short hem of the skirt. I wondered if the free show was deliberate—if she just naturally came on to every man she encountered—or if she just didn’t give a damn.
She said, “I suppose it’s that call Tom Washburn received?”
“Ma’am?”
“The reason he believes Kenneth was murdered. The call he took that was meant for Leonard.”
“How did you know about the call?”
“The police told me when they were here—the San Francisco police, last week. He was a crank, of course. The caller.”
“Was he? Why are you so sure?”
“If he did know something … sinister about Kenneth’s death—and I don’t believe that for a minute—why would he have waited six months to contact Leonard?”
That was the sticking point, all right. But I said, “He might have had his reasons.”
“What reasons, for heaven’s sake?”
“I don’t know, Mrs. Purcell.”
“Well,” she said, and waved a hand as if to wave away the entire issue. She probed in the slash pocket of her skirt, drawing the hem even higher on her thighs, and came out with a package of cigarettes and a platinum-and-gold lighter. I watched her light up and blow smoke off to one side. Marlene Dietrich, I thought. She didn’t smoke a cigarette; she made love to it.
I waited, not saying anything, to see what she would do with the conversation. Pretty soon she said, “Last night you mentioned some details you wanted to clear up. What are they?”
“They have to do with the night your husband died.”
“Yes?”
“According to the newspaper accounts, he disappeared at around nine-thirty—”
“Approximately, yes. That was the last any of us saw him.”
“Who saw him then?”
“Lina. He went out through the kitchen.”
I said, “Who would Lina be?”
“My housekeeper. She let you in.”
“Did your husband go out alone or with someone?”
“Alone.”
“When did you last see him?”
“Not long before that. In his hobby room.”
“May I ask what you talked about?”
“His drinking,” she said. “He’d had several Scotches and he was rather drunk. He had a tendency to make a spectacle of himself when he drank too much, so I—”
“How do you mean, make a spectacle of himself?”
“Oh, you know: he became obnoxiously loud, argumentative, sometimes insulting to guests.”
“But he hadn’t reached that state when you spoke to him?”
“No. But I knew it wouldn’t be long before one of his mood swings. I asked him to please not drink any more.”
“What did he say?”
“He sai
d he wouldn’t.”
“Was he always that accommodating?”
“Not always, no. He was that night—I suppose because it was an occasion for him. He’d just bought a valuable French snuff box … you know about that, I’m sure.”
“Yes.”
“Well, that must be why he went out on the cliffs,” she said. “To accomodate me, I mean. To sober up.”
“What did you do after you left him in the hobby room?”
“I don’t remember exactly. It was such a hectic evening—parties are always hectic for the hostess—and I’d had a fair amount to drink myself. Champagne, at least that wears off after a while. I think I went to the kitchen to see how Lina was doing.”
“And after that?”
“Let’s see … That was when Leonard and I talked in the library.”
“Talked privately, you mean?”
“Yes.”
“What did you talk about?”
She reached over to crush out her cigarette in an ashtray that looked like the cross-section of a stomach in the Pepto-Bismol commercial. “It was girl-talk,” she said, and smiled.
“How do you mean, Mrs. Purcell?”
“Well, you know Leonard was gay …”
“Yes.”
“And that he and Tom Washburn had been living together for some time …”
“Yes.”
“Well, they were thinking seriously about getting married. Did you know that?”
“Washburn mentioned it, yes.”
“Leonard wanted my opinion,” she said. “He knew I wouldn’t laugh at him; he knew I would understand. That was what we discussed.”
“You and Leonard were close, then?”
“Close? No, I wouldn’t say that. We only saw each other a few times a year. But we could talk to each other; we had a kind of sisterly rapport. And I don’t mean that to sound facetious.”
I nodded and said nothing.
“I was shocked when I heard he’d been murdered,” she said, “but after Kenneth’s death … well, I couldn’t feel any deep sense of loss. I still can’t. Can you understand that?”
Deadfall (Nameless Detective) Page 10