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The Far Side of the Dollar la-12

Page 14

by Ross Macdonald


  He hesitated. `Just how much muscle do you want put info the operation?'

  `You mean how much can I pay for?'

  `Your client.'

  `I lost my client. I'm hoping this stuff I've uncovered will get me another one, but it hasn't yet.'

  Arnie whistled. `What you're doing isn't ethical.'

  `Yes it is. I'm temporarily an investigator for the local sheriff's office.'

  `Now I know you've flipped. I hate to bring this up, Lew, but you owe me three hundred dollars and that's a charity price for what we've done. Tomorrow at this time it'll be six hundred anyway, if we stay with it. With our overhead we just can't work for nothing.'

  `I know that. You'll be paid.'

  `When?'

  `Soon. I'll talk to you in the morning.'

  `What do we do in the meantime?'

  `Carry on.'

  `If you say so.'

  Arnie hung up on me and left me feeling a little shaky. Six hundred dollars was what I got for working a full week, and I didn't work every week. I had about three hundred dollars in the bank, about two hundred in cash. I owned an equity in the car and some clothes and furniture. My total net worth, after nearly twenty years in the detective business, was in the neighborhood of thirty-five hundred dollars. And Ralph Hillman, with his money, was letting me finance my own search for his son.

  On the other hand, I answered my self-pity; I was doing what I wanted to be doing. I wanted to take the man who had taken me.

  I wanted to find Tom. I couldn't drop the case just as it was breaking. And I needed Arnie to backstop me in Nevada. Carry on.

  I made a second collect call, to Lieutenant Bastian. It was long past midnight, but he was still on duty in his office. I told him I was bringing in a witness, and I gave him a capsule summary of what the witness was going to say. Bastian expressed a proper degree of surprise and delight.

  Harold was still in the bedroom, standing pensively beside the tie rack attached to the closet door. He was fully dressed except for a tie.

  `What kind of a tie do you think I ought to wear? Lila always picks out the tie I wear.'

  `You don't need a tie.'

  `They'll be taking my picture, won't they? I've got to be properly dressed.'

  He fingered the tie rack distraughtly.

  I chose one for him, a dark blue tie with a conservative pattern, the kind you wear to the funerals of friends. We closed up the house and garage and drove south out of Long Beach.

  It was less than an hour's drive to Pacific Point. Harold was intermittently talkative, but his silences grew longer. I asked him about his and his brother's early life in Idaho. It had been a hard life, in an area subject to blizzards in the winter and floods in the spring and extreme heat in the summer. Their father believed that boys were a kind of domestic animal that ought to be put to work soon after weaning. They were hoeing corn and digging potatoes when they were six, and milking the cows at eight or nine.

  They could have stood the work, if it hadn't been for the punishment that went with it. I'd seen Harold's scars. The old man used a piece of knotted wire on them. Mike was the first to run away. He lived in Pocatello for a couple of years with a man named Robert Brown, a high-school coach and counselor who took him in and tried to give him a chance.

  Robert Brown was Carol's father. Mike paid him back for his kindness eventually by running away with his daughter.

  `How old was Mike then?'

  `Twenty or so. Let's see, it was about a year after they drafted him into the Navy. Yeah, he'd be about twenty. Carol was only sixteen.'

  `Where were you at the time?'

  `Working here in Los Angeles. I was 4-F. I had a job taking pictures for a hotel.'

  `The Barcelona Hotel,' I said.

  `That's right.'

  He sounded a little startled by my knowledge of his life. `It wasn't much of a job, but it gave me a chance to freelance on the side.'

  `I understand that Carol and your brother stayed there, too.'

  `For a little. That was when he was AWOL and hiding out. I let them use my room for a couple of weeks.'

  `You've done a lot for your brother in your time.'

  `Yeah. He paid me back by trying to frame me for stealing a Navy camera. There's one extra thing I could have done for him.'

  `What was that?'

  `I could have drowned him in the river when he was a kid. That's all the use he's been to anybody. Especially Carol.'

  `Why did she stick to him?'

  He groaned. `She wanted to, I guess.'

  `Were they married?'

  He answered slowly. `I think so. She thought so. But I never saw any papers to prove it.'

  `Lately,' I said, `they've been calling themselves Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown. The car he left with you is registered to Robert Brown.'

  `I wondered where he got it. Now I suppose I'll have to give it back to the old guy.'

  `First the police will be wanting it.'

  `Yeah. I guess they will at that.'

  The thought of the police seemed to depress him profoundly. He sat without speaking for a while. I caught a glimpse of him in the headlights of a passing car. He was sitting with his chin on his chest. His body appeared to be resisting the movement which was carrying him toward his meeting with the police.

  `Do you know Carol's father?'

  I asked him finally.

  `I've met Mr. Brown. Naturally he holds Mike against me. God knows what he'll think of me now, with Carol dead and all.'

  `You're not your brother, Harold. You can't go on blaming yourself for what he's done.'

  `It's my fault, though.'

  `Carol's death?'

  `That, too, but I meant the kidnapping. I set it up for Mike without meaning to. I gave him the idea of the whole thing.'

  `How did you do that?'

  `I don't want to talk about it.'

  `You brought it up, Harold. You seem to want to get it off your chest.'

  `I've changed my mind.'

  I couldn't get him to change it back. He had a passive stubbornness which wouldn't be moved. We drove in complete silence the rest of the way.

  I delivered Harold and the five hundred dollars to Lieutenant Bastian, who was waiting in his office in the courthouse, and checked in at the first hotel I came to.

  14

  AT NINE O'CLOCK in the morning, with the taste of coffee still fresh in my mouth, I was back at the door of the lieutenant's office. He was waiting for me.

  `Did you get any sleep at all?'

  I said.

  `Not much.'

  The loss of sleep had affected him hardly at all, except that his voice and bearing were less personal and more official. `You've had an active twenty-four hours. I have to thank you for turning up the brother. His evidence is important, especially if this case ever gets into court.'

  `I have some other evidence to show you.'

  But Bastian hadn't finished what he was saying: `I talked the sheriff into paying you twenty-five dollars per diem plus ten cents a mile, if you will submit a statement.'

  `Thanks, but it can wait. You could do me a bigger favor by talking Ralph Hillman into bankrolling me.'

  `I can't do that, Archer.'

  `You could tell him the facts. I've spent several hundred dollars of my own money, and I've been getting results.'

  `Maybe, if I have an opportunity.'

  He changed the subject abruptly: `The pathologist who did the autopsy on Mrs. Brown has come up with something that will interest you. Actual cause of death was a stab wound in the heart. It wasn't noticed at first because it was under the breast.'

  `That does interest me. It could let Harley out.'

  `I don't see it that way. He beat her and then stabbed her.'

  `Do you have the weapon?'

  `No. The doctor says it was a good-sized blade, thin but quite broad, and very sharp, with a sharp point. It went into her like butter, the doctor says.'

  He took no pleasure in the image. H
is face was saturnine. `Now what was the evidence you referred to just now?'

  I showed Bastian the piece of black yarn and told him where I had found it. He picked up the implication right away: `The trunk, eh? I'm afraid it doesn't look too promising far the boy. He was last seen wearing a black sweater. I believe his mother knitted it for him.'

  He studied the scrap of wool under his magnifying glass. `This looks like knitting yarn to me, too. Mrs. Hillman ought to be shown this.'

  He put the piece of yarn under glass on an evidence board. Then he picked up the phone and made an appointment with the Hillmans at their house in El Rancho, an appointment for both of us. We drove out through morning fog in two cars. At the foot of the Hillmans' driveway a man in plain clothes came out of the fog-webbed bushes and waved us on.

  Mrs. Perez, wearing black shiny Sunday clothes, admitted us to the reception hall. Hillman came out of the room where the bar was. His movements were somnambulistic and precise, as if they were controlled by some external power. His eyes were still too bright.

  He shook hands with Bastian and, after some hesitation, with me. `Come into the sitting room, gentlemen. It's good of you to make the trip out here. Elaine simply wasn't up to going downtown. If I could only get her to eat,' he said.

  She was sitting on the chesterfield near the front window. The morning light was unkind to her parched blonde face. It was two full days and nights since the first telephone call on Monday morning. She looked as if all the minutes in those forty-eight hours had passed through her body like knots in wire. The red piece of knitting on the seat beside her hadn't grown since I'd seen it last.

  She managed a rather wizened smile and extended her hand to Bastian. `Ralph says you have something to show me.'

  `Yes. It's a piece of yarn, which may or may not have come off your boy's sweater.'

  `The black one I knitted for him?'

  `It may be. We want to know if you recognize the yarn.'

  Bastian handed her the evidence board. She put on reading glasses and examined it. Then she put it aside, rose abruptly, and left the room. Hillman made a move to follow her. He stopped with his hands out in a helpless pose which he was still in when she returned.

  She was carrying a large, figured linen knitting bag. Crouching on the chesterfield, she rummaged among its contents and tossed out balls of wool of various colors. Her furiously active hand came to rest holding a half-used ball of black wool.

  `This is what I had left over from Tom's sweater. I think it's the same. Can you tell?'

  Bastian broke off a piece of yarn from the ball and compared it under a glass with my piece. He turned from the window: `The specimens appear identical to me. If they are, we can establish it under the microscope.'

  `What does it mean if they are identical?' Ralph Hillman said.

  `I prefer not to say until we have microscopic confirmation.'

  Hillman took hold of Bastian's arm and shook him. `Don't double-talk me, Lieutenant.'

  Bastian broke loose and stepped back. There were white frozen-looking patches around his nose and mouth. His eyes were somber.

  `Very well, I'll tell you what I know. This piece of yarn was found by Mr. Archer here, caught in the lock of a car trunk. The car was one driven by the alleged kidnapper, Harley.'

  `You mean that Tom was riding in the trunk?'

  `He may have been, yes.'

  `But he wouldn't do that if-' Hillman's mouth worked. `You mean Tom is dead?'

  `He may be. We won't jump to any conclusions.'

  Elaine Hillman produced a noise, a strangled gasp, which made her the center of attention. She spoke in a thin voice, halfway between a child's and an old woman's: `I wish I had never recognized the yarn.'

  `It wouldn't change the facts, Mrs. Hillman.'

  `Well, I don't want any more of your dreadful facts. The waiting is bad enough, without these refinements of torment.'

  Hillman bent over and tried to quiet her. `That isn't fair, Elaine. Lieutenant Bastian is trying to help us.'

  He had said the same thing about me. It gave me the queer feeling that time was repeating itself and would go on endlessly repeating itself, as it does in hell.

  She said: `He's going about it in a strange way. Look what he's made me do. All my balls of yarn are spilled on the floor.'

  She kicked at them with her tiny slippered feet.

  Hillman got down on his knees to pick them up. She kicked at him, without quite touching him. `Get away, you're no help, either. If you'd been a decent father, this would never have happened.'

  Bastian picked up the evidence board and turned to me. `We'd better go.'

  Nobody asked us not to. But Hillman followed us out into the hall.

  `Please forgive us, we're not ourselves. You haven't really told me anything.'

  Bastian answered him coolly: `We have no definite conclusions to report.'

  `But you think Tom's dead.'

  `I'm afraid he may be. We'll learn more from an analysis of the contents of that car trunk. If you'll excuse me, Mr. Hillman, I don't have time for further explanations now.'

  `I do,' I said.

  For the first time that morning Hillman looked at me as if I might be good for something more than a scapegoat. `Are you willing to tell me what's been going on?'

  `So far as I understand it.'

  `I'll leave you men together then,' Bastian said. He went out, and a minute later I heard his car go down the drive.

  Hillman deputed Mrs. Perez to stay with his wife. He led me into a wing of the house I hadn't visited, down an arching corridor like a tunnel carved through chalk, to a spacious study. Two of the oak-paneled walls were lined with books, most of them in calf-bound sets, as if Hillman had bought or inherited a library. A third wall was broken by a large deep window overlooking the distant sea.

  The fourth wall was hung with a number of framed photographs. One was a blownup snapshot of Dick Leandro crouching in the cockpit of a racing yacht with his hand on the helm and the white wake boiling at his back. One showed a group of Navy fliers posing together on a flight deck. I recognized a younger Hillman on the far right of the group. There were other similar pictures, taken ashore and afloat; one of a torpedo-bomber squadron flying formation in old World War II Devastators; one of an escort carrier photographed from far overhead, so that it lay like a shingle on the bright, scarified water.

  It seemed to me that Hillman had brought me to this specific room, this wall, for a purpose. The somnambulistic precision of his movements was probably controlled by the deep unconscious. At any rate, we were developing the same idea at the same time, and the photographer of the escort carrier was the catalyst.

  `That was my last ship,' Hillman said. `The fact is, for a few weeks at the end I commanded her.'

  `A few weeks at the end of the war?'

  `A few weeks at her end. The war was long since over. We took her from Dago through the Canal to Boston and put her in mothballs.'

  His voice was tender and regretful. He might have been talking about the death of a woman.

  `She wasn't the Perry Bay by any chance?'

  `Yes.'

  He swung around to look at me. `You've heard of her?'

  `Just last night. This whole things is coming together, Mr. Hillman. Does the name Mike Harley mean anything to you?'

  His eyes blurred. `I'm afraid you're confusing me. The name you mentioned earlier was Harold Harley.'

  `I had the wrong name. Harold is Mike's brother, and he's the one I talked to last night. He told me Mike served on the Perry Bay.'

  Hillman nodded slowly. `I remember Mike Harley. I have reason to. He caused me a lot of trouble. In the end I had to recommend an undesirable discharge.'

  `For stealing a Navy camera.'

  He gave me a swift responsive look. `You do your homework thoroughly, Mr. Archer. Actually we let him off easy, because he wasn't quite responsible. He could have been sent to Portsmouth for stealing that expensive camera.'

  H
e backed up into a chair and sat down suddenly, as if he'd been struck by the full impact of the past. `So eighteen years later he has to steal my son.'

  I stood by the window and waited for him to master the immense coincidence. It was no coincidence in the usual sense, of course. Hillman had been in authority over Harley, and had given Harley reason to hate him. I had heard the hatred speak on the telephone Monday.

 

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