“I’ve seen unlikelier,” she said.
“Are you trying to tell me Nick may have killed the woman?”
“No, I’m not. If I thought so I wouldn’t be talking about it. Nick has been our patient for fifteen years.”
“Since 1954?”
“Yes.”
“What happened in 1954?”
“Nick became ill,” she said levelly. “I can’t discuss the nature of his illness. I’ve already said too much.”
We were almost back where we started. Not quite. Driving back to the hospital I could feel her leaning close to me, tentatively, lightly.
chapter 22
Moira left me at the hospital entrance to fix her face, as she said. I took the elevator to the second floor and found Nick’s parents in the visitors’ room. Chalmers was snoring in an armchair with his head thrown back. His wife sat near him, dressed in elegant black.
“Mrs. Chalmers?”
She rose with her finger to her lips, moving toward the door. “This is the first rest Larry’s had.” She followed me into the corridor. “We’re both deeply grateful to you, for finding Nick.”
“I hope it wasn’t too late.”
“It wasn’t.” She managed a pale smile. “Dr. Smitheram and the other doctors are most encouraging. Apparently Nick regurg—” She stumbled over the word. “He vomited some of the pills before they could take effect.”
“What about his concussion?”
“I don’t think it’s too serious. Do you have any idea how he got it?”
“He fell or was hit,” I said. “Who hit him?”
“I don’t know.”
“Where did you find him, Mr. Archer?”
“Here in San Diego.”
“But where?”
“I’d rather report the details through Mr. Truttwell.”
“But he’s not here. He refused to come. He said he had other clients to attend to.” Her feelings had risen close to the surface, and anger broke through. “If he thinks he can give us the brush-off, he’ll be sorry.”
“I’m sure he didn’t mean that.” I changed the subject. “Since Truttwell isn’t available, I should probably tell you I’ve been talking to a Mrs. Swain. She’s Jean Trask’s mother and she has some family pictures that I’d like to have a look at. But Mrs. Swain wants money for them.”
“How much money?”
“Quite a lot. I may be able to get them for a thousand or so.”
“That’s ridiculous! The woman must be crazy.”
I didn’t press the point. Nurses were coming and going in the corridor. They already knew Mrs. Chalmers, and they smiled and nodded and looked inquiringly at her hot black eyes. Breathing deeply, she got herself under some control.
“I insist that you tell me where you found Nick. If he was the victim of foul play—”
I cut her short: “I wouldn’t get off on that kick, Mrs. Chalmers.”
“What do you mean?”
“Let’s take a little walk.”
We turned a corner and loitered along a hallway past offices that had been closed for the night. I told her in detail where I had found her son, in the garage next to the kitchen where Jean Trask had been murdered. She leaned on the white wall, her head hanging sideways as if I had struck her violently in the face. Without her coloring, her foreshortened shadow looked like that of a hunched old woman.
“You think he killed her, don’t you?”
“There are other possibilities. But I haven’t reported any of this to the police, for obvious reasons.”
“Am I the only one you’ve told?”
“So far.”
She straightened up, using her hands to push herself away from the wall. “Let’s keep it that way. Don’t tell John Truttwell—he’s turned against Nick on account of that girl of his. Don’t even tell my husband. His nerves are exhausted as it is, and he can’t take it.”
“But you can?”
“I have to.” She was quiet for a moment, getting her thoughts in order. “You said there were other possibilities.”
“One is that your son was framed. Say the murderer found him drugged and put him in the Trask garage as a patsy. It would be hard to convince the police of that one.”
“Do they have to be brought in?”
“They’re in. The question is how much we have to tell them. We’ll need legal advice on that. My neck is out a mile as it is.”
She wasn’t much interested in the state of my neck. “What are the other possibilities?”
“I can think of one other. We’ll get to that in a minute.” I took out my wallet and produced the suicide note which had fallen from Nick’s pocket. “Is this Nick’s writing?”
She held it up to the light. “Yes, it is. It means he’s guilty, doesn’t it?”
I took it back. “It means he feels guilty of something. He may have stumbled across Mrs. Trask’s body and had an overwhelming guilt reaction. That’s the other possibility that occurred to me. I’m no psychiatrist, and I’d like your permission to talk this over with Dr. Smitheram.”
“No! Not even Dr. Smitheram.”
“Don’t you trust him?”
“He knows too much about my son already.” She leaned toward me urgently. “You can’t trust anybody, don’t you know that?”
“No,” I said, “I don’t know that. I was hoping we’d reached a point where the people responsible for Nick could do some candid talking with each other. The hush-hush policy hasn’t been working too well.”
She looked at me with a kind of wary surprise. “Do you like Nick?”
“I’ve had no chance to like him, or get to know him. I feel responsible for him. I hope you do, too.”
“I love him dearly.”
“You may love him too damn dearly. I think you and your husband have been giving him a bad break in trying to over-protect him. If he actually killed anyone the facts are going to have to be brought out.”
She shook her head resignedly. “You don’t know the circumstances.”
“Then tell me.”
“I can’t.”
“You might save yourself a lot of time and money, Mrs. Chalmers. You might save your son’s sanity, or his life.”
“Dr. Smitheram says his life is not in danger.”
“Dr. Smitheram hasn’t been talking to the people I’ve been talking to. There have been three killings over a period of fifteen years—”
“Be quiet.”
Her voice was low and frantic. She looked up and down the corridor, her gesture mocked and cartooned by her shadow on the wall. In spite of her sex and her elegance I was reminded of Randy Shepherd’s furtive sidelong peerings.
“I won’t be quiet,” I said. “You’ve lived in fear so long you need a taste of reality. There have been three killings, as I said, and they all seem to be connected. I didn’t say that Nick was guilty of all three. He may not have done any of them.”
She shook her head despairingly.
I went on: “Even if he killed the man in the railroad yards, it was a far cry from murder. He was protecting himself against a kidnapper, a wanted man named Eldon Swain who was carrying a gun. As I reconstruct the shooting, he made a rough pass at your little boy. The boy got hold of his gun and shot him in the chest.”
She looked up in surprise. “How do you know all this?”
“I don’t know all of it. It’s partly reconstruction from what Nick told me himself. And I had a chance to talk today with an old con named Randy Shepherd. If I can believe him at all, he went to Pacific Point with Eldon Swain but got cold feet when Swain started planning the kidnapping.”
“Why did they pick on us?” she said intently.
“That didn’t come out. I suspect Randy Shepherd was more deeply involved than he admits. Shepherd seems to be connected with all three killings, at least as a catalyst. Sidney Harrow was a friend of Shepherd’s, and Shepherd was the one who got Jean Trask interested in looking for her father.”
“Her father?”r />
“Eldon Swain was her father.”
“And you say that this Swain person was carrying a gun?”
“Yes. We know it was the same gun that killed him, and the same gun that killed Sidney Harrow. All of which makes me doubt that Nick killed Harrow. He couldn’t very well have kept that gun hidden for the last fifteen years.”
“No.” Her eyes were wide and bright yet somehow abstract, like a hawk’s, looking over the entire span of those years. “I’m sure he didn’t,” she said finally.
“Did he ever mention the gun to you?”
She nodded. “When he came home—he found his own way home. He said a man picked him up on our street and took him to the railroad yards. He said he grabbed a gun and shot the man. Larry and I didn’t believe him—we thought it was little-boy talk—till we saw it in the paper next day, about the body being found in the yards.”
“Why didn’t you go to the police?”
“By that time it was too late.”
“It’s not too late even now.”
“It is for me—for all of us.”
“Why?”
“The police wouldn’t understand.”
“They’d understand very well if he killed in self-defense. Did he ever tell you why he shot the man?”
“He never did.” She paused, and her eyes were suffused with feeling.
“And what happened to the gun?”
“He left it lying there, I guess. The police said in the paper the weapon couldn’t be found, and Nicky certainly didn’t bring it home with him. Some hobo must have picked it up.”
My mind went back to Randy Shepherd. He had been on or near the spot, and he had been very eager to disconnect himself from the kidnapping. I shouldn’t have let him go, I thought: a half million dollars was a critical mass of money, enough to convert any thief into a murderer.
chapter 23
Mrs. Chalmers and I walked back to the visitors’ room, where Dr. Smitheram and his wife were talking to Larry Chalmers.
The doctor greeted me with a smile that failed to touch his dubious, probing eyes. “Moira tells me you took her to dinner. Thanks very much.”
“It was a pleasure. What are my chances of talking to your patient?”
“Minimal. Nonexistent, in fact.”
“Even for a minute?”
“It wouldn’t be a good idea, for both physical and psychiatric reasons.”
“How is he?”
“He has a giant hangover, of course, and he’s depressed both physically and emotionally. That’s partly the overdose of reserpine. Also he has a bit of a concussion.”
“What caused it?”
“I’d say he was hit on the back of the head with a blunt object. But forensic medicine is not my line. Anyway, he’s doing surprisingly well. I owe you a vote of thanks for getting him here in time.”
“We all do,” Chalmers said, and shook hands with me formally. “You saved my son’s life.”
“We were lucky, both of us. It would be nice if the luck continued.”
“What do you mean, exactly?”
“I think Nick’s room should be guarded.”
“You think he might get away again?” Chalmers said.
“That’s a thought. It hadn’t occurred to me. What I had in mind was protection for him.”
“He has round-the-clock nurses,” Dr. Smitheram said.
“He needs an armed guard. There have been several killings; we don’t want another.” I turned to Chalmers: “I can get you three shifts for about a hundred dollars a day.”
“By all means,” Chalmers said.
I went downstairs and made a couple of phone calls. The first was to a Los Angeles guard service with a San Diego branch. They said they would have a man named Maclennan on duty in half an hour. Then I called Conchita’s Cabins in Imperial Beach. Mrs. Williams answered in a hushed and worried voice.
“This is Archer. Has Randy Shepherd been back?”
“No, and he probably won’t be.” She lowered her voice even further. “You’re not the only one looking for him. They have the place staked out.”
I was glad to hear it, because it meant I wouldn’t have to stake it out myself.
“Thanks, Mrs. Williams. Take it easy.”
“That’s easier said than done. Why didn’t you tell me Sidney Harrow was dead?”
“It wouldn’t have done you any good to know.”
“You can say that again. I’m putting this place up for sale as soon as I get them out of my hair.”
I wished her good luck, and went out the front door for some air. After a while Moira Smitheram came out and joined me.
She lit a cigarette from a fresh pack and smoked it as if she was being timed by a stop watch. “You don’t smoke, do you?”
“I gave it up.”
“So did I. But I still smoke when I’m angry.”
“What are you angry about now?”
“Ralph again. He’s going to sleep in the hospital tonight so he can be on call. I might as well be married to a Trappist.”
Her anger sounded superficial, as if it was masking some deeper feeling. I waited for that feeling to show itself. She threw her cigarette away and said: “I hate motels. You wouldn’t be driving back to the Point tonight?”
“West Los Angeles. I can drop you off on the way.”
“You’re very kind.” Under the formal language I could sense an excitement echoing mine. “Why are you going to West Los Angeles?”
“I live there. I like to sleep in my own apartment. It’s just about the only continuity in my life.”
“I thought you abhorred continuity. You said at dinner you liked to move in and out of people’s lives.”
“That’s true. Particularly the people I meet in my work.”
“People like me?”
“I wasn’t thinking of you.”
“Oh? I thought you were stating a general policy,” she said with some irony, “to which everyone was expected to conform.”
A tall, wide young man with a crew cut and wearing a dark suit emerged from the shadows of the parking lot and headed for the hospital entrance. I called to him:
“Maclennan?”
“Yessir.”
I told Moira I’d be right back, and took Maclennan up in the elevator. “Don’t let anyone in,” I told him, “except hospital personnel—doctors and nurses—and the immediate family.”
“How do I know who they are?”
“I’ll get you started with them. The main thing I want you to look for is men, wearing white coats or not. Don’t let any man in unless he’s vouched for by a nurse or a doctor you know.”
“You expecting a murder attempt?”
“It could happen. You’re armed?”
Maclennan pulled back his jacket and showed me the butt of the automatic in his armpit. “Who do I look out for?”
“I don’t know, unfortunately. You have one other duty. Don’t let the boy run away. But don’t use a gun on him, or anything else. He’s what it’s all about.”
“Sure, I understand that.” He had a large man’s calmness.
I took him to the door of Nick’s room and asked the private nurse for Smitheram. The doctor opened the door wide as he came out. I caught a glimpse of Nick lying still with his eyes closed, his nose pointed at the ceiling, his parents sitting on either side of him. The three of them looked like something in a frieze, a ritual in which the raised hospital bed served as a kind of sacrificial altar.
The door closed on them silently. I introduced Maclennan to Dr. Smitheram, who gave us both a bored and weary look:
“Are all these alarms and excursions really necessary?”
“I think so.”
“I don’t. I’m certainly not going to let you plant this man in the room.”
“He’d be more effective there.”
“Effective against what?”
“A possible murder attempt.”
“That’s ridiculous. The boy’s perfectly safe her
e. Who would want to murder him?”
“Ask him.”
“I will not.”
“Will you let me ask him?”
“No. He’s in no condition—”
“When will he be?”
“Never, if you plan to bullyrag him.”
“ ‘Bullyrag’ is a loaded word. Are you trying to make me sore?”
Smitheram let out a clever little laugh. “If I were, I appear to have succeeded.”
“What are you sitting on, doctor?”
His eyes narrowed and his mouth talked very rapidly: “I’m standing—standing on my right and duty to protect my patient. And no junior G-men are going to talk to him now or ever, if I can help it. Is that clear?”
“What about me?” Maclennan said. “Am I hired or fired?”
I turned to him, swallowing my anger. “You’re hired. Dr. Smitheram wants you to stay outside in the corridor. If anyone questions your right to be here, tell them you’re employed by Nick Chalmers’s parents to protect him. Dr. Smitheram or one of the nurses will introduce you to the parents when it’s convenient.”
“I can hardly wait,” Maclennan said under his breath.
chapter 24
Moira wasn’t waiting downstairs or in my car. I found her eventually in a parking lot reserved for doctors’ cars. She was sitting behind the wheel of her husband’s Cadillac convertible.
“I got tired of waiting,” she said lightly. “I thought I’d test your investigative skills.”
“This is a hell of a time to be playing hide-and-seek.”
My voice must have been rough. She closed her eyes in reaction. Then she climbed out of the convertible. “I was only kidding. But not really. I wanted to see if you would look for me.”
“I looked. Okay?”
She took my arm and shook it gently. “You’re still angry.”
“I’m not angry at you. It’s your goddam husband.”
“What did Ralph do now?”
“He pulled rank on me and called me a junior G-man. That’s the personal part. The other part is more serious. He refused to let me talk to Nick, now or ever. If I could have just five minutes with Nick, I could clear up a lot of points.”
“I hope you’re not asking me to take it up with Ralph?”
The Goodbye Look Page 13