CLANDESTINE by James Ellroy

The Silver Star bar was the place to start, but it was useless to hit it in the daytime, so I drove to a phone booth and got the address of the Small World Import-Export Company: 615 North Virgil. I drove there, exhilarated–and feeling slightly guilty about it.

The Small World Import-Export Company was in a large warehouse in the middle of a residential block specializing in rooming houses for students at L.A. City College a few blocks away. Every house on the block advertised “Student Housing,” and “Low Rates for Students.” There were a lot of “students” sitting on their front porches, drinking beer and playing catch on their beat-up front lawns. They were about my age, and had the superior look of G.I. Bill recipients. Two wars, Underhill, I thought, and you avoided them both and got what you wanted. Now here you are, a patrolman in Watts imitating a detective in Hollywood. Be careful.

I was. I entered the warehouse through its ratty front door stenciled with a ratty-looking globe by a guy who obviously didn’t know his geography very well. But the receptionist knew a cop and a badge when she saw them, and when I inquired about friends of Maggie Cadwallader she said, “Oh, that’s easy.” She dialed a number on her desk phone, saying, “Mrs. Grover, our head bookkeeper, was a good friend of Maggie’s. They had lunch together almost every day.” Into the phone she said, “Mrs. Grover, there’s a policeman here to talk to you about Maggie.” The receptionist put down the phone and said, “She’ll be out in a minute.” She smiled. I smiled back.

We were exchanging about our eighth and ninth smiles when an efficient-looking woman of about forty came into the waiting room. “Officer?” she asked.

“Mrs. Grover,” I answered, “I’m Officer Underhill, Los Angeles Police Department. Could I talk with you?”

“Certainly,” she said, very businesslike. “Would you like to come to my office?”

I was enjoying my role but her brusque manner was unnerving. “Yeah, sure,” I replied.

We walked down a dingy hallway. I could hear great numbers of sewing machines whirring behind closed doors. Mrs. Grover sat me down in a wooden chair in her sparsely furnished office. She lit a cigarette, settled behind her desk, and said, “Poor Maggie. What a godawful way to die. Who do you think did it?”

“I don’t know. That’s why I’m here.”

“I read in the papers that you people think it was a burglar. Is that true?”

“Maybe. I understand you and Maggie Cadwallader were good friends.”

“In a sense,” Mrs. Grover replied. “We ate together every workday, but we never saw each other socially.”

“Was there a reason for that?”

“What do you mean?”

“What I mean, Mrs. Grover, is that I’m trying to get a handle on this woman. What kind of person was she? Her habits, her likes, dislikes, the people she associated with, that kind of thing?”

Mrs. Grover stared at me, smoking intently. “I see,” she said. “Well, if it’s helpful I can tell you this: Maggie was a very bright, disturbed woman. I think she was a pathological liar. She told me stories about herself and later told stories that contradicted the earlier ones. I think she had a drinking problem, and spent her nights alone, reading.”

“What kind of stories did she tell you?”

“About her origins. One day she was from New York, the next day the Midwest. She once told me she had a child out of wedlock, from a ‘lost love,’ then the very next day she tells me she’s a virgin! I sensed that she was very lonely, so once I tried to arrange a dinner date for her with a nice bachelor friend of my husband’s. She wouldn’t do it. She was terrified. She was a cultured person, Maggie, and we had many lovely conversations about the theater, but she told me such crazy things.”

“Such as?”

“Such as the nonsense about the baby back east. She showed me a photo once. It broke my heart. She had obviously clipped it from a magazine. It was so sad.”

“Do you know of any men in her life, Mrs. Grover?”

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