Sue Grafton – “A” is for Alibi

“It was just the two of you?”

“What? No, the whole family. Except Diane. She got sick and stayed with Mom. It was Labor Day weekend. We drove to Palm Springs, first, just for the day, and then came on down here.”

“How’d you feel about Colin?”

“Okay I guess, but I didn’t see why the whole family had to revolve around him. The kid had a handicap and I felt bad about that, but I didn’t want my life to focus on his infirmity, you know? I mean, Jesus, I would have had to develop a terminal disease to compete with him. This is me at seventeen, you understand. Now I’m a little more compassionate, but back then, I couldn’t cope with that stuff. I didn’t see why I should. Dad and I were never bosom buddies, but I needed time with him too. I used to have these fantasies of what it would be like. I’d really tell him something important and he’d really listen to me. Instead, all we talked about was bullshit just bullshit. So six weeks later he’s dead.”

He glanced at me and then shook his head, smiling sheepishly.

“Shakespeare should have done a play about this stuff,” he said. “I could have done the monologue.”

“So he never talked to you about his personal life?”

“That’s number three, you know,” he remarked. “You sneaked in that little question about whether it was just Dad and me down here. But the answer is no. He never talked to me about anything. I told you I couldn’t be much help. Let’s knock it off for a while, okay?”

I smiled and tossed my shoes up on the beach, starting to jog.

“Do you jog?” I called back over my shoulder.

“Yeah, some,” he said, catching up. He began to trot at my side.

“What happens if I work up a sweat?” I asked. “Can we get cleaned up?”

“The neighbors let me use their shower.”

“Great,” I said and picked up the pace.

We ran, not exchanging a word, just taking in sun and sand and dry heat. The whole time, the same question came up over and over again. How could Sharon Napier fit into this scheme? What could she possibly have known that she didn’t live long enough to tell? So far, none of it made sense. Not Fife’s death, not Libby’s, not Sharon’s death eight years later. Unless she was blackmailing someone. I glanced back at the little trailer, still visible, looking remarkably close in the odd perspective of the flat desert landscape. There was no one else around. No sign of vehicles, no boogeymen on foot. I smiled at Greg. He wasn’t even panting yet.

“You’re in good shape,” I said.

“So are you. How long do we keep this up?”

“Thirty minutes. Forty-five.”

We chunked along for a while, the sand causing mild pains in my calves.

“How about I ask you three?” he said.

“Okay.”

“How’d you get along with your old man?”

“Oh great,” I said. “He died when I was five. Both of them did. In a car wreck. Up near Lompoc. Big rock rolled down the mountain and smashed the windshield. Took them six hours to pry me out of the back. My mother cried for a while and then she stopped. I still hear it sometimes in my sleep. Not the sobs. The silence after that. I was raised by my aunt. Her sister.”

He digested that. “You married?”

“Was. ” I held up two fingers.

He smiled. “Is that for ‘twice’ or question number two?” I laughed. “That’s number three.”

“Hey come on. You cheat.”

“All right. One more. But make it count.

“You ever kill anyone?”

I glanced over at him with curiosity. It seemed like a strange follow-up. “Let’s put it this way,” I said. “I did my first homicide investigation when I was twenty-six. A job I did for the public defender’s office. A woman accused of killing her own kids. Three of them. Girls. All under five. Taped their mouths, hands, and feet, then put them in garbage cans and let them suffocate. I had to look at the glossy eight-by-ten police photographs. I got cured of any homicidal urges. Also any desire for motherhood.”

“Jesus,” he said. “And she really did it?”

“Oh sure. She got off, of course. Pleaded temporary insanity. She might be back on the streets again for all I know.

“How do you keep from getting cynical?” he asked.

“Who says I’m not?”

While I showered in the trailer next door, I tried to think what else I might learn from Greg. I was feeling restless, anxious to be on the road again. If I could get to Claremont by dark, I could talk to Diane first thing in the morning and then drive back to Los Angeles after lunch. I toweled my hair dry and dressed. Greg had opened another beer for me, which I sipped while I waited for him to get cleaned up. I glanced at my watch. It was 3:15. Greg came into the trailer, leaving the door open, sliding the screen door shut. His dark hair was still damp and he smelled of soap.

“You look poised for flight,” he said, getting himself a beer. He popped the cap.

“I’m thinking I should try to get to Claremont before dark,” I said. “You have any messages for your sister?”

“She knows where I am. We talk now and then, often enough to keep caught up,” he said. He sat down in the canvas chair, propping his feet up on the padded bench next to me. “Anything else you want to ask?”

“Couple of things if you don’t mind,” I said.

“Fire away.”

“What do you remember about your father’s allergies?”

“Dogs, cat dander, sometimes hay fever but I don’t know what that consisted of exactly.”

“He wasn’t allergic to any kind of food? Eggs? Wheat?”

Greg shook his head. “Not that I ever heard. Just stuff in the air — pollens, things like that.”

“Did he have his allergy capsules with him when the family came down here that weekend?”

“I don’t remember that. I would guess no. He knew we’d be out in the desert and the air down here is usually pretty clear even in late summer, early fall. The dog wasn’t with us. We left him at home, so Dad wouldn’t have needed the allergy medication for that, and I don’t think there was anything else he needed it for.”

“I thought the dog got killed. I thought Nikki told me that,” I said.

“Yeah, he was. While we were gone as a matter of fact.”

I felt a sudden chill. There was something odd about that, something off. “How’d you find out about it?”

Greg shrugged. “When we got home,” he said, apparently not attaching much to the fact. “Mom had taken Diane over to the house to pick something up. Sunday morning I guess. We didn’t get back until Monday night. Anyway, they found Bruno lying out on the side of the road. I guess he was pretty badly mangled. Mom wouldn’t even let Diane see him up close. She called the animal-shelter people and they came and picked him up. He’d been dead awhile. All of us felt bad about it. He was a great beast.”

“Good watchdog?”

“The best,” he said.

“What about Mrs. Voss, the housekeeper? What was she like?”

“Nice enough, I guess. She seemed to get along with everybody,” he said. “I wish I knew more but that’s about it as far as I can tell.”

I finished my beer and got up, holding out my hand to him. “Thanks, Greg. I may need to talk to you again if that’s okay.”

He kissed the back of my hand, pretending to clown but meaning something else, I was almost sure. “Godspeed,” he said softly.

I smiled with unexpected pleasure. “Did you ever see Young Bess? Jean Simmons and Stewart Granger? That’s what he says to her. He was doomed, I think, or maybe she was — I forget. Ripped my heart out. You ought to watch for it on the late movie some night. It killed me when I was a kid.”

“You’re only five or six years older than me,” he said.

“Seven,” I replied.

“Same smell.”

“I’ll let you know what I find out,” I said.

“Good luck.”

As I pulled away, I glanced back out of the car window. Greg was standing in the trailer doorway, the screen creating the ghostly illusion of Laurence Fife again.

CHAPTER 15

I reached Claremont at 6:00, driving through Ontario, Montclair, and Pomona; all townships without real towns, a peculiar California phenomenon in which a series of shopping malls, and acres of tract houses acquire a zip code and become realities on the map. Claremont is an oddity in that it resembles a trim little midwestern hamlet with elms and picket fences. The annual Fourth of July parade is composed of kazoo bands, platoons of children on crepe-paper-decorated bikes, and, a self-satirizing team of husbands dressed in Bermuda shorts, black socks, and business shoes doing close-order drills with power mowers. Except for the smog, Claremont could even be considered “picturesque” with Mount Baldy forming a raw backdrop.

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