Sue Grafton – “A” is for Alibi

“All right, Kinsey. You’ve made your point.”

“No, I don’t think I have. You paid me five grand to find out what happened. You don’t like the answers, I can give you your money back.”

“No, never mind. Just skip it. You’re right,” she said.

“You want me to pursue it or not?”

“Yes, ” she said flatly, but she didn’t really look at me again. I made my excuses and left soon after that, feeling almost depressed. She still cared about the man and I didn’t a know what to make of that. Except that nothing’s ever cut-and-dried-especially where men and women are concerned. So why did I feel guilty of doing my job?

I went into Charlie’s office building. He was waiting at the top of the stairs, coat over one shoulder, tie loose.

“What happened to you,” he said when he saw my face.

“Don’t ask,” I said. “I’m going to try to get a scholarship to secretarial school. Something simple and nice. Something nine-to-five.”

I came up level with him, tilting my face slightly to look at him. It was as though I had suddenly entered a magnetic field like those two little dog-magnets when I was a kid — one black, one white. At the positive poles, if you held them half an inch apart, they would suck together with a little click. His face was solemn, so close, eyes resting on my mouth as though he might will me forward. For a full ten seconds we seemed caught and then I pulled back slightly, unprepared for the intensity.

“Jesus,” he said, almost with surprise, and then he chuckled, a sound I knew well.

“I need a drink,” I said.

“That’s not all you need,” he said mildly.

I smiled, ignoring him. “I hope you know how to cook because I don’t.”

“Hey listen, there is one slight kink,” he said. “I’m housesitting for my partner. He’s out of town and I’ve got his dogs to feed. We can grab a bite to eat out there.

“Fine with me,” I said.

He locked the office then and we went down the back stairs to the small parking lot adjacent to his office building. He opened his car door but I was already moving toward mine, which was parked out on the street.

“Don’t you trust me to drive?”

“I’m courting a ticket if I stay parked out here. I’ll follow you. I don’t like to be stuck without my own wheels.”

“‘Wheels’? Like in the sixties, you refer to your car as ‘wheels’?”

“Yeah, I read that in a book,” I said dryly.

He rolled his eyes and smiled indulgently, apparently resigned. He got in his car and waited pointedly until I had reached mine. Then he pulled out, driving slowly so that I could follow him without getting lost. Once in a while, I could see him watching me in his rearview mirror.

“You sexy bastard,” I said to him under my breath and then I shivered involuntarily. He had that effect.

We proceeded to John Powers’s house at the beach, Charlie driving at a leisurely pace. As usual, he was operating at half speed. The road began to wind and finally his car slowed and he turned left down a steep drive, a place not far from Nikki’s beach house, if my calculations were correct. I pulled my car in beside his, nose down, hoping my handbrake would hold. Powers’s house was tucked up against the hill to the right, with a carport dead ahead and parking space for two cars. The carport itself had a white picket fence across it, the two halves forming a gate, locked shut, with what I guessed to be his car parked inside.

Charlie got out, waiting as I came around the front of my car. As with Nikki’s property, this was up on the bluff, probably sixty or seventy feet above the beach. Through the carport, I could see a patchy apron of grass, a crescent of yard. We went along a narrow walkway behind the house and Charlie let us into the kitchen. John Powers’s two dogs were of the kind I hate: the jumping, barking, slavering sort with toenails like sharks’ teeth. They reeked of bad breath. One was black and the other was the color of moldering whale washed up on the beach for a month. Both were large and insisted on standing up on their hind legs to stare into my face. I kept my head back, lips shut lest wet, sloppy kisses be forthcoming.

“Charlie, could you help me with this?” I ventured through clenched teeth. One licked me right in the mouth as I spoke.

“Tootsie! Moe! Knock it off!” he snapped.

I wiped my lips. “Tootsie and Moe?”

Charlie laughed and dragged them both by neck chains to the utility room, where he shut them in. One began to howl while the other barked.

“Oh Jesus. Let ‘em out,” I said. He opened the door and both bounded out, tongues flapping like slivers of corned beef. One of the dogs galummoxed into the other room and came trotting back with a leash in its mouth. This was supposed to be cute. Charlie put leashes on both and they pranced, wetting the floor in spots.

“If I walk them, they calm down,” Charlie remarked. “Sort of like you.”

I made a face at him but there seemed to be no alternative but to follow him out the front. There were various dog lumps in the grass. A narrow wooden stairway angled down toward the beach, giving way in places to bare ground and rock. It was a hazardous descent, especially with two ninety-five-pound lunkheads doing leaps and pirouettes at every turn.

“John comes home at lunch to give ‘em a run,” Charlie said back over his shoulder.

“Good for him,” I said, picking my way down the cliffside, concentrating on my feet. Fortunately, I was wearing tennis shoes, which provided no traction but at least didn’t have heels that would catch in the rotting steps and pitch me headfirst into the Pacific.

The beach below was long and narrow, bounded by precipitious rocks. The dogs loped from one end to the other, the black one pausing to take a big steaming dump, backside hunched, eyes downcast modestly. Jesus, I thought, is that all dogs know how to do? I averted my gaze. Really, it was all so rude. I found a seat on a rock and tried to turn my brain off. I needed a break, a long stretch of time in which I didn’t have to worry about anybody but myself. Charlie threw sticks, which the dogs invariably missed.

Finally, the dog romp at an end, we staggered back up the steps together. As soon as we were inside, the dogs flopped happily on a big oval rug in the living room and began to chew it to shreds. Charlie went into the kitchen and I could hear ice trays cracking.

“What do you want to drink?” he called.

I moved over to the kitchen doorway. “Wine if you have it.”

“Great. There’s some in the fridge.”

“You do this often?” I asked, indicating the pups.

He shrugged, filling ice trays again. “Every three or four weeks. It depends,” he said and then smiled over at me. “See? I’m a nicer guy than you thought.”

I twirled an index finger in the air just to show how impressed I was, but I did, actually, think it was nice of him to sit the dogs. I couldn’t imagine Powers finding a kennel to keep them. He’d have to take them to the zoo. Charlie handed me a glass of wine, pouring a bourbon on the rocks for himself. I leaned against the doorframe.

“Did you know that Laurence had an affair at one time with Sharon Napier’s mother?”

He gave me a startled look. “You’re making a joke.”

“No I’m not. Apparently it happened some time before Sharon went to work for him. From what I gather, her ‘employment’ was a combination extortion and revenge. Which might explain the way she treated him.”

“Who told you this stuff?”

“What difference does that make?”

“Because it sounds like crap,” he said. “The name Napier never meant anything to me and I knew him for years.”

I shrugged. “That’s what you said about Libby Glass,” I replied.

I Charlie’s face began to fade. “Jesus, you don’t forgive a thing, do you?” He moved into the living room and I followed. He sat down in a wicker chair, which creaked beneath his weight.

“Is that why you’re here? To work?” he asked.

“Actually, it’s not. Actually, it’s just the opposite.”

“Meaning what?”

“I came out here to get away from it,” I said.

“Then why the questions? Why the third-degree? You know how I feel about Laurence and I don’t like to be used.”

I felt my own smile fade, my face setting with embarrassment.

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