Sue Grafton – “D” Is for Deadbeat

I jumped, realizing belatedly that it was Billy Polo. I couldn’t distinguish his features in the dark, but his voice was distinctly his own.

“Oh Jesus, what are you doing here?” I said.

“Hey, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to scare you. I wanted to talk to you.”

I was still trying to recover from the jolt he’d given me, my temper rising belatedly. “How’d you know where to find me?”

“I looked you up in the telephone book.”

“My home address isn’t in the book.”

“Yeah, I know. I tried your office first. You weren’t in, so I asked next door at that insurance place.”

“California Fidelity gave you my home address?” I said. “Who’d you talk to?” I didn’t believe for a minute that CF would release that kind of information to him.

“I didn’t get her name. I told her I was a client and it was urgent.”

“Bullshit.”

“No, it’s the truth. She only gave it to me because I leaned on her.”

I could tell he wasn’t going to budge on the point, so I let it pass. “All right, what is it?” I said. I knew I sounded cranky, but I didn’t like his coming to my place and I didn’t believe his tale about how he found out where it was.

“We’re just gonna stand around out here?”

“That’s right, Billy. Now get on with it.”

“Well, you don’t have to get so huffy.”

“Huffy! What the hell are you talking about? You loom up out of the dark and scare me half to death! I don’t know you from Jack the Ripper so why should I invite you in?”

“Okay, okay.”

“Just say what you have to say. I’m beat.”

He did some fidgeting around … for effect, I thought. Finally, he said, “I talked to my sister, Coral, and she told me I should be straight with you.”

“Oh goody, what a treat. Straight about what?”

“Daggett,” he mumbled. “He did get in touch.”

“When was this?”

“Last Monday when he got to town.”

“He called you?”

“Yeah, that’s right.”

“How’d he know where you were?”

“He tried my mom’s house and talked to her. I wasn’t home at the time, so she got his number and I called him back.”

“Where’d he call from?”

“I don’t know for sure. Some dive. There was all this noise in the background. He was drunk and I figured he must have parked himself in the first bar he found.”

“What time of day was this?”

“Maybe eight at night. Around in there.”

“Go on.”

“He said he was scared and needed help. Somebody called him down in Los Angeles and told him he was dead meat on account of a scam he pulled up in prison just before he got out.”

“What scam?”

“I don’t know all the details. What I heard was his cellmate got snuffed and Daggett helped himself to a big wad of cash the guy had hidden in his bunk.”

“How much?”

“Nearly thirty grand. It was some kind of drug deal went sour, which is why the guy got killed in the first place. Daggett walked off with the whole stash and somebody wanted it back. They were comin’ after him. At least that’s what they told him.”

“Who?”

“I don’t want to mention names. I got a fair idea and I could find out for sure if I wanted to, but I don’t like puttin’ my neck in a noose unless I have to. The point is I shined him on. I wasn’t going to help that old coot. No way. He got himself in a hole, let him get himself out. I didn’t want to be involved. Not with those guys after him. I’m too fond of my health.”

“So what happened? You talked on the phone and that was it?”

“Well, no. I met him for a drink. Coral said I should level with you about that.”

“Really,” I said. “What for?”

“In case something came up later. She didn’t want it to look like I was holding out.”

“So you think they caught up with him?”

“He’s dead, ain’t he?”

“Proving what?”

“Don’t ask me. I mean, all I know is what Daggett said. He was on the run and he thought I’d help.”

“How?”

“A place to hide.”

“When did you meet with him?”

“Not till Thursday. I was tied up.”

“Pressing social engagements, no doubt.”

“Hey, I was looking for work. I’m on parole and I got requirements to meet.”

“You didn’t see him Friday?”

“Uh-uh. I just saw him once and that was Thursday night.”

“What’d he do in the meantime?”

“I don’t know. He never said.”

“Where’d you meet him?”

“At the bar where Coral works.”

“Ah, now I see. She got worried I’d ask around and somebody’d say they saw you with him.”

“Well, yeah. Coral don’t like me to mess with the law, especially with me on parole anyway.”

“How come it took the bad guys so long to catch up with him? He’s been out of prison for six weeks.”

“Maybe they didn’t figure it was him at first. Daggett wasn’t the brightest guy, you know. He never did nothin’ right in his life. They prob’bly figured he was too dumb to stick his hand in a mattress and walk off with the cash.”

“Did Daggett have the money with him when you talked to him?”

“Are you kidding? He tried to borrow ten bucks from me,” Billy said, aggrieved.

“What was the deal?” I asked. “If he gave the money back, they’d let him off the hook?”

“Probably not. I doubt that.”

“So do I,” I said. “How do you think Lovella figures into this?”

“She doesn’t. It’s got nothing to do with her.”

“I wouldn’t be too sure about that. Somebody saw Daggett down at the marina last Friday night, dead drunk, in the company of a trashy-looking blonde.”

Even in the dark, I could tell Billy Polo was staring at me.

“A blonde?”

“That’s right. She was on the young side from what I was told. He was staggering, and she had to work to keep him on his feet.”

“I don’t know nothin’ about that.”

“Neither do I, but it sure sounded like Lovella to me.”

“Ask her about it then.”

“I intend to,” I said. “So what happens next?”

“About what?”

“The thirty thousand, for starters. With Daggett dead, does the money go back to the guys who were after him?”

“If they found it, I guess it does,” he said, uncomfortably.

“What if they didn’t find it?”

Billy hesitated. “Well, I guess if it’s stashed somewhere, it’d belong to his widow, wouldn’t it? Part of his estate?”

I was beginning to get the drift here, but I wondered if he did. “You mean Essie?”

“Who?”

“Daggett’s widow, Essie.”

“He’s divorced from her,” Billy said.

“I don’t think so. At least not as far as the law is concerned.”

“He’s married to Lovella,” he said.

“Not legally.”

“You’re shittin’ me.”

“Come to the funeral tomorrow and see for yourself.”

“This Essie has the money?”

“No, but I know where it is. Twenty-five thousand of it, at any rate.”

“Where?” he said, with disbelief.

“In my pocket, sweetheart, in the form of a cashier’s check made out to Tony Gahan. You remember, Tony, don’t you?”

Dead silence.

I lowered my voice. “You want to tell me who Doug Polokowski is?”

Billy Polo turned and walked away.

I stood there for a moment and then followed reluctantly, still pondering the fact that he had my home address. Last time I’d talked to him, he didn’t even buy the fact that I was a private investigator. Now suddenly he was seeking me out, having confidential chats about Daggett on my front step. It didn’t add up.

I heard his car door slam as I reached the street. I hung back in the shadows, watching as he swung the Chevrolet out of a parking place four doors down. He gunned it, speeding off toward the beach.“I debated about whether to pursue him, but I couldn’t bear the thought of lurking about outside Coral’s trailer again.

Enough of that stuff. I turned back and let myself into my apartment. I kept thinking about the fact that my car was broken into, my handbag stolen, along with all of my personal identification. Had Billy Polo done that? Is that how he came up with my home address? I couldn’t figure out how he’d tracked me to the beach in the first place, but it would explain how he knew where to find me now.

I was sure he was maneuvering, but I couldn’t figure out what he’d hoped to get. Why the yarn about Daggett and the bad guys in jail? It did fit with some of the facts, but it didn’t have that nice, untidy ring of truth.

I hauled out a stack of index cards and wrote it all down anyway. Maybe it would make sense later, when other information came to light. It was 10:00 by the time I finished. I pulled the white wine out of the re frigerator, wiggled the cork loose, and poured myself a glass. I stripped my clothes off, turned the lights out, and toted the wine into the bathroom where I set it on the window sill in the bathtub and stared out at the darkened street. There’s a streetlight out there, buried in the branches of a jacaranda tree, largely denuded now by the rain. The window was half opened and a damp slat of night wind wafted in, chilly and secretive. I could hear rain begin to rattle on my composition roof. I was restless. When I was a young girl, maybe twelve or so, I wandered the streets on nights like this, barefoot, in a raincoat, feeling anxious and strange. I don’t think my aunt knew about my nocturnal excursions, but maybe she did. She had a reckless streak of her own and she may have honored mine. I was thinking a lot about her, of late, perhaps because of Tony. His family had been wiped out in a car accident, just as mine had, and he was being raised now by an aunt. Sometimes, I had to admit to myself … especially on nights like this … that the death of my parents may not have been as tragic as it seemed. My aunt, for all her failings, was a perfect guardian for me … brazen, remote, eccentric, independent. Had my parents lived, my life would have taken an altogether different route. There was no doubt of that in my mind. I like my history just as it is, but there was something else going on as well.

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