Sue Grafton – “M” Is for Malice

Like the bedroom above, this room was immense. The twelve foot ceiling was rimmed with ten-inch crown molding, the walls papered in a narrow blue-and-cream stripe that had faded with the years. The pale Oriental carpet had to be seventeen feet wide and probably twenty-five feet long. The furniture had been arranged in two groupings. At the far end of the room, four wing chairs faced one another near the front windows. Closer to the center of the room, three large sofas formed a U in front of the fireplace. All of the side pieces-an armoire, an escritoire, and two carved and inlaid wooden tables-were the sort I’d seen in antique stores, heavy, faintly fussy, with price tags that made you squint because you thought you’d read them wrong.

Christie returned with two glasses of wine and handed one to me. She took a seat on one of the sofas and I sat down across from her with a murmured “thanks.” The blue floral pattern was faded to a soft white, the fabric threadbare along the arms and the cushion fronts. There was a large brass bowl filled with fresh flowers and several copies of Architectural Digest lined up on the square glass coffee table in the crook of the U. There was also an untidy stack of what looked like condolence cards. While I was thinking about it, I took out my typed report and placed it on the table in front of me. I’d leave it for Donovan so he’d have a copy for his files.

I heard footsteps in the hall and the sound of voices. Jack and Bennet came into the living room together. Whatever they’d been discussing, their expressions were now neutral, conveying nothing but benign interest at the sight of me. Bennet wore a running suit of some silky material that rustled when he walked. Jack looked as if he’d just come in off the golf course, his hair still disheveled from the imprint of his visor. He wore a bright orange sweater vest over a pink short-sleeved golf shirt and his gait tended to a lilt as if he were still wearing cleats. Jack poured himself a scotch and water as dark as iced tea while Bennet made a pitcher of martinis that he stirred with a long glass wand. I made note of his vermouth-to-gin ratio-roughly two parts per million. He poured one for himself and one for Donovan, adding olives to both. He brought the martini pitcher over to the coffee table and set it down within range.

While drinks were being poured, various pleasantries were exchanged, none of them heartfelt. As with tobacco, the rituals of alcohol seemed to be a stalling technique until those assembled could get themselves psychologically situated. I had an odd sensation in my chest, the same itch of anxiety I’d felt before a thirdgrade dance recital in which I played a bunny, not a specialty of mine. My aunt Gin was ill and unable to attend, so I’d been forced to do my hippy-hopping in front of countless alien adults, who didn’t seem to find me winsome. My legs were too skinny and my fake ears wouldn’t stand up. The brothers Malek watched me with about the same enthusiasm. Donovan took a seat next to Christie on the couch across from me while jack sat facing the fireplace with Bennet on his left.

It was interesting to see the three brothers in the same room together. Despite the similarities in their coloring, their faces were very different, Bennet’s the more so because of his beard and mustache. Donovan and Jack were built along finer lines though neither was as appealing as their errant brother Guy. Jack leaned forward and began to sift idly through the sympathy cards.

I thought Donovan was on the verge of asking for my report when Myrna came into the room with assorted edibles on a serving tray. The tray itself was the size of a manhole cover, very plain, probably sterling silver, and distinctly tarnished along the edges. The hors d’oeuvres, in addition to what looked like Cheez Whiz on saltines, consisted of a bowl of peanuts and a bowl of unpitted green olives in brine. No one said a word until she’d departed, closing the door behind her.

Jack leaned forward. “What the fuck is this?”

Bennet laughed at the very moment he was swallowing a mouthful of martini. He made a snorting sound as he choked and I saw gin dribble out his nose. He coughed into his handkerchief while jack shot a smile in his direction. I bet as children they’d paused in the midst of dinner, opening their mouths to one another to exhibit masticated food.

Christie flashed them a look of disapproval. “It’s Enid’s night off. Would you quit with the criticism? Myrna’s a nurse. She was hired to look after Dad, not to wait on the two of you. We’re lucky she stayed on and you bloody well know it. Nobody else lifts a finger around here except me.”

“Thanks for setting the record straight, Christie. You’re a fuckin’ peach,” Jack said.

“Knock it off,” Donovan said. “Could we hold off on this until we hear from her?” He grabbed a handful of peanuts, eating one at a time as his focus returned to me. “You want to fill us in?”

I took a few minutes to detail the means by which I’d managed to locate Guy Malek. Without mentioning Darcy Pascoe or California Fidelity Insurance, I played out the steps that led to the information on his identification card. I’ll admit I stretched it out, making it sound more problematic than it had actually been. “As nearly as I can tell, your brother’s cleaned up his act. He’s working as the custodian for the jubilee Evangelical Church. I gather he doubles as a handyman for various people in Marcella. He says he’s the only one in town doing home maintenance, so he earns decent money, by his standards. His lifestyle is simple, but he’s doing okay.”

Donovan said, “Is he married?”

“I didn’t ask if he was married, but he didn’t seem to be. He never mentioned a wife. His housing’s provided by the church in exchange for his services. The place is pretty funky, but he seems to manage all right. I grant you these are superficial judgments, but I didn’t really stop to investigate.”

Bennet shaved an olive with his teeth and placed the pit on a paper napkin. “Why Marcella? That’s a dirt bucket of a place.”

“The pastor of this fundamentalist church picked him up hitchhiking out on 101 the day he left home. Essentially, he’s been in Marcella ever since. The church he joined seems pretty strict. No dancing, card playing, things like that. He did say he had a beer now and then, but no drugs. That’s been for the better part of fifteen years.”

“If you can believe him,” Bennet said. “I don’t know how much you could tell from the brief time you spent. You were there for what, an hour?”

“About that,” I said. “I’m not exactly an amateur. I’ve dealt with addicts in the past and believe me, he didn’t look like one. I can spot a liar, too.”

“No offense,” he said. “I’m skeptical by nature when it comes to him. He always put on a good show.” He finished his martini, holding the glass by the stem. The last vestiges of the gin formed a distinct scallop along the rim. He reached for the pitcher and poured himself another drink.

“Who else did you talk to?” Donovan asked, reasserting his presence. He was clearly running the show and wanted to make sure Bennet remained aware of it. For his part, Bennet seemed more interested in his martini than the conversation. I could see the lines of tension in his face smooth out. His questions were meant to demonstrate his control of himself.

I shrugged. “I made one stop in town and mentioned Guy in passing to the woman who runs the general store. There couldn’t be more than five or six hundred residents and I figure everyone there knows everybody else’s business. She didn’t bat an eye and had no comment about him one way or the other. The pastor and his wife seemed genuinely fond of him and spoke with some pride of the distance he’s come. They could have been lying, putting on a show, but I doubt it. Most people aren’t that good at improvising.”

Jack picked up a cracker and lifted the dollop of Cheez Whiz off the surface like he was licking the filling from an Oreo. “So what’s the deal? Is he born-again? Has he been baptized? Do you think he’s accepted our Lord Jesus in his heart?” His sarcasm was offensive.

I turned to stare at him. “You have a problem with that?”

“Why would I have a problem? It’s his life,” Jack said.

Donovan shifted in his seat. “Anybody else have a question?”

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