Sue Grafton – “N” is for Noose

I held up a hand. “Don’t give me beauty tips. I can’t handle ’em.”

She laughed, an earthy guttural sound that set her breasts ajiggle. “Never hurts to try. You ever get interested in a makeover, you can give me a buzz. I could do wonders with that mop of yours. Now what’s this about Alfie? I thought all his problems were over and done with, the poor guy.”

I filled her in on the nature of the job I’d been hired to do, thinking that as a widow, she might appreciate Selma Newquist’s concern about her husband’s mental state in the weeks before he died.

“I remember the name Newquist. He was the one called me a couple weeks after Alfie took off. Said it was important, but it really wasn’t urgent, as far as I could tell. I told him Alfie was still around some place and I’d be happy to go looking for him if he’d give me a day or two.”

“How long was Alfie here?”

“Two days, maybe three. I don’t let any ex of mine stay longer than that. Otherwise, you have fellows camping on your doorstep every time you turn around. They all want the same thing.” She lifted her right hand, ticking off the items as she mentioned them. “They want sex, want their laundry done, and a few bucks in their pocket before you send ’em on their way.”

“What made Alfie leave the Gramercy?”

“I got the impression he was nervous. I noticed he was jumpy, but he never said why. Alfie was always restless, but I’d say he was looking for a place to hole up. I think he was hoping for the chance to set up permanent residence here, but I wasn’t having any. I tried to discourage any long-range plans of his. He was a sweet man, the sweetest. He was twenty years younger than me though you never would have guessed. We were married for eight years. Of course, he was in and out of jail for most of it which is why we lasted as long as we did.”

“What was he in jail for?”

She waved the question away. “It was never anything big-bad checks, or petty thievery, or public drunkenness. Sometimes he did worse, which is how he ended up in prison. Nothing violent. No crimes against persons. His problem was he couldn’t figure out how to outsmart the system. It wasn’t in his nature, so what could you do? You couldn’t fault him for being dumb. He was just born that way. He tended to fall into bad company, always taking up with some loser with a harebrained scheme. He was easily dominated. Anybody could lead poor Alfie around by the nose. It all sounded good to him. That’s how innocent he was. Most of it ended in disaster, but he never seemed to learn. You had to love that about him. He was good-looking, too, in a goofy sort of way. What he did, he did well, and the rest you might as well write off as a dead loss.”

“What was it he did well?”

“He was great in the sack. The man was hung like a donkey and he could fuck all day.”

“Ah. And how did you two meet?”

“We met in a bar. This was when I was still doing the singles scene, though I’ve about given that up. I don’t know about you, but these days, I stick to the personal ads. It’s a lot more fun. Are you single? You look single.”

“Well, I am, but it seems to suit me.”

“Oh, I know what you mean. I don’t mind living on my own. I have no problem with that. I prefer it, to tell the truth. I just don’t know how else to get laid.”

“You run ads for sex?”

“Well, you don’t come right out and say so. That’d be dumb,” she remarked. “There’s a hundred cute ways to put it. ‘Party-Hearty,’ ‘Girls Just Want to Have Fun,’ ‘Passionate at Heart Seeks Same.’ Use the right terminology and guys get the point.”

“But doesn’t that make you nervous?”

“What?” she said, her big eyes fixed on me blankly.

“You know, picking up a bed partner through a newspaper ad.”

“How else are you going to get ’em? I’m not promiscuous by any stretch, but I’ve got your normal appetite for these things. Three, four times a week, I get the itch to go lookin’ for love.” She shimmied in her seat, snapping her fingers to indicate the joys of the bump-and-grind single life, something I’d obviously missed. “Anyway, at the time I met Alfie, I was still cruising the clubs which, believe me, in Perdido really limits your range, not to mention your choices. Looking at Alf, I never guessed his talents would be so impressive. The man never got tired-just kept banging away. I mean, in some ways, it was fortunate he spent so much time in jail.” She paused to sip her martini, lifting her eyebrows appreciatively.

I made some bland comment, wondering what might constitute a proper response to these revelations. “So he was here less than a week last June,” I said, trying to steer her back onto neutral ground.

She set the glass on the table. “Something like that. Couldn’t have been long, because I met the fellow I’m currently balling at the end of May. Lester didn’t take kindly to the idea of Alfie’s sleeping on my couch. Men get territorial, especially once they start jumping your bones.”

“Where’d he go when he left?”

“Your guess is as good as mine. Last time I saw him he was gathering up his things. Next thing I know, they’re asking about his bridgework, trying to identify his body from the crowns on his molars. This was the middle of January so he’d been gone six months.”

“Do you think something frightened him into leaving when he did?”

“I didn’t think so at the time, but that could have been the case. The cops seemed to think he’d been killed shortly after he took off.”

“How’d they pinpoint the time?”

“I asked the same thing, but they wouldn’t give me any details.”

“Did you identify his body?”

“What was left of it. I’d reported him missing, oh I’d say early September. His parole officer had somehow tracked down my address and telephone number and he was in a tiff because Alfie hadn’t been reporting. There he was chewing me out. I told him what he could do with it.”

“Why’d you wait so long to call the cops?”

“Don’t be; silly. Somebody spends as much time as Alfie did on the wrong side of the law, you don’t call the cops just because he hasn’t showed his face in two months. He was usually missing, as far as I was concerned. In jail or out of town, on the road . . . who the hell knows? I finally filed a report, but the cops didn’t take it seriously until the body showed up at Ten Pines.”

“Did the police have a theory about what happened to him?”

She shook her head. “I’ll tell you this. He wasn’t killed for his money because the man was stone broke.”

“You never told me why Newquist was looking for Alfie in the first place.”

“That was in regard to a homicide in Nota County. He’d heard Alfie was friends with a fellow whose body was found back in March of last year. I guess they had reason to believe the two were traveling together around the time of this man’s death.”

“Alfie was a suspect?”

“Oh, honey, the cops will never say that. They think you’ll be more cooperative if they tell you they’re looking for a potential witness to a crime. In this case, probably true. Alfie was a sissy. He was scared to death of violence. He’d never kill anyone and I’d swear to that on a stack of Bibles.”

“How did Tom Newquist find out Alfie was here?”

“The fellow at the hotel told him.”

“I mean, in Santa Teresa.”

“Oh. I don’t know. He never said a word about that. He might have run the name through the computer. Alfie’d just done a little jail time so he’d have popped right up.”

“What about the victim? Did Newquist give you the name of the other man?”

“He didn’t have to. I knew hire through Alfie. Fellow by the name of Ritter. He and Alfie met in prison. This was six years ago at Chino. I forget what Alfie was doing time for at that point, something stupid. Ritter was vicious, a real son of a bitch, but he protected Alfie’s backside and they hung around together after they got out. Alfie wanted Ritter to stay here as well, but I said absolutely not. Ritter was a convicted rapist.”

” ‘Ritter,’ was the first name or last?”

“Last. His first name was something fruity, maybe Percival. Everybody called him Pinkie.”

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