Sue Grafton – “O” Is for Outlaw

“Magruder? I haven’t seen him in years.”

‘ That’s what Dixie said. I talked to Mickey’s buddy, Shack, a little while ago and your names came up. You remember Pete Shackelford?”

“Vaguely.”

“He thought you might know, but I guess not, huh? ”

Eric said, “Sorry I can’t help. What’s the deal?”

“I’m not really sure. It looks like I have a debt to settle with him and I’d like to clear it.”

“I can ask around, if you want. I still see some of those guys at the gym. One of them might know.”

“Thanks, but I can probably manage on my own. I’ll call his lawyer, and if that fails I’ve got some other little ways. I know how his mind works. Mickey’s devious.”

Eric’s gaze held mine, and I felt an unspoken communication scuttle between us like the shadow of a cloud passing overhead. His mood seemed to shift and he let the sweep of his arm encompass the tree-strewn property surrounding us on all sides. “So what do you think? Nine point nine acres and it’s paid off, all mine. Well, half mine, given California’s community property laws.”

“It’s beautiful. You’ve done well.”

“Thanks. I had help.”

“Dixie or AA?”

“I’d have to say both.”

A plumber’s truck appeared in the driveway, pulling up behind Eric’s van. He glanced back and waved to let the driver know he was aware of him and wouldn’t take all day. He turned back to me. “Why don’t you turn the car around and come back to the house? We can all have dinner together and spend time catching up.”

“I’d love to, but I’d better not. Dixie’s got interviews and I have some things to take care of myself. Maybe another time. I’ll give you a call and we can set something up.” I put my car in gear.

“Great. Do that. You promise.

“Scout’s honor.”

The driver of the truck behind him gave an impatient beep on his horn. Eric glanced back at him and waved again. “Anyway, nice to see you. Behave yourself.”

“You too.”

He rolled his window up, and I could see him accelerate with the help of a device on his steering wheel. It was the only reminder I’d had that he was a double amputee. He tapped his horn as he departed and I continued down the driveway, the two of us moving in opposite directions.

I headed into town, pondering the nature of the divine comedy. Two of my pet beliefs had been reversed in the past few hours. Given the brevity of my marriage to Mickey, I’d always assumed he’d been faithful. That notion turned out to be false so it was stricken from the record, along with any lingering confidence I felt. I’d also suspected, well, let’s be honest about this, I’d been convinced Mickey’d played a part in Benny Quintero’s death. It turned out he hadn’t, so we could strike that one, too. Guilty of infidelity, innocent of manslaughter. Someone with talent could convert that to lyrics for a country-western tune. In some ways Dixie’d nailed it. Did I really want to know about this shit? I guess I didn’t have a choice. The question was what to do with it?

The minute I hit the office, I hauled out the telephone book and leafed through the yellow pages to the section listing attorneys. I ran a finger down the column until I found Mark Bethel’s name in a little box of its own. The ad read CRIMINAL DEFENSE and, under that heading, specified the following: Drugs, Molest, Weapons, White Collar, DUI, Theft/Fraud, Assault, Spousal Abuse, and Sex Crimes, which I thought just about covered it-except for murder, of course. Mark Bethel had been Mickey’s attorney when he resigned from the department, a move Mickey’d made on Mark’s advice. I’d never been crazy about Mark, and after Mickey’s unceremonious departure there was little reason for our paths to cross. On the odd occasion when I ran into him around town, we tended to be cordial, feigning a warmth neither of us felt. We were bound by old business, one of those uneasy alliances that survived more on form than content. Despite my lukewarm attitude, I had to admit he was an excellent attorney, though in the past few years he’d set his practice aside in his bid for public office, one Republican among many hoping for a shot at Alan Cranston’s Senate seat in the coming November elections. In the past ten years, his political ambitions had begun to emerge. He’d allied himself with the local party machine, ingratiating himself with Republicans by working tirelessly on Deukmejian’s 1988 gubernatorial campaign. He’d opened his Montebello home for countless glitzy fundraisers. He’d run for and won a place on the county board of supervisors; then he’d run for state assembly. Logically, his next step should have been a try for Congress, but he’d skipped that and entered the primary for a U.S. Senate seat. He must have felt his political profile was sufficient to net him the kind of votes he’d need to outstrip Ed Zschau. Fat chance, in my opinion, but then what did I know? I hate politicians; they he more flagrantly than I do and with a lot less imagination. It helped that Bethel was married to a woman who had a fortune of her own.

I’d heard through the grapevine Laddie Bethel was bankrolling the major portion of his campaign. She’d made a name for herself locally as a fund-raiser of some persuasion for numerous charitable organizations. Whatever worthy cause she adopted, she certainly wasn’t shy about sending me donation requests with a return envelope enclosed. Inevitably, there was a series of amounts to be circled: $,500, $1,000, $500, $50. If the charitable event was an evening affair, “black tie optional” (in case your green one was at the cleaners). I’d also be offered the opportunity to buy a “table” for my cronies at a thousand dollars a plate. Little did she know I was, by nature, so cheap that I’d sit there and pick the stamp off the prestamped envelope. In the meantime, Mark maintained an office and a secretary with his old law firm.

I dialed Mark Bethel’s office, and his secretary answered, followed by an immediate “May I put you on hold?”

By the time I said sure, she was already gone. I was treated to a jazz rendition of “Scarborough Fair.”

Mark’s secretary clicked back on the line. “Thanks for holding. This is Judy. May I help you?”

“Yes, hi, Judy. This is Kinsey Millhone. I’m an old friend of Mark’s. I think I met you at the Bethels’ Christmas party a couple of years back. Is he there by any chance?”

“Oh, hi, Kinsey. I remember you,” she said. “No, he’s off at a committee meeting, probably gone for the day. You want him to call in the morning, or is there something I can do?”

“Maybe,” I said. “I’m trying to get in touch with my ex-husband. Mickey Magruder was a client of his.”

“Oh, I know Mickey,” she said, and right away I wondered if she knew him in the biblical sense.

“Do you know if Mark has a current address and phone number?”

“Hold on and I’ll check. I know we have something, because he called here a couple months ago and I spoke to him myself.” I could hear pages rattling as she leafed through her book.

“Ah, here we go.” She recited an address on Sepulveda, but the house number differed from the one I had. The digits were the same but the order was changed, which was typical of Mickey. In his semi-paranoid state, he’d give the correct information but with the numbers transposed so you couldn’t pin him down. He thought your address was your own damn business and phones were meant for your convenience, not anyone else’s. If other people couldn’t call him, what did he care? I don’t know how he managed to receive his mail or have pizza delivered. Those were not issues he found interesting when his privacy was at stake. Judy chimed back in, and the phone number she recited was a match for the one I had in my book.

I said, “You can scratch that one out. I tried it a while ago, and it’s a disconnect. I thought maybe Mickey moved or had the number changed.”

I could hear her hesitate. “I probably shouldn’t say this. Mark hates when I discuss a client, so please don’t tell him I said this “Of course not.”

“When Mickey called, this would have been mid-March, he did ask to borrow money. I mean, he didn’t ask me. This is just what I heard later, after Mark talked to him. Mark said Mickey’d had to sell his car because he couldn’t afford the upkeep and insurance, let alone the gas. He’s got financial problems even Mark couldn’t bail him out of.”

“That doesn’t sound good. Did Mark lend him any money?”

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