Sue Grafton – “O” Is for Outlaw

I let myself out the back door, using Mickey’s key to lock the door behind me. I slipped the key in my pocket, stripped off my rubber gloves, and zipped them into my pack. I went downstairs and knocked at the manager’s front door. I’d assumed that B & C Hatfield were a married couple, but the occupants turned out to be sisters. The woman who opened the door had to be in her eighties. “Yes?”

She was heavy through the middle, with a generously weighted bosom. She wore a sleeveless cotton sundress with most of the color washed away. The fabric reminded me of old quilts, a flour-sacking floral print in tones of pale blue and pink. Her breasts were pillowy, powdered with talcum, like two domes of bread dough proofing in a bowl. Her upper arms were soft, and I could see her stockings were rolled down below her knees. She wore slippers with a half-moon cut out of one to accommodate a bunion.

I said, “Mrs. Hatfield?”

“I’m Cordia,” she said cautiously. “May I help you? ”

“I hope so. I’d like to talk to you about Mickey Magruder, the tenant in Two-H.”

She fixed me with a pair of watery blue eyes. “He was shot last week.”

“I’m aware of that. I just came from the hospital, where I was visiting him.”

“Are you the police detective?”

“I’m an old friend.”

She stared at me, her blue eyes penetrating.

“Well, actually, I’m his ex-wife,” I amended, in response to her gaze.

“I saw you park in the alley while I was sweeping out the laundry room.”

I said, “Ah.”

“Was everything in order?”

“Where?”

“Two-H. Mr. Magruder’s place. You were up there quite a while. Thirty-two minutes by my watch.”

“Fine. No problem. Of course, I didn’t go in.”

“No?”

“There was crime scene tape across the door,” I said.

“Place was posted, too. Big police warning about the penalties.””I saw that.”

She waited. I would have continued, but my mind was blank. My thought process had shorted out, catching me in the space between truth and lies. I felt like an actor who’d forgotten her lines. I couldn’t for the life of me think what to say next.

“Are you interested in renting?” she prompted.

“Renting?””Apartment Two-H. I assume that’s why you went up.

“Oh. Oh, sure. Good plan. I like the area.”

“You do. Well, perhaps we could let you know if the unit becomes available. Would you care to come in and complete an application? You seem discombobulated. Perhaps a drink of water?”

“I’d appreciate that.”

I entered the apartment, stepping directly into the kitchen. I felt like I’d slipped into another world. Chicken was stewing on the back of the stove. A second woman, roughly the same age, sat at a round oak table with a deck of cards. To my right, I could see a formal dining room: mahogany table and chairs, with a matching hutch stacked with dishes. Clearly, the floor plan was entirely different from Mickey’s. The temperature on the thermostat must have been set at eighty, and the TV on the kitchen counter was blaring stock market quotes at top volume. Neither Cordia nor her sister seemed to be watching the screen. “I’ll get you the application,” she said. “This is my sister, Belmira.”

“On second thought, why don’t I take the application home with me? I can fill it out and send it back. It’ll be simpler that way.”

“Suit yourself. Have a seat.”

I pulled out a chair and sat down across from Belmira, who was shuffling a tarot deck. Cordia went to the kitchen sink and let the faucet water run cold before she filled a glass. She handed me the water and then crossed to a kitchen drawer, where she extracted an application. She returned to her seat, handed me the paper, and picked up a length of multicolored knitting, six inches wide and at least fifteen inches long.

I took my time with the water. I made a study of the application, trying to compose myself. What was wrong with me? My career as a liar was being seriously undermined. Meanwhile, neither sister questioned my lingering presence.

Cordia said, “Belmira claims she’s a witch, though you couldn’t prove it by me.” She peered toward the dining room. “Dorothy’s around here someplace. Where’d she go, Bel? I haven’t seen her for an hour.”

“She’s in the bathroom,” Bel said, and turned to me. “I didn’t catch your name, dear.”

“Oh, sorry. I’m Kinsey. Nice meeting you.”

“Nice to meet you, too.” Her hair was sparse, a flyaway white with lots of pink scalp showing through. Under her dark print housedress, her shoulders were narrow and bony, her wrists as flat and thin as the handles on two soup ladles. “How’re you today?” she asked shyly, as she pulled the tarot deck together. Four of her teeth were gold.

“I’m fine. What about yourself?” “I’m real good.” She plucked a card from the deck and held it up, showing me the face. “The Page of Swords. That’s you.”

Cordia said, “Bel.”

“Well, it’s true. This is the second time I pulled it. I shuffled the deck and drew this as soon as she stepped in, and then I drew it again.”

“Well, draw something else. She’s not interested.”

I said, “Tell me about your names. Those are new to me.”

Bel said, “Mother made ours up. There were six of us girls and she named us in alphabetical order: Amelia, Belmira, Cordia, Dorothy, Edith, and Faye. Cordi and I are the last two left.”

“What about Dorothy?”

“She’ll be along soon. She loves company.”

Cordia said, “Bel will start telling your fortune any minute now. I’m warning you, once she gets on it, it’s hard to get her off. just ignore her. That’s what I do. You don’t have to worry about hurting her feelings.”

“Yes, she does,” Bel said feebly.

“Are you good at telling fortunes?”

Cordia cut in. “Not especially, but even a blind hog comes across an acorn now and then.” She had taken up her knitting, which she held to the light, her head tilted slightly as the needles tucked in and out. The narrow piece of knitting trailed halfway down her front. “I’m making a knee wrap, in case you’re wondering.”

My Aunt Gin taught me to knit when I was six years old, probably to distract me in the early evening hours. She claimed it was a skill that fostered patience and eye-hand coordination. Now, as I watched, I could see that Cordia had dropped a few stitches about six rows back. The loops, like tiny sailors washed overboard, were receding in the wake of the knitting as each new row was added. I was about to mention it when a large white cat appeared in the doorway. She had a flat Persian face. She stopped when she saw me and stared in apparent wonderment. I’d seen a cat like that once before: long-haired, pure white, one green eye and one blue.

Bel smiled at the sight of her. “Here she is.”

“That’s Dorothy,” Cordia said. “We call her Dort for short. Do you believe in reincarnation?”

“I’ve never sorted that one through.”

“We hadn’t either till this kitty came along. Dorothy always swore she’d be in touch with us from the Other Side. Told us for years, she’d find a way to come back.

Then, lo and behold, the neighbor’s cat had a litter the very day she passed on. This was the only female, and she looks just like Dort. The white hair, the one blue eye, the one green. Same personality, same behavior. Sociable, pushy, independent.”

Bel chimed in. “The cat even passes wind the way Dorothy did. Silent but deadly. Sometimes we have to get up and leave the room.”

I pointed to the knitting. “It looks like you dropped some stitches.” I leaned forward and touched a finger to the errant loops. “If you have a crochet hook, I can coax them up the line for you.”

“Would you? I’d like that. Your eyes are bound to be better than mine.” Cordia bent over and reached into her knitting bag. “Let’s see what I’ve got here. Will this do?” She offered me a J hook.

“That’s perfect.” While I began the slow task of working the dropped stitches up through the rows, the cat picked her way across the floor and jumped up in my lap. I jerked the knitting up and said, “Whoa!” Dorothy must have weighed twenty pounds. She turned her backside to me and stuck her tail in the air like a pump handle, exhibiting her little spigot while she marched in place.

“She never does that. I don’t know what’s got into her. She must like you,” Belmira said, turning up cards as she spoke.

“I’m thrilled.”

“Well, would you look at this? The Ten of Wands, reversed.” Bel was laying out a reading. She placed the Ten of Wands with the other cards on the table in some mysterious configuration. The card she’d assigned me, the Page of Swords, had now been covered by the Moon.

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