Sue Grafton – “P” is for Peril

“Didn’t their father figure it out?”

“No, but Tommy did. They had a mutual friend-Buddy-who’d seen Richard do it. Buddy says Richard was always pounding on him, broke his nose once, so Buddy tattled to Tommy just to get even. Tommy waited until Richard was off somewhere. He stole the bike back and pushed it off the side of a bridge.”

“He got away with that?”

“Richard guessed right away, but what could he do? It still pisses him off. The thing about those two is both would rather forfeit everything than see the other enjoy his half. Happened with a girl once and she ended up dead.”

“You’re really cheering me up here.” I wrote THE END on the scratch pad and gave the letters a look of three-dimensions in the manner of gang graffiti. “Happily, I’m hanging up my spurs. I called to fill you in in case one of ’em makes a move.”

“Come on. You can’t leave me now with the job half done. What about the safe? You have to hang in until you locate that.”

“Find it yourself. I’m bowing out of this.”

“Just think how good it’ll feel when we finally nail those guys.”

“What’s this ‘we’ shit? The problem isn’t mine. It belongs to you.”

Mariah laughed. “I know, but I keep hoping I can talk you into it.”

“No, thanks. Nice doing business with you. It was fun,” I said, and hung up. I lifted my eyes from my drawing to find Richard Hevener standing at my door, wearing a black raincoat and black cowboy boots.

I felt the icy-hot sensation of a bad sunburn, a stinging heat on my skin that chilled me to the bone. I had no idea how long he’d been there and I couldn’t remember for the life of me if I’d mentioned his name or Tommy’s in the final moments of my conversation. I didn’t think I’d used hers.

I said, “Hello,” trying to sound unconcerned.

“What’s this?” He pulled an envelope from his pocket and tossed it toward the desk. My letter whicked through the air and landed in front of me.

I could feel my heart begin to thump. “I feel bad about that. I probably should have called, but it seemed so awkward somehow.”

“What’s going on?”

“Nothing. It’s just not going to work.”

“‘It’s not going to work.’ Just like that.”

“I don’t know what else to say. I don’t want the space. I thought I did, but now I don’t.”

“You signed a lease.”

“I know and I apologize for the inconvenience-”

“It’s not a matter of inconvenience. We have an agreement.” His tone was light but unrelenting.

“What do you want from me?”

“I want you to honor the terms of the lease you signed.”

“You know what? Why don’t you talk to my attorney about that. His name is Lonnie Kingman. He’s right down the hall.”

Ida Ruth appeared in the hall behind him. “Everything okay?”

Richard flicked a look at her and then looked back at me. He said, “Everything’s fine. I’m sure we’ll find the perfect solution to the little problem we have.”

He backed out of the room. I watched him turn in her direction, careful not to touch her as he passed. He moved out of my line of sight, but Ida Ruth continued to stare. “What’s with him? Is he nuts or what? He seems off.”

“You don’t know the half of it. If he shows up again, call the cops.”

I locked my office door and placed a call to Mariah’s Texas number, leaving another message on her answering machine. I wasn’t sure how soon she’d check back, but I really didn’t like the direction this was starting to take.

Chapter 20

I headed north on the 101 to the off-ramp at Little Pony Road, a distance of three to four miles in light traffic. I found myself reviewing that phone conversation with Mariah, the easy banter between us at the Hevener boys’ expense. I was almost positive I hadn’t tipped my hand. In the meantime, I had no idea what Richard had in mind for me, but I figured his “perfect solution” lay somewhere on a continuum between small claims court and death. I kept an eye on the rearview mirror, flicking a quick look at any car that pulled up even with mine. Laguna Plaza is an aging L-shaped strip mall, much classier than some, but a far cry from the massive retail stadiums being built these days. No glass-enclosed atrium planted with full-sized trees, no food court, no second and third tiers with escalators running in between. I pulled my VW into a slot directly in front of Mail More, a franchise that boasted private mailbox rentals, mail receiving and forwarding, copy machines, a notary public, custom business cards, rubber stamps, and twenty-four-hour access, seven days a week.

The interior was divided into two large areas, each with an entrance, and separated from each other by a glass wall and lockable glass door. The space on the right contained a counter, the copiers, office supplies, and a clerk to assist with the packaging and mailing services. Through a doorway in the rear wall, I could see banks of flat cardboard boxes in assorted sizes, continuous rolls of bubble wrap, wrapping paper, and bins of Styrofoam packing fill.

The clerk was gone, but she’d left a note on the counter: CLOSED FOR PERSONAL EMERGENCY. SORRY FOR THE INCONVENIENCE. BACK MONDAY. TIFFANY. If she was anything like Jeniffer, the personal emergency consisted of a tanning session and a pedicure. I said, “Yoo hoo” and “Hello” type things to cover my ass while I took the liberty of walking around the counter to inspect the backroom. Not a soul in sight. I returned to the front and stood for a moment, feeling thoroughly annoyed. Anyone could waltz in and steal the office supplies. What if I had a package to ship or a critical need for a notary public?

I crossed to the glass wall and peered into adjoining space: a veritable cellblock of mailboxes, numbered and glass-fronted, floor to head height, with a slot on the far wall for the mailing of letters and small packages. This was the section open twenty-four hours a day. I pushed through the glass door. I followed the numbers in sequence and found box 505-fifth tier over, five down from the top. I leaned over and looked through the tiny beveled glass window. No mail in evidence, but I was treated to a truncated view of the room beyond where I could see a guy moving down the line, distributing letters from a stack in his hand. When he reached my row, I knocked on the window of 505.

The fellow leaned down so his face was even with mine.

I said, “Can I talk to you? I need some help out here.”

He pointed to my right. “Go down to the slot.”

We both moved in that direction, he on his side of the boxes, me on mine. The slot was at chest height. This time, I leaned close, catching a glimpse of mail piled in the bin beneath. The guy was much taller than I and the difference in our heights forced him not only to bend, but to tilt his head at an unnatural angle. He said, “What’s the problem?”

I took out a business card and stuck it through the slot so he could see who I was. “I need information about the party renting box 505.”

He took my card and studied it. “What for?”

“It’s a murder investigation.”

“You have a subpoena?”

“No, I don’t have a subpoena. If I did, I wouldn’t need to ask.”

He pushed the card back at me. “Check with Tiffany. That’s her department.”

Her department? There were two of them. What was he talking about? “She’s gone and the note says she won’t be back until Monday.”

“You’ll have to come back then.”

“Can’t. I have a court appearance. It won’t take half a second,” I said. “Please, please, please?”

He seemed vexed. “What do you want?”

“I just need a peek at the rental form to see who’s renting it.”

“Why?”

“Because the man’s widow thinks he might have been receiving pornographic material at this address and I don’t think it’s true. All I want to know is who filled out the form.”

“I’m not supposed to do that.”

“Couldn’t you make an exception? It could make a really big difference. Think of all the grief she’d be spared.”

I could see him staring at the floor. He appeared to be forty, way too old for this line of work. I could well imagine his debate. On one hand, the rules were the rules, though I personally doubted there was any kind of policy to cover my request. He wasn’t a federal employee and his job didn’t require a security clearance. Executive mail-sorter. He’d be lucky to earn fifty cents an hour over the minimum wage. I I said, “I just talked to the police and told them I’d be doing this and they said it was fine.” No response.

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