Sue Grafton – “P” is for Peril

“Limits and boundaries.”

“That’s what I said.”

“She gets that at Fitch and so far, it hasn’t helped.”

“Too much carrot. Not enough stick.”

“How does Leila feel about it?”

He looked at me sharply. “Feeling doesn’t have anything to do with it. She’s headstrong and lazy. Leave it up to her and all she’d do is lie around watching TV. Crystal’s too busy trying to be her best friend. Doesn’t work that way. Kid needs a parent, not a pal.”

I kept my mouth shut. Crystal wasn’t going to let her go, but I wasn’t there to argue with him.

His tone of voice turned wry. “You ever going to get around to telling me why you came?”

“Sure. I could do that,” I said. “I understand Purcell came up here to talk to you about four months ago. I was wondering why.”

“He’d heard a rumor Crystal was having an affair. He assumed it was me. Too bad I couldn’t up and confess. I’d have taken a certain satisfaction shoving that in his face.”

“It wasn’t you.”

“I’m afraid not.”

“How long were you married to her?”

“Six years.”

“Bad years? Good?”

“I thought they were good, but like they say, the husband’s the last to know.”

“I’ve heard your relationship was volatile.”

He paused and leaned on the fender while he wiped his hands. “We had chemistry. Stone and flint. We’d come together and the sparks would fly. What’s wrong with that?”

“She didn’t have sparks with Purcell?”

“Are you kidding? The way I heard it, he liked the kinky stuff. That must have been the shock of her life. Here she marries the guy thinking he’s the answer to her prayers. Turns out he drinks like a fish and can’t get it up unless she wears high-heeled boots and beats his ass with a whip. It doesn’t surprise me she’d cheat. I might have slapped her around, but I never did that stuff.”

“Was she faithful to you?”

“Far as I know. I don’t put up with any shit on that score.”

“How’d you get along with Purcell?”

“Considering he walked off with my wife, we did fine.”

“You remember where you were?”

He smiled, shaking his head. “The night he took a dive? I already went through that. The cops were here yesterday.”

“What’d you tell them?”

“Same thing I’m telling you. I was working that Friday, the night of the twelfth. I had a gig driving cabs-it’s on the company books. Leila was here with her friend Paulie, watching videos. Crystal picked her up Sunday morning as usual. You can ask her yourself if you don’t believe me.”

I watched him for a moment. “What happened to the earring?”

“Took it out for an interview I had a few months back. Didn’t want the guy to think I was a fruit.”

“You get the job?”

“No.”

“Is that why you’re going back to Vegas, to change your luck?”

“Here’s my theory. Things get bad? Think about the last place you were happy and go there.”

In a fit of guilt, I devoted all of Friday to other clients. Nothing exciting went down, but at least it paid the bills.

The memorial service for Dr. Dowan Purcell took place at 2:00 Saturday afternoon in the Presbyterian Chapel on West Glen Road in Montebello. I donned my black all-purpose dress and black flats and presented myself at 1:45. The sanctuary was narrow, with high stone walls, a beamed ceiling, and fifty pews divided into two sections of twenty-five. Outside, the day was damp and gray and the six stained-glass windows, done in tints of deep scarlet and indigo, reduced most of the available light to a somber gloom. I don’t know much about the Presbyterian faith, but the atmosphere alone was enough to put me off predestination.

Despite the fact the mourners were assembled by invitation only, the crowd was sizeable and filled the chapel to capacity. Crystal’s friends sat on one side, Fiona’s on the other. For some, the decision seemed easy. Dana and Joel, for instance, took their seats without hesitation, studiously avoiding Dow’s second wife out of loyalty to his first. Those I judged to be mutual acquaintances seemed torn, consulting one another surreptitiously before they slid into a pew. While the stragglers were being seated, an unseen organist worked her (or his) way through a selection of dolorous tunes, the funereal equivalent of Top Forty Dirges. I used the time to contemplate the brevity of life, wondering if Richard Hevener intended to shorten mine. Mariah, when she’d called back, didn’t seem that alarmed. Her theory was the Hevener boys would never risk another murder so soon after the first. This was not a comfort.

Crystal had arranged things in haste and it felt about like that. I guess organizing a funeral is like planning any other social event. Some people have a flair for it, some people don’t. What made this one odd was the absence of a casket, a crematory urn, or even floral sprays. The announcement in the paper had suggested that, in lieu of flowers, a charitable donation should be made in Dr. Purcell’s name. There wasn’t even a photograph of him.

In the matter of seating, I’d suffered a bit of conflict. Crystal had asked me to attend, but since I was still technically in Fiona’s employ, I felt fiscally obliged to sit on her side of the church. I’d settled on the aisle in the last pew, affording myself a panoramic view. Fiona’s older daughter, Melanie, had flown in from San Francisco and she walked her mother down the aisle as solemnly as a father giving away his daughter in marriage. Fiona was dressed, not surprisingly, in black; a two-piece wool suit with big rhinestone buttons on the jacket and the skirt cut midcalf. Her curls had been subdued under a black velvet cloche and she wore a veil suggestive of the Lone Ranger’s mask. I saw her press a tissue to her mouth, but she might have been blotting her lipstick instead of holding back tears. Mel’s hair, like her mother’s, was dark, though the style was quite severe; hennaed and blunt cut with dense, unforgiving bangs. She was taller and more substantial, in an austere charcoal pantsuit and black ankle boots.

Blanche followed them down the aisle in a voluminous maternity tent. She moved slowly, both hands framing her belly as though holding it in place. She walked as carefully as someone whose soup is threatening to slop out of the bowl. Her husband, Andrew, accompanied her, his pace slowed to hers. She’d left the children at home, which was a mercy on us all.

Mrs. Stegler, from Pacific Meadows, sat just in front of me; brown suit, brown oxfords, and her mop of red curls. There were also numerous doctor types in dark suits and several elderly people I took to be Dr. Purcell’s former geriatric patients.

On the other side of the aisle, Crystal and Leila were ushered to their seats in the first pew on the left. Crystal wore a simple black sheath, her tumble of blond hair giving her a look of elegant dishevel-ment. She looked tired, her face pinched, dark circles under her eyes. Leila had forsworn the outlandish in favor of the strange: a black latex tube top matched with a black sequined skirt. Her short white-blond hair stood out from her head as though charged with static electricity. Jacob Trigg, in a coat and tie, swung into the church on his forearm crutches. He eased into a seat on Fiona’s side, near the rear. Anica Blackburn appeared and smiled at me briefly before she took her seat in the pew across from mine. There was the usual rustle and murmuring, an occasional cough. I checked my program, wondering how Crystal managed to get it printed up so fast. Altogether, we were looking at a scattering of hymns, a doxology, two prayers, a soloist singing Ave Maria, followed by the eulogy, and two more hymns.

A latecomer arrived, a woman with medium-blond hair whom I recognized belatedly as Pepper Gray, my favorite nurse. I watched her shrug out of her coat and tiptoe halfway down the aisle, where she paused while a fellow rose to let her into the pew. She walked as if she was still wearing crepe-sole shoes.

The minister appeared in a robe like a judge, accompanied by his spiritual bailiff, who intoned the corollary of a courtroom “All rise.” We stood and sang. We sat and prayed. While all heads were bowed, I occupied my thoughts by reflecting on the state of my pantyhose and my unruly soul. I don’t know why pantyhose can’t be designed to stay in place. As for the state of my soul, my early religious training would have to be considered spotty at best, consisting as it did of sequential expulsions from a variety of church Sunday schools. My aunt Gin had never married and had no offspring of her own. After I was so rudely thrust into her care by the death of my parents, she fell headlong into parenting without any experience, making up the rules as she went along. From the outset, she labored under the misguided notion that children should be told the truth, so I was regaled with lengthy and unvarnished replies to the simplest of questions, the one about the origin of babies being my earliest.

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