Sue Grafton – “P” is for Peril

“Everything else was still there?”

“Of course it was. Now would you shut the fuck up?”

“Maybe someone saw you with the stuff and followed you back. If they saw where the safe was hidden, they could have waited until you left and ripped you off.”

“I said, shut your mouth!” He raised his left arm, torqued around in the seat, and bashed me in the face with a backhanded swing. The blow didn’t have much force, but it hurt like a son of a bitch. I felt tears burn my eyes. I put my hands across my nose, hoping he hadn’t broken it. Didn’t feel like that.

Tommy said, “Hey! Cut it out.”

“Who put you in charge?”

“Just leave her alone.”

“Why, because you’re fucking her?”

“He is not!” Who wants to be accused of screwing some guy you can barely tolerate? There was a moment of silence. Then, I said, “Anyway, how’d they get the safe open? Was it drilled?”

“You are just not going to shut up, are you?”

I thought the question was a good one, but I shut my mouth and leaned away from the front seat, out of range. The space where I was sitting was small and cramped, scratchy with cheap carpeting. I groped around, hoping for a weapon-a wrench or a screwdriver-but found nothing. I felt along the circumference of the well and my fingers closed over a ballpoint. I didn’t think it’d be effective, but then again, why not? I clutched the pen in my fist, wondering what would happen if I jammed it in Richard’s ear.

The drive to the house took seven minutes at top speed on the wet-slick roads that wound through Horton Ravine. I held on for dear life, the turns throwing me first this way and then that. As Tommy wheeled up the driveway, he picked up the remote control for the two double-wide garage doors and hit one of the buttons. The double door on the left began to roll open and a light came on. He pulled in, coasted to a stop, and set the hand brake. The adjacent bay was empty. Tommy’s red Porsche sat in the next bay over and on the other side of that was a second Porsche, a shiny black one, presumably Richard’s.

Richard opened the door and got out. He left the truck door ajar. I could see the two big garbage cans just outside the kitchen door where they tossed their trash. Above them, I could see a line of buttons on the wall. I thought he meant to hit one so the garage door would grind shut, but he peered into the truck bed. He opened the toolbox and fumbled among the contents. I measured the distance, but I wasn’t going to have time enough to lean forward, pull the door shut, and lock it before he got to me. I turned to Tommy. “You were at my house last night. I saw someone in the office when I stopped off on my way home. You couldn’t have stolen anything and then showed up at my place so soon afterward.”

He turned to look at me. “What?”

“If it wasn’t you, it was him. Who else knew the combination? Just the two of you, right?”

Richard came back with a coil of rope. “Nobody asked you. Now get out.”

“Tommy, think about it. Please.”

Tommy sat there for a moment. He got out of the truck and moved around the front to the passenger side. “Richard, what are we doing? This is dumb. We should have left her where she was. She doesn’t know anything.”

Richard scarcely looked at him. “Back off. I’ll take care of it.”

“Who put you in charge? What the hell is that for?”

“I’m going to tie her up and kick the shit out of her until she tells us where she hid the stuff.”

“You’re not thinking straight.”

“Who asked you?” Richard said. “I told you not to fuck with her. This is all your fault.”

“Oh, really. Now it’s my fault,” Tommy said. His annoyance had passed and there was something new in his face. He put his hand in his coat pocket; I knew he’d put the gun in one pocket, but I couldn’t remember which. “You know, she’s got a point. I know where I was last night and I can prove it because of her. How do I know you didn’t clean out the safe yourself?”

Richard snorted. “Why would I do that? I don’t have anyone to lay it off on, if you’ll remember.”

“You say that now. You could have taken everything to L.A. when you went on Friday. You could have sold it all and kept the money, then come back here and made it look like a burglary. There’s only your word you put it back where it was. I never saw the jewelry after you came back.”

“That’s bullshit.”

“I’ll give you bullshit. The safe wasn’t drilled. Somebody had the fuckin’ combination. There are only two of us who knew. I know it wasn’t me, so that leaves you.”

“Stick it up your ass,” Richard said. He put his hand on the seat back so he could reach for me. I leaned forward and swung the pen in an arc and brought it down hard on the back of his hand. Richard bellowed with rage. He tried to grab me, but I scooted back to the driver’s side of the truck. Enraged, he flipped the seat forward, prepared to haul me out. I braced myself and kicked twice at his hand. I caught him smartly with the heel of my Saucony, jamming three of his fingers.

“Fuck!” He pulled his hand back, flashing a furious look at Tommy. “Jesus, Tommy. Help me out here.”

“Answer my question.”

“Don’t be an idiot. I didn’t take anything. Now let’s get her out of here.”

“You and I were the only ones who knew. Fuck this burglar shit. There wasn’t any burglar.”

Richard slammed the passenger side door. “All right, you shit. I’m telling you the truth. I didn’t do it. You get that? I wouldn’t do that to you, but you’d do that to me because you’ve done it before. So how do I know it wasn’t you?”

“I didn’t open the safe. You did that, Richard. You made a point of going down to L.A. alone. The jewelry’s gone now, you-”

Richard flew forward and grabbed Tommy by the front of his coat. He pulled him forward and then shoved. Tommy stumbled but regained his footing and came back at him. I saw Richard’s fist fly out, catching Tommy in the mouth. He went down, tumbling backward into the two plastic garbage cans that shot apart like bowling pins. I leaned down and reached around the side of the seat, fumbling for the lever that would release the seat back. I felt the lock give way. I opened the door on the driver’s side. I slithered through the gap, crouched, and came up along the fender still in a crouch. I could hear the chilling sound of flesh on flesh, a grunt as someone took the brunt of a blow. I lifted my head. Tommy was dragging himself to his feet, trying to free the Davis from his raincoat pocket. His legs seemed to weaken under him and he went down. There was blood streaming from his nose. He moaned, looking up at his brother in a daze. Richard kicked him. He bent down and took the gun from Tommy’s rubbery grip. He stepped back and leveled the Davis at his brother. Almost lazily, Tommy put a hand up and said, “Oh, Richie, don’t.”

Richard fired. The bullet tore into Tommy’s chest, though the blood was slow to come.

Richard looked blankly at his brother’s body and nudged him with his foot. “Serves you right, you little shit. Don’t accuse me.”

He tossed the gun aside. I heard it clatter across the garage floor and skitter under the truck. He hit the button that activated the other garage door. His manner was matter-of-fact as he moved around the red Porsche to the black one and got in. He started the car and put it in reverse. Engine whining, he backed out of the garage and down the drive.

I scrambled around the front of the truck on my hands and knees. I crawled over to Tommy to check his pulse, but he was dead. I spotted the gun. I was just about to pick it up when I caught myself. My hand veered off abruptly like an airplane pilot aborting a landing. No way would I mar the fingerprints that Richard’d left on the gun. I got up and went through the back door, turning the deadbolt behind me as I headed for the phone. I was feeling cold with dread, worried Richard would turn around and come back for me.

I dialed 911 and told the dispatcher about the shooting. I explained who the shooter was, gave her his name, a description of his Porsche, and his license number, H-E-V-N-E-R-l. I recited the address in Horton Ravine, repeating everything twice. She told me to remain at the scene until the officers arrived. I said, “Sure,” and hung up. After that, I dialed Lonnie.

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