I angled the light along the joists, tracing the beams to the hole where daylight spilled down. Had the floor burned through and the body tumbled into the basement? I moved closer, craning to see better. The edges of the hole looked cut to me. Maybe the fire inspector had taken samples of the boards for lab tests. To my left, I could see the furnace, a silent squat bulge of gray, with sooty ducting extending in all directions. The floor was hard-packed dirt and cracked concrete, the entire space filled with junk. Paint cans and old window screens were stacked up under the stairs and there was an ancient galvanized sink in the corner, the pipes corroded away.
I toured the perimeter, poking the light into spaces where eight-legged creatures skittered away from me, horrified. Later I was glad I’d been such a conscientious little bun, but at the time, I only wanted to get out of there as quickly as I could. An empty house always seems to make those noises that have you wondering it an ax murderer is creeping through the premises in search of prey. I shone the flashlight over to the far wall where the stairs jutted up a short distance to the bolted double doors leading out to the side yard. Daylight slanted through the cracks but the smell of fresh air didn’t sift down this far. I knew the double doors were padlocked on the outside, but the wood was old and crumbly and didn’t seem that secure. From what Lily Howe had said, the burglar hadn’t even bothered with breaking and entering. He’d marched right up to the front door and rung the bell. Had they struggled? Had he panicked when she opened the door and killed her instantly? The intruder might have been a woman, of course, especially if the weapon had actually been a baseball bat. Ever since Title IX, women have become more adept at the sportier side arms; death by discus, javelin, shot put, bow and arrow, hockey puck… the possibilities are endless, one would think.
I moved back toward the stairs shivering involuntarily with the darkness at my back. I took the steps two at a time, nearly knocking myself out when I banged into a crossbeam. I cursed soundly to myself, bursting out of the basement and into the hall again as though pursued. Something feathery caught my eye and when I realized it was a delicate centipede whiffling down my front, I did this erratic quick dance step, brushing my shirt like I’d suddenly burst into flames. God, the things I do for money, I thought savagely. I went out the back door, locking it behind me, and sat down on the porch steps. My breathing finally slowed, but it took me a few more minutes to regain my composure.
In the meantime, I had a chance to check the backyard. I don’t know what I was looking for or what I thought I might find after six months. There were only overgrown bushes and weeds, a little orange tree crippled by the lack of water and covered with hard fruit turning brown because it hadn’t been picked. The shed was one of those prefabricated metal jobs you can order through the Sears catalogue and put up anywhere. It was secured by a nice big fat padlock that looked sturdy enough. I cross the yard and inspected it. It was actually a simple warded lock I thought I could open in a few minutes, but I didn’t have my little double-headed pick key with me and I wasn’t crazy about the idea of standing out there fiddling with a padlock in broad daylight. Better I should come back when the sun went down and find out what
Grice or his nephew kept in there. Old lawn furniture was my guess, but one can never be sure.
I took the house key back to Mr. Snyder and then got in my car and headed over to the office. I let myself in and made a pot of coffee. The mail wasn’t in yet and there were no messages on my machine. I opened the French doors and stood out on the balcony. Where the fuck was Elaine Boldt? And where was Elaine Boldt’s pussycat? I was running out of things to do and places to look. I typed up a contract for Julia Ochsner to sign and stuck that in my out box. When the coffee was ready, I poured myself some and sat down in my swivel chair and swiveled. When in doubt, I thought, it’s best to fall back on routine.
I made a long-distance telephone call to a newspaper in Boca Raton, and another call to a paper in Sarasota, placing classified ads in the personals columns of each. “Anybody knowing the whereabouts of Elaine Boldt, female, Caucasian, age 43…” etc. “Please contact…” with my name, address, and phone number and an invitation to call collect.
That felt productive. What else? I swiveled some more and then put a call through to Mrs. Ochsner. She was on my mind anyway.
“Hello?” she said, picking up at long last. Her voice was tremulous, but held a note of anticipation, as though despite the fact she was eighty-eight, anyone might be calling and anything might come to pass. I hoped I’d always feel that way myself. At the moment, I wasn’t so optimistic.
“Hi, Julia. This is Kinsey out in California.”
“Just a minute, dear, and I’ll turn the television down. I’m watching my program.”
“You want me to call you back in a bit? I hate to interrupt.”
“No, no. I’d prefer talking to you. Hold on.”
Some moments passed and I heard the volume of the background noise reduced to silence. Julia was apparently creeping back to the phone as fast as she could. I waited. Finally she picked up the receiver again. “I kept the picture on,” she said, out of breath, “though it just looks like one big blur from across the room. How are you?”
“Frustrated at the moment,” I said. “I’m running out of things to do, but I wanted to ask you about Elaine’s cat. I don’t suppose you’ve seen Mingus in the last six months, have you?”
“Oh goodness, no. I hadn’t even thought about him. If she’s gone, he’d have to be missing too, I suppose.”
“Well, it looks that way. The building manager here says she left that night with what looked like a cat carrier, so if she actually got to Florida, I’m assuming she’d have had him with her.”
“I’d be willing to swear he never got here any more than she did, but I could check with vets and kennels in the area,” Julia said. “Maybe she boarded him out for some reason.”
“Could you do that? It would really save me some time. I don’t know that you’ll turn up anything, but at least we’ll know we tried. I’m going to see if I can trace the taxicab she took and find out if she had the cat with her when she went to the airport. Did Pat Usher ever mention him?”
“Not that I recall. She’s gone, you know. Moved out lock, stock, and barrel.”
“Oh, really? Well, I’m not surprised, but I would like to know where she is. Could you get her forwarding address from the Makowskis? I’ll call you back in a day or two, but don’t you dare call Pat yourself. I don’t want her to know you’re involved. I may need you to do some more snooping later and I don’t want your cover blown.” I added, “How are things with you otherwise?”
“Oh, I’m fine, Kinsey. You needn’t worry about me. I don’t suppose you’d consider a partnership after we wrap this one up.”
“I’ve had worse offers in my day,” I said.
Julia laughed. “I’m going to start reading Mickey Spillane just to get in shape. I don’t know a lot of rude words, you know.”
“I think I’ve got us covered on that score. I’ll talk to you later. Let me know if you come up with anything startling in the meantime. Oh-and I’m shipping you a contract for your signature. We might as well do this right.”
“Roger. Over and out,” she said and hung up.
I left my vintage VW in the parking lot behind the office and walked over to the Tip Top Cab Company on Delgado. The business office is located in a narrow strip of stores best noted for their liquidation sales: a constant round of discount shoes, car stereos, lunch counters, and motorcycle shops with an occasional beauty salon or a “fast-foto” establishment. It is not a desirable location. The one-way street runs the wrong way.
The parking lot is too small and apparently the owner of the building, while not exacting outrageous rents, is also content to let the premises languish under worn paint and tatty carpeting.