Sue Grafton – “M” Is for Malice

“You can pull up right here,” he said. “You want to come in and see the place? If you’re paid by the hour, you might as well have the full tour. I’m sure Donnie can afford it.”

I hesitated slightly. “All right.”

He cocked his head. “You don’t have to worry. I won’t try to convert you.”

I parked and the two of us got out. He didn’t issue a proclamation, but I could tell from his manner that he was proud of the place. He took out a ring of keys and let us in.

The church was small, a frame building, little more than one room. There was something about its plain appearance that spoke of goodness. The stained glass windows were not elaborate. Each was divided into six simple panels of pale gold with a scripture written across the bottom. There was an unadorned wood pulpit at the front, positioned to the left of a raised and carpeted platform. On the right, there was an organ and three rows of folding chairs for the choir. Last Sunday’s flowers consisted of a spray of white gladioli. “Place was destroyed by fire about ten years back. Congregation rebuilt everything from the ground right on up.”

I said, “How’d you get on track? That must have been hard.”

He sat down in one of the front pews and I could see him look around, perhaps seeing the place as I saw it. “I give credit to the Lord, though Pete always says I did the work myself,” he said. “I grew up without much guidance, without values of any kind. I’m not blaming anybody. That’s just how it was. My parents were good people. They didn’t drink or beat me or anything like that, but they never talked about God or faith or their religious beliefs, assuming they had any, which I don’t guess they did. My brothers and I. . . even when we were little kids . . . never went to Sunday school or church.”

“My parents disliked ‘organized religion.’ I don’t know what that phrase meant to them or what their perception was, but they took pride in making sure none of us were ever exposed to it. Like a disease of some kind. I remember they had a book by this guy named Philip Wylie. Generation o f Vipers. He equated the church teachings with intellectual corruption, the stunting of young minds.”

“Some people feel that way,” I said.

“Yeah, I know. I don’t get it, but it’s something I run into out there in the world. It’s like people think just because you go to church you’re not all that bright. I mean, just because I’m born-again doesn’t mean I lost IQ points.”

“I’m sure you didn’t.”

“Thing is, I was raised without a moral compass. I couldn’t get a sense of what the rules were so I just kept pushing. I kept crossing the line, waiting for somebody to tell me where the boundaries were.”

“But you were getting into trouble with the law from what I heard. You must have known the rules because every time you broke one, you ended up in court. Donovan says you spent more time in juvenile Hall than you did at home.”

His smile was sheepish. “That’s true, but here’s what’s weird. I didn’t mind Juvie all that much. At least I could be with kids as screwed up as I was. Man, I was out of control. I ran wild. I was a maniac, freaked out about everything. It’s hard to think about that now. I have trouble relating to myself and who I was back then. I know what happened. I mean, I know what I did, but I can’t imagine doing it. I wanted to feel good. I’ve thought about this a lot and that’s the best explanation I’ve been able to come up with. I felt bad and I wanted to feel better. Seemed to, me dope was the quickest way to get there. I haven’t touched drugs or hard liquor for more than fifteen years. I might have a beer now and then, but I don’t smoke, don’t play cards, don’t ballroom dance. Don’t take the Lord’s name in vain and don’t cuss . . . all that much. Stub my toe and I can turn the air blue, but most of the time, I avoid swear words.”

“Well, that’s good.”

“For me, it is. Back then, I was always teetering on the brink. I think I was hoping my parents would finally draw the line and mean it. That they’d say, ‘Here, this is it. You’ve finally gone and done it this time.’ But you know what? My dad was too soft. He waffled on everything. Even when he kicked my ass from here to next Tuesday, even when he threw me out of the house, he was saying, ‘Give this some thought, son. You can come back when you’ve figured it out.’ But like what? Figured what out? I didn’t have a clue. I was rudderless. I was like a boat going full throttle but without any real direction, roaring around in big circles. Know what I mean?”

“Sure I do. In high school, I was a screw-up myself. I ended up as a cop before I did this.”

He smiled. “No kidding? You drank and smoked dope?”

“Among other things,” I said, modestly.

“Come on. Like what?”

“I don’t know. Kids in my class were all clean-cut, but not me. I was a wild thing. I ditched school. I hung out with some low-life dudes and I liked that. I liked them,” I said. “I was the odd one out and so were they, I guess.”

“Where’d you go to high school?”

“Santa Teresa High.”

He laughed. “You were a low-waller?”

“Absolutely,” I said. Low-wallers were the kids who quite literally perched on a low wall that ran along the back of the school property. Much smoking of cigarettes, funky clothes, and peroxided hair.

Guy laughed. “Well, that’s great.”

“I don’t know how great it was, but it’s what I did.”

“How’d you get on track?”

“Who says I am?”

He got to his feet as if he’d come to a decision.

“Come on out to the parsonage and meet Peter and Winnie,” he said. “They’ll be in the kitchen at this hour setting up supper for the Thursday night Bible study.”

I followed him up the center aisle and through a door at the rear. I could feel the first stirrings of resistance. I didn’t want anyone pushing me to convert. Too much virtue is just as worrisome as wickedness in my book.

SIX

The parsonage was situated on the property adjacent to the church and consisted of a rambling white frame farmhouse, two stories tall, with green shutters and a shabby green shingled roof broken up with dormers. Across one end was a wide screened-in porch distinctly tilted, as though an earthquake had pulled the concrete foundation loose. Behind the house, I could see a big red barn with a dilapidated one-car garage attached. Both the house and the barn were in need of afresh coat of paint, and I noticed sunlight slanting through the barn roof where it was pierced with holes. Metal lawn chairs were arranged in a semicircle in the yard under a massive live oak tree. A weathered picnic table flanked with benches was set up close by where I pictured Sunday school classes and church suppers during the summer months.

I followed Guy across the yard. We went up the back steps and into the kitchen. The air was scented with sautéed onions and celery. Peter was a man in his sixties, balding, with a wreath of white hair that grew down into sideburns and wrapped around his jaw in a closely trimmed beard linked to a matching mustache. Pale sunlight coming through the window illuminated a feathery white fuzz across his pate. He wore a red turtleneck with a ribbed green sweater over it. He was just in the process of rolling out biscuit dough. The baking sheets to his right were lined with rows of perfect disks of dough ready for the oven. He looked up with pleasure as the two of us came in. “Oh, Guy. Good, it’s you. I was just wondering if you were here yet. The furnace over at the church has been acting up again. First it clicks on, then it clicks off. On then off.”

“Probably the electronic ignition. I’ll take a look.” Guy’s posture was self-conscious. He rubbed his nose and then stuck his hands in his overall pockets as if to warm them. “This is Kinsey Millhone. She’s a private detective from Santa Teresa.” He turned and looked at me, tilting his head at the minister and his wife as he made the introductions. “This is Peter Antle and his wife, Winnie.”

Peter’s complexion was ruddy. His blue eyes smiled out at me from under ragged white brows. “Nice to meet you. I’d offer to shake hands, but I don’t think you’d like it. How are you at homemade biscuits? Can I put you to work?”

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