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Sue Grafton – “M” Is for Malice

“She wouldn’t tell me. She felt guilty she hadn’t said anything before now.”

“Myrna feels guilty about everything,” I said.

“I know,” Enid said. “But I think she was also worried about the consequences. She thought she’d be in danger if she opened her mouth. I told her to tell the police, in that case, but she was afraid to do that. She said she’d rather talk to you first and then she’d talk to them. It’s not like her to go off without a word.”

“You did check her room?”

“That’s the first thing I did. And that’s the other thing that bothers me. Something doesn’t seem right. Myrna’s very fussy. Everything has to be just so with her. I don’t mean to criticize, but it’s the truth.”

“Her room is messed up?”

“It’s not exactly messed up, but it doesn’t look right.”

“Who else is there? Is anybody home besides you?”

“Bennet was here, but I think he’s gone. He came in for lunch. I fixed him a sandwich and he took it up to his room. He must have left again while I was at the market. Christie and Donovan are due back any minute. I don’t mean to be a bother, but I don’t feel right about this.”

Dietz was giving me an inquisitive look. Having eavesdropped on my end of the conversation with her, he was suitably mystified. “Hang on a second.” I put a palm across the mouthpiece. “How long will you be here?”

“At least an hour,” he said. “If you’d ever get off the phone, I might get this call from the East Coast that I’ve been waiting for. What’s the problem?”

“It’s Myrna. I’ll tell you in a minute.” I went back to Enid. “Why don’t I come over there,” I said. “She might have mentioned something to Christie before they left for the funeral home. You’re sure she didn’t leave a note?”

“Positive.”

“I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.”

“I don’t want you to go to any trouble.”

“It’s no trouble.”

I took my sandwich and soda with me, driving with one hand while I finished my lunch. I kept the chilled soda can between my thighs. Shifting gears is a pain in the ass when you’re trying to dine in style. At least I knew the route. I could have done it with my eyes shut.

Enid had left the gate open for me. I pulled into the courtyard and left my car in a spot I was beginning to think should be reserved for me. Donovan’s pickup truck was parked to one side of the garage. At first, I thought he was back, but then I remembered that he’d been driving the BMW when he left. Both the open garages were still empty. The driveway angled up along the house on the left. For the first time, I noticed a separate parking pad nearby with spaces for three vehicles. Currently, I could see a bright yellow VW convertible and what looked like a Toyota, a pale metallic blue, maybe three or four years old.

Enid had the backdoor ajar and was standing in the opening. She’d taken off her apron to do the marketing and she now wore a jacket as though chilled by circumstance.

I moved into the utility room. “Still no sign of her?” I asked, following Enid through a door that opened into a rear hall.

“Not a peep,” she said. “I’m sorry to be a bother. I’m probably being silly.”

“Don’t worry about it. You’ve had a murder in the house. Everybody’s nerves are on edge. Is one of those cars out there hers?”

“The Toyota,” she said. She paused in front of a door at the end of the hall. “This is hers.”

“Have you tried knocking on her door since we talked?”

Enid shook her head. “I think I scared myself. I didn’t want to do anything until you arrived.”

“Geez, Enid. You’re scaring me,” I said. I knocked on the door, my head tilted against the panel, listening for sounds that might indicate Myrna was back. I was reluctant to barge right in. She might be napping or naked, just out of the shower. I didn’t want to catch her with her dentures out or her wooden leg unstrapped. I tapped again with one knuckle. “Myrna?”

Dead silence.

I tried the knob, which turned easily. I opened the door a crack and peered around the frame. The sitting room was empty. Across from me, the door to the bedroom was standing open and the room appeared to be empty. “Myrna, you in here? It’s Kinsey Millhone,” I said. I waited a moment and then crossed the room. In passing, I put my hand on the television set, but the housing was cold.

“I told you she wasn’t here,” Enid said.

I looked into the bedroom. I could see why Enid felt something was wrong. On the surface, both rooms seemed tidy and untouched, but there was something amiss. It was the little things, the minutiae. The bed was made, but the coverlet was not quite smooth. A picture on the wall was ever so slightly tilted.

“When was the last time you actually saw her?” I leaned down and peeked under the bed, feeling like an idiot. There was nothing under there except an old pair of bedroom slippers.

“Must have been noon.”

“Was Bennet here at that point?”

“I don’t remember. He was gone when I got back from the market. That’s all I know.”

In the sitting room, the shade on the floor lamp was askew and it was clear from the dents in the carpet the base had been moved from its usual place. Had there been a struggle of some kind? I looked in the closet. Enid followed me like a kid, about three steps back, possibly feeling the same eerie sense of intrusion that I felt.

“Can you tell if all her clothes are here? Anything missing? Shoes? Coat?”

Enid studied the rack. “I think everything’s here,” she said and then pointed. “That’s her suitcase and her garment bag.”

“What about her handbag?”

“It’s in the kitchen. I knew you’d ask so I opened it. Her wallet’s in there, driver’s license, cash, all that stuff.”

I moved into the bathroom. I heard a little pop under my shoe, followed by the kind of scratching sound that makes you think of broken glass on ceramic floor tile.

I looked down. There was a touch of dry soil, as from the bottom of a shoe, and two tiny pieces of gravel. “Be careful. I don’t want us to disturb that,” I said to Enid, who was crowding into the room on my heels.

“Was someone in here?”

“I don’t know yet. It could be.”

“It looks like someone tried to straighten up and didn’t do a very good job of it,” she said. “Myrna always left notes if she was going somewhere. She wouldn’t just walk out.”

“Don’t start babbling. I’m trying to concentrate.”

I checked the medicine cabinet. All the obvious toiletries were still sitting on the shelf: toothbrush, toothpaste, deodorant, odds and ends of makeup, prescription bottles. The shower curtain was bone-dry, but a dark blue washcloth had been draped over the rim of the basin and it had been recently used. I peered closely at the basin. There was a trace of water around the small brass ring fixture for the outflow valve. Unless my eyes were deceiving me, the water was ever so faintly pink. I lifted the washcloth and squeezed out some of the excess water. There was a splash of bright red against the white of the basin. “You better call 9-1-1. This is blood,” I said.

While Enid went off to call the police, I closed the door to Myrna’s apartment and I retraced my steps through the utility room to the backdoor. In the kitchen, I could hear Enid on the phone, sounding shaken and slightly shrill. Someone must have been waiting to catch Myrna alone. Outside, I crossed the small back patio and took a right at the driveway. Myrna’s car was locked, but I circled the exterior, peering in at the front seats and back seats. Both were empty. Nothing on the dashboard. I was curious if the trunk was locked, but I didn’t want to touch it. Let the cops do that. To the right, the driveway formed a dead end with space for three more cars. Beyond that, I saw a long line of drab pink stucco wall and a tangle of woods. Suppose she’d been killed in haste? What would you do with the body?

I headed back toward the garages. Donovan’s pickup was parked much closer to the front of the house than the back. There was something about the traces of gravel and dried soil that bothered me. I put a hand out. The hood of the pickup was warm. I walked around the truck, hands behind my back as I scrutinized the exterior. The bed liner was littered with gravel and dead leaves. I peered over the tailgate, looking closely at the liner. There was what looked like a dark smear on one edge. I left that alone. Whatever had happened, they couldn’t blame Jack this time.

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