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Authors: Sue Grafton

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I traced Jean Timberlake's picture back, volume by volume, like the aging process in reverse. During her high school years, while the rest of California's youth were protesting the war, smoking dope, and heading for the Haight, the girls at Central Coast were teasing their hair into glossy towers, putting black lines around their eyes and white gloss on their lips. The junior girls wore white blouses and bouffant hair, which curved out in a heavily sprayed flip at the sides. The guys had damp-looking crewcuts and braces on their teeth. They couldn't have guessed how soon they'd be sporting sideburns, beards, bell-bottoms, and psychedelic shirts.

Jean never looked like she had anything in common with the rest. In the few group pictures where I spotted her, she never grinned and she had none of the bouncy-looking innocence of the Debbies and the Tammies. Jean's eyes were hooded, her gaze remote, and the faint smile that played on her mouth suggested a private amusement still evident after all these years. The blurb in the senior index listed no committees or clubs. She hadn't been burdened with scholastic honors or elective offices, and she hadn't bothered to participate in any extracurricular activities. I leafed through
candid shots taken at various school functions, but I never did catch sight of her. If she went to football or basketball games, she must have hovered somewhere beyond the range of the school photographer. She wasn't in the senior play. All the prom pictures focused on the queen, Barbie Knox, and her entourage of beehived, white-lipped princesses. Jean Timberlake was dead by then. I jotted down the names of her more conspicuous classmates, all guys. I figured if the girls were still living in the area, they'd be listed in the phone book under married names, which I'd have to get somewhere else.

The principal at that time was a man named Dwight Shales, whose picture appeared in an oval on one of the early pages of the annual. The school superintendent and his two assistant superintendents were each pictured separately, seated at their desks, holding official-looking papers. Sometimes a member of the office staff, female, peered over some man's shoulder with interest, smiling perkily. The teachers had been photographed against a varied background of maps, industrial arts equipment, textbooks, and blackboards on which phrases had been writ large in chalk. I noted some of their names and specialties, thinking I might want to return at a later date to talk to one or two. A young Ann Fowler was one of four guidance counselors photographed on a separate page with a paragraph underneath. “These counselors gave extra time, thought, and encouragement to us as they helped us plan our program for the next year wisely or advised us
when we had decisions to make regarding our future plans for jobs or college.” I thought Ann looked prettier then, not as tired or as soured.

I tucked my notes away and returned the books to the shelves. I headed down the hallway, passing the nurse's office and the attendance office. The administrative offices were located near the main entrance. According to the name plate on the wall beside the door, Shales was still the school principal. I asked his secretary if I could see him, and after a brief wait, I was ushered into his office. I could see my business card sitting in the center of the blotter on his desk.

He was a man in his mid-fifties, medium height, trim, with a square face. The color of his hair had changed from blond to a premature white, and he'd grown it out from its original mid-sixties crewcut. His whole manner was authoritarian, his hazel eyes as watchful as a cop's. He had that same air of assessment, as if he were checking back through his mental files to come up with my rap sheet. I felt my cheeks warm, wondering if he could tell at a glance what a troublesome student I'd been in high school.

“Yes, ma'am,” he said. “What can I do for you?”

“I've been hired by Royce Fowler in Floral Beach to look into the death of a former student of yours named Jean Timberlake.” I'd expected him to remember her without further prompting, but he continued to look at me with studied neutrality. Surely he couldn't know about the dope I'd smoked back then.

“You do remember her,” I said.

“Of course. I was just trying to think if we'd held on to the records on her. I'm not sure where they'd be.”

“I've just had a conversation with Bailey's attorney. If you need some kind of release . . .”

He gestured carelessly. “That's not necessary. I know Jack Clemson and I know the family. I'd have to clear it with the school superintendent, but I can't see that it'd be any problem . . . if we can locate 'em. It's the simple question of what we've got. You're talking more than fifteen years ago.”

“Seventeen,” I said. “Do you have any personal recollections of the girl?”

“Let me get clearance on the matter first and then I'll get back to you. You're local?”

“Well, I'm from Santa Teresa, but I'm staying at the Ocean Street in Floral Beach. I can give you the number . . .”

“I've got the number. I'll call you as soon as I know anything. Might be a couple of days, but we'll see what we can do. I can't make any guarantees.”

“I understand that,” I said.

“Good. We'll help you if we can.” His handshake was brisk and firm.

At three-fifteen I headed north on Highway 1 to the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Department, part of a complex of buildings that includes the jail. The surrounding countryside is open, characterized by occasional towering outcroppings of rock. The hills look like soft humps of foam rubber, upholstered in variegated green velvet. Across the road from the Sheriff's
Department is the California Men's Colony, where Bailey had been incarcerated at the time of his escape. It amused me that in the promotional literature extolling the virtues of life in San Luis Obispo County, there's never any mention of the six thousand prisoners also in residence.

I parked in one of the visitors' slots in front of the jail. The building looked new, similar in design and construction materials to the newer portions of the high school where I'd just been. I went into the lobby, signs directing me to the booking and inmate information section down a short corridor to the right. I identified myself to the uniformed deputy in the glass-enclosed office, where I could see the dispatcher, the booking officer, and the computer terminals. To the left, I caught a glimpse of the covered garage where prisoners could be brought in by sheriffs' vehicles.

While arrangements were being made to bring Bailey out, I was directed to one of the small, glass-enclosed booths reserved for attorney-client conferences. A sign on the wall spelled out the rules for visitors, admonishing us that there could only be one registered visitor per inmate at any one time. We were to keep control of children, and any rude or boisterous conduct toward the staff was not going to be tolerated. The restrictions suggested past scenes of chaos and merriment I was already wishing I'd been privy to.

I could hear the muffled clanking of doors. Bailey Fowler appeared, his attention focused on the deputy who was unlocking the booth where he would sit while
we spoke. We were separated by glass, and our conversation would be conducted by way of two telephone handsets, one on his side, one on mine. He glanced at me incuriously and then sat down. His demeanor was submissive and I found myself feeling embarrassed in his behalf. He wore a loosely structured orange cotton shirt over dark gray cotton pants. The newspaper photograph had shown him in a suit and tie. He seemed as bewildered by the clothing as he was by his sudden status as an inmate. He was remarkably good-looking: grave blue eyes, high cheekbones, full mouth, dark blond hair already in need of a cut. He was a tired forty, and I suspected circumstances had aged him overnight. He shifted in the straight-backed wooden chair, clasping his hands loosely between his knees, his expression empty of emotion.

I picked up the phone, waiting briefly while he picked up the receiver on his side. I said, “I'm Kinsey Millhone.”

“Do I know you?”

Our voices sounded odd, both too tinny and too near.

“I'm the private investigator your father hired. I just spent some time with your attorney. Have you talked to him yet?”

“Couple of times on the phone. He's supposed to stop by this afternoon.” His voice was as lifeless as his gaze.

“Is it all right if I call you Bailey?”

“Yeah, sure.”

“Look, I know this whole thing's a bummer, but Clemson's good. He'll do everything possible to get you out of here.”

Bailey's expression clouded over. “He better do something quick.”

“You have family in L.A.? Wife and kids?”

“Why?”

“I thought there might be someone you wanted me to get in touch with.”

“I don't have family. Just get me the hell out of here.”

“Hey, come on. I know it's tough.”

He looked up and off to one side, anger glinting in his eyes before the brief show of feeling subsided into bleakness again. “Sorry.”

“Talk to me. We may not have long.”

“About what?”

“Anything. When'd you get up here? How was the ride?”

“Fine.”

“How's the town look? Has it changed much?”

“I can't make small talk. Don't ask me to do that.”

“You can't shut down on me. We have too much work to do.”

He was silent for a moment and I could see him struggle with the effort to be communicative. “For years, I wouldn't even drive through this part of the state for fear I'd get stopped.” Transmission faltered and came to a halt. The look he gave me was haunted, as if he longed to speak, but had lost the capacity. It
felt as if we were separated by more than a sheet of glass.

I said, “You're not dead, you know.”

“Says you.”

“You must have known it would happen one day.”

He tilted his head, doing a neck roll to work the tension out. “They picked me up the first time, I thought it was all over. Just my luck there's a Peter Lambert out there wanted on a murder one. When they let me go, I thought maybe I had a chance.”

“I'm surprised you didn't take off.”

“I wish now I had, but I'd been free so long. I couldn't believe they'd get me. I couldn't believe anybody cared. Besides, I had a job and I couldn't just chuck it all and hit the road.”

“You're some kind of clothing rep, aren't you? The L.A. papers mentioned that.”

“I worked for Needham. One of their top salesmen last year, which is how I got promoted. Western regional manager. I guess I should have turned it down, but I worked hard and I got tired of saying no. It meant a move to Los Angeles, but I didn't see how I could get tripped up after all this time.”

“How long have you been with the company?”

“Twelve years.”

“What's their attitude? Can you count on them for any help?”

“They've been great. Real supportive. My boss said he'd come up here and testify . . . be a character witness and stuff like that, but what's the point? I feel like
such a jerk. I've been straight all these years. Your proverbial model citizen. I never even got a parking ticket. Paid taxes, went to church.”

“But that's good. That'll work in your favor. It's bound to make a difference.”

“But it doesn't change the facts. You don't walk away from jail and get a slap on the wrist.”

“Why don't you let Clemson worry about that?”

“I guess I'll have to,” he said. “What are you supposed to do?”

“Find out who really killed her so we can get you off the hook.”

“Fat chance.”

“It's worth a shot. You got any ideas about who it might have been?”

“No.”

“Tell me about Jean.”

“She was a nice kid. Wild, but not bad. Mixed up.”

“But pregnant.”

“Yeah, well, the baby wasn't mine.”

“You're sure of that.” I framed it as a statement, but the question mark was there.

Bailey hung his head for a moment, color rising in his face. “I did a lot of booze back then. Drugs. My performance was off, especially after I got out of Chino. Not that it mattered. She was with some other guy by then.”

“You were impotent?”

“Let's say, ‘temporarily out of order.' ”

“You do any drugs now?”

“No, and I haven't had a drink in fifteen years. Alcohol makes your tongue loose. I couldn't take the chance.”

“Who was she involved with? Any indication at all?”

He shook his head again. “The guy was married.”

“How do you know?”

“She told me that much.”

“And you believed her?”

“I can't think why she would have lied. He was somebody respectable and she was underage.”

“So this was somebody with a lot to lose if the truth came out.”

“That'd be my guess. I mean, she sure didn't want to have to tell him she was knocked up. She was scared.”

“She could have had an abortion.”

“I guess . . . if it came to that. She only found out about the baby that day.”

“Who was her doctor?”

“She didn't have one yet for that. Dr. Dunne was the family physician, but she had the pregnancy test at some clinic down in Lompoc so nobody'd know who she was.”

“Seems pretty paranoid. Was she that well known?”

“She was in Floral Beach.”

“What about Tap? Could the kid have been his?”

“Nope. She thought he was a jerk and he didn't like her much either. Besides, he wasn't married and it was nothing to him even if the kid had been his.”

“What else? You must have given this a lot of thought.”

“I don't know. She was illegitimate and she'd been trying to find out who her old man was. Her mom refused to tell her, but money came in the mail every month, so Jean figured he had to be around someplace.”

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