J is for Judgment (11 page)

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Authors: Sue Grafton

BOOK: J is for Judgment
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I placed my handbag on the floor and eased onto the seat adjacent to his. “I hope I’m not intruding.”

“That depends on what you want.” His smile was pleasant but fleeting and never really reached as far as his eyes.

“It looks like Wendell Jaffe is alive.”

His expression shifted into neutral and his body went still, animation suspended as if from a momentary power loss. For a split second it flashed on me that he might have been in touch with Wendell since his disappearance. He was apparently willing to take my word for it, which saved all the bullshit Dana’d put me through. He assimilated the information, sparing me additional expressions of shock or surprise. There was no hint of denial or disbelief. He seemed to shift into gear again. He reached in his jacket pocket smoothly and took out a pack of cigarettes, his way of stalling until he could figure out what I was up to. He shook several cigarettes into view and held the pack out for my selection.

I shook my head, refusing.

He put a cigarette between his lips. “Will it bother you if I smoke?”

“Not a bit. Go ahead.” Actually I abhor smoking, but I wanted some information and I didn’t think it was the time to voice my prejudice.

He struck a paper match and cupped his hands around the flame. He gave the match a shake and dropped it in the ashtray, easing the pack of matches back into his pocket again. I smelled sulfur and that first whiff of smoldering tobacco that to me smells like no other. Early mornings on the road, I catch the same scent drifting through the room vents in those hotels where the smokers aren’t properly segregated from the rest of us.

“Would you like a drink?” he asked. “I’m about to order another round myself.”

“I’d like that. Thanks.”

“What’ll it be?”

“Chardonnay would be fine.”

He held his hand up for the waiter, who moved over to the table and took the order. Eckert was having Scotch.

Once the waiter disappeared, his attention came back to me and he focused his gaze. “Who are you? A cop? Narc? IRS, what?”

“I’m a private detective, working for California Fidelity on the life insurance claim.”

“Dana just collected on it, didn’t she?”

“Two months ago.”

A group of guys in the bar burst into sudden harsh laughter, and it forced Eckert to lean forward to make himself heard. “How did all this business come to light?”

“A retired CF insurance agent spotted him in Mexico last week. I was hired to fly down the next day to verify the report.”

“And you actually verified that it was Wendell?”

“More or less,” I said. “I never met Mr. Jaffe, so it’d be hard for me to swear it was him.”

“But you did see him,” he said.

“Or someone damn close. He’s had surgery, of course. It’s probably the first thing he did.”

Carl stared at me blankly and then shook his head. A brief smile appeared. “I assume you’ve told Dana?”

“I just talked to her. She wasn’t thrilled.”

“I should think not.” He seemed to search my face. “What’s your name again?”

I took out a business card and passed it across the table. “You knew his kid was in trouble?” I asked.

Behind us, there was another burst of laughter, this one louder than the last. The guys were apparently having another tedious bawdy joke fest.

He glanced at my name on the card and tucked it in his shirt pocket. “I read about Brian in the paper,” he said. “This is curious.”

“What is?”

“The notion of Wendell. I was just thinking about him. Since his body never surfaced, I guess I always had my doubts about his death. I never said much. I figured people would think I was unwilling to face the facts. ‘In denial,’ they call it. Where’s he been all this time?”

“I didn’t have a chance to ask.”

“Is he still down there?”

“He checked out of the hotel in the dead of night and that’s the last I’ve seen of him. He may be on his way back.”

“Because of Brian,” he said, instantly making the connection.

“That’s my guess. At any rate, it’s the only lead we have. Not really a lead, but at least a place to start.”

“Why tell me?”

“In case he tries to make contact.”

The waiter returned with our drinks and Carl looked up. “Thanks, Jimmy. Put this on my tab, if you would.” He took the bill, tacked on a tip, and scrawled his name across the bottom before he handed it back.

The waiter murmured, “Thank you, Mr. Eckert. Will there be anything else?”

“We’re fine.”

“You have a good night.”

Carl nodded absentmindedly, regarding me with speculation.

I reached in my handbag and pulled a copy from the sheaf of composites Valbusa had done. “I have a picture if you want to see it.” I laid it on the table in front of him.

Carl stuck his cigarette in the corner of his mouth, squinting slightly from the smoke as he studied Wendell’s face. He shook his head, his smile bitter. “What a fuck.”

“I thought you might be glad to hear he was alive,” I said.

“Hey, I went to jail because of him. Lot of people wanted a piece of my hide. When money goes down the toilet, someone has to take the blame. I didn’t mind paying my debt, but I sure as hell hated paying his.”

“Must have been hard.”

“You have no idea. Once I filed bankruptcy, all the loans went into default. It was a mess. I don’t want to get into that.”

“If Wendell gets in touch, will you let me know?”

“Probably,” he said. “I don’t want to talk to him, that’s for sure. He was a good friend. At least I thought he was.”

There was another burst of laughter. He shifted restlessly and pushed his drink aside. “Let’s go down to the boat. It’s too fuckin’ loud in here.”

Without waiting for an answer, he got up and left the table. Startled, I grabbed my handbag and scurried after him.

The noise level dropped dramatically the minute we stepped outside. The air was cold and fresh. The wind had picked up, and the waves crashed against the seawall in a series of blasting sprays. Boom! A feathery plume, like a stalk of pampas grass, would dance along the breakwater and go down again, throwing off a splat of water that landed on the walk as if it were being thrown by the bucket.

When we reached the locked gate leading into Marina 1, he took out his card key and let us through. In a curiously gallant gesture, Carl put his hand on my elbow and guided me down the slippery wooden ramp. I could hear creaking sounds as the boats shifted in the harbor waters, bobbing and swaying with an occasional tinkling of metal on metal. Our footsteps formed an irregular rhythm as we clunked along the walkway.

The four marinas provide slips for about eleven hundred boats, protected from the open waters in an eighty-four-acre area. The wharf on one side is like the crook of a thumb with the breakwater curling toward it in a nearly completed circle in which the boats are nestled. In addition to visitors occupying temporary slips, there are usually a small number of permanent “live-aboards,” using their boats as their primary residence. Key-secured restrooms provide toilets and showers, with a holding tank pump-out station located on the south side of the fuel dock. At the “J” dock we took a left, proceeding another thirty yards to the boat.

The
Captain Stanley Lord
was a thirty-five-foot Fuji ketch, derived from a John Alden-designed sailing vessel with the mainmast toward the bow. The exterior
was painted an intense dark green with the trim in navy blue. Carl pulled himself up on the narrow deck and then extended a hand, pulling me up after him. In the dark I could make out the mainsheet and the mizzen-mast, but not much else. He unlocked the door and slid the hatch forward. “Watch your head,” he said as he moved down into the galley. “You know anything about boats?”

“Not much,” I said. I eased carefully down four steep carpeted stairs into the galley behind him.

“This one has three headsails: a one fifty Genoa, a one ten working jib, and a storm jib, then the mainsail, of course, and the mizzen.”

“Why is it called the
Captain Stanley Lord?
Who’s he?”

“It’s nautical lore. Wendell’s sense of humor, such as it was. Stanley Lord was captain of the
Californian
, allegedly the only boat close enough to the
Titanic
to have helped with the rescue. Lord claimed he never picked up the distress signal, but a later investigation suggested he ignored the SOS. He was blamed for the extent of the disaster, and the scandal ruined his career. Wendell used the same name for the company: CSL Investments. I never did get it, but he thought it was amusing.”

The interior had the cozy, unreal feeling of a doll’s house, the kind of space I love best, compact and efficient, every square inch put to use. There was a diesel stove on my left, and on my right an assortment of seagoing equipment: radio, compass, a fire extinguisher, monitors for wind velocity and the electrical systems, the heater, main switch, and the engine start battery. I
was picking up the faint smell of varnish, and I could see that one of the berth cushions still had a sales tag attached. All the upholstery was done in dark green canvas with the seams piped in white.

“Nice,” I said.

He flushed with pleasure. “You like it?”

“It looks great,” I said. I moved over to one of the berths and dropped my handbag, sitting down. I stretched my arm out along the cushion. “Comfortable,” I remarked. “How long have you had it?”

“About a year,” he said. “The IRS seized it shortly after Wendell disappeared. I was a guest of the feds for about eighteen months. After that, I was broke. Once I got a little money ahead, I had to track down the guy who’d bought it from the government. I went through an incredible rigmarole before he’d agree to sell. Not that he had much use for it. It was a mess when he finally turned it over to me. I don’t know why people have to be such butts.” He peeled off his suit coat and loosened his tie so he could ease the button on his shirt collar. “You want another white wine? I have some chilled.”

“Half a glass,” I said. He chatted about sailing for a while and then I brought the subject back to Wendell. “Where’d they find the boat?”

He opened a miniature refrigerator and took out a bottle of Chardonnay. “Off the Baja coast. There are huge shifting sand bars about six miles out. It looked like the boat had run aground and drifted loose again with the tide.” He stripped the foil off the neck of the wine bottle, took an opener, and angered out the cork.

“He didn’t have a crew?”

“He preferred to single-hand. I watched him sail that day. Orange sky, orange water with a slow, heaving swell. Had this weird feeling to it. Like the
Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
You study that in high school?”

I shook my head. “In high school, most of what I studied was cussin’ and smokin’ dope.”

He smiled. “When you leave the Channel Islands, you sail out through a gap in the oil rigs. He turned and waved as he cast off. I watched until he left the harbor, and that’s the last I ever saw of him.” His tone was hypnotic, mild envy mixed with mild regret. He poured the wine in a stemmed glass and passed it over to me.

“Did you know what he was doing?”

“What
was
he doing? I guess I’m still not sure.”

I said, “Apparently, he was skipping.”

Eckert shrugged. “I knew he was feeling desperate. I didn’t think he meant to pull a fast one. At the time—especially when his last note to Dana came to light—I tried to accept the idea of his suicide. It didn’t seem in character, but everybody else was convinced, so who was I to argue?” He poured half a glass of wine for himself, set the bottle aside, and sat down on the banquette across from mine.

“Not everybody,” I corrected. “The police didn’t like it much, and neither did CF.”

“Will this make you a hero?”

“Only if we get the money back.”

“Doesn’t seem very likely. Dana’s probably got it all spent.”

I didn’t want to think about that. “How’d you feel about Wendell’s ‘death’ at the time?”

“Terrible, of course. Actually, I missed him, even with the flak I took. Strange thing is, he told me some of it. I didn’t believe him, but he tried to let me know.”

“He told you he was leaving?”

“Well, he hinted as much. I mean, he never spelled it out. It was one of those statements you can interpret any way you want. He came to me, I think in March, maybe six or seven weeks before he sailed. Said, ‘Carl, buddy, I’m bailing. This whole fuckin’ gig is comin’ down around our heads. I can’t take it anymore. It’s too much.’ Or words to that effect. I thought the guy was just blowing smoke. I knew we had big problems, but we’d been up against it before and we’d always come out okay. I figured this was just one more hairy episode in the ‘Carl and Wendell Show.’ Next thing I know they find his boat drifting in the ocean. Looking back, you think, well…when he said ‘bailing’ did he mean he’d kill himself or cut out?”

“But you were stuck either way, yes?”

“Yes indeed. First thing they did was start checking back through the books. I guess I could have walked out the door then, with just the clothes on my back, but I couldn’t see the point. I had nowhere to go. I didn’t have a cent, so I was forced to ride it out. Unfortunately, I had no idea the extent of what he’d done.”

“Was it actually fraud?”

“Oh, big time. It was major. The days went by and all this shit came to light. He’d been stripping the company till there was nothing left. In the letter he left, he claimed he’d been pouring every dime back in, but I didn’t see any evidence to support the claim. What did
I know? By the time I understood just how bad it was, there was no escape. I didn’t even have a way to recoup my personal losses.” He paused and shrugged. “What can I say? With Wendell gone, there was just us chickens left. I gave ‘em everything. I copped a plea and took the jail time just to get it over with. Now you tell me he’s alive. What a joke.”

“Are you bitter?”

“Of course.” He leaned his arm against the back of the banquette and rubbed his forehead idly. “I can understand his wanting out. At first I didn’t realize the extent of his betrayal. I felt sorry for Dana and the kids, but I couldn’t do anything about it if the guy was dead.” He shrugged and sent me a rueful smile, moving with sudden energy. “What the hell. It’s over with and you have to move on.”

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