The Fourth Durango (21 page)

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Authors: Ross Thomas,Sarah Paretsky

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery

BOOK: The Fourth Durango
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“How long’s his sheet?” Vines said.

“Nine arrests and two convictions. He spent two years in Angola down in Louisiana and nine months in the L.A. county jail for aggravated assault.”

“What’d he give as his occupation—just out of curiosity?”

Fork grinned happily. “Actor.”

“Congratulations, Chief,” Adair said.

“Well, it took more charm than brains,” said Fork, trying to sound modest but not succeeding. “All I had to do was convince some guy to do something he wasn’t quite sure he wanted to do.”

Vines rose, went to the window, looked out, noticed the unmarked four-door sedan that was parked down the street and wondered whether it was the black detective or the too-tall one who was keeping the night watch. He turned from the window to B. D. Huckins.

“When you hung up on me,” he said, “I was calling to tell you your brother-in-law had phoned to say that the date and place of the switch are set. July fourth at Cousin Mary’s.”

Huckins nodded her approval. “Good. Merriman always closes on the fourth. What time?”

“Mansur didn’t say.”

“It’ll have to be in the afternoon.”

“Why?”

“Because Sid and I have to be in the parade in the morning.”

Chapter 36

After he gave the pan a small flip, Jack Adair’s first omelette in eighteen months
folded over perfectly and Virginia Trice said, “Mine always falls apart right about now and I wind up with scrambled eggs.”

Adair glanced over his right shoulder to find her standing in the kitchen entrance, leaning against the doorjamb, her arms folded tightly against her chest, as if to keep the quivering at bay. Adair thought the smudges under her eyes were larger and darker than they had been that afternoon when she’d played reluctant landlady. Three-way exhaustion, he decided, confident of his diagnosis. Physical, mental and emotional.

“Better sit down and have some,” he said. “I got carried away and used six eggs.” Turning back to the gas stove, which he guessed was as at least as old as he, Adair asked, “Long day?”

“The longest,” she said and sat down at the pickled-pine kitchen table.

Adair moved a few steps to his right, keeping an eye on the omelette as he poured coffee from the Bunn automatic into a mug. He placed it on the table in front of her and went quickly back to the stove.

“Now comes the tricky part,” he said, “which’ll turn out to be either a breeze or a disaster.”

The omelette slid, as if trained, from pan onto plate. Adair quickly cut it in two, placing half on another plate, which he served to Virginia Trice along with silverware and a paper napkin. “Toast is in the oven,” he said.

“There’s a toaster over there by the can opener.”

“I know, but I like to do it in the oven under the broiler.”

He opened the old stove’s high door, used a pot holder to pull out the broiler grill and speared the four pieces of toast with a long-tined cooking fork. He served the toast on a plate along with a small open tub of margarine. “I couldn’t find any butter,” he said as he sat down across from her with his share of the omelette.

“We don’t use butter because Norm worried about his cholesterol,” she said, spreading margarine over a piece of toast. “But I guess he could’ve gone ahead and eaten all the butter he wanted, couldn’t he?”

“I guess.”

She tasted the omelette and said it was perfect. Adair said he thought it could use a little salt and pepper. She said she didn’t use much salt anymore. They ate in silence after that, Adair trying to think of something to say that didn’t sound like forced small talk. He was rescued from what was beginning to seem like an insurmountable task when Virginia Trice said, “When’s the last time you fucked a woman?”

Adair went on spreading margarine over his last small piece of toast. “Seventeen months and four days ago.”

“How long were you in Lompoc?”

“Fifteen months.”

“You didn’t have one final fling?”

Adair used knife and fork to pile the last bit of omelette on the last of his toast, vaguely pleased that they had come out even. He ate the final bite, swallowed and said, “My legal problems prior to incarceration were such that sex became a matter of supreme unimportance.”

“Something like saltpeter, huh?”

“Possibly.”

“What’d you do for sex in jail?”

“I did without and two hundred sit-ups a day. Of course, there was also a normal amount of masturbation. At least, I trust it was normal.”

She put her knife and fork down, pushed away the plate with its half-eaten omelette, and leaned on the table with folded arms, staring down at its waxed surface. “I feel like I’ve just been sent to jail.”

“That won’t last.”

Still staring at the table, she said, “I must’ve had four or five hundred customers in today. I opened at eight and closed at two-fifteen, two-thirty, around in there. Nine of the guys who came in to say how sorry they were about Norm tried to hit on me. Married guys. Good friends of his. When I was showing you and Vines your rooms this afternoon, I’d almost decided not to go back to the Eagle.”

“You learned an invaluable lesson today,” Adair said. “The assholes are everywhere.”

“I’ve lived in this town four years now, going on five, and that’s longer’n I ever lived anywhere. I know a lot of people because I’m Norm’s wife and before that I worked in the Eagle for him. But he’s the only real friend I had here and now he’s dead. So after I closed up tonight, I was sitting there at the bar with a gin and tonic that I don’t even like and wondering how I was going to last till morning when somebody knocks at the door—and it’s like two forty-five by then.”

She looked up at Adair, as if for either comment or encouragement. Adair nodded and said, “You answered the door?”

“Well, I go and ask who’s there first because, you know, it’s late and I’ve got all the day’s cash and I don’t wanta take any chances. So guess who it is?”

“No idea.”

“It’s B. D.”

“The mayor.”

“Yeah, and she comes in and wants to know if I’d like to stay at her place tonight or as long as I want to. So you know what I do?”

“You cry.”

“Bawl like a baby. But she’s just as nice as she can be and seems to understand when I tell her I can’t stay with her.”

“Why not?”

“I don’t know. But I guess it’s because I kept thinking, What’ll you tell Norm? Does that make any sense?”

Adair said he thought it did.

“Well, when I finally get in the car and start home, it’s all of a sudden like I’m going to jail. I mean it’s like I’ve gotta spend a year or two all by myself up in that room on the second floor. Like it’s the law or something.”

“It’s not, of course,” Adair said. “At least, not yet.”

“Well, it sure feels like it,” she said, looking away and up toward the kitchen’s most distant corner. She was still inspecting the far corner when she said, “So d’you wanta sleep with me tonight?”

“Why me?”

She looked at him—rather gravely, he thought—and said, “Well, you’re nice and you’re older and since I’m asking you, instead of you making a move on me, it means it’s my choice, doesn’t it? And if I can make a choice, then I must not be in jail after all.”

“It also means you can choose somebody else,” Adair said.

“We don’t have to—
do
anything—unless you want to. I just wanta wake up and find somebody there. Somebody nice.”

“I’m very flattered,” Adair said.

She smiled for the first time—a very slight smile. “I think you just said no thanks, Virginia.”

Adair smiled back. “But if you’re still feeling the same some other night, well…”

She rose slowly and stood, staring down at him curiously. “What you’re doing is giving me one more choice, aren’t you?”

“I can’t give what you already have.”

She smiled again, more confidently this time. “I’ll think about it, Mr. Adair,” Virginia Trice said, turned and left the kitchen.

Adair rose, picked up the plates, mugs and silver and carried them to the sink. As he ran the water and added the Ivory Liquid, he promised himself to wash and dry everything slowly, concentrating on each plate, mug, fork, spoon and knife. This would keep him from thinking of what it would be like, sitting on the edge of the bed up in Virginia Trice’s room, slowly taking off her clothing, one item at a time.

 

After she left the studio apartment of the tall young uniformed policeman who had directed traffic out on Noble’s Trace where Ivy Settles and the woman photographer had been shot to death, Dixie Mansur drove home to Santa Barbara and its Montecito enclave. It was there that she and Parvis Mansur lived in the sprawling fieldstone house with the blue tile roof on an acre of ground that was surrounded by a twelve-foot-high chain-link fence.

As she slipped the coded plastic card into the slot that opened the sliding steel gate, she tried to remember the young policeman’s name. It was either Sean or Michael, she thought, deciding he was just about young enough to have been born at a time when most male babies seemed to be named either Sean or Michael. But what she remembered best about him was the mess his apartment had been.

She drove the Aston Martin through the gate and on up the concrete drive to the four-door garage. She pressed the switch beneath the dashboard that signaled her garage door to rise. Once it had risen, she drove in and parked next to Parvis Mansur’s white Rolls-Royce.

As she entered the library, Mansur looked up from his book, down at his watch, and up again. “You might’ve called,” he said.

Dixie went over to the bar and poured herself a glass of sherry. “I started to,” she said, taking a sip, “but after I talked to Vines and told him what you told me to tell him, I went over to B. D.’s and after that things got a little hectic.”

“In what respect?”

“Remember that photographer—the one who wanted to do a freelance feature on the house for some grubby monthly?”

“I remember that you talked to her and turned her down. A Miss Hornette, wasn’t it?”

“Hazel Hornette—although she liked to be called Hazy. Anyway, she’s dead.”

“An accident?”

“She was shot dead out on the Trace about two blocks east of the city limits. A Durango cop was also killed. One of the out-of-town ones that Sid hired. Ivy something.”

“Ivy Settles,” said Mansur, who had made it a point to learn the names of all four detectives Sid Fork had hired for what Mansur thought of as the chief’s personal Savak.

He put down his book, Palmer and Colton’s
A History of the Modern World
, the fifth edition, rose and walked over to the bar, where he mixed himself a weak Scotch and water. After a swallow, he turned to Dixie and asked, “You saw them then—the remains?”

“I was with B. D. when the sheriff called and told her about it. She was in a hurry to get there so we went in my car. They hadn’t been moved so, yes, I saw the bodies.”

“I’d like you to tell me the rest of it, Dixie, and do take your time. You might start from when you first saw Kelly Vines.”

She gave him a concise and reasonably factual account of how she had spent the afternoon, evening, night and morning hours, and also of what she had seen and heard and done, leaving out the sex she had enjoyed with Vines and the sex she had experienced, if not enjoyed, with the tall young uniformed policeman whose name, she now remembered, was Sean and not Michael.

After she had finished, and after Mansur had asked all the questions he thought he needed to ask, she said, “This is tied in somehow with that deal you’ve arranged for the fourth, isn’t it?”

Mansur thought about it, nodded and said, “It would appear to be.”

“Then on the fourth I’m going to be out of town.”

“Why?”

“Because if anything goes wrong, or if anything happens to you or Sid, I want to be with somebody someplace else.”

Mansur smiled approvingly. “You want an alibi.”

“You could call it that.”

“I really can’t blame you. Whom d’you have in mind?”

“I thought I’d drive down to San Diego Saturday, stay with the Moussavvises and come back late Monday when it’s all over.”

“They’ll be glad to see you, especially Reva, but the traffic’s going to be bloody awful.”

“That’s why I thought I might take the Rolls—unless you plan to do your go-betweening in it.”

Mansur chuckled. “I can think of nothing more inappropriate.”

“That’s what I thought.”

“Take it, of course,” he said and looked at his watch. “We’d best get to bed, hadn’t we?” He paused to smile at her—a smile full of hope. “Would you like to sleep in my room tonight, or are you too tired?”

“I’m not tired at all,” Dixie Mansur said.

Chapter 37

From the June 28, 29, 30 and July 2 editions of the
Durango Times:

Services for Norman Trice, 46, owner of the landmark Blue Eagle Bar, were held Monday at Bruner Brothers Mortuary.

Twenty-three out-of-town media representatives and approximately 200 mourners heard Mayor B. D. Huckins deliver a brief but moving eulogy. Mr. Trice, a native of Durango, is survived by his wife, Virginia, (
Cont. on Page 3
)

 

A memorial service was held Tuesday at the First Methodist Church for Detective Ivy Settles, 51, of the Durango Police Department. A brief but moving eulogy was delivered by Chief of Police Sid Fork.

Among the more than 100 persons attending the services were Mayor B. D. Huckins, Sheriff Charles J. Coates and representatives from 17 California police departments. Five out-of-town reporters were also present.

Settles is survived by his wife, Carlotta, (
Cont. on Page 5
)

 

The body of Hazel Hornette, 28, a Santa Barbara freelance photographer, was identified here Wednesday by her aunt, Marlene Hornette, 52, also of Santa Barbara.

Following cremation, private services will be held at sea by the Santa Barbara Neptune Society.

 

Graveside services for Brig. Gen. Soldier P. Sloan (RCAFRet.), 71, were held Friday at the Evergreen Cemetery with prayers offered by Fr. Francis Riggins of Santa Margarita Catholic Church. A brief but moving eulogy was spoken by Jack Adair, formerly of Lompoc.

In attendance were Mayor B. D. Huckins, Chief of Police Sid Fork, Kelly Vines, formerly of La Jolla, and Mrs. Parvis Mansur of Santa Barbara.

General Sloan left no survivors.

Adair and Vines walked away from Soldier Sloan’s grave on Thursday morning after the final prayer and headed for the blue Mercedes. A man, dressed in a tan poplin suit, got out of a black Mercury sedan parked near the Mercedes and walked toward them.

The man’s right hand was reaching for something in either his shirt pocket or the breast pocket inside his coat when Sid Fork materialized in front of Vines and Adair, blocking the man’s approach.

Fork had dressed for the graveside services in his old tweed jacket, ironed jeans, white shirt and black knit tie. His right hand was jammed down into the jacket’s right pocket.

Staring at the man in the tan suit, Fork said, “Sure hope that’s either a cigarette or some ID you’re reaching for, friend.”

The man in the tan suit nodded. “After I bring it out ever so slowly, it’ll say I’m with the Department of Justice.”

“Nice and slow then.”

The man produced a folding ID case and handed it to Fork, who studied it, looked up and said, “Claims you’re Leonard Deep and that you’re an assistant deputy U.S. attorney out of Washington. What it doesn’t say is if you’re here on official business.”

“Personal,” Deep said. “With Mr. Adair and Mr. Vines.”

Fork turned to them and said, “You want to talk to the Justice Department about something personal?”

“I think so,” Adair said, looking at Vines. “Kelly?”

“Sure. Why not?”

“Then B. D. and I’ll see you out at Cousin Mary’s for lunch,” Fork said, handed the ID back to Deep, turned and walked toward the mayor, who was standing beside her Volvo, listening to Father Riggins.

“Where’d you like to talk, Mr. Deep?” Vines asked.

Deep looked around the cemetery. “That bench over there in the shade looks comfortable.”

To reach the bench they had to pass by Soldier Sloan’s grave, which was being filled in by two workmen with shovels. Deep paused to read aloud the inscription Vines had composed for the headstone: “‘Soldier Pershing Sloan, 1917–1988, Few Deserve Such a Friend.’” Deep looked up at Adair and Vines and said, “I think Soldier would’ve approved. Like him, it’s nicely equivocal.”

“You knew Soldier?” Adair said as he and Deep sat down on the bench and Vines leaned against one of the pines that provided the shade.

“Let’s say that over the years his long and interesting career came to our attention.”

At forty, or close to it, Deep had the body and moves of a slowly aging athlete who, in his youth, Vines guessed, had passed up contact sports for the loner’s favorites of running, swimming or diving. Vines decided Deep had probably been a snob jock and was possibly just as smart as he looked.

“You here to talk to us about Soldier?” Adair said, his voice as innocent as his kitten blue eyes.

Deep’s reply sounded almost diffident. “The FBI in Santa Barbara would appreciate it if you’d give them a ring.”

“That’s what Chief Fork told me,” Adair said. “I’ll have to do that when I get a moment.”

Deep smiled as if he knew he was being lied to shamelessly and didn’t really care. Vines decided to find out why and said, “Suggesting that Jack call the FBI makes your trip sound more official than personal.”

Deep studied Vines before he said, “I’m here because of Paul Adair.”

“What about Paul?” Adair demanded.

“This may not be much comfort, Mr. Adair, but I can assure you Paul didn’t commit suicide.”

Adair nodded slowly. “That’s no small comfort and I thank you for telling me.”

“I also want you to know we’ve finally located the two Mexican prostitutes who signed sworn statements that they heard two shots as they were going up the stairs to Paul’s room in Tijuana. They’ve now refuted those statements and deny they either were on their way up to his room or ever heard any shots.”

“This comes from where?” Vines said.

“From an FBI investigation ordered by the attorney general who had great respect for Paul.”

“Well, that’s nice of the attorney general,” Adair said, “and I appreciate your telling us Paul didn’t commit suicide because Kelly and I’d wondered how he managed to shoot himself in the mouth twice with a forty-five. Then, too, knowing Paul’s sexual orientation, we never put much stock in his sending down for a pair of female prostitutes. They were female, weren’t they, Mr. Deep?”

Deep gave his head an almost amused tilt to the right and said, “You knew he was gay, of course.”

“Ever since he announced it at the breakfast table to his mother, his sister and me on his fifteenth birthday.”

“You also knew, Mr. Vines?”

“Yes, but I still preferred his sister.”

“Whom you married.”

“So I did.”

Deep sighed and said, “I was shattered by Paul’s death. It was a great personal loss.”

“We all felt rotten,” Adair said. “Especially Kelly, who had to go down there and identify his body.”

“He was absolutely brilliant,” Deep said. “If Paul had lived, he could have—”

“He’s dead, Mr. Deep,” Adair said.

“And we finally know who killed him,” Deep said and waited, as if for some emotional outcry.

But Jack Adair only nodded and said, “You mean Theodore Contraire, right? Also known as Teddy Smith or Jones.”

Leonard Deep lost a little of his almost studied poise, but recovered it quickly and said, “I’d very much like to know how you learned about Contraire.”

“Chief Fork figured it out and told us. Contraire’s the one who’s apparently been killing all these folks in Durango, including Soldier Sloan, which got me and Kelly pretty upset because we’d both known Soldier for years. Chief Fork, of course, doesn’t have the FBI’s resources but he’s shrewd and persistent. Seems to me they ought to get together with him and compare notes.”

“I’ll recommend it,” Deep said as he rose from the cemetery bench.

“You and Paul were good friends, I take it?” Adair said.

“Extremely close.”

“Well, I’m glad he had someone.”

“Another couple of questions, Mr. Adair—completely unofficial?”

Adair nodded.

“Why’re you in Durango?”

“On the day I was to get out of Lompoc, somebody put a price on my head.”

“I heard. Twenty thousand dollars.”

“So I figured Durango’d be as good a place as any to hide out or lie low or whatever you want to call it.”

“Who recommended it?”

“Soldier Sloan.”

“What was Soldier doing here when he was killed?”

“He never got the chance to say.”

“If I were either you or Mr. Vines,” Deep said, “I’d get out of Durango as quickly as possible.”

“Kelly and I’re leaving on the evening of the fourth.”

“Why not before?”

“We don’t want to miss the parade,” Vines said.

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