I Dreamed I Married Perry Mason

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by Susan Kandel




  I Dreamed I Married Perry Mason

  Susan Kandel

  FOR MY MOTHER, WHO LOVED A GOOD MYSTERY

  Contents

  1

  What a pity my vintage Maud Frizon pumps didn’t come…

  2

  For most people the world over, Beverly Hills is a…

  3

  But before I picked up where Erle Stanley Gardner had…

  4

  The next morning I woke at dawn. I was in…

  5

  I knew the court transcript like the back of my…

  6

  Joseph Albacco smiled as he sat down, and I knew…

  7

  On the long drive home, Father Herlihy’s words reverberated in…

  8

  It was the Spanish colonizers of Alta California who, early…

  9

  The morning sun hit me square in the face. Bad…

  10

  I am a biographer. I understand people the way secretaries…

  11

  It had been four whole days since I’d had my…

  12

  As it turned out, Meredith Allan had left Ojai more…

  13

  My hostess gestured toward a plush red couch. Just as…

  14

  I heaved a sigh of relief to be out of…

  15

  I hated driving on the freeway at night. The glare…

  16

  Burnett called the next day just to say hello, and…

  17

  I’m useless with dead people. When I was sixteen, my…

  18

  It’s a sign of how well Lael knows me that…

  19

  It was close to seven A.M. when we got back…

  20

  If I had bothered to look at the return address,…

  21

  Call me crazy, but I had a feeling Jean’s lockbox…

  22

  I met Detective Peter Gambino (no relation to the crime…

  23

  I headed back to Tehachapi first thing the next morning.

  24

  I knew I’d have to see Meredith Allan again, but…

  25

  Wednesday morning. Another day in paradise. The birds were singing,…

  26

  My next stop was Bridget’s, back in town. I felt…

  27

  And precisely what was I supposed to think when the…

  28

  Given my recalcitrant technophobia, my spending the morning on the…

  29

  That was one too many coincidences. I’ve been around the…

  30

  Curiouser and curiouser. I tugged off my shoes, collapsed onto…

  31

  Burnett was up on a ladder, painting wings on fallen…

  32

  Cece? Can you hear me?”

  33

  Here’s the last box, Cece,” Mr. Grandy said, setting it…

  34

  Ellie, it’s Cece Caruso, I’m calling from my car. How…

  35

  Gambino took me to Buffalo to meet his parents. We…

  36

  Tomas, the default architect of Lael’s rabbit warren of a…

  37

  It was like watching a movie on fast forward.

  38

  Let’s say you’re Clark Gable, and you need a new…

  39

  That would be the roof.

  40

  I did finish my biography of Erle Stanley Gardner, by…

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  What a pity my vintage Maud Frizon pumps didn’t come with steel-reinforced toes. Lace stilettoes are not the best defense against a case of gourmet cat food moving inexorably toward zero-degree gravity. Why on earth did I ever buy in bulk?

  “You okay?” asked my gardener, Javier, who was fixing a downed sprinkler head on my small but velvety front lawn.

  “I’m fine, just ignore me,” I moaned, rubbing what was left of my foot. “What about the snails?”

  Javier checked the bowl of beer I had put out last night. I wasn’t being a good hostess (I drew the line at cheese and crackers), but I had tried everything else, including mail-order carnivorous snails bred to destroy their herbivorous cousins. I’d been ready to give up entirely on my ornamental cabbages when I’d heard the mere smell of beer lured the monsters to their deaths.

  “Sorry. No bodies.”

  I kicked the door open with my good foot, greeted Mimi, the cat indirectly responsible for my suffering, and Buster, my teacup poodle, dumped the grocery bags on the kitchen table, and upset a half-drunk cup of cold coffee. I decided against wiping it up just then (that would mean finding the paper towels) and hit the button on the answering machine.

  BEEP. “Hi, it’s Lael. You won’t believe it—”

  Actually, I would. Lael was my best friend in the world and an extraordinary person, but she had a unique talent for disaster. I’d listen to the rest after a shower and perhaps some meditation. I don’t meditate, but I keep thinking I should start.

  Sidestepping the coffee now dripping onto the floor, I went into the bedroom and took off my favorite suit, a black Joan Crawford–esque number I’d found at an estate sale with Lael, who’d zeroed in on an almost complete and barely chipped set of Wedgwood lusterware. She’d tried to talk me into removing the suit’s shoulder pads, but I liked the line-backer/diva effect—not to mention that you don’t mess around with a classic silhouette. But I suppose Lael and I are different that way. I am obsessed with clothes, and she is the kind of beautiful woman who doesn’t need to be.

  I picked my robe up off the bathroom floor and turned on the water, which took precisely three and a half minutes to warm up.

  My West Hollywood bungalow, purchased nine years ago with the proceeds from my divorce settlement, was like a Stradivarius—the 1932 Spanish had amazing art deco details, but woe to she disrespectful of its myriad quirks. Like the temperamental plumbing, for one thing. Or the sloping floor in the kitchen, which meant that anything heated on the stove top would migrate to the right side of the pot. Or the front door’s inlaid brass knob, which pulled off pretty much every time you tried to open the door from the inside. Visitors seemed to find this latter idiosyncrasy particularly unnerving.

  BEEP. “This is George at Kleiner’s. The new motor for your fountain is in. Listen, the old one was really filthy. You have to clean it out twice a week like I told you, especially when the Santa Anas are blowing all that muck around.”

  What George didn’t know was that my fountain was of the same vintage as my house, and equally volatile. Also, that the portentous Santa Ana winds were invented by Raymond Chandler purely for literary purposes.

  BEEP. “Call your mother.”

  BEEP. “Please call your mother, dear. I have no idea where you are.”

  BEEP. “Cece, it’s Richie. Call Mom, for god’s sake. She’s cleaning the attic again, and doesn’t know what to do with your stuff. Do you want to keep your crown? Joanne and the kids send their love.”

  Like all good Italian boys, my brothers, Richie and James Jr., worshiped their mother. I was somewhat more ambivalent. This the boys understood from an early age, which meant I’d spent my childhood at the mercy of a pair of pint-size enforcers. They became cops, just like our dad. I became a beauty queen. But for the record, my reign as Miss Asbury Park, New Jersey, was short-lived and utterly lamentable. Mom could use my crown to plunge the toilet for all I cared. More likely she’d wear it to a church potluck. She’d always harbored the belief that she’d been swi
tched at birth and was really royalty, or Frank Sinatra’s sister at least.

  BEEP. “Hello, I’m returning Cece’s call. Listen, Cece, if you’re there, I have a vagabond virgin, a negligent nymph, a hesitant hostess, and a borrowed brunette for you. So, are you a madam or a mystery buff? But seriously, folks, they’re five dollars apiece, paperback reprints.”

  Everyone’s a comedian.

  “I’ve got a first edition of The Case of the Sleepwalker’s Niece, but I don’t think you want it. There’s some water damage on the sleeve, but it’s still pretty pricey. Ditto The Case of the Curious Bride, which is one of the better prewar Masons, not that I’m an expert, like some people. You can order on-line or by phone. We’re here until eight P.M., thanks to folks like yourself.”

  I suppose that made it official. Even the bozo working the desk at the Mystery Manor could see that Perry Mason had stolen my life. Yes, that would be Perry Mason, the world-famous and much-beloved attorney-at-law.

  To wit: I could tell you under what circumstances Perry could be persuaded to take a case (a natural blonde in distress was always a plus); his favorite expletive (“the deuce!”); how he liked his steak (broiled rare); and what he drank when he had to drive (soda water just flavored with Scotch)—in short, as much as Della Street, his perfect jewel of a secretary, ever could. I go to bed marveling at his courtroom moves and wake up mulling his situational ethics. Some might say I’m obsessed. My answer would be it’s purely business.

  Ever since I left my sorry excuse for a husband, I’ve made my living writing biographies of mystery writers. For the last twelve months, I’ve been working on Erle Stanley Gardner, creator of the brilliant, unflappable Perry Mason. Gardner wrote eighty-two full-length Mason novels, which have sold more than 300 million copies worldwide. He also wrote twenty-four mysteries under the pseudonym A. A. Fair, featuring the P.I. Donald Lam and his heavyset partner, Bertha Cool (love that name), and nine mysteries about the D.A. Doug Selby. Plus a whole lot more. Still, to understand Gardner, you have to understand what makes his alter ego tick. Thus the stolen life to which I alluded earlier and the profusion of Mason books, with their fabulously lurid covers, everywhere I turned: in vertiginous piles on my bedside table; between the seats of my car; and covering the floor of my office like pulp-themed linoleum.

  The hot water was ready, and it lasted exactly eight minutes so I hopped right in. Later, after a good dinner, I could give my full attention to Lael. Who can think creatively on an empty stomach? Then I’d settle down on the sofa with my new cashmere throw, which Buster had thus far spared, and finish The Case of the Sunbather’s Diary even if it killed me. I’d been trying to get through it for a week, but it just wasn’t happening. There were too many characters. I spent all my time trying to keep them straight, which meant that every time I picked up the book I basically had to start from scratch. The prewar Gardners were indeed better reads.

  I toweled off as I meandered over to the kitchen and riffled through the grocery bags. Toilet paper, laundry detergent, cat litter, cocktail peanuts, basil, garlic croutons—a hundred dollars later, and not a thing to eat for dinner. Typical. I couldn’t stand cereal after ten A.M., and Buster needed a walk anyway. I threw on flip-flops and an old cotton sundress and headed back to the market, which was located just around the corner.

  The Gelson’s on Santa Monica Boulevard six blocks east of La Cienega is the closest West Hollywood gets to a Greek agora. Despite its prices, it is the place where the citizens of the republic convene. They make the journey on foot or by Rolls Royce, armed with platinum credit cards or food stamps, in search of bagfuls of stuff or just a Haas avocado and a Meyer lemon (even the produce at Gelson’s is luxury branded). But food is merely the pretext. People go to Gelson’s to stimulate the senses, to chitchat with the neighbors, to pay their respects to the all-powerful checkers—in sum, to reconnect with the world.

  Today was Thursday, and Thursdays were special at Gelson’s. Between five and six, one of the box boys leaves his station, puts on a white apron and chef’s toque, and stands up front near the prepared foods, slicing up freshly cooked turkey and tri-tip roast to order. Even the least sociable come out of the woodwork on Thursdays.

  Tonight there was Melanie, the loquacious PR lady, with her standard poodle, Scarlett, tied up outside the store and wailing like nobody’s business (Buster was sequestered in my purse, feasting on treats I offered every time I sensed a bark coming on).

  Then there was Richard, the retired screenwriter, who was now directing (very) amateur theater. This fall, it was an all-male revival of Guys and Dolls.

  No one even blinked at the preoperative transsexual eyeing the bear claws. That was just Tina.

  Nor did they gape at “the ladies,” white-haired ex-showgirl twins who live on my corner and make it their business to see that every stray cat in the neighborhood is properly fed. The ladies could charge for seminars on how to milk the system. Most recently, they got the city of West Hollywood to turn the curb in front of their house into a private handicapped zone so they’d always have a place to park their ancient white Mercedes.

  Max was there, too, with the latest of his bodacious girlfriends. Max was a Sephardic Jewish community organizer who rented the converted garage next door as his base of operations.

  And of course, the usual assortment of budding soap opera actors, who always got a little competitive over the turkey legs, despite their high fat content. Me, I went for the beef.

  I got into Brenda’s line.

  “Hi, sweetie. Back so soon?”

  “I missed you. How’s your son, by the way?”

  Brenda’s son wanted to be a rocker, but was working by day as a substitute teacher for L.A. Unified.

  “Looking for an agent. How about Annie? I haven’t seen her for a while. Is she still living in Topanga Canyon?”

  “Yup. Still a Trekkie in Topanga. She’s fine, my son-in-law, too.”

  Like my mother and grandmother before me, I was a child bride and at thirty-nine had a twenty-one-year-old daughter who had inherited the family gene. Only unlike me she wasn’t pregnant at her nuptials and, for the record, has far better taste in men. She met her husband, Vincent, in art school, where they discovered a mutual passion for science fiction. He is a big cheese in the world of alternative comics, the creator of Trash Pimp, and she works as a set designer for a Star Trek clone called Testament, now in its third season on network TV.

  On the way home, Buster and I encountered a gorgeous Siberian husky, and there was much reciprocal sniffing (between the dogs).

  “Excuse me,” ventured Mr. Handsome’s owner, an elderly gentleman in a track suit, “is your dog fixed?”

  “Yes, he is,” I answered demurely.

  “Not my man Pushkin. I ask because whenever he meets another intact male, Pushkin gets aggressive. Testosterone, you know. It’s what makes the male of the species strong, virile. But we don’t want strong men anymore. We want them to sit still, to lie there, just to take it, like little girls.”

  I had no idea what we were talking about, but I didn’t think it was Pushkin. Buster was enthralled, but I hurried him along. Some relationships just aren’t meant to be.

  Back at home I fed my beasts, arranged my dinner on a plate, poured a glass of Cabernet, and returned Lael’s call. I got the machine.

  “Pick up if you’re there, Lael. It’s me. Where are you?” I trilled. “Are you in the kitchen, baking something divine?”

  Lael was a master baker, a genius actually, but her handiwork was decidedly eccentric. This time of year she was probably making Labor Day gingerbread cookies shaped like striking dockworkers or something.

  “Cece, hi, don’t hang up, I’m here,” she said, out of breath.

  “Sorry, hon, did I drag you away from something?”

  “No, I’m just sitting here with your daughter.”

  “Annie? What’s she doing there?”

  “That’s what I wanted to talk to you about. Annie’s lef
t Vincent. She says it’s over.”

  Damn it.

  I leapt up to look for my car keys and banged my knee on the coffee table. Stifling a scream, I tossed the room, sending old magazines and dirty laundry flying. A push-up bra landed on Buster’s head.

  “You can stop looking for your car keys.”

  “Who said I’m looking for my car keys?”

  “Cece. Please.”

  “Lael—”

  “Listen to me. Now’s not a good time. Annie will call you when she’s ready. You know how you are. You’ll only make things worse.”

  “But—”

  “I mean it.”

  As she hung up, Buster trotted over with my keys between his teeth.

  Defeated, I sought solace in my tri-tip. It was ice cold.

  Tomorrow, I thought, sighing, had better be another day.

  2

  For most people the world over, Beverly Hills is a mythic place, a big-ticket Shangri-La chockablock with diamond-dripping trophy wives and buxom starlets cruising in convertibles on perennially sun-kissed days. For me, Beverly Hills meant only two things: parking hell and Raymond Burr.

  Every Friday, like clockwork, I headed to the Museum of Television and Radio on Beverly Drive to watch at least four back-to-back episodes of Perry Mason. It was the ultimate in decadence—watching TV and calling it work—especially since I usually stopped at the Candy Baron across the street first to load up on Swedish fish and cinnamon bears. But if I didn’t get there by eleven A.M., especially during the Christmas rush (which in Beverly Hills begins in August), I’d be punished by having to circle the block for hours.

 

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