Mary knew why Kenum had picked this place. It must have reminded him of prison.
She got out of the Honda and walked to the front of the building. For some weird reason, she felt eyes on her. She didn’t put any store in that goofy premonition shit. Or sixth sense crap. But still, she felt strange. Maybe the pasta last night had been bad.
A boy came out of the building with a bike. He bounced it down the stairs.
“It goes faster if you pedal,” Mary said. He looked at her, and Mary wondered if he knew she was kidding.
“What, bitch?” the little boy said.
Mary stopped. Had she heard right? Had she just been called a bitch by a kid? She took a closer look at him. A husky ten-year-old. Or a growth-stunted early teen.
“Nice,” Mary said.
“Nice rack,” he said.
She considered backhanding him but pictured another trip downtown, this time a charge of child abuse and decided against it.
“They miss you at Finishing School,” Mary said, then walked past him and pushed her way into the building, through old steel doors with cracked glass and creaking hinges. Kids today, she thought.
The intercom system wasn’t functional. Mary knew this because the entire metal face of the system was smashed inward, as if someone with a size 17 EE foot had made the kick of his life.
It didn’t matter. The PO had told her it was apartment 525. She took the stairs to the fifth floor, then fished the .45 out of its holster. She held it at her side as she got to the door.
Apparently the guy with the 17 EE feet got around. Because David Kenum’s door looked just like David Kenum’s apartment building’s intercom system. Smashed in and hanging uselessly in the breeze.
Reminiscent of a Pottery Barn catalogue, Mary thought to herself. The only time Martha Stewart would find herself in a place like this would be if she’d been abducted and held hostage – ransomers demanding her recipe for cream cheese mashed potatoes.
Mary took a step inside the apartment, holding the .45 with both hands, pointed vaguely at the floor in front of her. The first thing she noticed was the smell. There are bad smells, and then there are bad smells. This was horrible. Not dead-body-bad, but definitely fecal-debris-bad.
“Eesh,” Mary said to the empty room.
Only the stench answered her back. Mary took in the place: a single large room with a small kitchen consisting of an ancient stove and tall rectangle of dust where a refrigerator used to be.
She moved through the main room to the back where a tiny bathroom with a filthy toilet sat. “Love what you’ve done with the powder room, Mr. Kenum,” she said. Mary was looking at the rings of growth inside the toilet when she heard the soft scrape of a shoe behind her.
She whirled and had the .45’s three-dot sights lined up on the forehead of her unannounced guest.
“He’s not here, Sugar.”
She lowered the gun.
It was the boy from outside.
“You’re as bright as you’re polite,” she said.
“Nice gun,” he said. “I like a woman with a big gun like that. Turns me on.”
“So, Miss Manners,” Mary said. “Do you live here?”
“What’s it to you?”
Mary rolled her eyes. “You said ‘he’s not here.’ Who’s not here?”
“Santa Claus,” the kid said. “Who do you think? The guy that lived here. David.”
Mary nodded. “So if he’s not here, then where is he?”
“What’s it worth to you?”
Mary rolled her eyes again. She took out a twenty.
“I’m not talkin’ about money,” he said. “How about you make a man out of me?”
Mary ignored the question and poked his palm with the edge of the twenty but pulled it back when he reached for it.
“I used to steal bottles of wine for him,” the kid said. “Last one I gave him was just before he left. Told me he was going to work on a boat. Offered me a boat ride.”
Mary gave the kid the twenty.
“This boat have a name? A location?”
“It was called the Diver Down.”
“If-” she started to say but he cut her off.
“I know, if I’m lying you’ll come back and kill me. Big whoop. I almost wouldn’t mind seeing those sweet jugs of yours again.”
It wasn’t until she was back in her car that Mary finally let herself start laughing.
Forty-Five
A call to her contact in the state’s vehicle licensing division told her the boat was registered and its home base was the marina in Marina del Rey.
Mary took the 405 up to Sepulveda, and followed that into Marina del Rey. She wound her way along the harbor until she came to the marina she was looking for.
She parked and walked until she found a small structure on the eastern side of the marina. It had a sign reading “Marina Office” over its door.
“Hello?”
“What can I do for you?” said a burned out, older surfer looking dude with pink shorts, an orange Polo shirt and topsiders.
“I’m looking for a boat called the Diver Down,” Mary said. “Guy’s a big fan of Van Halen.”
“That’s before Sammy Hagar, right?” the guy said.
Mary nodded. “Yes. Well before that epochal moment when ‘Van Hagar’ came into existence,” she said.
“Man, Eddie goes through lead singers like I go through flip flops.”
“So where is this ode to 70s rock?” she repeated.
The guy sat, swiveled in his office chair, and looked at a chart of the marina.
“Slip 73,” he said and pointed in a vague direction behind him. “That’s over there.”
“Thanks,” Mary said and headed for the slips.
“Whoa, whoa, whoa, Jamie’s cryin’,” the guy sang.
Forty-Six
The Diver Down was painted red and white. It was about a thirty-footer Mary guessed. Not really a speedboat, but it had two big new-looking outboards on the back.
“Hello!” Mary called out. There was no activity she could tell of going on in the boat. But soon she heard the creak of the lower cabin’s door open and a man popped his head out.
“Yeah?” he said.
“David around? David Kenum?”
“Nope,” the old man said. “Who’s askin’?”
The man had now come out of the little doorway and stood on the deck of the boat. He looked old and haggard. His shoes and shirt were all a dirty gray. He had grease on his forehead. Dark, leathery skin full of deep creases.
“Do you know where he is?”
“How about you try answering my question before asking yours?” he said. His voice tired and annoyed.
Mary paused for a moment. “I’m his fiancé. His pregnant fiancé and when he found out the second part, he left faster than he did his deed. Which was pretty damn quick to begin with.”
Would this guy have any sympathy for a pregnant woman? Probably not. But it was worth a try.
“Ah Christ, I’m sorry,” the old guy said. “But didn’t he just get out of prison? How’d…”
“Conjugal visits.”
The old man nodded. “Well, he’s not here but I know where he is.”
“Let me guess. He’s in the drunk tank. Or back in prison.”
“Nope. Catalina.”
Catalina Island. About an hour and half boat ride from L.A.
“What the hell is he doing out there?” Mary said. “Going for horseback rides instead of earning money to buy diapers and baby wipes for us?” She patted her tummy and emphasized ‘us.’
“He came looking for a job. His parole officer sent him here, but I quit doing that after the last guy made off with my motors. Luckily I had insurance. But I told him about a guy I knew was hiring, so he said he’d check it out.”
“That’s funny, David with a good paying job,” Mary said. “Yeah, he just loved to work and work and work. Suppose you tell me what kind of “job” that douche bag thought he was goi
ng to get?”
“Something that don’t require much of a brain,” the old man said.
He looked her up and down and this time, Mary did detect a note of sympathy.
“Look, I’m headed out there right now.” He gestured toward a stack of boxes and crates that he’d lashed against a rail. “Have to deliver all that to the restaurant. I can give you a ride out there if you want.”
“How long will you be there?”
“Long enough to unload and gas up. Maybe two hours, tops.”
Mary hopped onto the deck.
“Hit it, captain.”
Forty-Seven
L.A. faded into the background like a corrupt memory filed for deletion.
Mary stood on the deck, leaning against the rail, looking out at the deep blue water. It was beautiful, but she hated it. She hated the cold. She hated the depth. She hated the cool indifference it offered.
She hated that her parents had died here.
Well, not here exactly. But ‘out here’ in the water, cold and alone except for each other.
Mary wondered if they’d talked. Of if they’d already been dead by the time they hit the water. She shook her head. Why was she always so macabre? She knew better. Knew there weren’t any answers. If there were, they would have made themselves known a long time ago. She made a mental note: be happier. Be positive. Walk on the goddamn sunny side of the street.
“Wind is bad,” the old man said behind her. “May take us an extra ten minutes or so.”
Mary turned. He stood by the wheel, on the right side of the boat. A can of Coke in his hand.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
“Mungons. Greg. But everyone calls me Mungo.”
“Mungo. It’s catchy. So how long you been doing this, Mungo?” Mary said.
“1959,” he said. “Sad, isn’t it? So much life going on either back there,” he gestured toward L.A. proper. “Or there,” he nodded toward Catalina. “I always felt like while life was going on I was either on the way to it or on the way from it. Know what I mean?”
“It’s like being in the middle of a shit sandwich,” Mary said. “I think Thoreau said that.”
“Not to mention the gas prices are killing me,” he said.
“How’s your 401(K) doing?” she said.
“That’s funny. You’re standing on my 401(k).” He took a drink of his Coke. “So how’d you end up with Kenum? You don’t seem his type.”
“What’s his type?”
“Trashy.”
“Well thanks for the compliment.”
“My advice?” the guy said.
“Yeah?”
“Get rid of it,” he said, nodding toward her belly, like he was telling someone to lose a moustache. Or throw out yesterday’s newspaper. “Nothing good will come from you having that baby. More people should do it.”
“We could do it right here,” Mary said. “Just bring over that bait bucket and some fishing tackle…”
“Look, I didn’t mean any offense,” the old guy said.
“Plenty taken,” Mary said, acting hurt. She’d heard pregnant women could be pretty moody. She moved to the back of the boat, pretending to be nursing her wounded spirit.
Mary watched L.A. recede into the distance. It looked so harmless from the water. Not like the sinful, lecherous community it often was. Although it had its decent moments and its unique attributes, too. Like the Getty. Mary loved to go there. They’d even recently had a Jackson Pollock…
Lights exploded over L.A. and for a brief moment Mary wondered if there was some kind of fireworks show going on. But then blackness crept over her eyes and a horrible, all-consuming pain rocketed down her spine and then she was pretty sure she was screaming. The last thing she felt were hands on her legs and a sudden sense of airiness.
“Splish Splash I was takin’ a bath…” she heard a voice say.
And then a feeling of floating. Just before the cold wash of water enveloped her.
What…? Mary wondered, before she simultaneously sank into unconsciousness and the Pacific Ocean.
Forty-Eight
It was the first lungful of water that woke her up. She gagged underwater, heard the sound of the motor racing away and opened her eyes.
A thick wave of kelp was ten feet ahead of her. Her lungs were on fire and she had a mouth full of sea water but she made it to the kelp before she surfaced.
She spewed a mixture of air and water at the surface, and saw the back of the Diver Down, too far away now, but close enough that she could see a man looking back toward where she’d gone into the water.
Mary treaded water and tried to clear her head. She could see Catalina in the distance, but there was no way she could swim that far. She gagged again and felt her stomach heave. Fear gripped her insides and she nearly panicked, her mind filled with images of her drowning and sharks ripping her apart. In an instant’s flash, she saw her balcony with her view of the Pacific and her head cleared.
She had one option. To wait. It was a relatively busy area, with sailboats and speedboats and the occasional ferry.
But she was afraid how long she could last in the cold water. Sharks were known to be out this far.
She swam farther into the kelp. Look on the bright side, she thought. People pay top dollar for this. Probably at least $500 for a kelp bath at LeMerigot spa.
“There’s the positive spirit, Mary,” she said. “Hey, look on the bright side. Sharks generally don’t attack in the middle of the kelp. People drown all the time getting tangled in kelp, but sharks don’t attack.”
Mary put a hand up against the side of her head. It came away pinkish. She hoped that meant there wasn’t much blood there.
“Stupid,” she said. Someone had been hiding down below in the cabin. She’d been able to see the old man at the wheel out of the corner of her eye just before the attack. So someone else had slipped out of the sleeping quarters, came up behind her, bonked her, and tossed her overboard.
Mary thought of the Discovery channel, of how seals would roll themselves up in kelp to keep them afloat and then nap.
Cold began to seep into her body. Not enough for hypothermia, but enough to give her a summer cold, and those are the worst, Mary thought.
So she waited. She was enveloped by cold. Her teeth chattered, and she was getting tired from treading water. Once, she felt something slick and rubbery scrape against her leg and she nearly screamed.
Just when she thought she couldn’t last any longer and would have to try swimming the rest of the way to the island, she heard the sound of a motor.
It was a high-pitched whine, rather than the deep rumble of a boat. Mary peeled herself out of the kelp and swam toward the open ocean. Far off, she saw two jet skis on their way to Catalina.
She swam as fast as she could for ten minutes, as the jet skis came closer. Finally, when she thought she could get their attention, she surged out of the water and waved her arms up over her head. Survival water ballet.
There were two of them, and it was an awful moment when they seemed totally oblivious to her. Mary gathered herself and launched her body out of the water, waving her arms over her head. It was the second rider who finally spotted her. He zoomed out past the leader, and herded him over toward Mary.
Minutes later, they pulled up next to her. They were covered in tattoos and had more piercings than Aunt Alice’s pin cushion. And they were the most beautiful people she had ever seen.
“Dude, what happened?” the lead guy asked, displaying a tongue stud.
“What, you’ve never seen a mermaid before?” she said. She reached out and got ahold of the jet ski’s side.
“Lift me up and I’ll show you my tail,” she said.
“Cool, man!” the guy said and reached out for her.
It was a little tricky, but between Mary hoisting herself up, and the guy lifting, she was able to swing onto the back of the machine.
“We’re going to Catalina, dude,” he said to her. “Get
wasted and then ride back!”
“I’m going to Catalina too,” Mary said. “To beat the crap out of a couple of old men.”
“Kick ass, dude!” the guy said.
Forty-Nine
Finding a guy with the austere nickname of ‘Mungo’ shouldn’t have been a big challenge to Mary. But it was. Because Mungo certainly wasn’t really Mungo.
Still, the old man had a boat and made deliveries. Mary was sure that part of it wasn’t a lie.
After her new ‘best dude’ dropped her off at the pier, she went to the public bathroom and checked her cut, which was pretty small, and pulled out the small business card case she kept in her front pocket. In addition to business cards, she had an American Express card for emergencies tucked in the very back.
She went to the first store she could find and bought a pair of overpriced pants and a matching overpriced sweatshirt, went back to the public bathroom and changed. Her head hurt, and her body ached. Her stomach was queasy from all the saltwater she’d swallowed. She wanted to call Jake. A part of her still felt like she was bobbing out in the Pacific, alone and bleeding. As much as the idea of hearing his voice pleased her, the hassle of explaining how and why she’d ended up here outweighed the benefit.
She needed to sit down for awhile and get her bearings. She went to a place called the Blue Heron and ordered coffee.
No point going to the cops on the island. For one thing, they wouldn’t do much. And for another thing, they might call L.A. and that would cause a huge cock-up and she might wind up in the Catalina slammer for a day or two. Nuh-uh.
She sipped her coffee and thought about what had happened. Why Catalina? Just to get her out on a boat? That seemed sort of silly. They could have said Kenum was a sport fisherman or a worker on a cruise line or a shrimper.
The waitress came back to check on her.
“I’m looking for the old bastard who tossed me off his boat,” Mary said to her. “Said his name was Mungo and that he ran supplies in here on a regular basis. Ever heard of him?”
“Nope,” the waitress said. “What’d he look like?”
Six Pack of Sleuths: Comedy Mysteries Page 11