by Sue Grafton
The trailer he occupied had been subdivided into three offices of equal size, extending shotgun style from the front of the structure to the back. Long fluorescent bulbs cast a cold light across the white Formica surfaces of desks and drafting tables. Wide counters were littered with technical manuals, project reports, specs, and blueprints. Sturdy metal bookshelves lined the walls in most places, crammed with binders. Donovan didn’t seem to have a private secretary within range of him and I had to guess that one of several women up front fielded his calls and helped him out with paperwork.
He motioned me into a seat and then settled into the high-back leather chair behind his desk. He leaned sideways toward a bookshelf and removed a Santa Teresa high school annual, which he opened at a page marked by a paper clip. He held out the annual, passing it across the desk. “Guy, age sixteen. Who knows what he looks like these days.” He leaned back and watched for my reaction.
The kid looking out of the photograph could have been one of my high school classmates, though he preceded me by some years. The two-by-two inch black-and-white head shot showed light curly hair worn long. Braces on his teeth gleaming through partly opened lips. He had a bumpy complexion, unruly eyebrows, and long, fair sideburns.. His shirt fabric was a wild floral pattern. I would have bet money on bell-bottom trousers and a wide leather belt, though neither were visible in the photograph. In my opinion, all high school annuals should be taken out and burned. No wonder we all suffered from insecurity and low self-esteem. What a bunch of weirdo’s we were. I said, “He looks about like I did at his age. What year did he graduate?”
“He didn’t. He got suspended six times and finally dropped out. As far as I know, he never even picked up his GED. He spent more time in Juvie than he did at home.”
“Tasha mentioned criminal behavior. Can you tell me about that?”
“Sure, if I can think where to start. Remember the rumor that you could get high off aspirin and Coca Cola? He went straight out and tried it. Kid was disappointed when it had no effect. He was in the eighth grade at that point. Discounting all the so-called ‘harmless pranks’ he pulled back then, I’d say his first serious transgressions dated back to high school when he was busted twice for possession of marijuana. He was into dope big time ��� grass, speed, uppers, downers. What did they call ‘em back then? Reds and yellow jackets and something called soapers. LSD and hallucinogens came in about the same time. Teenagers didn’t do heroin or cocaine in those days, and nobody’d ever heard of crack. I guess that’s been a more recent development. For a while he sniffed glue, but said he didn’t like, the effect. Kid’s a connoisseur of good highs,” he said derisively. “To pay for the stuff, he’d rip off anything that wasn’t nailed down. He stole cars. He stole heavy equipment from Dad’s construction sites. You get the picture, I’m sure.”
“This may sound like an odd question, but was he popular?”
“Actually, he was. You can’t tell much from the photograph, but he was a good-looking kid. He was incorrigible, but he had a sort of goofy sweetness that people seemed to find appealing, especially the girls.”
“Why? Because he was dangerous?”
“I really can’t explain. He was this shy, tragic figure, like he couldn’t help himself. He only had one buddy, fellow named Paul Trasatti.”
“Is he still around somewhere?”
“Sure. He and Jack are golfing buddies. Bennet pals around with him, too. You can ask when you talk to him. I don’t remember any other friends offhand.”
“You didn’t hang out with Guy yourself?”
“Not if I could help it,” he said. “I was busy keeping as much distance between us as possible. It got so I had to lock the door to my room so he wouldn’t walk off with everything: You name it, he’d boost it. Stereos and jewelry. Some stuff he did for profit and some was just plain raising hell. After he turned eighteen, he got kind of crafty because the stakes went up. Dad finally flat told him he’d hang him out to dry if he fucked up again. Excuse my bad language, but I still get hot when I think about this stuff.”
“Is that when he took off?”
“That was when he shifted gears. On the surface, he cleaned up and got a job out here, working in the maintenance shed. He was clever, I must say. Good with his hands and he had a good head on his shoulders. He must have seen this place as the answer to his prayers. He forged checks on Dad’s accounts. He used the company credit card to charge stuff and then sold the goods. Dad, God bless him, was still covering. I begged him to blow the whistle, but he just couldn’t bring himself to do it. Guy strung him along, telling lie after lie.
“What can I tell you? Dad wanted to believe him. He’d talk tough. I mean, he’d act like he was really cracking down this time, but when it came right down to it, he always gave in and offered him ‘one more chance.’ Jesus, I got sick of his saying that. I did what I could to close the loopholes, but I could only do so much.” Donovan tapped his temple. “Kid had a screw loose. He was really missing some essential sprocket in the morals department. Anyway, the last stunt he pulled ��� and this didn’t come out until he’d been gone a couple months ��� was a scam where he cheated some ‘poor old widder woman’ of her nest egg. That was the last straw. Dad had already kicked his ass out, but we were still stuck with the mess.”
“Where were you at that time? I take it you were working for your father.”
“Oh, yeah. I’d graduated by then. I’d been in and out of Vietnam, and I was working here as a mining engineer. I got my degree at Colorado School of Mines. My dad’s degree was civil engineering. He started Malek Construction back in 1940, the year I was born, and bought his first gravel pit in forty-three. We were a construction outfit first and ended up owning all our aggregate sources. In fact, we built the business around that because it gives us a competitive edge. There’s a lot of companies around here that do construction that don’t own their aggregate sources and they end up buying from us. I’m the only one of the kids who went into the family business. I didn’t get married till I was thirty-five.”
“I understand your mother died the year Guy left,” I said.
“That’s right. She’d been diagnosed with lung cancer maybe ten years before. Fought like an alley cat, but she finally went under. I’m sure the uproar didn’t help. Dad never remarried. He didn’t seem to have the heart for it. All he cared about was the company, which is why I was so surprised about the will. Even in 1965, I can’t believe he wanted Guy getting so much as a nickel from his estate.”
“Maybe someone will come across the second will.”
“I’d like to think so, but so far I’ve turned the house upside down. There was nothing like it in the safe deposit box. I hate to consider what’s going to happen if Guy shows up again.”
“Meaning what?”
“He’ll cause trouble of some kind. I can guarantee it.”
I shrugged. “He might have changed. People sometimes straighten out.”
Donovan gestured impatiently. “Sure, and sometimes you win the lottery,, but the odds are against. That’s how it is and I guess we’ll have to live with it.”
“You have any idea where he might be?”
“No. And I don’t lie awake at night trying to figure it out either. Frankly, it makes me crazy to think of him coming home to roost. I understand that by law he’s entitled to his fair share of the estate, but I think he ought to be a brick about it and keep his hands to himself.” He picked up a piece of paper and slid it in my direction. “Date of birth and his Social Security number. His middle name is David. What else can I tell you?”
“What about your mother’s maiden name?”
“Patton. Is that for ID purposes?”
“Right. If I find him, I’d like to have a way to confirm it’s really Guy we’re dealing with.”
“You’re picturing an impostor? That’s hard to imagine,” he said. “Who’d want to be a standin for a loser like him?”
I smiled. “It’s not that
far-fetched. The chances are remote, but it’s been done before. You don’t want to end up turning money over to a stranger.”
“You got that right. I’m not all that thrilled to give the money to him. Unfortunately, it’s not up to me. The law’s the law,” he said. “At any rate, I leave this to you. He was a hard-livin’, hard-drinkin’ kid before the age of twenty-one. As to his current whereabouts, your guess is as good as mine. You need anything else?”
“This should do for the time being. I’ll talk to your brothers and then we’ll see where we stand.” I got to my feet and we shook hands across the desk. “I appreciate your time.”
Donovan came around the desk, walking me to the door.
I said, “I’m sure Tasha will have the proper notices published in the local paper. Guy may get wind of it, if he hasn’t already.”
“How so?”
“He might still be in touch with someone living here.”
“Well. That is possible, I suppose. I don’t know how much more we’re obliged to do. If he never turns up, I guess his share of the estate gets placed in an escrow account for some period of time. After that, who knows? The point is, Tasha insists we get it settled and you don’t want to mess with her.”
“I should think not,” I said. “Besides, closure is always nice.”
“Depends on what kind you’re discussing.”
Chapter 3
*
I stopped by the office and opened a file on the case, recording the data Donovan had given me. It didn’t look like much, the merest scrap of information, but the date of birth and Social Security number would be invaluable as personal identifiers. If pressed, I could always check with Guy Malek’s former high school classmates to see if anybody’d heard from him in the years since he left. Given his history of bad behavior, he didn’t seem like a kid others would have known well or perhaps cared to have known at all, but he might have had confederates. I made a note of the name Donovan had given me. Paul Trasatti might provide a lead. It was possible Guy had turned respectable in the last decade and a half and might well have come back to his reunions from time to time. Often the biggest “losers” in high school are the most eager to flaunt their later successes.
If I had to make an educated guess about his original destination on the road to exile, I’d have to say San Francisco, which was only six hours north by car, or an hour by plane. Guy left Santa Teresa when the Haight Ashbury was at its peak. Any flower child who wasn’t already brain-dead from drugs had gravitated to the Haight in those days. It was the party to end all parties, and with ten grand in his pocket his invitation would have been engraved.
At three-thirty, I locked up my office and went down to the second floor to pick up instructions for service on the two deposition subpoenas. I retrieved my car and headed to the Maleks’ place. The house was at the end of a narrow lane, the fifteen-acre property surrounded by an eight-foot wall intersected by an occasional wooden gate. I’d grown up in this town and I thought I knew every corner of it; but this was new to me, prime Santa Teresa real estate dating back to the thirties. The Maleks must lay claim to the last section of flat land for miles. The rear portions of the property must have tilted straight uphill because the face of the Santa Ynez Mountains loomed above me, looking close enough to touch. From the road., I could pick out individual patches of purple sage and coyote brush.
The iron gates at the entrance to the property stood open. I followed the long, curved driveway past a cracked and neglected tennis court into a cobblestone turnaround tucked into the L of the main residence. Both the house and the wall that encompassed the grounds were faced with dusky terra-cotta stucco, an odd shade of red halfway between brick and dusty rose. Massive evergreens towered above the grounds and a forest of live oaks stretched out to the right of the house as far as the eye could see. Sunlight scarcely penetrated the canopy of branches. Near the front of the house, the pine trees had dropped a blanket of needles that must have turned the soil to acid. There was little if any grass and the damp smell of bare earth was pervasive. Here and there, a shaggy palm tree asserted its spare presence. I could see several outbuildings to the right ��� a bungalow, a gardener’s shed, a greenhouse ��� and on the left, a long line of garages. The driveway apparently continued on around the rear of the house. A Harley-Davidson was parked op a gravel pad to one side. There were flowerbeds, but even the occasional suggestion of color failed to soften the somber gloom of the mansion and the deep shade surrounding it.
The architectural style of the house was Mediterranean. All of the windows were flanked with shutters. A series of balustrades punctuated the stark lines of the facade and a lovers’ stairway curved up along the left to a second-story veranda. All the trim was done in dark green, the paint color chalky with age. The roof was composed of old red tile, mottled with soft green algae. The poured concrete urns on either side of the front door were planted with perennials that had died back to sticks. The door itself looked like something that had been lifted from one of the early California missions. When I pressed the bell, I could hear a single resonating note strike within, tolling my presence to the occupants.
In due course, the door was opened by a white woman of indeterminant age in a gray cotton uniform. She was of medium height, thick through the middle, her shoulders and breasts slumping toward a waist that had expanded to accommodate the gradual accumulation of weight. I pegged her in her early forties, but I couldn’t be sure.
“Yes?” Her eyebrows needed plucking and her blond hair showed dark roots mixed with gray. This was a woman who apparently whacked at her own hair with some kind of dull instrument, a not unfamiliar concept. Her bangs had been cut slightly too short, curling across her forehead unbecomingly. Maybe forty dollars for a haircut wasn’t too much to pay.
I handed her my business card. “Are you Myrna?”
“That’s right.”
“I’m Kinsey Millhone,” I said. “I believe Donovan called to say I’d be stopping by this afternoon. Is Bennet at home?”
Her expression didn’t change, but she seemed to know what I was talking about. She was plain, her nose maybe half a size too big for her face. Her lips were antiqued with the remnants of dark lipstick, probably eaten off at lunch or imprinted on the edge of her coffee cup. Now that I’d become an aficionado of drugstore cosmetics, I was acting like an expert. What a laugh, I thought.
“He just got in. He said to put you in the library if you arrived before he came down. Would you like to follow me?”
I said, “Sure.” I loved the idea of being “put” in the library, like a potted plant.
I followed her across the foyer, toward a room on the right. I took in my surroundings surreptitiously, trying not to look like a mouth breather in the process. In the homes of the rich, it doesn’t do to gape. The floor was dark parquet, a complicated herringbone pattern with the polished wooden chevrons blending together seamlessly. The entrance hall was two stories high, but little if any light filtered down from above. Tapestries were hung along the walls at intervals, faded depictions of women with high waists and faces shaped like hard-boiled eggs. Gents in cloaks rode on horseback, trailed by hunting dogs on chains. Behind them, a merry band of woodcutters toted a dead stag that had spears sticking out of its torso like Saint Sebastian. I could tell right away that theirs was a world devoid of animal-rights activists.
The library had the look of a private men’s club, or what I imagine such a place would look like if women were allowed in. Several large red Oriental carpets had been laid side by side to form a continuous floor covering. One wall was paneled in dark walnut and there were floor-to-ceiling bookshelves on the other three. The windows were tall and narrow, diamonds of leaded glass admitting more chill air than afternoon light. There were three groupings of ripped red-leather club chairs and an enormous gray stone fireplace with a gas starter, its inner hearth blackened by countless fires. The room smelled of charred oak and book mold and suggested the kind of dampness
associated with poorly laid foundations. For a family that had amassed a fortune in the construction business, they really ought to think about pumping money into the place. Failing major home improvements, a quick trip to Pier I would have done wonders.
For once, left to my own devices, I didn’t bother to snoop. Guy Malek had been gone for eighteen years. I wasn’t going to find a copy of his outbound bus schedule or a drawer filled with personal diaries he’d kept as a lad. I heard someone walking on the second floor, the ceiling creaking as the steps passed from one side to the other of the room above. I circled the library, glancing out of every window I passed. The room was a good thirty feet long. At the far end, a solarium looked out on the rear lawn, a large expanse of dormant grass with a murky-looking koi pond in the center. The surface of the water was choked with lily pads.
I moved back toward the door and heard someone come down the stairs and traverse the hall. The door opened and Bennet Malek came in. He was four years younger than Donovan with the same fair hair. Where Donovan’s was glossy, Bennet’s was coarse, and he kept it cut short to discourage a visible tendency to curl. He’d apparently given up his battle to stay clean shaven and a blond beard and mustache now defined the lower portion of his face. He was heavyset, looking beefy across the shoulders and thick through the chest. He wore jeans and a navy sweatshirt with the sleeves pushed up along forearms densely matted with hair. Tasha had tagged him as a man who invested and lost sums of money on various faulty commercial ventures. I wondered how I might have responded to him if I hadn’t been told in advance of his poor business sense. As it was, I found myself disregarding the hearty confidence he was at pains to project. Belatedly, I noticed that he carried the last half inch of a drink in his right hand, gin or vodka over ice with a twist. He set the drink on the end table closest to him.