Muller, Marcia - [McCone 04] Games to Keep the Dark Away (v.1,shtml) (9 page)

BOOK: Muller, Marcia - [McCone 04] Games to Keep the Dark Away (v.1,shtml)
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"That would have been okay," Don went on, "but
Allen also started taking Jane out in public. He made a lot of stupid
moves, like renaming the boat
Princess Jane
. People started
to talk. This is a small town, in spite of the way it's grown in the
past ten years. It wasn't long before Arlene knew the whole story."

"And she filed for divorce?"

"Yes. And because Arlene knew Allen had manipulated his
finances when he split from his second wife, she hired detectives to
trace their joint assets. They found he'd forged Arlene's signature a
couple of times, and she demanded a huge settlement in exchange for
not prosecuting. I gather Keller had to liquidate a number of
holdings in order to keep her from getting her hands on The
Tidepools. Rumor has it he's on the verge of bankruptcy."

I recalled the impression I'd had of Keller's home as a house of
cards. "What happened with him and Jane?"

"She couldn't take the heat of the scandal. Quit her job at
The Tidepools and moved to San Francisco. But she still saw
Keller—they were in here together last month—and I think
they hoped it would work out for them once he got his financial
affairs in shape. And it probably would have; the scandal would have
eventually died down. People give up, you know, when there's nothing
fresh and juicy to chew over."

"You say you saw Keller with Jane last month?" If she
had been with him then, she could also have been with him the past
week.

"I didn't, but someone from the station did and, of course,
she felt she had to mention it."

"Has anyone seen them together since then?"

"Not that I know of."

I'd have to have a talk with Keller tomorrow, I decided. Suddenly
tired, I drained my glass and looked at my watch.

Don said, "Can I cook dinner for you one night this week? It
would have to be after eight, of course. I'm happy having the show in
a prime time slot, but it doesn't allow for a normal social life."

"That's okay; I've never had one of those myself. And, yes,
I'd love to have dinner."

He grinned, then motioned to the waiter for the check. Our
departure from the restaurant was accompanied by the same waving and
handshaking as Don's arrival had been, and I realized he was
something of a local celebrity. When I commented on the fact,
however, he shrugged and said, "It's a friendly town." His
offhandedness made me like him even more.

We walked toward my car, Don's hand resting lightly on my arm. As
we came in sight of the MG, I spotted a figure in dark clothing
leaning down next to it, as if trying to see through the window.

"Hey!" I called.

The figure moved back onto the sidewalk, behind a group of people
who stood talking in front of a restaurant. I shook off Don's hand
and quickened my pace. The figure started to run, and I went after
it.

A tourist couple came out of the restaurant. They were both fat,
and the man had his arm around the woman. I dodged to the left, but a
kid on a skateboard came zooming by, barely missing me. The couple
both seemed tipsy; when they tried to avoid me, they staggered and
then stopped. The woman giggled and the man smiled apologetically. By
the time I'd gotten around them, the dark figure had vanished.

Don came up behind me. "What was that about?"

"I don't know." I turned and hurried back to my car.
Both doors were locked and the convertible top was intact, but I got
out my keys, opened the passenger door, and unlocked the glove box.
The .38 Special I kept there had not been touched.

I straightened up and turned to Don. His mouth was open and he was
looking at me as if he were seeing me for the first time. "You're
for real, aren't you?" he said.

"What?"

He motioned at the glove box. "It's one thing hearing you
talk about an investigation, but seeing that…"

I smiled. After dating a cop who took things like the .38 for
granted, I'd forgotten how it could scare off potential boyfriends.
"Don't worry." I put my hand on Don's arm. "I've very
rarely had to use it."

He covered my hand with his and squeezed it. "But you do know
how."

"Yes. I wouldn't own it if I didn't." The image of a man
I'd once killed flashed into my mind, but I shook it off, as I always
did. I certainly didn't want to go into that with Don—not until
I knew him a lot better.

He smiled. "Well, just don't bring the gun to dinner."

"I'll bring wine instead."

We exchanged phone numbers—mine at the motel, his at
home—and said good-night there on the sidewalk. Intrigued as I
was by the prospect of a budding romance with this attractive man, my
thoughts were on the figure I'd seen by my car. It could have been
nothing, but I'd do well to be more alert in the future. And the
romance, I told myself as I drove back to the Mission Inn, would have
to wait until I cleared up the business at hand.

13

At
ten the next morning I sat on one of the ornately
carved chairs in the lobby of The Tidepools, waiting to talk to Ann
Bates. I'd been there half an hour and the high-backed chair grew
harder with each passing minute. Every time I shifted my position,
the handsome dark-haired woman at the desk would look up, an anxious
frown creasing her brow. When I finally stood up and went over to the
glass wall that opened onto the patio, the woman jerked. I glanced
curiously at her, but she lowered her eyes.

The hospice seemed strangely hushed this morning. Except for the
woman at the desk, I hadn't seen a single soul, and the phone hadn't
rung once all the time I'd been waiting. Even the fountain was quiet,
its water turned off, and not a breeze ruffled the fuchsia blossoms
in their hanging baskets. It wasn't a peaceful stillness, however.

The receptionist's tension had begun to affect me. When the carved
front door opened, squeaking on its iron hinges, I jumped. A
middle-aged couple, prosperous-looking in tweeds, came in. They
conferred with the receptionist, then took seats on the far side of
the lobby. Tired of waiting, I went over to the woman at the desk and
asked how much longer Mrs. Bates would be.

"Oh, I'm certain it won't be more than a few minutes."
She did not meet my eyes.

"Would you get her on the phone again and find out?"

Her hand strayed toward the receiver, then stopped. "She
knows you're here. I'm sure she'll be out as soon as she's free."
She looked up, and I saw that her eyes were almost pleading.
Obviously Bates was the source of her jumpiness.

I said, "Is she in a bad mood today?"

A smile tugged at the corners of the woman's mouth. "Today
and yesterday. All week, in fact. I'd rather not bother her again—"
Footsteps clicked on the tiled floor behind us and the trace of a
smile disappeared from the woman's lips.

I turned to face Mrs. Bates. Dressed in beige silk, she was as
fashionable as the last time I'd seen her, but there were lines
around her mouth that hadn't been there before. "Ms. McCone,"
she said, "what can I do for you?"

"I take it you've heard about Jane Anthony's death?"

"The police were here making inquiries. And of course it was
in the papers."

"I'm cooperating with the local force in the investigation,
and there are some questions I need to ask you."

"I've already told the detectives from Homicide everything I
know about Ms. Anthony. Perhaps you should talk to them."

"No, I'd rather talk to you."

Bates glanced at the couple on the other side of the lobby, and
then at the receptionist. "Mary, who are—"

''Relatives of a prospective patient. One of the volunteers is to
give them a tour, but she hasn't arrived yet."

Bates frowned. "Doesn't she know enough to be on time, for
God's sake?"

"They're early."

"Well… oh, never mind." Bates looked back at me,
exasperation plain on her face. "Ms. McCone, I realize you are
merely trying to do your job, but you are hindering me from doing
mine. As I said before, I suggest you talk to the police."

Her voice was louder now, and the prosperous-looking couple turned
their heads. I raised my own voice. "You also must realize that
by refusing to talk to me you're obstructing my investigation of this
murder."

The man sat up straighter and he and the woman exchanged looks.

"Ms. McCone!" Bates glanced at them frantically.

"Since you won't talk with me I can only assume that you—or
someone else at The Tidepools—have something to hide."

Two spots of red appeared on Bates' cheeks. She heaved a sigh and
said to the receptionist, "Hold all my calls, Mary." Then
she glared at me. "Come this way, Ms. McCone." In icy
silence we went down a hallway to an office wing.

Bates led me into a paneled office with a view of a cypress grove.
It was furnished with a large, cluttered desk and banks of metal
filing cabinets. She made a curt motion at a visitor's chair in front
of the desk, then went around and sat behind it.

"Now that you have succeeded in making both me and The
Tidepools look bad," she said, "what do you want to ask
me?"

"I need to see Jane Anthony's personnel file."

"Absolutely not."

"Why?"

"It's confidential."

"The woman's been murdered. Nothing about her is confidential
anymore."

"The file is the property of The Tidepools."

'"Did you refuse to show it to the police?"

"They didn't ask. They merely questioned me about what I
recalled about Ms. Anthony."

"All the more reason I should see it."

She leaned forward on the desk, her eyes flashing. "No, Ms.
McCone. All the more reason you should not. If the police didn't need
to see the file, you don't either."

This statement was going to be broken only by the introduction of
a new element. "Why don't we get Allen Keller in on this?"

She blinked and took her elbows off the desk. "I thought Mary
told you when you arrived that Dr. Keller isn't in today."

"Has he been in at all since Jane Anthony was killed?"

"That's none of your business." But the fire went out of
her eyes and she bit her underlip.

"I guess he's taking it hard. It would be a shame to have to
disturb him over something like this file."

"Yes, it would."

"On the other hand, if I have no choice…"

"Ms. McCone, Allen—Dr. Keller has had a very difficult
time this week. He told me how you hunted him down at home."

"Did he also tell you that he lied to me about how well he
knew Jane?"

"That's only natural, given the havoc that woman wreaked upon
his life. I don't want you bothering him any more."

"But I need to see that file."

She was silent, her hands gripping the arms of her chair. Her
face, which had seemed invulnerable moments ago, was now deeply
troubled. I thought of women I'd known who had fallen in love with
bosses or co-workers. They might lose them to other women, but still
they went on, keeping the office fires burning, waiting for some
improbable future chance. Was Ann Bates…?

A look of resolve spread over her features and she stood up,
taking a key out of her desk drawer. "If I let you see the file,
will you leave Dr. Keller alone?"

"Would I have any other reason to contact him?"

"Of course not." Either she was not as bright as she
appeared to be or she badly wanted to believe she was doing the right
thing. She went to one of the file cabinets, opened it, and reached
inside. Then her back straightened and she began to shuffle through
the files.

She closed the drawer, opened the one below it, and repeated the
procedure. When she finally turned to me, her face was drained of
color.

"What's wrong?" I said.

She shook her head and shut the drawer. "I'm afraid I can't
show you the file after all."

"Why not?"

"Because, Ms. McCone, it is not there. And from what I can
tell, a large number of our other files have vanished as well."

I left Ann Bates rummaging through her file cabinets, trying to
figure out exactly what was missing, and drove to Allen Keller's
home. The maid who answered the door told me the doctor wasn't in,
but refused to say where he had gone. On my way back to the MG, I
checked the garage; there was no car inside, so it was a good bet the
maid was telling the truth. I thought for a minute and then
remembered his boat, the
Princess Jane
, at the marina next
to the Sand Dollar. It was worth a try. I drove over there and
spotted the cruiser tied up at the far end of an outer slip. The
location was reasonably private and the cruiser, which had to be at
least thirty feet, was luxurious. I understood why Keller and Jane
had chosen to meet there.

The marina was almost deserted on this weekday morning. As I
walked out toward Keller's slip, all I heard were the cries of gulls
and the creaks of the mooring hawsers. Then I heard another sound—the
clink of a bottle against a glass.

Keller sat on a folding chair on the afterdeck of the cruiser. He
wore cutoff jeans and no shirt, and his stomach sagged over his belt.
When I came alongside the boat, he was setting a gin bottle down on
the table next to him. He looked up at me, squinting and shading his
eyes from the sun, then said, "Go away."

I stepped on board anyway.

"You do as you please, don't you?" He picked up his
glass and drank off half the clear liquid.

"Most of the time." I looked around and found another
folding chair. Keller watched me set it up.

"I could throw you off of here." But his words held no
menace.

"You could, but you look like you might need some company."

He shrugged. I sat down in the chair.

"How'd you know I was here?" he asked.

"I guessed, since this was where you and Jane used to go."

He paused, glass halfway to his lips. "Somebody's been
talking. Who?"

"Nobody you know."

"Not Ann Bates. She wouldn't."

"No, not Ann. Let's just say I heard some gossip."

"Yeah, sure. Everybody's heard the gossip." He drank,
then added, "If you're going to stay, at least have a drink."

If that was what it would take to get him talking, I would.
Besides, it was hot there in the sun. "I'll take a beer if
you've got one."

"I think there are some in the fridge below."

"Do you want me to get it?"

"No." He stood up, went to the entrance to the cabin,
and disappeared. In a minute or so he returned with a chilled Coors.
He handed it to me and reached immediately for the gin bottle. From
his speech and movements, Keller wasn't drunk yet, but at this rate
he soon would be.

"So you heard the gossip and came to hold rny hand." His
expression was sardonic, mouth pulled down on one side.

"Her death was a bad shock, wasn't it?"

"You could say that."

"Why'd you lie to me about knowing her?"

"Why should I have gone into it? She wasn't really missing—I
knew that, and you knew it too because you'd talked to her mother."

"You knew it because she was staying with you."

He shook his head. "No. She wasn't with me, at least not the
whole week."

"Where was she?"

His eyes left mine and flicked toward the bow. "She was
elsehwere."

"Where?"

"I don't know. It doesn't matter now."

"It may."

"No." He drank more gin. "Not now it doesn't."

"Why wasn't she with you?"

"She needed privacy to do her research, and she didn't want
to involve me anyway."

"What research?"

He made a motion with his hand, as if trying to erase his words.

"What kind of research?"

"Forget it."

A telephone that sat on the deck next to the companion way door
began ringing. Keller got up and answered it, standing with his back
to me.

While he talked, I thought over my visit to his house. Keller
probably was telling the truth about Jane not staying there, because
he would not have admitted me so freely and let me stay so long if
she were there or likely to return. But what about this "research?"
What had she been—?

"I said, don't worry about it!" Keller's voice was
suddenly loud. "They'll turn up… No, I'm not coming in
today… I don't know when—For God's sake, Ann, just hold
things together there. Is that too much to ask? I'll be in when I
can." He slammed the receiver into its cradle and strode back to
his chair, his face mottled with anger.

"Ann Bates," I said.

He glared at me. "You seem to know a great deal about my
friends and associates."

"I know Ann because I just came from The Tidepools. She was
calling about the missing files, wasn't she?"

He sighed and leaned forward, elbows on knees, head in hands. "The
files are not missing, they've merely been misplaced. She's making a
big deal out of nothing. Jesus, why did I get up today? What the fuck
is happening to me? When did it all get so out of control?"

I waited, but he just sat there, staring down at the desk. My beer
can was empty, and the ice in his glass had melted. I stood up and
said, "You can use a fresh drink; I'll get some ice and another
beer—"

He looked up quickly. "No, I'll do it." This time his
steps were unsteady as he walked toward the companionway.

I waited until his head disappeared, then got up, and looked down
there. I could see a small, compact galley, but that was all. I
glanced down at the telephone at my feet and made a note of its
number. By the time Keller returned, I was back in my deck chair.

"About that research of Jane's…" I opened my beer
and took a swallow.

Keller's angry expression returned. "If you don't want to get
pitched over the side, drop it. I don't even know why I'm letting you
stay aboard."

But I could guess; Keller wasn't a man who could bear loneliness
in the face of his loss. To prove it, he began to talk, his words
slurring as they spilled out.

"But, then, I don't know anything anymore. How
do
you know when your life gets out of control? There was a time when I
thought I had it all and now I can't even remember when that was. I
was a doctor, a good doctor, and I was going to ease pain. I'd been
to England, seen the work they were doing in the hospices there, and
I'd inherited enough capital to start my own here. The Tidepools.
Ease pain. Jesus."

"But you do good work there."

"Sure. Good work. And we take their money. Sometimes we even…
Jesus." He poured a full glass of gin and began in on it. "You
know, it probably got out of control up there when I brought Ann in.
She had a lot of ideas about making a profit and they sounded good,
but what they did was bastardize the original concept. But the reason
I brought her in and went for those ideas was because it had gotten
out of control with me first. You know what I mean?"

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