Mr. Monk and the Two Assistants (22 page)

BOOK: Mr. Monk and the Two Assistants
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“I’ll ask animal control about boars, too,” Disher said, making a note to himself.
 
 
“You do that,” Stottlemeyer said wearily. “Don’t forget to mention the giant clam and the octopus while you’re at it.”
 
 
“Shouldn’t I ask a marine biologist those questions?”
 
 
“I wasn’t serious about the clam and the octopus,” Stottlemeyer said.
 
 
“Were you serious about the alligator?” Disher asked.
 
 
“I wish I wasn’t,” the captain said, “but I’ve learned to trust Monk’s hunches.”
 
 
“It’s not a hunch,” Monk said. “It’s a fact.”
 
 
“But is it murder?” Stottlemeyer asked.
 
 
Monk rolled his shoulders.
 
 
“Yes,” he said, “it is.”
 
 
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
 
 
Mr. Monk and the Other Shoe
 
 
Even though Monk had declared the case a murder, Captain Stottlemeyer wasn’t prepared to commit more police resources to the Webster investigation until he got the medical examiner’s official determination.
 
 
I could understand Stottlemeyer’s reluctance.
 
 
He was stuck with a dead guy on a nude beach who might or might not have been killed by an alligator. While that situation raised some big questions (like “How did the guy get to the beach?” and “Where did the alligator come from?”), there wasn’t actually anything pointing to murder except Adrian Monk’s opinion.
 
 
Granted, Monk had never been wrong about this kind of thing before, but the powers that be at the SFPD weren’t as confident in his abilities as Stottlemeyer and I were. So if Stottlemeyer wanted to keep his job, he had to play the politics and take a wait-and-see approach until after the autopsy.
 
 
But Monk didn’t have to wait.
 
 
Nor could he.
 
 
Monk would have been eager to investigate this case even if he wasn’t actively avoiding the prospect of returning to Los Angeles to solve Ellen Cole’s murder, though I’m sure that was an extra motivation. This particular death was just too intriguing for him to ignore.
 
 
I wasn’t too happy about the way things were working out. My job security would remain uncertain as long as Trevor was in jail, Sharona was in the picture and Ellen Cole’s murderer was still free. But I couldn’t honestly blame Monk for the delay. The alligator attack was a legitimate case, not a stalling tactic. And getting a head start on the investigation meant he’d solve the mystery that much quicker.
 
 
Monk wanted to learn more about Ronald Webster to see if there was something in the man’s life that might explain the bizarre circumstances of his death.
 
 
So we started at the shoe store where Webster worked. I was surprised to discover that the store was in my neighborhood, just two doors down from Sorrento’s Pizza.
 
 
I’d never bought any shoes at the store, but I’d window-shopped there a few times. They carried lots of fancy Italian brands and running shoes that cost more per pair than the yearly salaries of the Chinese factory workers who made them.
 
 
I wish I could say that I didn’t buy the shoes as a deeply felt political statement, but it was mostly because they were way too pricey for me on my Monk salary.
 
 
Then again, so was a pack of bubble gum.
 
 
There were three customers, two salespeople and one cashier in the store when we went in.
 
 
I was never entirely comfortable in situations like this, where Monk intended to question people who didn’t know who he was or his connection to the police.
 
 
The problem was that we didn’t have any official standing,which meant that often the people we were meeting with had no reason to talk with us, certainly not about things that were usually intensely private matters.
 
 
So getting them to open up took a little finesse. As we walked into the store, I was still thinking about what approach to take.
 
 
There were several table displays interspersed among the chairs where people sat trying on shoes. The back wall was covered from floor to ceiling with perhaps a hundred shoes staggered on clear plastic shelves.
 
 
Monk went straight to the back wall and approached the salesman standing there, waiting to be helpful.
 
 
“May I help you, sir?” the salesman asked with a smile as synthetic as his blazer. His name tag identified him as Maurice.
 
 
Monk picked up one of the shoes on display. “Where’s the other shoe?”
 
 
“We have plenty more where that came from,” Maurice said, “and in several handsome styles. Would you like to see them?”
 
 
“This is the shoe for the right foot,” Monk said. “Where is the shoe for the left foot?”
 
 
“I’m sure it’s in the back somewhere,” Maurice said.
 
 
“Why isn’t it out here?”
 
 
“These are just samples, sir,” Maurice said. “But it would be my pleasure to find a pair in your size.”
 
 
“I want the other shoe that goes with this one,” Monk said and began pointing at the individual shoes on the wall. “And that one, and that one, and that one, and that one, and—”
 
 
“You want to try on every shoe on this wall?” Maurice interrupted,giving up any attempt at sustaining his synthetic smile. But I was beginning to see an approach that I could take to get the information we wanted.
 
 
“I want to see them up on that wall,” Monk said.
 
 
“Why?”
 
 
“People have two feet,” Monk said.
 
 
“I’m aware of that, sir,” Maurice said.
 
 
“Shoes come in pairs.” Monk motioned to the wall. “Those aren’t pairs.”
 
 
“Like I said, sir, these are samples.”
 
 
“How can you break up a pair of shoes?” Monk said.
 
 
“It’s easier and more attractive to display one shoe in each style on the wall.”
 
 
“But you’re a shoe professional,” Monk said. “You of all people should respect the rule of the unbreakable pair.”
 
 
“The rule of the unbreakable pair?” Maurice asked.
 
 
“Breaking up a pair is a crime against nature,” Monk replied.
 
 
“You’re telling me this display of shoes is a crime against nature.”
 
 
“Isn’t it obvious?”
 
 
“You’ll have to forgive my friend,” I said, pulling the salesman aside and lowering my voice. “But Ronald Webster usually takes care of him. Ron is so good with people. Is he here today?”
 
 
“He hasn’t shown up,” Maurice said. “In fact, his priest called this morning looking for him.”
 
 
“His priest?” I said. “Isn’t that kind of odd?”
 
 
“Ronald never misses morning mass at Mission Dolores, ” Maurice said. “This morning he did.”
 
 
“He goes to mass
every
morning?”
 
 
“Ronald is a real straight arrow,” Maurice said. “Punctual, clean, extremely organized.”
 
 
“You’re lying,” Monk said.
 
 
Maurice turned to him. “Excuse me?”
 
 
“Look at that wall.” Monk motioned to the shoes again. “No organized, God-fearing man would allow that.”
 
 
The salesman looked at me. “Is he off his meds?”
 
 
“Maybe Ronald is at his girlfriend’s house and overslept, ” I said.
 
 
“Ronald doesn’t have a girlfriend at the moment,” Maurice said.
 
 
“I could have sworn he mentioned her to me,” I said. “He said they liked to go skinny-dipping at Baker Beach.”
 
 
“Ronald? Never. He won’t even wear short-sleeved shirts.” Maurice eyed me suspiciously. “This is a small store and I’ve worked here for five years. I can’t recall ever seeing you or your friend here before.”
 
 
“Maybe you just didn’t notice us,” I said.
 
 
That was when Monk whirled around and pointed at the other salesman.
 
 
“What do you think you’re doing?” Monk snapped.
 
 
The other salesman, who was easily in his twenties but still seemed to have the awkward gawkiness of an adolescent, froze in midstride with an open shoe box in his hand.
 
 
“I’m, um, returning these shoes to the back room,” the other salesman squeaked.
 
 
“You can’t,” Monk said.
 
 
“Why not?”
 
 
“Because they were on her feet.” Monk pointed accusingly at a female customer, startling the poor woman who was tugging at her loose socks. She was in her fifties and had a hairstyle that looked like it had been done in 1972 and flash-frozen on her head.
 
 
“I was only trying them on,” she said meekly.
 
 
“You try, you buy,” Monk said. “That’s the law.”
 
 
“No, it isn’t,” Maurice said.
 
 
“But they don’t fit,” the woman said.
 
 
“You should have thought of that before you put them on your feet,” Monk said.
 
 
“I’m wearing socks,” she said.
 
 
“You weren’t wearing any when you came in,” Monk said.
 
 
“They gave these to me,” she said, gesturing to the other salesman, “so I could try on the shoes.”
 
 
Monk turned to Maurice. “You gave her those filthy socks? How many other disgusting feet have they been on?”
 
 
“Disgusting?” she said. “My feet aren’t disgusting.”
 
 
“They weren’t when you came in, but they certainly are now,” Monk said. “Don’t handle any food with them.”
 
 
“I don’t eat food with my feet!” she exclaimed. “I’m not a monkey.”
 
 
“Then you have no excuse for sticking your feet in every shoe you see, do you?”
 
 
Like I said, finesse.
 
 
Maurice glared at us both. “That’s enough. Leave immediately or I’ll call the police.”
 
 
“You know what, Maurice? I think that’s an excellent idea.” I handed him my cell phone. “You can use my phone. Ask for Captain Leland Stottlemeyer.”
 
 
I know it would have been a lot easier if I’d just had the captain call the shoe store before we went there. But, technically,this wasn’t an official homicide investigation yet, and if Monk went out on his own and got into a situation that was potentially embarrassing to the department, Stottlemeyer could still plausibly claim ignorance.
 
 
I didn’t used to think about the politics of Stottlemeyer’s job, but during the unofficial police strike a while back, Monk was reinstated as captain of homicide and I got a firsthand glimpse at how things worked in the department. I realized afterward that protecting Stottlemeyer was, in a way, simply an extension of my job protecting Monk.

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