Authors: Marcia Muller
But I couldn't shake the feeling that something was wrong with this case. And I couldn't help wishing that I'd come to the Lost Coast in summertime, with a backpack and in the company of my loverâinstead of on a rainy fall afternoon, with a .38 Special and soon to be in the company of Shoemaker's disagreeable wife, Andrea.
The rain was sheeting down by the time I spotted the orange post. It had turned the hard-packed earth to mud, and my MG's tires sank deep in the ruts, its undercarriage scraping dangerously. I could barely make out the stand of live oaks and sycamores where the track ended; no way to tell if another vehicle had traveled over it recently.
When I reached the end of the track I saw one of those boxy four-wheel-drive wagonsâBronco Cherokee?âdrawn in under the branches of an oak. Andrea Shoemaker's? I'd neglected to get a description from her husband of what she drove. I got out of the MG, turning the hood of my heavy sweater up against the downpour; the wind promptly blew it off. So much for what the catalog had described as “extra protection on those cold nights.” I yanked the hood up again and held it there, went around and took my .38 from the trunk and shoved it into the outside flap of my purse. Then I went over and tried the door of the four-wheel drive. Unlocked. I opened it, slipped into the driver's seat.
Nothing identifying its owner was on the seats or in the side pockets, but in the glove compartment I found a registration in the name of Andrea Shoemaker. I rummaged around, came up with nothing else of interest. Then I got out and walked through the trees, looking for the cabin.
Shoemaker had told me to follow a deer track through the grove. No sigh of it in this downpour; no deer, either. Nothing but wind-lashed trees, the oaks pelting me with acorns. I moved slowly through them, swiveling my head from side to side, until I made out a bulky shape tucked beneath the farthest of the sycamores.
As I got closer, I saw the cabin was of plain weathered wood, rudely constructed, with the chimney of a woodstove extending from its composition shingle roof. Smallâtwo or three roomsâand no light showing in its windows. And the door was open, banging against the inside wallâ¦
I quickened my pace, taking the gun from my purse. Alongside the door I stopped to listen. Silence. I had a flashlight in my bag; I took it out. Moved to where I could see inside, then turned the flash on and shone it through the door.
All that was visible was rough board wills, an oilcloth-covered table and chairs, an ancient woodstove. I stepped inside, swinging the light around. Unlit oil lamp on the table; flower-cushioned wooden furniture of the sort you always find in vacation cabins; rag rugs; shelves holding an assortment of tattered paperbacks, seashell, and driftwood. I shifted the lights again, more slowly.
A chair on the far side of the table was tipped over, and a woman's purse lay on the edge of the woodstove, its contents spilling out. When I got over there I saw a .32 Ivey Johnson revolver lying on the floor.
Andrea Shoemaker owned a .32. She'd told me so the day before.
Two doors opened off the room. Quietly I went to one and tried it. A closet, shelves stocked with staples and canned goods and bottled water. I looked around the room again, listening. No sound but the wail of wind and the pelt of rain on the roof. I stepped to the other door.
A bedroom, almost filled wall-to-wall by a king-sized bed covered with a goose down comforter and piled with colorful pillows. Old bureau pushed in one corner, another unlit oil lamp on the single nightstand. Small travel bag on the bed.
The bag hadn't been opened. I examined its contents. Jeans, a couple of sweaters, underthings, toilet articles. Package of condoms. Uh-huh. She'd come here, as I'd found out, to meet a man. The affairs usually began with a casual pickup; they were never of long duration and they all seemed to culminate in a romantic weekend in the isolated cabin.
Dangerous game, particularly in these days when AIDS and the prevalence of disturbed individuals of both sexes threatened. But Andrea Shoemaker had kept her latest date with an even larger threat hanging over her: for the past six weeks, a man with a serious grudge against her husband had been stalking her. For all I know, he and the date were one and the same.
And where was Andrea now?
This case had started on Wednesday, two days ago, when I'd driven up to Eureka, a lumbering and fishing town on Humboldt Bay. After I passed the Humboldt County line I began to see logging trucks toiling through the mountain passes, shredded curls of redwood bark trailing in their wakes. Twenty-five miles south of the city itself was the company-owned town of Scotia, mill stacks belching white smoke and filling the air with the scent of freshly cut wood. Yards full of logs waiting to be fed to the mills lined the highway. When I reached Eureka itself, the downtown struck me as curiously quiet; many of the stores were out of business, and the sidewalks were mostly deserted. The recession had hit the lumber industry hard, and the earthquake hadn't helped the area's strapped economy.
I'd arranged to meet Steve Shoemaker at his law office in Old Town, near the waterfront. It was a picturesque area full of renovated warehouses and interesting shops and restaurants, tricked up for tourists with the inevitable horse-and-carriage rides and t-shirt shops, but still pleasant. Shoemaker's offices were off a cobblestoned courtyard containing a couple of antique shops and decorator's showroom.
When I gave my card to the secretary, she said Assemblyman Shoemaker was in conference and asked me to wait. The man, I knew, had lost his seat in the state legislature this past election, so the term of address seemed inappropriate. The appointments of the waiting room struck me as a bit much: brass and mahogany and marble and velvet, plenty of it, the furnishings and antiques that tended to be garish. I sat on a red velvet sofa and looked for something to read.
Architectural Digest, National Review, Foreign
Affairs
âthat was is it, take it or leave it. I left it. My idea of waiting-room reading material is
People
; I love it, but I'm too embarrassed to subscribe.
The minutes ticked by: ten, fifteen, twenty. I contemplated the issue of
Architectural Digest
, then opted instead for staring at a fake Rembrandt on the far wall. Twenty-five, thirty. I was getting irritated now. Shoemaker had asked me to be here by three; I'd arrived on the dot. If this was, as he'd claimed, a matter of such urgency and delicacy that he couldn't go into it on the phone, why was he in conference at the appointed time?
Thirty-five minutes. Thirty-seven. The door to the inner sanctum opened and a woman strode out. A tall woman, with long chestnut hair, wearing a raincoat and black leather boots. Her eyes rested on me in passingâa cool gray, hard with anger. The she went out, slamming the door behind her.
The secretaryâa trim blond in a tailored suitâstarted as the door slammed. She glanced at me and tried to cover with a smile, but its edges were strained, and her fingertips pressed hard against the desk. The phone at her elbow buzzed; she snatched up the receiver. Spoke into it, then said to me, “Ms. McCone, Assemblyman Shoemaker will see you now.” As she ushered me inside, she again gave me her frayed-edge smile.
Tense situation in this office, I thought. Brought on by what? The matter Steve Shoemaker wanted me to investigate? The client who had just made her angry exit? Or something else entirely�
Shoemaker's office was even more pretentious than the waiting room: more brass, mahogany, velvet, and marble; more fake Old Masters in heavy gilt frames; more antiques; more of everything. Shoemaker's demeanor was not as nervous as his secretary's, but when he rose to greet me, I noticed jerkiness in his movements, as if he was holding himself under tight control. I clasped his outstretched hand and smiled, hoping the familiar social rituals would set him more at ease.
Momentarily they did. He thanked me for coming, apologized for making me wait, and inquired after Jack Stuart. After I was seated in one of the clients' chairs, he offered me a drink; I asked for mineral water. As he went to a wet bar tucked behind a tapestry screen, I took the opportunity to study him.
Shoemaker was handsome: dark hair, with the gray so artfully interwoven that it must have been professionally dyed. Chiseled features; nice, well-muscled body, shown off to perfection by an expensive blue suit. When he handed me my drink, his smile revealed white, even teeth that I, having spent the greater part of the previous month in the company of my dentist, recognized as capped. Yes, a very good-looking man, politician handsome. Jack's old friend or not, his appearance and manner called up my gut-level distrust.
My client went around his desk and reclaimed his chair. He held a drink of his ownâsomething dark amberâand he took a deep swallow before speaking. The alcohol replenished his vitality some; he drank again, set the glass on a pewter coaster, and said, “Ms. McCone, I'm glad you could come up here on such short notice.”
“You mentioned on the phone that the case is extremely urgentâand delicate.”
He ran his hand over his hairâlightly, so as not to disturb its styling. “Extremely urgent and delicate,” he repeated, seeming to savor the phrase.
“Why don't you tell me about it?”
His eyes strayed to the half-full glass on the coaster. Then they moved to the door through which I'd entered. Returned to me. “You saw the woman who just left?”
I nodded.
“My wife, Andrea.”
I waited.
“She's very angry with me for hiring you.”
“She did act angry. Why?”
Now he reached for the glass and belted down its contents. Leaned back and rattled the ice cubes as he spoke. “It's a long story. Painful to me. I'm not sure where to begin. I just⦠don't know what to make of the things that are happening.”
“That's what you've hired me to do. Begin anywhere. We'll fill in the gaps later.” I pulled a small tape recorder from my bag and set it on the edge of his desk. “Do you mind?”
Shoemaker eyed it warily, but shook his head. After a moment's hesitation, he said, “Someone is stalking my wife.”
“Following her? Threatening her?”
“Not following, not that I know of. He writes notes, threatening to kill her. He leavesâ¦things at the house. At her place of business. Dead things. Birds, rats, one time a cat. Andrea loves cats. She⦔ He shook his head, went to the bar for a refill.
“What else? Phone calls?”
“No. One time, a floral arrangementâsuitable for a funeral.”
“Does he sign the notes?”
“John. Just John.”
“Does Mrs. Shoemaker know anyone named John who has grudge against her?”
“She says no. And I⦔ He sat down, fresh drink in hand. “I have reason to believe that this John has a grudge against me, and is using this harassment of Andrea to get at me personally.”
“Why do you think that?”
“The wording of the notes.”
“May I see them?”
He looked around, as if he were afraid someone might be listening. “Later. I keep them elsewhere.”
Something then, I thought, that he didn't want his office staff to see. Something shameful, perhaps ever criminal.
“Okay,” I said, “how long has this been going on?”
“About six weeks.”
“Have you contacted the police?”
“Informally. A man I know on the force, Sergeant Bob Wolfe. But after he started looking into it, I had to ask him to drop it.”
“Why?”
“I'm in a sensitive political position.”
“Excuse me if I'm mistake, Mr. Shoemaker, but it's my understanding that you're no longer serving in the state legislature.”
“That's correct, but I'm about to announce my candidacy in a special election for a senate seat that's recently been vacated.”
“I see. So after you asked your contact on the police force to back off, you decided to use a private investigator, and Jack recommended me. Why not use someone local?”
“As I said, my position is sensitive. I don't want word of this getting out in the community. That's why Andrea is so angry with me. She claims I value my political career more that her life.”
I waited, wondering how he'd attempt to explain that away.
He didn't even try, merely went on, “In ourâ¦conversation just prior to this, she threatened to leave me. This coming weekend she plans to go to a cabin on the Lost Coast that she inherited from her father to, as she put it, sort things through. Alone. Do you know that part of the coast?”
“I've read some travel pieces on it.”
“Then you're aware how remote it is. The cabin's very isolated. I don't want Andrea going there while this John person is on the loose.”
“Does she go there often?”
“Fairly often. I don't; it's too rustic for meâno running water, phone, electricity. But Andrea likes it. Why do you ask?”
“I'm wondering if Johnâwhoever he isâknows about the cabin. Has she been there since the harassment began?”