at school, Texas Seminary."
I nodded, made a nonsense note on my blotter. I printed the letters
slowly, paying no real attention to them. "Did you get along with your
father?"
"I hardly see what that has to do it."
"Look, Mr. King--"
"Jeffrey."
"All right, Jeffrey, if we're going to work together you're going to have
to trust me. If I ask a question, it's probably for a good reason."
He blinked his eyes down, then back up to mine. "My father was a
difficult man. I respected him, and I honored him, as I was taught to
do."
I decided I was not going to be able to crack Jeffrey King, and that it
probably wasn't worth my effort anyway. "All right, Jeffrey," I said,
"I'm interested." I recited my rates, adding, "Plus a bonus if I get her off.
A hundred will do for a retainer."
"Will a check be all right?"
I nodded, and while he started writing I asked him, "Who do you think
did it?"
He finished making out the check, tore it out with a long,
backhanded rip. Then he looked at me with smoldering eyes. "The
whore," he said. "Charlene Desmond."
"Have you met her?"
"No. But I've read what she said in the newspapers. She's evil, Mr.
Sloane. A desperate, misguided woman." He was sounding twice his
age again, and I wondered just how much he knew about desperate,
misguided women.
"What's her motive?"
He shrugged. "Who knows? But she must have known Chico was off
on Thursdays. That would be the day when she was used to visiting my
father. So when she wanted something from him, she knew when he
would be alone. He refused her, probably refused to continue his
relationship with her, and she shot him."
"Um hmm," I said, and picked up the check. "Can I reach you at this
number?" He nodded. "All right. I'll get on it right away. If there's
anything else I need I'll call you."
He left and I threw open a window. The smell of baking asphalt wafted
in from Congress Avenue, but it was an improvement. I called the
sheriff's office and asked for Winslow.
"Hello, Sam. This is Dan. Looks like we're going to be working
together."
"How's that?" His voice had a tentative sound to it, a little frayed at the
edges.
"On the King case. His son hired me."
"Oh really."
"What's wrong? You and Jeannie slug it out again?"
"No. No...just can't see why you'd want to bother with the King case.
It's all over but the trial."
"Well, maybe so. But I still got to make a living. Listen, can you give
me some info? I need to know where the King woman stands."
"Like what?"
"Like did you get prints on the gun?"
"Yeah. They were smeared, but we got two good sets. One hers, one
his."
"Do you have an address for Charlene Desmond?" He gave it to me and
I wrote it on the blotter.
"One mote thing," I said. "What about traffic up at the King house
Thursday night. Did you find out anything?"
"The cab companies say none of their people went up there. Neighbors
don't remember much." He found a quieter, apologetic tone. "Say, Dan,
I have to go."
"Yeah. I understand. See you, Sam." I did understand. I'd been around
long enough to know the sound of pressure coming down.
V
In 1959 I gave up my DA haircut and sold my Chevy and joined the
Marines. My girlfriend was very proud of me for about two weeks, then
she found somebody who was still in the neighborhood, and that was
that. When Kennedy sent the "advisors" to Viet Nam in '61 I was along
for the ride, and I was flying choppers by '62. Then my hitch was up,
and I was ready to go home. So my sergeant got me drunk and got me
to sign a blank piece of paper and I was suddenly in for three more
years. They hadn't been able to make their idea of a man out of me, and
they wanted another chance.
I didn't want to give it to them. I'd been rooked and they knew it, but
the pressure was on. I tried to raise a stink, but it was hopeless, and
finally the word came down: if I wanted out badly enough I could have
a Dishonorable Discharge. I walked out of the Commandant's Office in
Saigon and watched a Buddhist monk pour gasoline on himself and set
himself on fire. I went back into the Commandant's office and talked
some more. I finished my hitch at a desk in Germany.
I took my hand-to-hand combat training to Pinkerton while I was at
Berkeley on the GI
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.