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She fell into a glum silence that lasted most of the way to the La Paloma. Before she left the car, I told her about the women I was looking for, Mildred Mead and Betty Siddon.
She listened gravely. "I'll do what I can. I won't have much time for phoning on _this_ night shift. But I'll pass the word along to some nurses I know in the other nursing homes." She added haltingly, as if it cost her a moral effort to acknowledge any debt: "Fred told me how you treated him in Arizona. I appreciate that. After all, I'm his mother," she said in something like surprise.
She stepped out onto the asphalt and moved heavily toward the half-lighted building. Beyond the wall that enclosed the parking lot, cars went by in unceasing flight and pursuit on mourning tires. Mrs. Johnson turned as she reached the doorway and lifted her hand to me.
A moment after she entered, Mrs. Johnson backed out of the doorway. She was closely followed by two cops. One was in uniform. The other was Captain Mackendrick. I heard her complaining as I approached that they had no right to jump on her in the dark, she was an i
Mackendrick sca
"That is correct," she said coldly. "It doesn't give you any license to scare me out of my wits."
"I didn't mean to do that, ma'am. I'm sorry."
"You ought to be sorry." Mrs. Johnson was pressing her advantage. "You have no right to harry me and harass me. We've got a good lawyer working on our behalf, and you'll be hearing from him if you don't look out."
Mackendrick gazed helplessly at the sky and then at me. "Look, did I do anything wrong? I bumped into a woman accidentally in the dark. I apologized. Do I have to get down on my knees?"
"Mrs. Johnson is a little nervous tonight."
She nodded approvingly in my direction. "You bet I am. What are you doing here, anyway, Captain?"
"We're making a search for a woman."
"Miss Siddon?"
"That's correct, ma'am." Mackendrick gave her a sharp inquiring look. "Who told you about Miss Siddon?"
"Mr. Archer here. He asked me to phone some of my friends in the other nursing homes. I said I would if I got the time, and I will. May I go now?"
"Please do," Mackendrick said. "Nobody's interfering with your movements in any way, shape, or form. But it may not be a good idea to call the other nursing homes. We'd rather surprise 'em."
Mrs. Johnson went into the building for a second time, and didn't reappear.
"She's a tough old babe," Mackendrick said.
"She's had a tough couple of days. Could you and I have a word in private, Captain?"
He jerked his head at the man in uniform, who climbed into the police car. We walked to the far corner of the lot, as far as possible from the building and the highway. A native oak that had somehow kept itself alive in this waste of pavement extended its faint moon-shadow to us. I said, "What brought you here?"
"We got a tip. Someone phoned in and said we should look here for Miss Siddon. That's why I came over myself. We went through the place with a fine-toothed comb and found no trace of her or anybody like her."
"Who provided the tip?"
"It was anonymous-evidently some woman trying to stir up trouble. Mrs. Johnson's the kind who makes enemies. She got herself fired from the hospital, you know."
"So she was telling me. You don't need my opinion, Captain, but I'll give it to you anyway. I think I gave you a bum steer on this search of the nursing homes. I'm not suggesting you call it off entirely. But I think it's time to concentrate your own energies on something else."
Mackendrick was slow to answer. "You mean Mrs. Chantry, don't you?"
"She seems to be at the center of this case."
"We don't know that."
"I think we do."
"What you think isn't good enough, Archer. I can't move against that woman without enough evidence to sink her."
XXXIII
I parked at the head of Mrs. Chantry's street and walked down to her house. Fog was crawling up the barranca behind it. On the hill above, the Biemeyers' place was full of cold light. But Mrs. Chantry's house was dark and still.
I knocked on the front door. I must have half expected to find her dead, or gone, because her immediate response took me by surprise.
As if she'd been waiting there all night, she said through the door, "Who is that? Rico?"
I didn't answer her. We stood on opposite sides of the door in a long waiting silence. It was unevenly filled by the noise of the waves that mounted the beach like giant blundering footsteps and then slid back again.
"Who is that?" she said on a rising note.
"Archer."
"Go away."
"Should I go and get Captain Mackendrick?"
There was another silence, measured by the thumping, slumping footsteps of the sea. Then she unlocked the door and opened it.
There were no lights in the hallway or, so far as I could see, in the house. Against the interior darkness, her hair and her face were the same silvery color. She had on a high-necked dark dress, which suggested that she was a widow and made me wonder if she was.
"Come in if you must," she said in a small cold voice.
I followed her into the main room where her party had been held. She switched on a floor lamp above an armchair and stood beside it waiting. We faced each other in dead silence. Her party had left no echoes in the room.
Finally she said, "I know your type. You're one of these self-elected experts who can't keep his sharp little nose out of other people's business. You just can't bear to see them live their lives without your horning in, can you?"
She flushed, perhaps partly in anger. But what she was saying seemed to have other pressures behind it, too.
I said, "You call this a life that you're living? Covering up a murder for a man you haven't seen in twenty-five years. Sleeping with a boy-man like Rico to keep him quiet."
As if the lighting in the room had changed drastically, the color left her face and her eyes darkened.
"Nobody talks to me like that."
"You might as well get used to it. When the D.A.'s men make their case in Superior Court, they won't be mincing their words."
"The case will never get to court. There is no case." But her eyes were strained and questioning, trying to see over the sharp edge of the present.
"Come off it, Mrs. Chantry. Twenty-five years ago, a man was killed in this house. I don't know who he was but you probably do. Rico buried him in the greenhouse. Tonight, with some help from you, he dug up his bones and put them in a weighted sack. Unfortunately for both of you, I caught him before he threw them in the sea. Do you want to know where they are now?"
She turned her face away. She didn't want to know. Suddenly, as if her legs had collapsed, she sat down in the armchair. She covered her face with her hands and appeared to be trying to cry.
I stood and listened to her painful noises. Handsome as she was, and deep in trouble, I couldn't feel much sympathy for her. She had built her life on a dead man's bones, and death had taken partial possession of her.
As if our minds had been tracking each other, she said, "Where are the bones now?"
"Captain Mackendrick has them. He has your friend Rico, too. And Rico's been talking."
She sat and absorbed the knowledge. It seemed to make her physically smaller. But the hard intelligence in her eyes didn't fade.
"I think I can handle Mackendrick. He's ambitious. I'm not so sure about you. But you do work for money, don't you?"
"I have all the money I need."
She leaned forward, her ringed fists on her knees. "I'm thinking about quite a lot of money. More than you can ever accumulate in a lifetime. Enough to retire on."