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“Was it Spivey?” Virginia Neighbors said. “Did you shoot Spivey?”

“Yes,” I said. “I didn’t want to, but there wasn’t much choice.”

She stared at me and the rain that streaked her face failed to conceal the bitterness. “He said you wouldn’t use a gun. He said you told him in Washington that you wouldn’t use a gun.”

“I’ll have to tell you what I told him,” I said.

“What?”

“I lied.”

I reached out and took the attaché case from Virginia Neighbors. “Let’s go,” I said. I turned and started back toward the beginning of the pier. In the distance I could hear Max Spivey screaming. He kept on screaming until the ambulance came and took him away.

21

The chili was dripping all over the detective-lieutenant’s fingers and he was trying to wipe them off with the wax paper and he was making a mess of it.

“The best goddamned hamburgers in town,” he said, “and for napkins they serve wax paper.”

“They are good,” I said, taking another bite of mine.

The detective-lieutenant was Mason Patrika and he had been a friend of Fastnaught’s. I had spent the entire morning, four very unpleasant hours, with the Los Angeles police and at one o’clock Patrika had appeared and offered to buy me the best hamburger in Los Angeles. We were sitting in his car at a drive-in type place called Tommy’s on Beverly Boulevard. We were eating hamburgers and drinking Cokes and Patrika was telling me what the police had found out about Max Spivey.

“We didn’t get anything out of him, you know,” he said.

“So I understand.”

“He screamed and screamed all the way to the hospital and just when he got there he stopped screaming and died. But the woman, what’s her name, Neighbors, yeah, Virginia Neighbors, well, she talked and for all I know, she’s still talking. She said Fastnaught got out here and started digging in pretty good, I mean he was getting close and so Spivey called him and set up a meeting and when Spivey got there, he picked up a bottle of booze and cracked old Fastnaught over the head with it and then used a piece of wire to choke him with, but you say you knew that.”

“It had to be Spivey,” I said. “But I didn’t know who it was at the time.”

“Well, they picked up a print from underneath where you flush the toilet. It was Spivey’s. After he got through choking Fastnaught he must have used the John to piss or maybe throw up in. Who knows? Sometimes they do that, you know, throw up.”

“Whose idea was it?” I said.

“You mean the whole schmear?”

“Yes.”

“It was Spivey’s. He needed money. I mean, he really needed it bad. He had gone into a couple of deals, land deals, and they’d gone sour. Well, he knew Jack Marsh was always up to his ears in debt so he approached him — laid it all out for him, according to the Neighbors woman. Marsh jumped at it. He paid the little guy, what’s his name?”

“Doc Amber.”

“Yeah, Amber. He paid him a few bucks to go and make a spiel to Maude Goodwater about how he had a buyer for the book. She fell for it and then when Marsh got to Washington he just picked up the book from the Library and then disappeared. The Neighbors woman was in Washington with him when she made all those calls.”

“What’d she use?” I said.

“What do you mean?”

“To distort her voice.”

“Oh. A couple of nickels, she said. She just put a couple of nickels in her mouth and then talked as deep as she could. Then in Washington it was Max Spivey who drove off with the money and the book after Fastnaught shot Marsh.”

“His hair was wet,” I said.

“Whose?”

“Spivey’s. When I finally got back to the hotel, his hair was wet. Or damp.”

“He could have taken a shower.”

“Or been out in the snow.”

“Or that,” he said. “What else? I mean, you say you knew it was Spivey even before you went out to make the buy-back last night.”

“I thought it was him,” I said. “I was pretty sure it was him. It was something he said.”

“When?”

“When we were in his boss’s office. The woman had called me and told me that I had until five o’clock to decide whether the insurance company would spend another hundred grand to buy the book back. When his boss asked how much time they had, Spivey said until five o’clock. I hadn’t told him that.”

“Gee, it was a real clue, wasn’t it?” Patrika said, not bothering to keep the sarcasm out of his voice. Sure.

“Why didn’t you do something about it?”

“Such as? You mean you think I should’ve called the cops and said, hey, this guy Spivey already knows that we have until just five o’clock to make up our minds. I didn’t tell him that, so why don’t you come down and get him and toss him in the jug? Something like that maybe?”

“It wasn’t much, was it?”

“Hardly anything.”

Patrika took the last bite of his hamburger, looked at his messy fingers, and sighed. “In my rear pocket,” he said. “There’s a handkerchief.”

I reached into his rear pocket and took out a fresh white handkerchief. He wiped his fingers on it. “I oughta keep some Kleenex in the car,” he said. “My wife gets mad as hell when I get chili all over my handkerchiefs.” He looked at me. “How come you didn’t get any on your fingers?”

“I’m naturally neat,” I said.

“Fastnaught,” Patrika said. “You know, he was a pretty good cop.”

“I know.”

“But he was drinking. A lot of cops drink too much. It’s sort of the cop’s disease.”

“And doctors and lawyers and writers and painters and traveling salesmen.”

“Yeah, I guess you’re right. I guess we all try to be a little special, don’t we? I mean, we all think if we didn’t have such rough jobs we wouldn’t drink so much. But still, Fastnaught must have been getting pretty close to get himself killed.”

“He was working the insurance angle,” I said. “He found out that Jack Marsh was in hock to some people in Vegas and that he’d taken out a policy with Spivey’s company that made the collector the beneficiary. That smelled and that’s probably all that Fastnaught needed.”

“To get himself killed, you mean.”

“That’s right. To get himself killed.”

Guerriero pulled up in front of the house on Malibu Road and cut the engine. “Will you be long?”

“Not long,” I said. “How much time do we have?”

“It’s about forty-five minutes to the airport.”

“We’ve got a little more than an hour then.”

I got out of the van and went through the wooden gate and across the patio and down the three steps. I rang the bell and Maude Goodwater opened the door. She smiled and I smiled back. I followed her into the living room.

“Would you like a drink?” she said.

“No, I don’t think so.”

“Well, it’s over, isn’t it?”

“Yes, it’s over. I’m sorry about the book.”

“I wasn’t talking about that. I mean it’s over between us.”

“It didn’t really get started, did it?”

She smiled again, this time a sad, almost wistful sort of a smile. “It might have worked out.”

“You would’ve had to put up with more than you bargained for.”

“What does that mean?”

“I’m not sure,” I said.

She turned and looked at the ocean. It was a pale blue dotted with frosty-looking whitecaps. “Funny,” she said. “It seems I might be able to stay here after all. I got a call a while ago.”

“From whom?”

“From a man who’d heard about the book — about it’s having a bullet hole through it. He wants to buy it. He offered me six hundred thousand. I didn’t think he was for real so I had my lawyer call him. He’s what we talked about — rich and eccentric.”