The Underground Man Page 5
Mrs. Broadhurst cast a slow look around at the house and its surroundings. “There’s never been fire in this canyon in my lifetime.”
“That means it’s ripe,” he said. “The brush up above is fifteen and twenty feet deep, and as dry as a chip. This is a fifty-year fire. It could take your house unless the wind changes again.”
“Then let it.”
Jean came to meet us at the door, a little tardily, as if she dreaded what we were going to say. I told her that her husband was dead and that her son was missing. The two women exchanged a questioning look, as if each of them was looking into the other for the source of all their troubles. Then they came together in the doorway and stood in each other’s arms.
Kelsey came up behind me on the porch. He tipped his hard hat and spoke to the younger woman, who was facing him over Mrs. Broadhurst’s shoulder.
“Mrs. Stanley Broadhurst?”
“Yes.”
“I understand you can give me a description of the girl who was with your husband.”
“I can try.”
She separated herself from the older woman, who went into the house. Jean rested on the railing near the hummingbird feeder. A hummingbird buzzed her. She moved to the other side of the porch and sat on a canvas chair, leaning forward in a strained position and repeating for Kelsey her description of the blue-eyed blond girl with the strange eyes.
“And you say she’s eighteen or so?”
Jean nodded. Her reactions were quick but mechanical, as if her mind was focused somewhere else.
“Is—was your husband interested in her, Mrs. Broadhurst?”
“Obviously he was,” she said in a dry bitter voice. “But I gathered she was more interested in my son.”
“Interested in what way?”
“I don’t know what way.”
Kelsey switched to a less sensitive line of questioning. “How was she dressed?”
“Last night she had on a sleeveless yellow dress. I didn’t see her this morning.”
“I did,” I put in. “She was still wearing the yellow dress. I assume you’ll be giving all this to the police.”
“Yessir, I will. Right now I want to talk to the gardener. He may be able to tell us how that spade and pick got up on the mountain. What’s his name?”
“Frederick Snow—we call him Fritz,” Jean said. “He isn’t here.”
“Where is he?”
“He rode Stanley’s old bicycle down the road about half an hour ago, when the wind changed. He wanted to take the Cadillac, but I told him not to.”
“Doesn’t he have a car of his own?”
“I believe he has some kind of jalopy.”
“Where is it?”
She shrugged slightly. “I don’t know.”
“Where was Fritz this morning?”
“I can’t tell you. He seems to have been the only one here for most of the morning.”
Kelsey’s face saddened. “How does he get along with your little boy?”
“Fine.” Then his meaning entered her eyes and darkened them. She shook her head as if to deny the meaning, dislodge the darkness. “Fritz wouldn’t hurt Ronny, he’s always been kind to him.”
“Then why did he take off?”
“He said that he was worried about his mother. But I think he was scared of the fire. He was almost crying.”
“So am I scared of the fire,” Kelsey said. “It’s why I’m in this business.”
“Are you a policeman?” Jean said. “Is that why you’re asking me all these questions?”
“I’m with the Forest Service, assigned to investigate the causes of fires.” He dug into an inside pocket, produced the aluminum evidence case, and showed her the half-burned cigarillo. “Does this look like one of your husband’s?”
“Yes it does. But surely you’re not trying to prove that he started it. What’s the point if he’s dead?” Her voice had risen a little out of control.
“The point is this. Whoever killed him probably made him drop this in the dry grass. That means they’re legally and financially responsible for the fire. And it’s my job to establish the facts. Where does this man Snow live?”
“With his mother. I think their house is quite near here. My mother-in-law can tell you. Mrs. Snow used to work for her.”
We found Mrs. Broadhurst in the living room, standing at a corner window which framed the canyon. The room was so large that she looked small at the far end of it. She didn’t turn when we moved up to her.
She was watching the progress of the fire. It was in the head of the canyon now, slipping downhill like a loose volcano, and spouting smoke and sparks above the treetops. The eucalyptus trees behind the house were momentarily blanched by the gusty wind. The blackbirds and pigeons had all gone.
Kelsey and I exchanged glances. It was time that we went, too. I let him do the talking, since it was his territory and his kind of emergency. He addressed the woman’s unmoving back:
“Mrs. Broadhurst? Don’t you think we better get out of here?”
“You go. Please do go. I’m staying, for the present.”
“You can’t do that. That fire is really on its way.”
She turned on him. Her face had sunk on its bones; it made her look old and formidable.
“Don’t tell me what I can or can’t do. I was born in this house. I’ve never lived anywhere else. If the house goes, I might as well go with it. Everything else has gone.”
“You’re not serious, ma’am.”
“Am I not?”
“You don’t want to get yourself burned, do you?”
“I think I’d almost welcome the flames. I’m very cold, Mr. Kelsey.”
Her tone was tragic, but there was a note of hysteria running through it, or something worse. A stubbornness which could mean that her mind had slipped a notch, and stuck at a crazy angle.
Kelsey cast a desperate look around the room. It was full of Victorian furniture, with dark Victorian portraits on the walls, and several cabinets full of stuffed native birds under glass.
“Don’t you want to save your things, ma’am? Your silver and bird specimens and pictures and mementos?”
She spread her hands in a hopeless gesture as if everything had long since run through them. Kelsey was getting nowhere trying to sell her back the pieces of her life.
I said:
“We need your help, Mrs. Broadhurst.”
She looked at me in mild surprise. “My help?”
“Your grandson is missing. This is a bad time and place for a little boy to be lost—”
“It’s a judgment on me.”
“That’s nonsense.”
“So I’m talking nonsense, am I?”
I disregarded her angry question. “Fritz the gardener may know where he is. I believe you know his mother. Is that correct?”
Her answer came slowly. “Edna Snow used to be my housekeeper. You can’t seriously believe that Fritz—” she stopped, unwilling to put her question into words.
“It would be a great help if you’d come along and talk to Fritz and his mother.”
“Very well, I will.”
We drove out the lane like a funeral cortege. Mrs. Broadhurst was leading in her Cadillac. Jean and I came next in the green Mercedes. Kelsey brought up the rear, driving the pickup.
I looked back from the mailbox. Sparks and embers were blowing down the canyon, plunging into the trees behind the house like bright exotic birds taking the place of the birds that had flown.
chapter 8
The residential district called Canyon Estates had been almost depopulated. A few men were up on their roofs with running hoses and defiant expressions.
Two roads crossed at the mouth of the canyon, and Mrs. Broadhurst took the right-hand turn. The neighborhood changed abruptly. Black and Chicano children stood beside the road and watched us go by as if we were a procession of foreign dignitaries.
Mrs. Snow lived in an old stucco cottage on a street of old stucco cottages mad
e almost beautiful by flowering jacaranda trees. Kelsey and I and Mrs. Broadhurst went to the door. Jean stayed in the Mercedes.
“I don’t trust myself,” she said.
Mrs. Snow was a quick-moving gray-haired woman wearing a fussy black outfit which looked as if she had dressed for the occasion. The eyes behind her rimless spectacles were dark, and hardened by anxiety.
“Mrs. Broadhurst! What brings you here?” Her voice hurried on as if she didn’t really want to know: “It’s very nice to see you. Won’t you come in?”
The door opened directly into the meager front room, and we went in. Mrs. Broadhurst introduced Kelsey and me. But Mrs. Snow’s scared eyes refused to look at us, resisting the notion that we were there at all. Which left her only Mrs. Broadhurst to deal with.
“Can I get you something, Mrs. Broadhurst? A nice cup of tea?”
“No thanks. Where’s Fritz?”
“I believe he’s in his room. The poor boy isn’t feeling too well.”
“He isn’t a boy,” Mrs. Broadhurst said.
His mother corrected her. “He is, emotionally. The doctor said he’s emotionally immature.”
She glanced quickly at Kelsey and me to see if we were picking this up. I sensed the beginning of a psychiatric copout.
“Get him out here,” Mrs. Broadhurst said.
“But he isn’t up to facing people now. He’s terribly upset.”
“What about?”
“The fire. He’s always been afraid of fire.” She gave Kelsey and me another seeking look. “Are you gentlemen from the police?”
“More or less,” I said. “I’m a detective. Mr. Kelsey is investigating the fire for the Forest Service.”
“I see.” Her small body seemed to grow smaller and at the same time denser and heavier. “I don’t know what kind of trouble Frederick is in, but I can assure you he isn’t responsible.”
“What kind of trouble is he in?” Kelsey said.
“I’m sure you know, or you wouldn’t be here. I don’t.”
“Then how do you know that he’s in trouble?”
“I’ve been looking after him for thirty-five years.” Her look turned inward, as if she was registering each of the thirty-five years and each of her son’s troubles.
Mrs. Broadhurst stood up. “We’re wasting time. If you won’t bring him out of his room, we’ll go in and talk to him there. I want to know where my grandson is.”
“Your grandson?” The little woman was appalled. “Has something happened to Ronald?”
“He’s missing. And Stanley is dead. He was buried with my spade.”
Mrs. Snow put her fingers to her mouth. A gold wedding band was sunk in the flesh of one finger like a scar.
“Buried in the garden?”
“No. At the top of the canyon.”
“And you think Frederick did this?”
“I don’t know.”
I said: “We were hoping your son could help us.”
“I see.” Her face brightened surprisingly, like the lights just before a power failure. “Why don’t I ask him? He isn’t afraid of me—I can get more out of him.”
Mrs. Broadhurst shook her head and started for the door that opened into the back of the house. Mrs. Snow danced out of her chair and intercepted her, backing into the doorway and talking quickly.
“Don’t go into his room, please. It hasn’t been cleaned, and Frederick isn’t himself. He’s in a bad state.”
Mrs. Broadhurst spoke in a guttural voice: “So is Stanley. So are we all.”
For the second or third time, she lost her balance and staggered a little. Her mouth was pulled to one side in a half-grin which seemed to call attention to some secret joke. Mrs. Snow, who moved and changed like mercury, was at her side in a moment, taking her arm and helping her into an old platform rocker.
“You’re feeling faint,” she said. “And I don’t wonder, if all these things are true. I’ll get you a glass of water. Or would you like a cup of tea after all?”
She sounded genuinely concerned. But I suspected she was also a master of delaying tactics. She’d hold us off for a week if we played along with her.
I pushed through the door into the kitchen and called her son by name. A muffled answer came through a further door which opened off the kitchen. I knocked on it and looked in. The air in the room smelled sweet and rotten.
All I could see at first were the narrow shafts of sunlight that came through the holes in the blind drawn over the window. They were thrust across the room like the swords of a magician probing a basket to demonstrate that his partner had disappeared. As if he would like to disappear indeed, the gardener crouched in the corner of the iron bed with his feet pulled up under him.
“I’m sorry to bother you, Fritz.”
“That’s all right.” His voice was hopeless.
I sat down on the foot of the bed facing him. “Did you take the spade and the pickax up the canyon?”
“Up the canyon?” he asked.
“To the Mountain House. Did you take them up there, Fritz?”
He considered his answer and finally said: “No.”
“Do you know who did?”
“No.” But his eyes shifted away from mine. He was a poor liar.
Moving as softly as a shadow, Kelsey appeared in the doorway. His large face was empty and waiting.
“The spade and pickax,” I said to Fritz, “were used to bury Stanley Broadhurst this morning. If you know who took the spade and pickax, you probably know who killed Stanley.”
He shook his head so hard that his face blurred. “He took them himself, when he came to get the key. He put them in the back of his convertible.”
“Is that true, Fritz?”
“Cross my heart and hope to die.” He crossed his breast with his finger.
“Why didn’t you tell us before about the spade and the pickax?”
“He told me not to.”
“Stanley Broadhurst told you not to?”
“Yessir.” He nodded profoundly. “He gave me a dollar and made me promise not to.”
“Did he say why?”
“He didn’t have to. He’s afraid of his mother. She doesn’t like people messing with her garden tools.”
“Did he tell you what he wanted the tools for?”
“He said that he was going to dig for arrowheads.”
“Did you believe him?”
“Yessir.”
“And then he drove up the mountain in his car?”
“Yessir.”
“With the blond girl and the little boy?”
“Yessir.”
“Did the girl say anything to you?”
“No sir. Not then.”
“What do you mean, ‘not then’? Did she talk to you some other time?”
“No sir. She never did.”
But his eyes shifted away again. He peered at the swords of light thrust through the chinks in the blind as if they were in fact the probes of a rational universe finding him out.
“When did you see her again, Fritz?”
He was perfectly silent for a while. His eyes were the only living things in the room. His mother appeared in the doorway behind Kelsey.
“You have no right in there,” she said to me. “You’re violating his legal rights and nothing that he says can be used against him. In addition to which he’s non compos, and I can prove it over and over with medical facts.”
“You’re assuming he’s done something wrong, Mrs. Snow,” I said.
“You mean he hasn’t?”
“Not that I know of. Please go away and let me talk to him. He’s a very important witness.”
chapter 9
She gave her son a sad dubious look, which he returned. But she backed away into the kitchen. Then I heard water running in a pan, and a gas burner blooping on.
“Did the girl come back, Fritz?”
He nodded.
“When was this?”
“Around noon, or a little later. I was eat
ing my lunch.”
“What did she say?”
“She said Ronny was hungry. I gave him a half of a peanut butter sandwich. I gave her the other half.”
“Did she mention Stanley Broadhurst?”
“No. I didn’t ask her. But she was scared.”
“Did she say so?”
“She didn’t have to say so. I can tell. The boy was scared, too. I can tell.”
“What happened after that?”
“Nothing. She went away down the canyon.”
“On foot?”
“Yeah.” But his eyes were avoiding mine again.
“Are you sure she didn’t take your car?”
His head sank lower. He sat perfectly still like a yogi studying the center of his body.
“All right. She took my car. They drove away in my car.”
“Why didn’t you tell us that before?”
“I never thought of it. I was fertilizing—I had a lot on my mind.”
“Come off it, Fritz. The boy is gone and his father is dead.”
“I didn’t kill him!”
“I think I believe you. Not everybody will.”
He lifted his head and looked past Kelsey. His mother was moving around in the kitchen. He listened to the sounds she made, as if they might tell him what to say and think.
“Forget about your mother, Fritz. This is between you and me.”
“Close the door then. I don’t want her to hear me. Or him either.”
Kelsey stepped back out of the doorway and closed the door. I said to Fritz: “Did you let her take your car?”
“Yeah. She said Mr. Broadhurst wanted her to have it.”
“There’s more to it than that, Fritz, isn’t there?”
Shame suffused his face. “Don’t tell her.” He waved a loose hand toward the kitchen.
“Don’t tell her what?” I said.
“She let me touch her.” The memory, or the fantasy, shuddered through him. His scarred mouth smiled, leaving his eyes still sad. “I mean, she looked like a girl I used to know.”
“And you let her take your car.”
“She said she’d bring it back. But,” he added in a grieved tone, “she never did yet.”