Collins tossed him a sheet of paper. “That’s the number.”
“Who is it?”
“I don’t know yet. Nobody home.”
“It might be a business number.”
“I don’t think so. Molly called in the evening.”
“True. You’d better make another trip up to San Jose. Then when somebody answers the phone, you’ll be on the spot to ask some questions.”
“That makes sense,” said Collins hollowly. “I might as well move to San Jose. I practically live there now.”
“It’s a nice climate,” said Bigelow, so soberly that Collins looked at him. What did he mean by that?
“I’ve pulled Sullivan and Kerner out of the park,” said Bigelow. “They didn’t get a nibble in the campgrounds. Too many people coming and going.”
“It was an off-chance,” said Collins defensively. “It might have paid off big.”
“Oh, I’m not knocking the idea,” said Bigelow. “In fact, do you have any others?”
“Just this telephone number, which I’d call our best lead so far.”
“I agree,” said Bigelow magnanimously. “Well, I better get going. The wife and kids are waiting outside.”
Collins arrived at San Jose shortly after one. He lunched at a drive-in, then crossed the street to a service station phone booth and dialed 363-2210. No answer.
He looked through the directory, checking every name and institution associated with the case.
Earl Genneman was listed once, Genneman Laboratories was listed again, and Jean Genneman also had a listing. None of these was 363-2210.
Myron Retwig had a listing, also Pacific Chemicals. Neither was 363-2210.
Red Kershaw had a listing.
Robert Vega and Westco were listed.
None was 363-2210.
Buck James was not represented in the directory. But James had already, at Cedar Grove, given his number to Collins. It was not 363-2210.
Collins dialed Myron Retwig’s home number. Retwig answered, and Collins asked if he had a few minutes free. Retwig said he did, and gave directions how to reach his home.
He lived on the summit of a hill west of San Jose, the Coast Range bulking up behind. His house was an enormous three-story box, with a high mansard roof broken by dormers and chimneys at either end. A copse of tall black cypresses at the rear comprised the landscaping; there was no trace of a garden.
Retwig answered the door in tan trousers and a faded blue work-shirt. With his round brown face, stiff gray hair and owlish look, he seemed not so much the owner of the house as its gardener or handyman.
He took Collins in. The place was furnished with heavy, comfortable furniture: leather chairs, an ancient leather-upholstered sofa, a massive table supporting a two-foot globe. The house seemed unnaturally quiet. Retwig said by way of explanation, “I’m alone today. My wife is in San Francisco, my sons are at Monterey for the regatta. Is it too early for a drink?”
“I wouldn’t say so.”
Retwig went to a cabinet, mixed a pair of highballs. Over his shoulder he asked, “How is the investigation coming?”
“Not too badly,” said Collins. “Cases like this are solved by hard-nosed plugging.”
Retwig nodded. “This is true in almost any endeavor.”
“There’s been one interesting development,” said Collins with an air of candor. “It concerns a certain Steve Ricks. Is that name familiar to you?”
Retwig considered carefully. “It is, in the sense that you already have asked me the same question. Otherwise, to the best of my knowledge, I have never heard the name.”
Collins nodded, as if Retwig had uttered a profound truth. “I hoped that you might have remembered a reference to him. We have reason to believe that he’s linked with Mr. Genneman.”
Retwig made no comment.
“Jean Genneman seems to recall the name,” mused Collins. “But she can’t remember from where.”
“It’s not an unusual name.”
“True. Look, Mr. Retwig, I’d like you to talk to me frankly about the Genneman family. In complete confidence, and for the sake of background, what was the state of affairs in the Genneman household?”
Retwig half smiled. “If I say nothing, I obstruct justice. If I talk freely, I become a gossip. You put me in an uncomfortable position, Inspector.”
“I realize that,” said Collins. “I make the request only because it may bring Mr. Genneman’s murderer to justice. Please?”
Retwig deliberated. Then he said, “I can’t tell you a great deal, because there isn’t much to tell. Earl and Opal seemed quite happy together. She was clever enough, or kind enough, to complement him — bring out the best in him. A less understanding and subtle woman might have made Earl’s life hell.”
“How so?”
“Earl was a positive man. He made decisions by a process which represented subconscious but perfectly accurate logic, but which might be mistaken for pigheadedness. Opal understood this.”
“What of Earl Junior?”
Retwig pursed his lips, “I’d say that in that department Earl did as good a job as anyone could. I am not a Freudian, thank God, and I can’t even guess at the shape of young Earl’s thoughts. But it would be wrong to blame the father for the son.”
“They didn’t have a good relationship?”
“I wouldn’t say so, no.”
“Where did Mrs. Genneman stand in all this?”
“In my opinion, Opal has behaved admirably. He may change with maturity, but as of now I consider Earl Junior pretty unprepossessing.”
“I appreciate your frankness,” said Collins. “Now, as to Jean?”
“No mystery there. She’s exactly what she appears: a healthy young woman with a strong personality.”
“She and her stepfather were on good terms?”
“Very much so. Earl gave her the affection he would have given his own flesh and blood. She felt the same toward him.”
“What’s the story between Jean and Buck James?”
“It’s beyond my understanding. Buck was graduated from the University of Wisconsin and came to Stanford for graduate work. He met Jean, they became engaged. Earl approved the match and gave Buck a job with Westco. Then the romance cooled and the two drifted apart. What I suspect is that Jean wanted to get married immediately, whereas Buck wanted to wait until he was independent, or at least out from under Earl’s shadow. He liked and respected Earl — but Earl had a very dominating personality, and if he disapproved of something he did so vehemently, to say the least. Earl was a good friend. He could also be a bad enemy.”
“And you, Mr. Retwig — why did you leave Genneman Pharmaceuticals?”
“For something of the same reasons which, in my opinion, dissuaded Buck from an early marriage with Jean. And because I was offered a more responsible job at more money.”
“But now you’re back working for Genneman Pharmaceuticals.”
“Opal offered me a better job with more money than my job with Pacific; and Earl is no longer around to demoralize me with his off-the-cuff — and accurate — decisions. You see,” said Retwig with a faint smile, “I’m the thinking-man type. I weigh and ponder, I project trends, I calculate probabilities — I eliminate the less promising courses of action and finally arrive at one which I regard as optimum. All that takes time. Earl would reach the same decision in half a second... I explained this to him when I left Genneman Laboratories, and he was greatly amused.”
“I understand you both were interested in model railroading,” said Collins, “that it was the basis of your friendship.”
“It was a mutual interest, certainly. Have you seen Earl’s set-up?”
“Mrs. Genneman showed it to me.”
“What did you think of it?” For the first time Retwig seemed to speak without calculation.
“I said to myself: how I wish I’d had something like this when I was a boy.”