“Who do you have in mind?”
I paused for a moment to organize my thoughts, and Arnie spoke impatiently: “You there, Lew?”
“I’m here. There are three main suspects. Number one is a local real estate man named Brian Kilpatrick. He knew that Elizabeth Broadhurst shot her husband, and I think she’s been paying him off ever since. Which gives him a reason for killing Stanley Broadhurst and Albert Sweetner.”
“What reason?”
“He had a large financial interest in keeping the original murder quiet.”
“Blackmail?”
“Call it disguised blackmail. But it’s still possible he finished off Leo Broadhurst himself. If so, he had an even stronger reason for silencing the other two. Albert Sweetner knew where Leo was buried. Stanley Broadhurst was trying to dig him up.”
“But why would Kilpatrick want to knife Leo Broadhurst?”
“Broadhurst broke up his marriage. Also, there was money in it for him, as I said.”
“Describe him, will you, Lew?”
“Kilpatrick’s about forty-five, over six feet, around two hundred pounds. Blue eyes, wavy red hair getting thin on top. Broken veins in the nose and face.” I paused. “Was he seen in Northridge Saturday?”
“Right now I’m asking the questions. Any scars?”
“None visible.”
“Who are the other suspects?”
“A motel-owner named Lester Crandall is number two. He’s heavy and short, about five-seven and one-eighty. Graying black hair with long sideburns. Talks like a good ole country boy, which he is, but he’s shrewd and heavily loaded.”
“How old?”
“He told me he’ll be sixty on his next birthday. He had a motive as strong as Kilpatrick’s for knocking off Leo Broadhurst.”
“Sixty is too old,” Arnie said.
“It would expedite matters if you laid your cards on the table. You have a description you’re trying to match, right?”
“A sort of one. The trouble is, my witness may not be reliable, and I want independent confirmation. Who’s your other suspect?”
“Kilpatrick’s ex-wife Ellen could have done it. Leo broke up her marriage and then dropped her.”
“It wasn’t a woman,” Arnie said. “Or if it was, my theory goes to pieces. Did any other adult male have motive and opportunity?”
I answered slowly, with some reluctance: “The gardener, Fritz Snow, who buried Leo’s body with his tractor. I wouldn’t have said he’s capable of murder, but Leo did give him provocation. So did Albert Sweetner, for that matter.”
“How old is Snow?”
“About thirty-five or -six.”
“What does he look like?”
“He’s five-ten, maybe one-sixty. Brown hair, moon face, green eyes which cry a lot. He seems to have emotional problems. Also genetic ones.”
“What kind of genetic problems?”
“Harelip, for one thing.”
“Why didn’t you say so?”
Arnie’s voice had risen. I held the receiver away from my ear. Jean was leaning with her hands on the door frame, watching me. Her face was pale, and her eyes were darker than I had ever seen them.
“Where is this Fritz Snow?” Arnie said.
“About a mile and a half from where I’m sitting. Do you want me to pick him up?”
“I better do it through channels.”
“Let me talk to him first, Arnie. I can’t believe he killed three people, or even one of them.”
“I can,” Arnie said. “That wig and mustache and beard that Albert Sweetner was wearing didn’t belong to Sweetner. They didn’t fit him. It’s my hypothesis they belonged to the killer, who put them on Sweetner to confuse the issue. We’ve been canvassing the wig shops and supply houses. To make a long story short, your suspect bought the wig and beard at a mark-down store on Vine Street called Wigs Galore.”
I didn’t want to believe it. “He could have bought them for Al Sweetner.”
“He could have, but he didn’t. He bought them a month ago, when Sweetner was still in Folsom. And we know he bought them for his own use. He asked the salesman for a mustache that would cover the bad scar on his upper lip.”
Jean spoke when I set the receiver down. “Fritz?”
“It looks that way.” I told her about the wig and beard he had bought.
She bit her lip. “I should have listened to Ronny.”
“Did he recognize Fritz on the mountain Saturday?”
“I don’t know about Saturday. He told me several weeks ago that he saw Fritz with long black hair and a mustache. But when I questioned him further, he said that he was telling me a story.”
We went into the bedroom where the boy was sleeping. He woke with a start when his mother touched him and sat up hugging his pillow, wide-eyed and shaking. It was my first naked glimpse of his hurt and fear.
He spoke with an effort: “I was afraid the bogy man would get me.”
“I won’t let him get you.”
“He got Daddy.”
“He won’t get you,” I said.
His mother took him in her arms, and for a little while he seemed content. Then he grew impatient of purely female comfort. He freed himself and stood up on the high bed, his eyes close to the level of mine. He bounced, and was temporarily taller than I was.
“Is Fritz the bogy man?” I said.
He looked at me in confusion. “I don’t know.”
“Did you ever see him wearing a long black wig?”
He nodded. “And whiskers, too,” he said a little breathlessly. “And a whatchamacallit.” He touched his upper lip.
“When was this, Ronny?”
“The last time that I visited Grandma Nell. I went into the barn and Fritz was there with long black hair and whiskers. He was looking at a picture of a lady.”
“Did you know the lady?”
“No. She had no clothes on.” He looked embarrassed, and scared. “Don’t tell him I told you. He said if I told anybody that something bad would happen.”
“Nothing bad will happen.” Not to him. “Did you see Fritz on Saturday wearing his wig?”
“When?”
“Up on the mountain.”
He looked at me in confusion. “I saw a bogy man with long black hair. He was away far off. I couldn’t tell if it was Fritz or not.”
“But you thought it was, didn’t you?”
“I don’t know.”
His voice sounded strained, as if his clear childish memory had registered more than he was able to cope with. He turned to his mother and said that he was hungry.
chapter 35
I dropped them off at a downtown restaurant and drove back through the ghetto to Mrs. Snow’s house. Brown water was running in the road in front of it. I parked on the blacktop driveway behind her old white Rambler and locked my car.
Mrs. Snow opened the front door before I could knock. She looked past me into rain as if there might be other men behind me.
“Where’s Fritz?” I said.
“He’s in his room. But I can do any talking that needs to be done. I always have – I guess I always will.”
“He’ll have to do his own talking, Mrs. Snow.”
I went past her into the kitchen and opened the door of her son’s room. He was crouched on the iron bed, hiding part of his face with his hands.
He was a helpless foolish man, and I hated what I had to do. A trial would make a public show of him. In prison he would be the bottom man, as his mother feared. I could feel her anxious presence close behind me.
I said to him: “Did you buy a wig a month or so ago? A wig and a beard and a mustache?”
He dropped his hands away from his face. “Maybe I did.”
“I happen to know you did.”
“Then what are you asking me for?”
“I want to know why you bought those things.”
“To make my hair look long. And to cover this.” He lifted his right forefinger to his scarred upper lip. “The girls won’t let me kiss them. I only kissed a girl once in my life.”