Authors: Ross Macdonald
“But somebody pays your salary, which I trust is large.”
“Who are you? I don’t like your tone.”
“Excuse me, I flunked out of the Juilliard School. But I was just asking for a little information in my crude way.”
“Mrs. Weather owns the station, of course.”
The big voice from the loudspeaker intoned: “That is my advice to you, Fearful One. Rear the child yourself. Bring up the little one in the ways of righteousness, and strive mightily to sustain yourself in worthiness for the noble career of motherhood. If you desire further advice and comfort from the seventh son of a seventh son, come to me in my office any day this week. Hours from ten in the morning till five in the afternoon.”
I said loudly: “Mrs. Weather died five years ago.”
“Please don’t shout,” the program director said. “Our soundproofing isn’t very good. You must be thinking of somebody else. I saw Mrs. Weather this afternoon, and she was in perfect health.”
“Did J.D. Weather marry again?”
“That’s true, I did hear Mr. Weather had been married before. He remarried a few months before his death.”
“Is she running the hotel, too?”
“As a matter of fact, she isn’t. It was sold to Mr. Sanford.”
“The rubber-company Sanford?”
“Right.”
“He still lives in that big house on the north side, doesn’t he?”
“That’s right. Now you’ll have to excuse me.” He trotted silently across the carpet to the door of the broadcasting chamber.
The loudspeaker was saying: “A genuine herbal remedy, prepared according to the exact and exotic formula of an ancient Oriental savant. This priceless medicine will cure or alleviate ailments of the heart, blood, stomach, liver, and kidneys. It is helpful in treating diseases of both men and women, and acts as a rare tonic in cases of depleted energy and low spirits generally. Just mail a dollar, plus a nominal fee of ten cents for wrapping, to this station, and get your large introductory bottle of Novena.”
The little man in the swallow-tailed coat moved away from the microphone to the door, and the program director took his place. “You have just been listening to Professor Salamander, seventh son of a seventh son and purveyor of age-old wisdom.” As the announcement continued, a record player played a few bars of the “Barcarolle.” Then the program director announced a half-hour of “Jazztime,” and began to create atmosphere with his voice.
I didn’t like the atmosphere created by his voice, and I went away. Professor Salamander and I rode the same elevator down. His eyeballs were yellow. He smelt strongly of whisky. He muttered to himself.
I had been there once or twice with my father, but I remembered the location of Mr. Sanford’s house only vaguely, so I took a taxi.
“You want me to let you off at the service entrance?” the driver said when we got there.
“Drive me up to the front door. I haven’t got anything to sell. And wait for me. I won’t be long.”
The house, which had been built by Mr. Sanford’s father, was a rambling white brick building with eighteen or twenty rooms. A grandiose and useless tower at each end of the façade gave it a feudal touch. Its grounds occupied a city block, and included a sunken garden, tennis courts, and a swimming pool, which kept Alonzo Sanford and his friends off the streets. Only when a strong and steady south wind was blowing, did the odor of the rubber factories reach Mr. Sanford’s front yard.
A Negro maid in white collar and cap answered the door-bell.
“Is Mr. Sanford home?”
“I’m not sure. Who shall I say is calling, please?”
“Tell him John Weather. J.D. Weather’s son.”
She let me in and left me on a chair in the vestibule, holding my hat on my knees. After a moment she returned and took my hat. “Mr. Sanford will see you in the library.”
When I came in, Mr. Sanford put down his open book on the wide arm of his chair and marked his place with his reading glasses. He didn’t look ten years older, but I noticed that when he got up he leaned forward over his knees and pushed with his arms as well as his legs. He had on a silk lounging robe with a red velvet collar. He came towards me with his hand outstretched.
His face had thinned and dried, so that his smile was like
carefully folded paper. “Johnny Weather, I do declare! This really calls for a drink. You look big enough to have a drink.” He chuckled paternally.
“Maybe a short lemonade. I’m awfully big for my age.”
He smiled again with all his scrupulously matched teeth. “Now let me see, what would your age be? I know I should be able to tell you, but when you’re my age you don’t number the years with such painstaking accuracy. Twenty or twenty-one?”
“Twenty-two,” I said. “Old enough to inherit property.”
He said: “Excuse me,” rang the bell for the maid, and asked for drinks.
“Won’t you please sit down? There, that’s better. Believe me, I can understand a little bitterness on your part, Johnny. From your point of view it was sheer bad luck that your father remarried a few months before his unfortunate—demise.”
“Who did he marry? Who killed him?”
“Do you mean to say you’ve never met your stepmother?”
“I never even heard of her before tonight. She’s a stranger to me. There seems to have been practically a hundred per cent turnover in this town.”
“I’m sure you’ll find her quite a charming young woman. I’ve had relations with her on several occasions, business and otherwise, and I’ve found her consistently charming.”
“How nice for both of you! I hear she sold you the hotel.”
“As a matter of fact, she did. Mrs. Weather, and her business agent, Mr. Kerch, decided to cut down a bit on her holdings in real property. And I’ve had no reason to regret the investment.”
“It’s funny to hear you call this woman Mrs. Weather. My mother died five years ago.”
“Yes, yes,” said Mr. Sanford. “Most unfortunate.”
The maid brought brandy highballs, and Mr. Sanford lit a cigar. “Your father tried to find you, you know,” he went on. “What in the world happened to you, Johnny?”
“I moved around. I didn’t like my father at that time, and I promised my mother I wouldn’t go back to him. I lived in various parts of the country for a couple of years, and then the draft got me. The last year or two I’ve felt different about my father.”
“Of course. It’s hard to think ill of the dead.”
“That’s not the point. You see, I didn’t know he was dead until tonight.”
“You mean to say you weren’t informed?”
“When was he killed?”
“Nearly two years ago. April of 1944, I believe it was.”
“I was in England then. Nobody went to the trouble of letting me know.”
“That is a crying shame.”
“Who killed him?”
“The crime was never solved. We all did what we could. You must know that your father and I were quite close at one time. His death was a rude shock to me.”
“It got you the Weather House. There can’t be much of the town you don’t own by now.”
He sipped his highball and looked at me coldly over the rim of the glass. “As I said before, I can understand your being a little bitter, Johnny, inasmuch as your father’s will cut you off without a cent. Still, I think it’s unwise of you to
insult your potential friends. I was prepared to be quite sympathetic towards you.”
“Your sympathy isn’t negotiable. It didn’t do my father much good. And your little threat isn’t very frightening. You can’t browbeat me with money till I come asking you for something.”
He leaned forward and his pale old eyes gave me a blank stare that tried to look candid. “You seem to have gotten some very strange notions into your head. I was under the impression that you came to me as an old friend of your father’s.” He paused and examined my unpolished field boots and my unpressed clothes. “Perhaps with some idea of asking me for assistance.”
“I haven’t asked anybody for anything in years.”
“Quite. But your attitude strikes me as unnecessarily aggressive—”
“This is a rough town, Mr. Sanford. You know that—it’s your town. Two years ago my father was killed in it. What happened to the investigation of his death?”
“I told you that the crime has remained unsolved. He was shot on the street and his assailant was never apprehended.”
“Is the case still open, or was it dropped?”
“I’m afraid I can’t tell you that. Why you should assume that I had anything to do with the investigation—”
“An important case wouldn’t be dropped without your tacit approval.”
We had finished our highballs. He put his glass down on the table with a slightly peremptory rap. “You have a curious conception of the function of a wealthy man in a
modern democratic municipality. We are all under the law, Mr. Weather. We must all try to get along with our neighbors.”
“J.D. used to try to, but one of his neighbors shot him on the street. Who handled the case?”
“Inspector Hanson, I believe. Ralph Hanson.” He stood up, picked up his book, and put on his reading glasses. Now he looked more than ever like an exquisite old scholar who had abandoned the pleasures of the world.
“
The Theory of the Leisure Class
is a funny book for you to be reading.”
He smiled his careful, crumpled smile. “Do you really think so? Veblen analyzes some of the illusions of my class very competently, I think. He helps me to be without illusions.”
“There’s one you’ll never lose. Every man that’s born rich brings it with him out of the nursery and holds on to it for the rest of his life—the illusion of his own superiority.”
“You had a lot of money when you were a young boy, didn’t you?” he said. “And I haven’t observed that you are afflicted with an inferiority complex.”
He rang the bell and the maid appeared to show me out.
“One more thing,” I said. “This Mrs. Weather got all my father’s property. Who’s next in line?”
“You are, I believe. But Mrs. Weather is both young and, so far as I have heard, healthy.”
He didn’t offer his hand again. I left him standing with his finger in Veblen, neck-deep in conspicuous consumption.
Inspector Ralph Hanson lived in the new east end, in one of the mass-produced houses I had seen when I first came into town. My taxi driver’s flashlight found the number, which I had looked up in the telephone directory, and I asked him to wait again. It wasn’t a big house but it was well kept, surrounded by carefully trimmed shrubbery and a lawn as smooth as a putting green. I climbed the veranda steps and knocked on the door with the ornamental iron knocker.
A middle-aged woman, whose figure had never recovered from childbearing, opened the door and smiled at me uncertainly. I noticed a tricycle beside the door and a doll carriage in the hall. I asked her if Inspector Hanson was home.
“Ralph’s in his workshop in the basement. You can just go down there if you want to.”
“I came here on business,” I said. “Perhaps you’d better call him up.”
The screeching of a plane on wood, which I had been hearing through the floor, stopped when she called down the stairs: “Ralph! There’s a young man here to see you.”
Hanson was rolling down his shirt sleeves when he came up, and the hairy backs of his hands were still dusted with little shavings. He was a tall man with a long, sour face and quick, green eyes. He stood in the hallway for a moment brushing off his hands.
“Oh, Ralph,” his wife said in an indulgent whine. “I asked you to be careful about bringing your dirt up here.”
“It isn’t dirt,” he said sharply. “It’s good, clean wood.”
“It’s just as hard to clean up as dirt,” she stated, and disappeared into the back of the house.
He looked me up and down and assigned me a mental classification that I could guess from his abrupt: “And what can I do for you, sir?”
I said: “A couple of years ago you investigated the murder of J.D. Weather. Is that correct?”
“That’s correct. I was in charge of the case.”
“Do you know who killed him?”
“No. I came to a dead end. We never caught the murderer.”
“Does that mean you couldn’t or you didn’t?”
He looked at me with hostility. His thin lips drew back from his teeth in an involuntary grimace, and I saw they were yellow and long like hound’s teeth. “I don’t like that crack. Just what is your interest in the case?”
“I’m his son.”
“Why didn’t you say so, then? Come in and sit down.”
He waved me ahead of him into the living-room and switched on the ceiling light. It was a small room, too full of overstuffed furniture, with French-type windows on two sides and a fireplace containing a gas heater on the third.
He placed me on a mohair chesterfield and sat down in a matching armchair facing me. The room was as homelike as the display window of an installment furniture store, but my host was trying to look more friendly. His long face creased in a smile that might have been mistaken for a look of pain.
“So you’re John, eh? I remember when you used to tag around with J.D. when you were a kid. I was on a motorcycle then.”
“You’ve been doing all right,” I said.
He looked around the room with grim complacence. “Yeah, they promoted me to Inspector last year.”
“Who did?”
“The police board. Who do you think?”
“Not, I take it, for your work on my father’s murder?”
He leaned forward and spoke rapidly with an almost neurotic excitement: “You’ll get nothing by coming around and throwing that in my teeth. I liked J.D. I worked hard on the case.”
“Everybody liked J.D., with the possible exception of my mother. And somebody who shot him on the street. And maybe a few other people who covered up for the man that shot him.”
“I don’t know what kind of stories you’ve been hearing,” Hanson said.
“I haven’t been hearing a damn thing. That’s the trouble. I don’t even know what happened to him.”
“You just told me.”
“I told you what I heard from an old man in a bar. How was he murdered?”
“You want it in detail?”
“As much as you can give me.”
He sat back in his chair and made an arch of his fingers. His story came as pat and clear as rehearsed testimony: