chapter 24


CAPTAIN AUBREY of the sheriff’s department arrived, and Thorndike went to talk to him. I closed the door of the library behind Thorndike and pushed the button in the knob which locked the door. It was the first time I’d been alone in a lighted place since I took the photocopies from Jack Fleischer’s body.

I spread them out on a table by the windows and pulled back the drapes. The copy of the birth certificate stated that Henrietta R. Krug had been born in Santa Teresa County on October 17, 1910, the daughter of Joseph and Alma Krug. It was signed by Richard Harlock, M.D., of Rodeo City.

The other photocopy was more interesting. It showed a part of the front page of the Santa Teresa Star for May 28, 1952. Under the heading “Oil Tycoon Slaying Still Unsolved” and the subheading “Youth Gang Sought,” was the following short account, datelined Malibu:


“The May 24 beach shooting of Mark Hackett, well-known Malibu citizen and Texas oil millionaire, is still under investigation by the police. According to Deputy Robert Aubrey of the sheriffs Malibu substation, more than a dozen suspects have been arrested and released. A gang of motorcyclists which was reported in the Malibu area on the night of May 24 is being sought for questioning.

“Hackett was shot to death while walking on the beach on the evening of May 24. His wallet was taken. Police have recovered a revolver which has been identified as the murder weapon. The dead man is survived by his widow and his son, Stephen.”


On the same page there was a story, with the dateline “Rodeo City (by Special Correspondent),” under the heading “Death on the Rails Strikes Again”:


“Riding the rails, which is reputed to be the cheapest way to travel, is costing some travelers their lives. Over the past several years, the lonely stretch of tracks south of Rodeo City has been the scene of a number of fatal accidents. Beheadings, dismemberments, and other mutilations have occurred.

“The most recent victim of the railroad jinx, and the second to die this year, was found early this morning by Sheriffs Deputy Jack Fleischer of the Rodeo City substation. The body, which bore no identification, was that of a man in his middle twenties. His head had been severed from his body.

“According to Deputy Fleischer, the man’s clothes marked him as a transient laborer. He had more than twenty dollars in his pockets, ruling out suspicion of foul play.

“A touching aspect of the accident was revealed by Deputy Fleischer to this reporter. The victim was accompanied by a small boy, approximately three years old, who apparently spent the night by his father’s body. The child has been placed in Children’s Shelter pending further investigation.”


Besides confirming what I already knew, this second story suggested that Fleischer had deliberately closed off the investigation. He must have known who the victim was; possibly he removed identification. The money in the dead man’s pockets didn’t rule out the possibility of murder, or the possibility that Fleischer himself had committed it.

I was struck by the sequence of the two deaths, three or four days apart. It could have been a coincidence, but it was clear enough that Fleischer hadn’t thought so. Also it seemed very likely that Captain Aubrey was that same Deputy Aubrey who had dealt with Mark Hackett’s murder fifteen years ago.

I found Captain Aubrey in the living room with Thorndike and Dr. Converse. Hackett wasn’t seriously injured, the doctor was telling them, but he was suffering from a certain degree of shock. He didn’t feel that his patient should be questioned any further until he’d had some rest. The policemen didn’t argue.

When Converse had finished, I drew him into the next room, out of earshot.

“What is it now?” he said impatiently.

“The same old question, about Sandy Sebastian. What did you treat her for last summer?”

“I can’t possibly tell you. It wouldn’t be ethical without the patient’s permission.” Converse paused, and his eyebrows went up. “Did you put Dr. Jeffrey up to calling me last night?”

“Not exactly. I asked him the same question I’m asking you.”

“Well, I’m not answering either of you,” Converse said flatly. “The girl’s in enough trouble as it is.”

“I’m trying to get her out of trouble.”

“You’re going about it rather strangely, aren’t you?”

I threw him a question from left field. “Was she taking drugs last summer, something like that?”

“I refuse to answer.” But his clever eyes flickered in a way that said yes.

“Psychedelic drugs?”

His curiosity overcame his ethics, or whatever they were. “What makes you suggest that?”

“I heard she was suicidal. A bad trip on LSD sometimes has that effect. I’m sure you know that, doctor.”

“Of course.”

“Will you sit down and talk about it with me?”

“No sir, I will not. I have no right to discuss my patient’s private affairs.”

“Sandy’s affairs are pretty public now. And I’m on her side, remember.”

Converse shook his head. “You really must excuse me. I have hospital rounds to make.”

“How’s Lupe?”

“He’s doing fine now.”

“Is Lupe on drugs by any chance?”

“How on earth should I know?”

Converse turned abruptly and went away.

Captain Aubrey was waiting for me in the living room. Thorndike had filled him in on my report, but he had some further questions.

“You’ve been close to this case from the beginning,” he said. “How do you think it all started?”

“It started the day that Davy Spanner and Sandy Sebastian got together. They’re both badly alienated, young people with a grudge.”

“I know something about Spanner. He’s a psycho with a record. He shouldn’t have been out on the streets.” His eyes were a cold gray. “Fortunately he won’t be out much longer. I’ve been in touch with Rodeo City. They found the Sebastian girl’s car north of the ranch, hub-deep in the mud. Spanner won’t get far without it. The Santa Teresa County authorities expect to take him today.”

“Then what?”

“Spanner’s their baby.” Aubrey’s phrase hit me queerly, and broke into multiple meanings. “They want him for first-degree murder, and that takes care of him. The problem of the girl is more complicated. For one thing, she’s a juvenile, with a clean record. Also she ran out on Spanner before the Fleischer murder was committed. Lucky for her.”

“Sandy’s no criminal. She wanted to quit as soon as she saw crime was for real.”

“You’ve talked to her, haven’t you? What gets into a girl like that?” Aubrey was genuinely disturbed. “I’ve got a daughter sixteen. She’s a good girl. So was this one apparently. How do I know my own daughter won’t walk up to somebody some fine day and crack his skull with a tire iron?”

“I think Sandy had a grudge against Lupe. The case may have started right there.”

“What did she have against him?”

“I better not say until I can prove it, Captain.”

He leaned toward me, red in the face, remembering his own daughter. “Did he have sexual congress with her?”

“Not that I know of. Whatever happened between them will all come out in the wash. The probation people will be going over her with a fine-tooth comb.”

Aubrey gave me an impatient look, and turned to leave.

I detained him. “There’s another thing I wanted to talk to you about. Let’s go out to your car. It’s more private.”

He shrugged. We went outside. Aubrey got in behind the wheel of his unmarked car, and I slid in beside him.

“Are you the same Aubrey who used to work out of the Malibu station?”

“I am. It’s why I was assigned to this one.”

“This is the second major crime in the Hackett family, I’ve been told.”

“That’s right. The senior Mr. Hackett – his name was Mark – was shot on the beach.”

“Did you ever get a line on the killer?”

“No. These hit-and-run crimes are hard to solve.” Aubrey sounded apologetic. “The trouble is there’s generally no provable connection between the robber and his victim.”

“Was robbery the motive?”

“Apparently. Hackett’s wallet was taken, and he carried a lot of money. Which wasn’t the wisest thing to do under the circumstances. He had a hideaway cottage on the beach, and he made a habit of walking down there at night, all by himself. Some thief with a gun caught onto the habit, and took him for his roll.”

“Did you arrest anyone?”

“We picked up dozens of suspects. But we couldn’t pin the crime on any one of them.”

“Do you remember any of their names?”

“Not at this late date.”

“I’ll try one on you, anyway. Jasper Blevins.”

He shook his head. “I’m afraid it rings no bell. Who is Jasper Blevins?”

“Davy Spanner’s father. According to an old Santa Teresa newspaper, he died under a train near Rodeo City, about three days after Mark Hackett was murdered.”

“So?”

“It’s an interesting coincidence.”

“Maybe. I run into these coincidences all the time. Sometimes they mean something, other times they don’t.”

“This one does.”

“Do you mean there’s a causal connection between these two crimes – Mark Hackett’s murder and his son’s kidnapping?”

“Some kind of a connection, anyway. According to a newspaper account, you recovered the revolver Mark Hackett was shot with.”

Aubrey turned and looked at me appraisingly. “You do your homework, don’t you?”

“Did you ever trace the revolver to its owner?”

Aubrey was slow in answering. “The queer thing is,” he said finally, “the gun belonged to Hackett himself, in a sense–”

“That suggests a family affair.”

Aubrey lifted the flat of his hand above the wheel. “Let me finish. The gun belonged to Hackett in the sense that one of his oil companies had purchased it. They stored it in an unlocked drawer in their Long Beach office. It wasn’t kept proper track of, and it simply disappeared, apparently some time before the murder.”

“Disgruntled employee?”

“We went into that pretty thoroughly. But we didn’t come up with anything tangible. The trouble was, Hackett had quite a number of disgruntled employees. He’d recently moved here from Texas, and he was riding herd on them Texas style. He was very unpopular with his people. But we couldn’t prove that any one of them killed him. He had nearly five hundred employees in Long Beach alone, and a good half of them hated his guts.”

“What was the name of his company?”

“Corpus Christi Oil and Gas. Mark Hackett originally came from Corpus Christi. He should have stayed there.”

Aubrey punched my arm in a friendly way, and turned his ignition key. I wandered into the house.

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