week ago. This little nitpick, that little niggle, without ever saying exactly what was troubling him about the project. And despite anything the Planning Commission and the Board of Supes might approve, it was Redevelopment that had the final, life-or-death say-so on new development projects in San Francisco.
They hadn’t even met in person, but this was Farrow’s third call in a week. He wasn’t going to just go away. Kreiger had a nose for corruption, dealing in it so much himself, and Farrow’s voice reeked of it. The man had his hand out-Kreiger just didn’t yet know why, or how, or for how much.
“I think we ought to meet,” said Farrow suavely. “There are a few things we have to discuss. Not on the phone.”
“The phone’s been fine up until now.”
“In person.”
If the phones were tapped, or Kreiger was taping, nothing incriminating would be on record. When they got together was time enough for Farrow to show him the upturned palm.
“I have time free tomorrow at-”
“Today.” The voice hardened, and Kreiger’s features darkened. He never did like to be pushed. “In one hour.”
“I don’t have an hour this morning.”
“How very too bad for your new arcade.”
Kreiger mastered his anger: all he let be heard over the phone was his long-suffering sigh.
“One hour. Where?”
Farrow chuckled. “Kreplovski’s apartment. Where else?”
“Ah.” Farrow had style. Kreiger suddenly was looking forward to the meeting. “All right.”
“Third floor rear. Apartment 333. The door will be unlocked but it sticks, you almost have to kick it open. I’ll be waiting inside.” The voice tightened. “I’ll only be there once, Kreiger.”
“Don’t worry your little head about it. I’ll be there.”
“This house was built by Lou Costello,” said Gloria Crowley. Her voice had a sort of throaty sensuality that seemed offhand and habitual. “Lou was the short fat one. Bud was the tall thin one.”
“Who’s on first,” supplied Dante brightly.
He could remember an interview he had once seen on TV with Bud Abbott after Costello had died. The IRS had disallowed dozens of pairs of his shoes. It had depressed Dante, somehow. He had watched their old movies religiously on afternoon TV after grade school, and had split his sides laughing.
“Mrs. St. John-”
“Please. Ms. Crowley.”
They were in the cool shadowy living room with French doors open wide to the apron of her pool. She had been doing laps when Dante arrived. The white filigree beach robe over her two-piece suit of bright harlequin colors was gray with wetness.
“His one-year-old son drowned in this pool,” she said with an odd false brightness that was like the sound of chalk on a blackboard. “Legend has it that he heard the news and then did his radio show with his partner.”
Dante didn’t know how to respond. He finally just said, “I have a few questions.”
She nodded, holding his eyes. She had the addicted swimmer’s seal-like figure, and somewhat coarsened facial features, a little too much flesh under the chin as if the monthly alimony check didn’t run to regular face-lifts. But Dante could see remnants of her daughter’s remarkable beauty in her face and oddly provocative blue eyes.
“You were divorced almost twenty-five years ago?”
“That’s right, Lieutenant. So I really know nothing at all about my ex these days.” She focused another limpid-eyed stare on him, waved a hand. He realized she was nearsighted, which explained the come-hither looks. “After all these years…”
She squirmed around in the big leather chair like a fidgety child; her bottom left skid marks. She was having a very dark drink with lots of ice in an old-fashioned glass. Dante was having iced tea without anything. It was an iced-tea day.
“The ceilings are all just slightly lower than normal because Mr. Costello really was quite a short man.”
She took another hit from the squatty glass; ice cubes tinkled. She waved a languid hand and gave a little laugh that did not tinkle.
“We have house finches nesting right outside the French doors, can you imagine? In the hanging fern pots. They’re forever bringing disgusting things for the nestlings, and their droppings get all over the patio, but…” Another of the airy gestures with her free hand.
“I was wondering, Ms. Crowley, why such an attractive woman as you has never remarried. Obviously-”
“And let that bastard off the hook?” There was sudden clarity of eye and voice. “Once Molly was grown and the support payments stopped he would be scot-free and I could not abide that. I will not abide it.”
Dante thought of a life wasted in getting even. For what? That’s what he hoped to find out here today.
“So your ex-husband pays for all this?”
“Not nearly enough, but that bastard will keep on paying as long as he lives, I’ll see to that.”
She stopped abruptly, as if realizing she was saying too much too vehemently. In the plantings that hid the property fence across the pool, the male house finch puffed up his red chest to cheep at them. He had a loud voice. Dante leaned forward in his chair. The sun glinted off the pool. He wished he could shed his clothes and dive in.
“Why did you get divorced, if I might ask?”
“The usual,” she said very quickly and airily. The dismissive hand again; it was her favorite gesture. “Growing apart. Incompatibility. Moving in different directions…”
“Nothing to do with your daughter, then.”
“Of course not.” Indignation now. Indignation he didn’t believe for an instant.
“And what was your relationship with your daughter before her death, Ms. Crowley?”
“How can you ask such a question?” Her bosom quivered with indignation beneath its scanty covering. “We were as close as two women could be. The mother-daughter bond…”
“Yet you weren’t at her funeral.”
“The bastard never even let me know she was dead!” Tears appeared in her eyes. “I was in Maui with my friend Charles, and only learned of it two days after the service.”
Dante put surprise into his face.
“But surely, as close as you and Molly were, her husband must have-”
“He…” She hesitated again. Took another hit of her drink; it seemed to loosen the reins of her caution. “He didn’t know how to reach me.” There was a long pause. “Will Dalton and I, well… we never actually met.” A longer pause, but his silence compelled further revelation. “You see, once she was in high school…” She put her feet up on a hassock; her relaxed thighs were meaty but still shapely. She made the hand gesture again. “You know children have to rebel at that age…”
“But when she was in college…”
Anger burst through her watchfulness again. “By then the bastard had won her over, turned her against me! It started when she was thirteen, expensive gifts, school programs abroad during the summer months. Things I couldn’t afford for her.” Pain spasmed her features. “He was her father, she wanted to know her father, she was so strong-willed I knew any danger would…”
She stopped again, as if a curtain had descended.
“What danger is that?” Dante asked.
“Oh…” The hand wave, meant to be light and airy, was forced and static. “Corruption of values… materialism…”
“Child molestation?” he said in a tone to match her own.
She sat bolt upright as if wasp-stung.
“I didn’t say that!” she yelped. She had her feet on the floor, was halfway out of her chair.
“Will Dalton did.”
She paused, then sank back like a deflating balloon. All of the alarm and anger were leaking out of her.
“He said that?”