said in a wheezy voice as he turned off the TV, “and don’t make any wisecracks about my name. I’ve heard them all.”
The nightstand held an array of prescription bottles and an empty drinking glass.
“My wife, who wants me to hurry up and die so she can sell the trailer park and move back to Mexico, says you’re a cop.”
“That’s right.”
Ferry made a gimme motion with his hand. “Let’s see your shield.”
Kerney handed him the badge case and watched Ferry reach for his reading glasses. He was a short man who’d lost weight and had the frail look that comes with an end-stage illness.
“Santa Fe Police Chief,” Ferry said, handing back the badge case with a slight smirk. “Impressive. What you want from me?”
“I hear you retired from the job,” Kerney said.
“After thirty-six years. I started when I was twenty-one. I’ve been on a pension for over twenty. You do the math.”
“You were a PI for a time.”
“Eighteen years, until I got sick.” Ferry dropped his reading glasses on his lap and coughed into his fist. “Get on with what you came here for. I could die before you finish asking your questions.”
“You did some private work for Clifford Spalding. I’d like to know about it.”
Ferry shook his head to ward off the inquiry. “That’s it. End of questions. Get out.”
“He’s dead,” Kerney said.
Ferry absorbed the information and relaxed slightly. “How did it happen?”
“We’re still looking into it.”
Ferry smiled sardonically. “Crazy Alice Spalding didn’t kill him, did she?”
“Why do you say that?” Kerney asked.
“For giving her the runaround all these years,” Ferry said as he adjusted the pillow behind his head.
“Explain that to me.”
Ferry propped himself up against the headboard. “Since he’s dead, I guess I finally can tell somebody. Spalding came to see me soon after he moved to Santa Barbara. Walked in the door of my office one day with a legal document he’d had drawn up. Said he would hire me to do some work for him if I agreed to do exactly what he wanted and sign a binding nondisclosure agreement. I looked it over. It basically said I couldn’t reveal any information I gathered about George Spalding or Debbie Calderwood to anyone but him, and that I’d forfeit any sums paid to me if I did.”
“And?”
Ferry took a deep breath that rattled in his chest. “I told him I needed a hell of a lot more information before I’d even consider taking on the case like that. That’s when he showed me the official Army documents of his son’s death in Vietnam and explained the situation with his wife. He said he’d tried everything to help her accept the fact that George was gone, and since that hadn’t worked he’d been forced to live with an obsessive wife who was driving him crazy and hounding cops all over the West to find her lost son. He gave me copies of missing person reports Alice had submitted to a half dozen police departments in three or four different states.”
Kerney scooted a straight-back chair to the foot of the bed and sat. “So you took the case.”
“After he put ten one-hundred-dollar bills in my hand as an advance and told me what he wanted me to do.”
“Which was?”
Ferry chuckled. “Nothing. Make stuff up. The deal was that he’d call and ask me to follow up on one of Alice’s crazy leads. Then I’d write up a report about my phony investigation into it, wait a week or two, and mail it to him. He paid me five hundred dollars a pop.”
“Easy money,” Kerney said. “How many reports did you concoct for him?”
“About twenty, twenty-five, over the next couple of years.”
“What made the cash cow dry up?”
Ferry laughed. “I blew it. When I started running out of creative ways to lie, I decided to do some actual investigating to freshen up my reports.”
“Tell me about that.”
“Alice had tracked down an old college friend of Debbie Calderwood living in Portland, who said
Katherine Woodfine
Naomi Kinsman
Debora Geary
Judy Troy
Joanne Rock
Marissa Elizabeth Stone
S.E. Akers
Brian Aldiss
Kevin Courrier
Simone Beaudelaire