O is for Outlaw
Page 115Laddie said, "So what?"
"I'll take care of this," he said to her. And then to me, "Go on. This is fascinating. Clearly, you've cooked up some theory and you're trying to make the pieces fit."
"I know how they fit. Duncan interviewed Laddie for the paper after you shipped out. By then, her daddy had money and Duncan couldn't resist. After all, a conquest is a conquest, however late it comes. The two had a fling and you found out about it. Either she 'fessed up or he told you himself, "
Laddie said, "I don't want to talk about this. It's over and done. I made a mistake, but it was years ago."
"Yeah, and I know who paid," I said caustically.
"Laddie, for God's sake, would you shut your mouth!" He turned back to me again, his face dark. "And?"
"And you killed him. Benny Quintero saw it and that's why he was hounding you. You set Mickey up. You killed Benny and made sure Mickey took the rap for it."
Mark's tone was light, but it wasn't sincere. "And you're saying what, that I shot Mickey too?"
"Yes."
He held his hands out, baffled. "Why would I do that? "
"Wait a minute, Kinsey. Duncan's body was never found, so for all you know he's alive and well. You think you can make a charge like this without evidence? "
"I have the snapshot. That helps."
"Oh, that's right. The snapshot. What crap. I think I better call your bluff. You have it with you?"
"I left it with a friend."
Mark snapped his fingers. "I forgot about Benny's brother. What's his name again? Duffy. Carlin Duffy. Now, there's a bright guy."
I said nothing.
He went on. "My sources tell me he's living in a shack at Himes Nursery. With his criminal history, it should be easy enough to put the screws to him."
"I thought you weren't worried."
"Call it cleanup," he said.
He pointed at me. "Bingo."
"Did you hate him that much?"
"Duncan? I'll tell you what pissed me off about that guy. Not so much that he screwed Laddie the minute my back was turned, but he showed up at la Drang, trying to pass himself off as a grunt. I had buddies, good friends, young guys, who died with valor, brave men who believed in what we were doing. I saw them die in agony, maimed and mutilated, limbs gone, gutshot. Duncan Oaks was a sleaze. He had money and pretensions but not an ounce of decency. He deserved to die, and I was happy to help him out. Speaking of which, I'd like to have his personal effects."
"Effects?"
"Press pass, dog tags."
"I can't help you there. You'd have to talk to Duffy about those things."
From the depths of my shoulder bag, there was a small but distinct click as the tape ran out and the recorder shut itself off. Mark's gaze flicked down and then flicked up to my face. His smile faded, and I heardLaddie's sharp intake of breath. He held his hand out. "You want to give me that?"
"Hey, Dad?"
The three of us turned in unison. The Bethels' son, Malcolm, was standing in the door to the dining room.
"Can I take your Mercedes? I've got a date."
"Of course."
Malcolm continued to stand there. "I need the keys. "
"Well, get a move on. We're in the middle of a conversation here," Mark said, waving him into the room.
Malcolm shot me a look of embarrassment as he entered the room. Impatiently, Mark removed his keys from his pocket, twisting the key from the ring as he separated it from the others. Meanwhile, I was staring at the kid. No wonder the photographs of Duncan Oaks had seemed familiar. I'd seen him, or his incarnation, in Laddie's son. The same youth, the same dark, distinctly handsome looks. Malcolm, at twenty, was the perfect blend of Duncan at seventeen and Duncan at twenty-three. I turned to Laddie, who must have known the final piece of the puzzle had fallen into place.
She said, "Mark." He glanced at her, and the two exchanged a quick piece of nonverbal communication.
"Where're you off to, Malcolm?" I said, ever the chipper one.
"I'm taking my girlfriend to a kegger out on campus."