If platinum smelled, Nordstrom would be what it smelled like — clean and ridiculously expensive. No less than three fresh-scrubbed young sales clerks wished me good morning and asked pleasantly if there was anything they could help me find as I made my way to the first-floor jewelry department.
“Can I help you find something special?”
Late twenties. Blond. Prematurely balding. Wire-frame glasses. Decked out in slacks, suit vest, white dress shirt, a gold tie. He was standing behind a glass display case filled with glittery baubles that I’d never afford.
“Cherry around?”
“She’s on her break.”
“Any idea when she’s due back?”
The clerk checked his oversized divers’ watch.
“Should be back any time. Is there something I can do for you? We have a really nice selection of brooches that just came in I’d be happy to show you.”
“That’s OK. I’ll wait.”
The women’s shoe department was next door. I sat. Mercifully, nobody asked me if I wanted to try on any pumps or anything. I noted an inordinate number of shoppers who were dressed up. That was the difference between Nordstrom and Sears. That and the power tools.
A couple of minutes passed before a round-faced, dark-complected young woman with streaked auburn tresses walked past me to where the clerk in the suit vest was standing behind the display case. She was wearing a black skirt, black ankle boots, and a blousy, zebra-striped top. She and the clerk conferred quietly. He pointed me out and she came over, smiling.
“Hi. Can I help you?”
“Cherry, right?”
“Right.” She pushed her hair behind her ear. I noticed a tattoo on the inside of her right wrist. In stylish, cursive script, it said, “Baby.”
“My name’s Logan. I wondered if I could ask you a couple of questions about your former boyfriend.”
“Which one?”
“Chad.”
Her friendly expression disappeared. I could see pain behind her dark eyes.
“I’m assuming you heard what happened to him?”
“I heard. You a cop?”
“No.”
“Well, I’m sorry,” Cherry said, starting to go around me, “but if you’re not the police, I really don’t think I should be talking to you.”
“I was there when they found him.”
She stopped and looked back at me.
“You saw him?”
I nodded.
“Did he look really bad?”
“No.”
She seemed relieved.
“Chad told me the two of you used to confide in each other, even after you split.”
“He was my soul mate,” Cherry said, her chin beginning to quiver. “We just didn’t get along sometimes, that’s all.”
“I’m trying to find who killed him.”
“What do you care? You said you’re not a cop.”
“Whoever shot Chad also may have kidnapped someone very close to me. He may be holding her hostage.”
She waited until a couple of tall, slim young women in long, flower-print dresses strolled past, each carrying several shopping bags. They were debating the proper pronunciation of foie gras.
“Chad was so great.” Cherry’s eyes glistened. She looked away, wistfully. “We loved each other so much.”
“Who do you think might’ve wanted him dead, Cherry?”
“I don’t know.”
“Who do you think does?”
She shrugged. “His mom, I’m pretty sure.”
“What makes you think that?”
“When she called to tell me what happened, she said she had her suspicions.”
“She tell you what those were?”
“Only thing she said was that she was afraid the guy might come after her if he knew she was pointing fingers.”
“Where can I find her?”
“I’m not going to get in trouble, am I?”
“No.”
Cherry searched my eyes. “I don’t know why,” she said, “but for whatever reason, I believe you.”
Chad’s mother, Sissy Barbieri, lived in the bedroom community of Thousand Oaks, north of Los Angeles. Why they call it Thousand Oaks is beyond me, considering that most of those one thousand trees appear to have been cut down long ago. What isn’t in short supply in Thousand Oaks are expensive cars and block after block of perfectly manicured lawns surrounding perfectly immaculate, Spanish-themed minimansions. The Stepford Wives would fit right in.
The closest airport to Thousand Oaks was in Camarillo, about thirteen miles away. Flying the Duck wouldn’t have worked, especially with the plane’s electrical problems that Larry had yet to diagnose. So I drove instead down the 101 freeway in my truck.
The address Cherry had given me was on Silver Oaks Drive, which was clearly among one of Thousand Oak’s lesser enclaves — modest, single-story ranch-style homes wedged close beside each other on a stretch of bleak, sun-baked real estate a block off the noisy freeway. Sissy’s house was noteworthy only for its especially decrepit appearance. Paint was peeling off the siding. A rain gutter hung from over the porch like a hiker clinging to a cliff. A weight bench and bar bells sat rusting on the scrum of devil grass and other weeds that passed for a front yard.
I parked as a matter of practice three houses down the street — far enough away to maintain the element of surprise, yet close enough to get to my truck if I had to in a hurry — walked in, and pressed the bell.
No answer. No sound of a bell ringing inside. I tried the steel-grated storm door. It was unlocked. I opened it and knocked on the front door. A dog began barking crazily inside the house — a small dog, by the sound of it. A few seconds passed, then the door opened, revealing a woman in a maroon, terrycloth bathrobe clutching the nub of a cigarette in the fingers of her right hand. Mid-forties, five foot five, 160 pounds. Her dirty blonde hair was shoulder-length, uncombed and unwashed. Deep sallow creases rimmed blue eyes. She planted her left hand on her hip and shifted her weight, a purposeful move that parted the top of her robe and allowed me a better peak at her pendulous, untethered breasts. You could tell she’d once been beautiful. All she was now was hard.
“Tofu, no!” She turned to yell at a trembling, goggle-eyed Chihuahua barking and snarling at me. Then she looked back at me. “What happened to the regular guy?”
“Pardon?”
“The regular guy? From the dispensary?”
I looked at her blankly.
“I ordered half an ounce of Super Lemon Haze. It was supposed to be here two hours ago. What is wrong with you people? Your ad says same-day delivery. Do you know how long I’ve been sitting around, waiting for my medicine?”
“I’m not from a medical marijuana dispensary.”
“You’re not?”
“No.”
Her shoulders sagged. “Well, do you have any weed on you?”
“Are you Sissy Barbieri?”
She took a drag on her cigarette, eyeing me with sudden suspicion.
“Who’s asking?”
“My name’s Logan. I was there when they found your son, Chad.”
Her demeanor softened instantly.
“You were there?”
I nodded.
“My baby didn’t deserve to die the way he did,” Chad’s mother said.
“I know this isn’t easy, Sissy, but I’d like to come in and ask you a few questions about him.”
“What kind of questions?”
“Ones that could help bring whoever killed him to justice.”
“You a cop?”
“No.”
“Then who are you?”
I told her. She asked to see my driver’s license.
“You live in Rancho Bonita?” she said, studying it.
“I do.”
“You’re not a rapist or anything like that, are you?”
“No.”
She eyed me, debating my trustworthiness, then handed me back my license and stepped aside. I thanked her for taking the time and walked in.
Barking and snarling, Tofu the Chihuahua held her ground on beige carpet that could’ve used a steam cleaning, until I reached down to pet her. She flopped over on her back, trembling, legs in the air, and I scratched her tummy. Suddenly, we were BFFs.
Sissy grabbed a quart bottle of Early Times bourbon off a glass-top coffee table and held it up with her eyebrows raised as if to offer me a hit.