CHAPTER 20
It cooled off after
midnight and I got to sleep. Showered, shaved and breakfasted, I
was in my car heading back to L. A. by nine A. M. Except for the
green strip along the Neville River, the land was brown and still
under heat that made the landscape shimmer.
***
Back in my office I
called Ohls and gave him the license numbers for the pickup, and
the gray Mercury I had seen parked in the Neville Valley Realty
Trust parking lot. Then I went downstairs to the coffee shop and
had a ham sandwich and some coffee and came back upstairs and sat
and dangled my feet until Ohls called back. The truck was
registered to Neville Valley Realty Trust. The gray Mercury
belonged to the Rancho Springs Development Corporation in Rancho
Springs, California.
"You need anything
else, Hawkshaw?" Ohls said.
"You show me how this
all ties into Carmen Sternwood," I said.
"Be good for you,"
Ohls said, "to work it out yourself."
I went straight
downtown to the hall of records and spent maybe an hour and a half
looking up the incorporation papers that the California secretary
of state's office requires of all new companies. Neville Valley
Trust was in there, and the Rancho Springs Development Corp.
Everything was written in the conventional language of lawyers,
which is why it took me an hour and a half. But when I was through
I knew that the Neville Valley Realty Trust and Rancho Springs
Development Corporation were legal corporations in the State of
California. And I knew that a member of the incorporating board of
Rancho Springs was Claude Bonsentir.
Then I went to the
library and spent another couple of hours in the periodical room
reading up on the Neville Valley Land Reclamation Project. It was
almost as boring as the documents of incorporation, but basically I
learned that it was a part of a federal effort to reclaim barren
land in the West and Southwest. The plan in Neville Valley was to
use the spill from the Neville River to irrigate land all over the
valley and turn it into rich farming country. There was no mention
of the Neville Valley Trust in anything I read.
Driving back to
Hollywood, I thought about all of this. Was Neville Valley Realty
buying up water rights as representatives of the government? Were
they buying the rights so they could resell them to the government
at extortion-level prices? What was kindly old doctor Heal-all
doing on the board of the Rancho Springs Development Corp.? And why
did some employees of the Neville Valley Realty Trust come to
Hollywood and pour it on me?
***
Back in my office I
put in a call to the Bureau of Land Management's Los Angeles
office. It took about a half an hour, and most of that on hold, to
get anyone who even knew about the Neville Valley project, and he
didn't know anything about the Neville Realty Trust. Which didn't
prove that they weren't working for the government. It only proved
what I already knew about the government.
I sat at my desk with
the window open, smelling the fumes from the coffee shop downstairs
and pushing the things I knew around in my head, hoping they'd form
a pattern I could recognize. It was late afternoon. I looked out my
window at the boulevard below me. Nobody was frying eggs on the
sidewalk. Off on another street somewhere a police siren wailed.
They'd be busy in this heat. People got a little crazy in heat like
this. Husbands began to ball their fists and frown at their wives.
Meek, mousy-haired wives began to look at the breadknife and eye
their husbands taking a nap in their undershirts and snoring, their
throats exposed. In the barrio the prowl car boys would keep their
hands a little closer to their guns. And in the hills where the
stars lived, people would sit on patios looking at the lights
twinkle in the steamy evening below them in the basin, and the
sweat that beaded on the sides of cocktail shakers would trickle
off and make a wet spot in their linen slacks. The heat played no
favorites.
It got slowly dark
while I sat there looking out at the baking city and thinking and
not getting anywhere. The end of another perfect day. Nobody
called. Nobody came in. Nobody cared if I died or bought a house in
Encino.