THE VERDICT -- Robert Gardner
When we last left my sister Marion, she had gone through, in no
particular order, a diamond-smuggling heist in Europe, a rather
interesting career in real estate, two husbands and three marriages.
After her second husband died of acute alcoholism, Marion moved to the
Balboa Peninsula. The first thing she did upon arriving was lure the
chief of police, Roland Hodgkinson, away from his wife of many years.
Result, divorce and then marriage, Marion style.
Surprisingly, this marriage was a success, but this doesn’t mean it
was without drama. Nothing was, where Marion was concerned.
They moved to Lido Isle and lived a very comfortable life. Too
comfortable, apparently, because Hodge found himself in court charged
with living a million-dollar lifestyle on a chief of police’s salary.
Allegedly, he was spending at least twice as much as his salary each
month, and the Treasury Department was after him for delinquent taxes.
I didn’t attend the trial, but I got a pretty good version from the
loser, the attorney representing the Treasury Department. Marion appeared
in court looking every inch the lady, down to her white gloves. It was
the white gloves that did the attorney in, he said. He had called her to
the stand to explain how she and Hodge could live as they did on Hodge’s
salary.
Marion never turned a hair. Folding her white gloved-hands in her lap,
she said, “Have you ever lived in the Orient, young man?”
Of course he hadn’t, so she began to explain all about the money
market of the Orient, how every town had its own printing press and
printed money, how you could go from town to town playing the money
market, what Mex dollars were (American silver dollars).
Well, it went on and on. Marion, so poised and looking so proper,
completely destroyed the poor attorney representing the Treasury
Department. As he said later, “Never cross-examine a woman wearing white
gloves.”
Despite the favorable verdict, Hodge’s career was over, so they spent
the next years in Turkey, where he provided security for an oil company,
and then went to Guadalajara, where they lived for many years.
Finally, Hodge succumbed to emphysema, leaving Marion once more a
widow, but, although in her late 70, her career was not over yet. A Texas
oilman she had met somewhere heard about Hodge’s death and immediately
proposed. There was the small matter of his wife to be dealt with, but he
promptly filed for divorce. Unfortunately for Marion, he died before the
divorce was completed, but meanwhile he had given her a new Cadillac, so
she didn’t come out empty-handed.
That was the end of her matrimonial career. She lived on her own after
that, and then one day, I got a call from her son. She was in the
hospital and, at 96, was probably not going to come out. I went down to
visit, and we talked about various things and, as I left, she smiled and
said, “I haven’t been a very good girl.” Those were her last words --
something of an understatement, considering her life.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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