Authors: Jonathan Kellerman
Tags: #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective, #Crime, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Fiction
“He never said, but you could just tell. Which is why I never made a fuss. Dad has a good feel for people. That’s part of what made him so successful.” She chuckled. “Who do you think bought me this house? My job sure couldn’t pay for it and I’m the first to admit it.”
“What do you do?”
“Work with kids. Nanny, preschool teacher, I’ve done some remedial tutoring. And… I probably shouldn’t admit it but, yes, like everyone else, I wanted to act. But want’s a long way from do. Right now I’m taking some downtime, maybe I’ll transition to something totally different. Anyway, Dad’s not like you’d imagine, for a man in his position. He’s a people person and his instinct is to trust. He always says he’d prefer to trust and end up disappointed rather than live his life as a cynic. ‘A cynic understands the price of everything and the value of nothing.’ That’s his favorite saying.”
Reed said, “Travis Huck hasn’t disappointed him yet.”
“Apparently,” said Simone Vander. “Maybe because Travis doesn’t have a life of his own, is always there to run some errand, whatever. I know that’s helpful for Dad and Nadine, but maybe that’s what bothers me. Maybe Travis is
too
involved?”
She sat forward, folding like origami. “Being an assistant is more than a job. He lives in that house.” Exhaling. “That’s why I hired Aaron. To find out if there is some reason to be worried. And you guys know what he found. Travis
killed
someone.”
She hugged herself.
Moe Reed said, “Did Mr. Fox give you the details?”
“I know it was kids pushing and shoving. But still. Someone died and he went to prison. Thinking about it last night, I didn’t sleep very well.”
Brown eyes drifted to Milo. “Aaron said you’d follow through, Lieutenant. That you never let go of a lead.”
We left Simone Vander standing just inside her gate. Milo drove down Benedict Canyon slowly.
Moe Reed said, “She’s someone who knows Huck. Guess this puts more focus on him as a solo psycho, Loo.”
Grunt.
At Lexington Road, Reed tried again. “It won’t be a problem, Loo.”
“What won’t be?”
“Aaron and me.”
“Never assumed it would be.”
“One thing she gave us: Doesn’t sound like the Vanders are running from anything. What are we thinking about those sex parties Selena played at?”
“Good question.”
“So they’re still potential suspects?”
“No reason to eliminate them. Or anyone else.” Milo smiled. “With an alternative lifestyle. Whether or not that’s what got her — and the other women — killed? Who the hell knows?”
I said, “Selena’s missing computer says there are secrets the killer wants to stay hidden.”
Reed said, “Or it’s just the bad guy getting rid of any link between him and Selena. Meaning someone she knew. And she knew Huck. And now
we
know he had the hots for her. Toss in the baldie Ramos saw and he’s looking better and better.”
“Creepy guy,” said Milo. “But not to the Vanders. Simon’s a sharp-eyed businessman. Trusting according to his daughter, but she never said he was an outright sucker. Why would he give Huck a job that had him living in?”
“The weird — the alternative lifestyle?”
Milo didn’t answer until we’d traveled a mile on Sunset. “All right, we’ll invite Mr. Huck for an interview, keep it mellow, maybe he won’t lawyer up immediately. But not today, give it a few more nights of surveillance. God’s smiling at us, guy’ll finally leave the house, head straight to Century Boulevard, solicit a working girl under your watchful eye, Detective Reed. Royal
-flush
scenario, he tries something nasty and you nab him heroically. That happens, you get to be at the press conference and I’ll do the paperwork.”
Reed said, “You think he’d be that stupid? With all those bodies turning up, he goes back there?”
“You’re the one been itching to watch him, kiddo.”
Silence.
Milo said, “Yeah, it would be stupid but without stupid criminals, the job would be as cheerful as cancer. And from Huck’s perspective, there really isn’t much heat. We had a two-minute chat with him, haven’t been back, the press conference emphasized no leads. He’s got to feel we know diddly. Which ain’t far from the truth.”
Reed said, “Feeling confident, so he strikes out.”
I said, “The pattern of the murders implies a sequence of confidence-building. Start with women who could be considered throwaway victims and bury them out of sight. No one catches on, kick it up to someone bound to be missed, display her, call it in just to make sure.”
“Mr. Hissy,” said Reed. “And everything goes down at the marsh. What’s that, staying in his geographic comfort zone?”
I said, “The marsh could be part of the thrill.”
“The place turns him on? How?”
“Dr. Hargrove called it hallowed ground. Lust murders are often about control through defilement. What better place to showcase your handiwork? There could’ve also been a practical reason. There’s limited public access to the marsh. If he’d stuck to stashing bodies in the muck, his crimes could’ve stayed undetected for years.”
“Instead he decides to advertise.” Reed gave a low whistle. “Life do get twisted.”
Milo said, “First step toward being an ace detective, kid.”
“What is?”
“Figuring out you’re living in a different world.”
Pigeons had partied atop Reed’s rented Cadillac. He grumbled, “Story of my life,” sounding uncannily like Milo.
His cell phone went off. “Reed… I’m so sorry, ma’am… yes, absolutely, ma’am.” Pulling his pad out, he scrawled, hung up.
“That was Mary Lewis, Sheralyn Dawkins’s mom. She lives in Fall-brook. What’s more important, watching Huck or talking to her?”
“Her,” said Milo. “Bring a scrape kit. At the very least we’ll get a firm I.D. on Sheralyn. I’ll watch Huck.”
“Depending on what she has to say, Loo, I can start out now, do a turnaround, and be back at the Vander house in eight, nine hours.”
“You start out now, you hit the crush, forget it. Get the DNA kit, pack yourself an overnight bag, leave when it’s clearer. Take the coastal route, find yourself a bed in Capistrano, whatever. Eat a nice seafood dinner, watch cable, be ready for Ms. Lewis in the morning.”
“Any suggestions where to stay?”
“Department’s not gonna pay for the Ritz-Carlton, you’ll be lucky to get a mattress and Cheez Whiz from a vending machine. And for God’s sake, fill out the forms — no, forget it, I’ll do it for you.”
“I’ll do it,” said Reed. “Promise.”
“Yadda yadda yadda.”
The two of them drove off the Pizza Palazzo lot and I headed home.
I phoned Robin, asked if she wanted me to pick up dinner.
She said, “Beat you to it. Prime rib.”
“What’s the occasion?”
“Prime rib. I was thinking we could invite Milo and Rick. On the off chance Rick’s free.”
“Feeling hospitable?”
“Got my hostess gown and my martini shaker and I bought enough cow for eight, which should accommodate Milo. It dawned on me after he called you this morning. I haven’t talked to him in ages — and we haven’t seen the two of them socially for even longer.”
“Nice thought,” I said, “but Milo’s doing surveillance tonight.”
“Oh. Starting when?”
“After dark.”
“Let’s eat early.”
“You feeling okay?”
“What?”
“Acute attack of sociability.”
“I’ve been too isolated, darling. You get to go out, meet people. I talk to Blanche and pieces of wood.”
“I’ll call Milo.”
“I’ll call. He has trouble refusing me.”
Pleasant surprise for both invitees.
Dr. Rick Silverman was off shift at the E.R.
Milo said, “Red meat. Public safety will just have to cool its goddamn heels.”
Rick arrived first, wearing a maroon silk shirt, pressed jeans, and mesh loafers, bearing an enormous orchid arrangement for Robin. His silver hair was longer than usual, his mustache boasted of surgical skills. Robin took the flowers and kissed him. Blanche rubbed her head against his cuffs.
He kneeled, petted. “Gorgeous. Can I take her home as a party favor?”
“Love you, Richard,” said Robin. “But not that much.”
He played with the dog some more, eyed the roast, sizzling as it rested. “Smells fantastic, glad I took an extra dose of Lipitor. Can I help with anything?”
“Nothing to help with. Manhattan on the rocks, Maker’s Mark, capful of red vermouth, dash of orange bitters, no cherry?”
“Impressive,” said Rick. “Not that I ever stray from the familiar.” He sat. Blanche settled at his feet. A long arm dangled; adroit fingers kneaded her flews. “Big Guy should be here any minute.”
Robin said, “He phoned half an hour ago, said he got beeped by Downtown, would let me know if he couldn’t make it. I haven’t heard from him since.”
“Downtown. That again.”
“What again?”
“New chief’s a hands-on administrator. Milo’s never had to deal with anything like it. It’s probably better than the old days — Siberia. But the personal attention cuts both ways. Right, Alex?”
I said, “Pressure to perform.”
“Exactly.”
Rick tried Milo’s cell, got voice mail, didn’t bother to leave a message.
Robin brought his drink, turned to me. “Chivas, baby?”
“Thanks.”
As she poured, Rick carried his Manhattan to the kitchen window, looked out at trees and sky. “I forget how pretty it is.” He sipped. “Sounds like this marsh mess won’t resolve soon, Alex.”
I nodded.
“Terrible,” he said. “Those poor women. Though I’m thinking selfishly. Disgustingly narcissistic, in fact. I got invited to give a speech at an alumni meeting. Thought we both might make it. Do a New England thing afterward. Milo’s never been.”
Robin said, “Undergrad at Brown or med school at Yale?”
“Yale.” He laughed. “No big whup, those things are always mind-numbing.”
The front door shut. A voice roared: “I smell
carcass
!”
Milo stomped into the kitchen, hugged everyone, sucked up all the oxygen in the room. The look on Rick’s face was pure relief.
Within three minutes, Milo had guzzled juice from the fridge, downed a beer, inspected the roast as if it were evidence, dipped a finger into a gravy spot on the counter and tasted. “Oh, this is going to be good. Where we going in terms of wine?”
The four of us ate lustily and polished off a bottle of New Zealand Pinot.
When Robin asked how Milo was doing, he took the question literally and reviewed the basics of the marsh murders.
Rick said, “Appetizing.”
Milo ran a finger over his lips.
Robin said, “No, I’m interested.”
Milo said, “
You
might be, but Dr. Rick is repelled and Dr. Alex is bored out of his skull. Whoever has custody of the potatoes, please pass.”
Small talk commenced. Milo didn’t contribute much, continued to shovel food like a combine. Rick worked hard at ignoring the rate of ingestion; he’s still trying to get Milo in for a checkup.
Blanche toddled in from her nap. She’s the only dog Milo’s ever admitted liking, but when she brushed against his leg, he ignored her. Rick lifted Blanche onto his lap, worked her ears.
Milo said, “Arf,” and stared into space.
Robin said, “Dessert?”
“I’m full, thanks,” said Rick.
“Congrats,” said Milo.
“For what?”
“Speaking for yourself.”
We moved outside, to the pond, ate fruit, drank coffee, watched the fish, tried to identify constellations in the moonless sky.
Milo said, “Twinkle, twinkle,” and lit up a cigar.
Rick said, “At least it’s outside, you won’t be poisoning the hosts.”
Milo tousled his hair. “How thoughtful of me.”
“What you’re doing to your own lungs we won’t talk about.”
Milo cupped a hand near his ear. “Ey, what’s that, sonny?”
Rick sighed.
Milo said, “I am beyond mere chemistry.”
“Ah, the
theory.
Call the Nobel committee.”
“What theory?” said Robin.
“He’s been so long on the job that his internal organs are petrified and immune to toxins.”
“Man of Granite,” said Milo, smoking hungrily. Holding his Timex to a low-voltage spot bulb, he said, “Oops, it’s that time,” got up, stubbed the cigar on stone, hugged everyone, and left.
Rick picked up the butt, held it between thumb and index finger. “Where should I toss this?”
By midnight, Robin and I were in bed, under crisp, clean covers.
She fell asleep quickly. I dragged myself through the usual brain-sweep, working to quiet my mind. Was back in Missouri, mastering my father’s Remington, feeling bigger than Dad — bigger than a bear — when the phone rang.
Dad said, “Hey, Al, you really caught on.”
Ring ring ring ring ring.
Stupid; no phones in the forest. I pulled the covers over my head.
Stayed gigantic.
Robin was up by six, working in her studio soon after.
I found her sliding a razor-sharp mini-plane over a pristine rectangle of spruce. From the size and thickness of the wood, the future soundboard of an archtop guitar.
“Stromberg copy. Going to try the diagonal brace, see if I can tweak it for some interesting nuances.”
“Brought you coffee,” I said.
“Thanks — you’ve got crust in your eye — there we go, gone. Feel rested?”
“I tossed?”
“A bit. Get the message from your service?”
“Haven’t checked yet.” I yawned. “When did it come in?”
“Two calls, actually. Twelve forty and then at five, both from Milo.”
I reached him at his desk. “Huck did something?”
“Huck did the usual nothing. But there’s another body in the marsh.”
“Oh, no. Poor woman.”
“Not exactly.”
From seven thirty to nine p.m. the previous night, Silford Duboff and his girlfriend, Alma Reynolds, had enjoyed a vegan dinner at Real Food Daily on La Cienega.