Authors: Jonathan Kellerman
Tags: #Psychological, #Mystery & Detective, #Suspense, #Hard-Boiled, #Fiction
“Just on my way out to do it.”
“Good, because that’ll be a prerequisite. Send me something with a picture, too. If everything checks out, I’ll see you, say, two-thirty.”
I found a quick-print place on CaÑon Drive and faxed my documents to New York. Returning home, I postponed telling Robin and called an airline, booking myself a ten p.m. flight out of LAX. I asked the ticket agent about hotels.
She said, “Midtown? I really don’t know, sir, but you might try the Middleton. The executives from our company stay there, but it’s expensive. Of course, everything in New York is unless you want a real dive.”
I thanked her and phoned the hotel. A very bored-sounding man took my credit card number, then grudgingly agreed to give me a single room for two hundred and twenty dollars a night. When he quoted the price, he suppressed a yawn.
I told Robin about Rosenblatt first.
She shook her head, took hold of my hand.
“Four years ago,” I said. “Another gap filled in.”
“How’d he die?”
“The son didn’t go into any details. But if the killer’s being consistent, it was probably something to do with a car or a fall.”
“All those people. My God.” Pressing my hand up against her cheek, she closed her eyes. The smell of glue hung in the garage, along with coffee and dust and the sound of the dog’s breathing.
I felt him nosing up against my leg. Looked down at his wide, flat face. He blinked a couple of times and licked my hand.
I told Robin of my plan to fly east and offered to have her come with me.
She said, “There’d be no point to it, would there?”
“It’s not going to be a vacation, just more digging up people’s misery. I’m starting to feel like a ghoul.”
She looked off, at her tools and her molds.
“Only time I’ve been in New York was a family trip. We went all the way up to Niagara Falls, Mom and Dad squabbling the whole time.”
“I haven’t been there, myself, since grad school.”
She nodded, touched my biceps, rubbed it. “You have to go — things are getting uglier and uglier here. When are you leaving?”
“I was thinking tonight.”
“I’ll take you to the airport. When will you be coming home, so I can pick you up?”
“Depends on what I find — probably within a day or two.”
“Do you have a place to stay?”
“I found a hotel.”
“A hotel,” she said. “You, alone in some room . . .” She shook her head.
“Could you please stay with Milo and Rick while I’m gone? I know it’s disruptive and unnecessary, but I’d have a lot more peace of mind.”
She touched my face again. “You haven’t had much of that lately, have you? Sure, why not.”
I tried a couple more times to reach Milo without success. Wanting to get Robin settled as soon as possible, I phoned his house. Rick was there and I told him we’d be coming over.
“We’ll take good care of her, Alex. I’m really sorry for all this crap you’ve been going through. I’m sure the big guy will get to the bottom of it.”
“I’m sure he will, too. Will the dog be a problem?”
“No, I don’t think so. Milo tells me he’s pretty cute.”
“Milo never expressed any affection for him in my presence.”
“Does that surprise you?”
“No,” I said.
He laughed.
“Are you badly allergic, Rick?”
“Don’t know, never had a dog. But don’t worry, I’ll pick up some Seldane in the ER, or write myself a scrip. Speaking of which, I have to head over to Cedars pretty soon. When were you planning on coming?”
“This evening. Any idea when Milo’ll be back?”
“Your guess is as good as mine. . . . Tell you what, I’ll leave a key in back of the house. There’re two sago palms growing up against the rear wall — you haven’t been here since we relandscaped, have you?”
“Just to pick up Milo.”
“Came out great, our water consumption’s way down . . . the sago palms — do you know what they are?”
“Squat things with leaves that look like fan blades?”
“Exactly. I’ll leave the key under the branches of the smaller one — the one on the right. Milo would kill me if he knew.” More laughter. “We have a new alarm code, too — he changes it every couple of months.”
He rattled off five numbers. I copied them down and thanked him again.
“Pleasure,” he said. “This should be fun, we’ve never had a pet.”
I packed my carry-on and Robin packed hers. We took the dog for a walk around the property and played with him, and finally he got sleepy. We left him resting and drove into town for an early dinner, taking Robin’s truck. Cholesterol palace on South Beverly Drive: thick steaks and home-fried potatoes served in lumberjack portions at prices no lumberjack could afford. The food looked great and smelled great, and my taste buds told me it probably tasted great, too. But somewhere along the line the circuitry between my tongue and my brain fizzed and I found myself chewing mechanically, forcing meat down a dry, tight
throat.
At seven, we cleaned the house on Benedict, picked up the dog, locked up, and drove over to West Hollywood. The key was where Rick had said it would be, placed on the ground precisely at the middle of the palm’s corrugated trunk. The rest of the yard was desert-pale and composed, drought-tolerant plants spread expertly around the tiny space. The walls were higher and topped with ragged stone.
Inside, the place was different, too: whitewashed hardwood floors, big leather chairs, glass tables, gray fabric walls. The guest room was pine. An old iron bed was freshly made and turned down. A single white rose rested on the pillow and a bar of Swiss chocolate was on a dish on the nightstand.
“How sweet,” said Robin, picking up the flower and twirling it. She looked around. “This is like a great little inn.”
Sheets of newspaper were spread on the floor next to the bed. On them were a white ceramic bowl filled with water, a plastic-wrapped hunk of cheddar cheese, and a shirt cardboard lettered in fountain pen, in Rick’s perfect, surgeon’s hand:
POOCH’S CORNER.
The dog went straight for the cheese — nosing it and having trouble with the concept of see-through plastic. I unwrapped it and fed it to him in bits.
We let him explore the yard for a while, then went back inside. “Every time I come here, they’ve done something else,” Robin said.
“
They
? I don’t think so, Rob.”
“True. You know, sometimes I have trouble imagining Milo living here.”
“I bet he loves it. Refuge from all the ugliness, someone else to worry about the details for a change.”
“You’re probably right — we can all use a refuge, can’t we?”
At eight, she drove me to LAX. The place had been rebuilt a few years ago, for the Olympics, and was a lot more manageable, but incoming arteries were still clogged and we waited to enter the departure lanes.
The whole city had been freshened up for the games, more energy and creativity mustered during one summer than the brain-dead mayor and the piss-and-moan city council had come up with in two decades. Now they were back to their old apathy-and-sleaze routine, and the city was rotting wherever the rich didn’t live.
Robin pulled up to the curb. The dog couldn’t enter the terminal, so we said our good-byes right there, and feeling lost and edgy, I entered the building.
The main hall was a painfully bright temple of transition. People looked either bone weary or jumpy. Security clearance was slow because the western-garbed man in front of me kept setting off the metal detector. Finally, someone figured out it was due to the metal shanks in his snakeskin boots, and we started moving again.
I made it to the gate by nine-fifteen. Got my boarding pass, waited a half hour, then stood in line and finally got to my seat. The plane began taxiing at ten-ten, then stopped. We sat on the runway for a while and finally lifted off. A couple of thousand feet up, L.A. was still a giant circuit board. Then a cloud bank. Then darkness.
I slept on and off for most of the flight, woke varnished in sweat.
Kennedy was crowded and hostile. I lugged my carry-on past the hordes at the baggage carousels and picked up a cab at the curb. The car smelled of boiled cabbage and was plastered with no-smoking signs in English, Spanish, and Japanese. The driver had an unpronounceable name and he wore a blue tank top and a white ski hat. The hat was rolled triple so the edge created a brim. It resembled a soft bowler.
I said, “The Middleton Hotel, on West Fifty-second Street.”
He grunted something and drove off, very slowly. The little I saw of Queens from the highway was low-rise and old, bricks and chrome and graffiti. But when we got on the Queensboro Bridge, the water was calm and lovely and the skyline of Manhattan loomed with threat and promise.
The Middleton was twenty stories of black granite sandwiched between office buildings that dwarfed it. The doorman looked ready for retirement and the lobby was shabby, elegant, and empty.
My room was on the tenth floor, small as a death row cell, filled with colonial furniture and sealed by blackout drapes. Clean and well ordered, but it smelled of mildew and roach killer. A dead quail-hunt print hung over the bed. The air-conditioner was a heavy-metal instrument. Street noise made it up this far with little loss of volume.
No rose on my pillow.
Unpacking, I changed into shorts and a T-shirt, ordered a three-dollar English muffin and five-dollar eggs, then punched the operator’s 0 and asked for a wakeup call at one. The food came surprisingly quickly and, even more amazing, was tasty.
When I finished, I put the tray on a glass-topped bureau, pulled back the covers, and got into bed. The TV remote was bolted to the nightstand. A cardboard guide listed thirty or so cable stations. The last choice was an early morning public access show featuring a dull, pudgy nude man interviewing dull, nude women. He had narrow, womanish shoulders and a very hairy body.
“Okay, Velvet,” he said, leering. “So . . . what do you do for, uh . . . fun?”
A painfully thin blond with a beak nose and frizzy hair touched a nipple and said, “Macramé.”
I switched off the set.
Lights out. The blackout drapes did their job well.
My heart was as dark as the room.
I beat the wakeup call by more than an hour. After showering, shaving, and dressing, I drew open the drapes on a view of the red-brick building across the street. Men in white shirts and ties were framed in its windows, sitting at desks, talking into phones, and stabbing the air with pens. Down below, the streets were clogged with double-parked cars. Horns blatted. Someone was using a compression drill. Even through the sealed windows I could smell the city.
I phoned Robin at just past nine L.A. time. We told each other we were fine and chatted for a while before she put Milo on.
“Talk about bicoastal,” he said. “Expedition or escape?”
“Bit of both, I guess. Thanks for taking care of the lady and the tramp.”
“Pleasure. Got a little more info on Mr. Gritz. Traced him to a small town in Georgia and just got finished talking to the police chief. Seems Lyle was a weird kid. Acted goofy, walked funny, mumbled a lot, didn’t have any friends. Out of school more than he was in, never learned to read properly or speak clearly. His home life was predictably bad, too. No father on the scene, and he and his mother lived in a trailer on the outskirts of town. He started drinking, slid straight into trouble. Shoplifting, theft, vandalism. Once in a while he’d get into a fight with someone bigger and stronger than himself and come out the loser. Chief said he locked him up plenty, but he didn’t seem to care, jail was as good as his home, or better. He used to sit in his cell and rock and talk to himself, as if he was in his own world.”
“Sounds more like the early signs of schizophrenia than a developing psychopath,” I said. “Onset during adolescence fits the schizophrenic pattern, too. What
doesn’t
fit is the kind of calculated thing we’re dealing with. Does this sound like a guy who could blend in at medical conferences? Delay gratification long enough to plot murders years in advance?”
“Not really. But maybe he changed when he grew up, got smoother.”
“Mr. Silk,” I said.
“Maybe he’s a good faker. Always was. Faked looking nuts, even back then — psychopaths do that all the time, right?”
“They do,” I said. “But did this police chief sound like someone easily fooled?”
“No. He said the kid was nuts but had one thing going for him. Musical talent. Taught himself to play guitar and mandolin and banjo and a bunch of other instruments.”
“The next Elvis.”
“Yeah. And for a while people thought he might actually make something of himself. Then one day, he just left town and no one heard from him again.”
“How long ago was this?”
“Nineteen-seventy.”
“So he was only twelve. Any idea why he left?”
“Chief had just busted him for drunk and disorderly again, gave him the usual lecture, then added a few bucks for him to get some new clothes and a haircut. Figured maybe if the kid looked better he’d act better. Lyle walked out of the police station and headed straight for the train depot. Police chief later found he used the money to buy a one-way ticket to Atlanta.”
“Twelve years old,” I said. “He could have kept traveling and ended up in Santa Barbara, been taken in by de Bosch as a charity case — de Bosch liked to put forth the humanitarian image, publicly.”
“Wish I could get hold of school records. No one seems to have any. Not the city or the county.”
“What about federal? If de Bosch applied for government funding for the charity cases, there might be some kind of documentation.”
“Don’t know how long those agencies hold on to their records, but I’ll check. So far I’m drawing a blank on this bastard. First time he shows up in California is an arrest nine years ago. No NCIC record prior to that, so that’s over a decade between his leaving Georgia and the beginnings of his West Coast life of crime. If he got busted for petty stuff in other small towns, it might very well not have been entered into the national computer. But still, you’d expect something. He’s a bad egg, where the hell was he all that time?”