Devil's Waltz (53 page)

Read Devil's Waltz Online

Authors: Jonathan Kellerman

Tags: #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Child Abuse, #Police, #Mystery & Detective, #Child psychologists, #General, #Psychological, #Delaware; Alex (Fictitious character), #Suspense, #Mystery Fiction, #Fiction, #Sturgis; Milo (Fictitious character), #Psychologists

BOOK: Devil's Waltz
6.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
D
ET
. S
TUGIS
: Your wife says she knew nothing about the box.
M
R
. J
ONES
: Of course she does. She’s lying. Really, Detective, it’s all a matter of context — seeing things in a different light, using a new lens.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Uh-huh.
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: Now what are you pulling out?
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: I think it’s obvious. This is a mask.
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: I fail to see—
M
R
. J
ONES
: No big deal. It’s from the carnival — Delta Psi’s carnival. They dressed me up as a witch. I kept the mask for a souvenir.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Kristie Kirkash kept it. You gave it to her last week and told her to keep it.
M
R
. J
ONES
: So?
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: So I think you put this on when you injected Cassie. So you’d look like a woman — the wicked witch.
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: Ridiculous.
M
R
. J
ONES
: I agree with you there, Tony.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: A souvenir, huh? Why’d you give it to Kristie?
M
R
. J
ONES
: She’s a Delta Psi. I thought the sorority would like to have it.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Considerate.
M
R
. J
ONES
: I’m their faculty adviser. What’s the big—
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: You have a thing for your students, don’t you? That’s how you met your wife, isn’t it? She was your student.
M
R
. J
ONES
: It’s not unusual — the teacher-student relationship…
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: What about it?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Often… sometimes it leads to intimacy.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: You tutor her, too? Your wife?
M
R
. J
ONES
: As a matter of fact, I did. But she was hopeless — not very bright at all.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: But you married her anyway. How come? A smart guy like you.
M
R
. J
ONES
: I was smitten — “this spring of love.”
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: You met in the spring?
M
R
. J
ONES
: It’s a quotation—
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Shakespeare?
M
R
. J
ONES
: As a matter of fact, yes. I fell deeply in love and was taken advantage of. A romantic nature. My bête noire.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: What about Karl Sobran? He take advantage of you too?
M
R
. J
ONES
: With Karl it was different — with him, ironically, I wasn’t naïve. I knew what he was, right away, but I felt I could help him channel his impulses.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: What did you know he was?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Classic antisocial sociopath. But contrary to popular belief, those types don’t lack consciences. They merely suspend them at their convenience — read Samenow. As a police officer, you really should. Where was I? Karl. Karl is very bright. I was hoping to direct his intelligence in a constructive manner.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Like murder for hire?
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: Don’t answer that.
M
R
. J
ONES
: Stop sighing, Tony. That’s ridiculous. Of course not. Did Karl actually say that?
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: How else would I know about him, Prof?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Ludicrous. But he is a sociopath — don’t forget that. Genetic liar. At worst I’m guilty of underestimating him — not realizing how truly dangerous he was. As much as I didn’t respect Dawn as a human being, I was horrified to find out she was murdered. If I’d known, I’d never have written that letter to Karl’s parole board. Never have… Oh, my God.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Never have what?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Talked idly to Karl.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: About Dawn?
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: Don’t answer that.
M
R
. J
ONES
: You’re sighing again — it’s very wearisome, Tony. Yes, about her, as well as other things. I’m afraid I must have thrown out idle comments about Dawn that Karl must have misinterpreted horribly.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: What kinds of comments?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Oh, no, I can’t believe he actually — How she was harassing me. He misunderstood. God, what a horrible misunderstanding!
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: You’re saying he misunderstood your comments and killed her on his own?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Believe me, Detective, the thought makes me sick. But it’s an inescapable conclusion.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: What exactly did you tell Sobran about Dawn?
M
R
. J
ONES
: That she was someone from my past who was bothering me.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: That’s it?
M
R
. J
ONES
: That’s it.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: There was no solicitation? To kill or hurt her?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Absolutely not.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: But there was payment, Prof. Two thousand dollars that Sobran deposited in his account the day after her murder. He had some of it in his pocket when I arrested him. He says he got it from you.
M
R
. J
ONES
: No problem. I’ve been helping Karl for a long time — so he could get on his feet, wouldn’t have to revert.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Two thousand dollars?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Sometimes I get a little loose with the purse strings. It’s an occupational hazard.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Of being a sociology professor?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Of growing up wealthy — it can be a real curse, you know. That’s why I always tried to live my life as if the money didn’t exist.
Keeping my life-style unpretentious — keeping away from all the things that have the potential to corrupt.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Like real estate deals?
M
R
. J
ONES
: My investments were for them — Cindy and the kids. I wanted them to have some kind of financial stability, because teaching school sure won’t give you that. That was before I realized what she was doing.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: By “doing,” you mean sexual behavior?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Exactly. With everything that walked in through the door. The children weren’t even mine, but I took care of them anyway. I’m a soft touch — it’s something I need to work on.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Uh-huh… Was Chad yours?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Not a chance.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: How do you know?
M
R
. J
ONES
: One look at him. He was the spitting image of a roofer we had working out on the tract. Spitting image — total clone.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Is that why you killed him?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Don’t be tedious, Detective. Chad died of sudden infant death syndrome.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: How can you be sure?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Textbook case. I read up on it — SIDS — after the little guy died. Trying to understand — to work it through. It was a horrible time for me. He wasn’t my flesh and blood, but I still loved him.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Okay, let’s move on. Your mother. Why’d you kill her?
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: I object!
M
R
. J
ONES
: You fuck—
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: See, I did some studying, too—
M
R
. J
ONES
: You fat fu—
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: I object! I most strenuously object to thi—
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: — trying to understand you, Prof. Talked to people all about your mom. You’d be amazed at how willing people are to talk once someone’s down—
M
R
. J
ONES
: You are stupid. You are psychotic and… and… egregiously stupid and ignorant. I should have known better than to bare my soul to someone like—
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: Chip—
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: One thing they all agree on was that old Mom was a hypochondriac. Healthy as a horse but convinced she was terminally ill. One person I spoke to said her bedroom was like a hospital room — that she actually had a hospital bed. With the little table? All these pills and syrups lying around. Needles too. Lots of needles. She stick herself, or get you to do it?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Oh, God…
M
R
. T
OKARIK
: Take my handkerchief, Chip.
Detective, I demand that you cease this line of questioning.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Sure. Bye.
M
R
. J
ONES
: She was the one who did the sticking! Herself and me — she hurt me! Vitamin B-12 shots twice a day. Protein shots. Antihistamine shots, even though I wasn’t allergic to anything! My bottom was her fucking pincushion! Antibiotics the minute I coughed. Tetanus shots if I got a scrape. I was the Azazel goat — cod liver oil and castor oil, and if I threw it up, I had to clean it up and take a double dosage. She could always get hold of medicine because she used to be a nurse — that’s how she met him. Army hospital, he was wounded at Anzio — big hero. She took care of him, but to me she was a sadistic maniac — you have no idea what it was like!
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Sounds like no one protected you.
M
R
. J
ONES
: No one! It was a living hell. Every day brought a new surprise. That’s why I hate surprises. Hate them. Detest them.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: You prefer everything planned out, huh?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Organization. I like organization.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Sounds like your dad let you down.
M
R
. J
ONES
: (laughs) That’s his hobby.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: So you go your own way.
M
R
. J
ONES
: Mother’s the — Necessity’s the mother of invention. (laughs) Thank you, Herr Freud.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Getting back to mom for a minute—
M
R
. J
ONES
: Let’s not.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: The way she died — Valium O.D., plastic bag over the head — guess we’ll never prove it wasn’t suicide.
M
R
. J
ONES
: That’s because it was. And that’s all I have to say about that.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Want to say anything about why you hung two pictures she painted in your house but really low to the ground? What was that, a symbolic demeaning or something?
M
R
. J
ONES
: I have nothing to say about that.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Uh-huh… yeah… So what you’re trying to tell me is, you’re the victim and this is all a big misunderstanding.
M
R
. J
ONES
: (unintelligible)
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: What?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Context, Detective. Context.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: New lens.
M
R
. J
ONES
: Exactly.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Your reading up on sudden infant death was because you were trying to understand your… Chad’s death?
M
R
. J
ONES
: Exactly.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Did you read up on Munchausen syndrome by proxy because you were trying to understand Cassie’s illnesses?
M
R
. J
ONES
: As a matter of fact, I did. Research is what I’m trained to do, Detective. All the experts seemed to be baffled by Cassie’s symptoms. I figured I’d learn what I could.
D
ET
. S
TURGIS
: Dawn Herbert said you were once pre-med.

Other books

The Book of Dreams by O.R. Melling
Defiant Spirits by Ross King
The Rings of Poseidon by Mike Crowson
Lupus Rex by John Carter Cash
Heart Specialist by Susan Barrie
The Loner by Rachel Ennis
Spiritual Warfare by Prince, Joseph