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Authors: Jonathan Kellerman

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Mystery, #Thriller

Killer (29 page)

BOOK: Killer
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I hung up and summarized for Milo.

He said, “Yeah, yeah, I got the gist,” and gazed up at the seventh floor of the King William.

I said, “Sorry it didn’t pan out tonight,” and opened the passenger door.

He said, “Are you really?” Then: “Mea culpa, that was uncalled for.”

I said, “No sweat,” but his apology bypassed my brain and stuck in my gut and I felt myself bristling.

Wishing him luck, I headed for my car.

Driving home on streets emptied of rage and steel, I thought about the quandary posed by Oletha Dreiser and her baby.

Family unification at almost any cost was a long-standing doctrine at social services originally motivated by compassion but powered now by budgetary restrictions and the soulless grinding of a bureaucratic machinery that viewed kids as case numbers.

Short of obvious life-threatening danger, no court would sever Oletha’s attachment to Cody. I’d seen people far more impaired than her entrusted with parenthood.

The fact that too many kids died in foster care didn’t help, either. Last year, the toll had been three babies at three separate temporary
homes. One was a neglected influenza, the second remained undetermined but was suspected to be a smothering. The last was a confirmed homicide committed by the foster mother’s gangbanger boyfriend.

A deputy D.A. had described that killing to me as a “big-time oops.”

Despite all that, Mommy as murderer would change the rules fast; Ree Sykes could forget about bureaucratic inertia as a shield.

Why had she taken the risk?

Once Milo caught up with her, what lay in store for Rambla?

I wondered how the two of them were coping with life on the run. Were they holed up in a sad little room like 709 at the Prince William, cooking with Sterno?

I wanted to believe Ree was too safety-conscious to put her child in jeopardy. That got tougher as I thought about the cold elimination of two human beings. Trying for an even three.

Winky Melandrano had served as Ree’s babysitter. Had she brought Rambla the night she ambushed and shot him?

Facts were piling up against her but I still had trouble reconciling that level of callousness with the woman I’d evaluated.

Devoted mother. Appropriate. Nurturing. I’d believed all that enough to put my endorsement in writing. But what if maternal devotion had degraded to a competitive blood sport?

The prize, twenty pounds of innocence.

Maybe … but even if I’d glossed Ree’s character, the motive Milo was ascribing to her seemed flimsy. If her goal was having Rambla to herself, why not simply disappear?

Because Connie was relentless and had the money to fund a long battle and needed to be taken care of first?

Fine, but that didn’t explain going after Melandrano and Chamberlain, men described as Ree’s lifelong friends.

Occasional lovers.

A wild night in the Malibu hills?

Complicated … if Ree wasn’t a killer, why had she vanished?

Maybe her disappearance hadn’t been voluntary. What if someone viewed
her
as an obstacle? The obvious candidate was Ree’s father. Brought into the game by Connie.

But if Connie had discovered his identity, why hadn’t she named him in her court papers?

And why focus on Winky and Boris?

Because naming them as possible fathers had nothing to do with the truth, it was just another ploy to cast Ree as a dissolute, sexually indiscriminate groupie.

If so, it was possible Connie had made a fatal error. Igniting a frightening man’s paternal urges, leading him to clear the deck of competition.

Connie out of the way, then Ree. Doing it quickly so that Ree’s disappearance would cast her as a suspect.

Easy enough to accomplish. So was leaving Ree’s car at the station, misdirecting the cops on a fruitless search.

A good planner. Meticulous.

But:

You left a speck of Connie’s blood on Ree’s carpet. An iota that flaked off shoes you thought you’d cleaned thoroughly
.

You’re not quite as smart as you think you are. Dad
.

The more I thought about it, the more I liked it intellectually. And hated it emotionally because of what it implied for Ree. And Rambla.

Child as Holy Grail. Property to be coveted, just like all the other crap cases I’d fielded in family court.

If I offered any of this to Milo, he’d point out that I had no evidence.

Neither do you, Big Guy
.

No sense getting into it with him.

Also: I hadn’t a clue where to take it.

CHAPTER
34

Morning can bring clarity or confusion. By six a.m. the following day I was experiencing a strange mixture of both. I woke up thinking about Lonesome Moan, couldn’t shake the feeling that the band had occupied my dreams.

No nocturnal music video; Ree’s long-lived friendship with all four members was the issue.

Half the quartet had been marked for murder, the other half left out of the crosshairs.

Did that make Chuck-o Blatt a target? Along with the guitarist I hadn’t met—Spenser “Zebra” Younger?

Or was one of
them
Rambla’s dad?

I thought of Blatt’s protectiveness when we’d talked about Ree.

If you really are a psychologist and not spying for her fucking sister …

You know the kind of person she is. You hear me? You didn’t say nothing
.

She’s a nice person.

Not just nice. Good
.

Aggressive sort. Suspicious—he’d held back giving me anything of substance until I proved my identity. Had ended up supplying a rationale for Ree’s disappearance:
Ree figured the bitch was going to keep harassing her
.

Unlike his bandmates, Chuck-o was a hard-nosed businessman who’d managed to parlay gig money into ownership of three bars. Whom I’d watch handle an array of serious drinkers with effortless dominance.

Boris Chamberlain had his muscles and Blatt was built soft, but from what I’d seen Blatt was the likely alpha in the band. And alphas were all about protection, so who better to turn to when you were feeling threatened?

Especially if your relationship with the alpha had produced a child. Then there was the matter of Zebra Younger, a total question mark. If either man was in danger, warning them was the right thing to do. If one of them was Rambla’s murderous daddy, additional face-time would be interesting.

Either way, time for a return visit to Virgo Virgo.

At eleven a.m., I drove into the Valley. One parking spot was available across the street from the bar, situated ten yards west with a gently oblique view.

Papered over the
Happy Hour!!!
banner was a new announcement.

CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE

I remained in the Seville, playing my phone as I tried to find personal data on
marvin blatt
. Nothing. I tried
charles, chuck
, and
chuck-o
. The last led back to the Lonesome Moan website and I was figuring out my next step when a man approached the bar’s front door.

Seventyish, basset-faced, shiny blue suit well past salvation, white dress shirt, droopy tie.

The boozehound with a penchant for history—Lloyd. Maybe he was also into current events. As I got ready to sprint across the street, he pulled on the bar’s door handle. The door swung open and he stepped in, exited moments later toting a brown paper bag too small to conceal the bottle it held. Full fifth of something amber, glass neck reflecting sunlight.

He stood there, talking to someone inside Virgo Virgo. That person stepped closer. Chuck Blatt’s soft face caught sunlight.

I watched Lloyd reach into his pocket and draw out cash and try to pay Blatt. Blatt shook his head and patted the older man’s shoulder, then retreated and closed the door.

Lloyd waddled away, jaunty, bearing his treasure.

My turn.

Chuck-o stood behind the bar, boxing up liquor. The stage was empty. Blatt’s drums were gone. A solitary bulb lent the bar the ambience of a root cellar.

I said, “Donating the inventory?”

Blatt stopped working and studied my approach. Plucking a bottle of Crown Royal from the shelf behind him, he eased it into a carton atop the bar.

I said, “Just saw Lloyd—”

Blatt placed his hands flat on the bar. “Lloyd’s an untreatable alcoholic, drinking’s what he does, he considers it his profession. That’s why he doesn’t make heavy six figures selling insurance anymore. That’s why I’ve stopped trying to educate him. So if he comes in jonesing for Jackie-D, what do I care?” He looked around the room. “It’s all over, anyway.”

“Because of Winky.”

His teeth clacked together. “Well, shrink-friend, it’s kind of hard to rock anyone’s world when your singer gets murdered, don’t you think?
You here to tell me something about that? Like who ruined the world by offing one of the coolest, most gentle human beings ever to set foot on this godforsaken planet?”

Reaching into the box, he yanked out the same whiskey he’d just carted and flung it across the room. The bottle hit the wall behind the empty bandstand, shattered, and skittered down the plaster. Shards landed on wood, tinkling like a harp glissando.

Chuck-o Blatt said, “Fuck this world and the assholes who live in it.” Turning away, he snatched a fifth of vodka from the shelf and boxed it.

I said, “Thank God Boris got away.”

He turned toward me, eyes blazing. “
What?

“You didn’t hear about it.”

“Hear what?” Suddenly he came around from behind the bar, arms bent and bunched, fists lofted at nipple level. “Don’t dick around, pal, this isn’t a game. You got something to tell me,
tell
it.”

I told him about the attempt on Chamberlain.

He sagged. “What the
fuck’s
going on?”

“Wish I knew.”

“You think
I
can tell you? Only reason I found out about Winky is my check—the money I give him for the Monday gig—was still magneted to his fridge. The idiot was terrible with finances, I’d have to bug him to cash the damn things so my books would be straight. Cops took the checks, figured I was his employer so they came here to tell me—some big fat guy just lays it on me: Your pal’s been shot to death. I just about had a heart attack, I mean I really thought I was seizing up.”

Slapping his chest. “Then I realize he’s there because he either suspects
me
or he thinks I can answer his prayers. Winky’s murdered and I’m supposed to know
who
?”

The door opened. A man stepped in and headed toward us. Bumping along laboriously using a pair of elbow-mounted metal crutches.

Middle-aged and thin, he had neatly parted white hair and heavy eyebrows to match, wore an oxford blue buttondown shirt, pressed jeans, white sneakers.

He maintained his dignity with a determined smile as he struggled. Glanced at me briefly but made prolonged eye contact with Blatt.

Another regular angling for free booze? Neat and clean preppy garb didn’t shout desperate alcoholic but I was well past the point of generalization.

As he got closer, I saw that his eyes were bloodshot and his bony face was pale—an unnatural pallor that left his skin almost translucent. As if he’d been drained.

Chuck-o exhaled and said, “Hey, man.” The new arrival hobbled to the nearest chair and sat down laboriously, took some time laying his crutches on the floor.

Once settled, he gave me another look.

Blatt said, “This is the shrink I told you about, man. Helped Ree in court but now he’s doing some kind of police thing, came here to pump me for information I don’t have.”

The neatly dressed man’s scrutiny continued. His eyes were brown and mild. “That so.”

Chuck-o said, “Doctor whatever-your-name-is, meet the best slide guitarist this side of Johnny Winter—Spenser Younger aka the Zebra Man. Reason for that is his ax of choice is a black-and-white-striped Strat. That’s a Fender guitar, should you not be educated in the way of strings.”

I held my hand out. “Alex Delaware.”

Spenser Younger offered me five limp fingers. “Anything new on Winky?”

Chuck-o Blatt said, “What’s new, Zebe, is someone tried to off Boris, too.”

Younger gripped the sides of the chair with both hands. His upper
body trembled but the denim-clad sticks that claimed to be his legs remained inert. “Good God. You’ve got to be kidding.”

Blatt said, “Wish I was, man.”

“That’s crazy, Marv, that’s just too nuts.” To me: “Someone tried? Meaning Boris is okay?”

“Fortunately.”

“Jesus. What happened?”

I told him.

Zebe Younger said, “Oh, man, jogging at night in Hollyweird, yeah, that would be Boris.”

I said, “Confident because of his muscles?”

“Ten years ago, he was totally out of shape. One day he changed. Told me he was tired of getting turned down by chicks and made a resolution to get buffed and boy oh boy, did he. He was always strong, played football in high school. But still. The transformation.”

Massaging his wasted left leg.

Blatt said, “Guy’s a monster, hundred-pound curls with each hand.”

Younger said, “We should go see him, Marv. Give him support.”

I said, “He’s left town.”

Chuck-o placed his hands against his temples and lowered his head. “What the hell’s going on?”

His shoulders shook.

Zebe Younger said, “Marv?”

When Blatt looked up his cheeks were tearstained. When he spoke, his voice was constricted. “Stupid Boris. Muscles up the wazoo matters? Bullet’s gonna laugh all the way in.”

“Aw, man,” said Younger. He eyed the few remaining bottles.

Chuck-o said, “Sure, man, name your poison.”

“Love to, Marv, but the doc says there’s interactions with the new meds.”

“They got you on new meds? Awesome, man, you’re gonna be jogging before you know it.”

Younger smiled. “Sure, training for a 10K.” To me: “Got what they call a rare degenerative neuromuscular condition, basically I’m melting. Hereditary, one of my uncles had it, he lasted eight months. But now they’ve got better meds, I’m four years in and the fingers are still working.”

BOOK: Killer
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