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“Even if the gun was registered to Jane or Mel,” I said, “that doesn’t rule out an outside shooter. Let’s say Jane was afraid, made a run for the bedroom, and grabbed her own gun, but whoever frightened her got hold of it.”

“When it comes to theories, you are human flypaper, my friend. First Dugger for Dr. Bloodlust, now Father of the Year for Lyle.”

“I’ve always been goal-directed.”

“Me too,” he said. “Least that’s what my third-grade teacher said. But screw goals. I need to co

At White Oak he said, “The thing that bothers me is maybe I narrowed my focus too quickly. I’m not saying the Duke thing or Lyle is wrong, but there’s always the danger of tu

“What do you mean?”

“I know Lauren… meant something to you, but the hard truth is she sold her body for a living, and women who do that live dangerously. The whole thing could trace back to some other john. Hell, I haven’t even followed up on her supposed modeling – the garment industry co

“What about Shawna and Duke?” I said.

He rotated his head, winced, rubbed his face. “I don’t know, Alex. My gut still tells me Shawna isn’t related to the rest of it.”

“Your gut’s worth listening to.”

“Thanks, Doc – see you next session.”

We traveled in silence all the way to Beverly Glen and Valley Vista, where Milo began the trip back to the city.

He let out a long, raspy sigh. “I respect your intuition also, Alex, but even an O-C pit bull takes a breather between bouts. Let’s both step back for a while. Maybe try to relax.”

CHAPTER 24

ROBIN SAID, “FIRST the daughter, now the mother?”

We were on the big couch in the living room. She was sitting at the far end, just out of reach, still wearing her work overalls and her red T-shirt. I’d come home determined to put everything aside, had ended up talking about all of it: Lauren’s aborted therapy, Phil Harnsberger’s party, Michelle, Shawna, Jane Abbot, Mel Abbot’s senescent terror.

Death kills confidentiality.

“You’re making it sound like a confession,” she said.

“Whose?”

“Yours. The whole sordid tale. As if you’ve done something wrong. As if you’re a main player in all of it and not just an extra.” She looked away. “It’s almost as if she’s seduced you – Lauren. Not sexually – you know what I mean. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. Seduction’s how she made a living.”

“I don’t see that at all.”

She got up, went into the kitchen, returned with two bottles of water, and handed me one. Sitting just as far.

“What’s wrong?” I said.

“You saw this girl, what – twice, ten years ago? – yet you’ve convinced yourself that you’re obligated to clarify every detail of her life. People like that don’t lend themselves to solutions. For them it’s always problems.”

“People like that.”

“Outcasts, troubled souls – patients, call them what you will. Didn’t you tell me one thing you had to learn so as not to become a toxic sponge was how to let go?”

“It’s not a matter of letting go-”

“What, then, Alex?” Her voice was low, but there was no mistaking the edge.

“Is there anything else that’s bothering you?” I said.

“That,” she said, “was very shrinky.”



“Sorry-”

“Your mind’s a fine piece of machinery, Alex. I’ve never encountered anything like it. You’re like a precisely tuned watch, always ticking – relentless. But sometimes I think you use what God gave you to dig ditches. Lowering yourself… these people…”

I reached for her, and she allowed me to touch her fingertips. But she exerted no stretch that would have allowed me to hold her.

“The thing is,” she said, “you get yourself on a track and you just keep ru

“The people who’ve died knew her well-”

She sighed and got up. “Listen, I’ve got work to catch up on – catch you later.”

“What about di

“Not hungry.”

“You are not happy with me.”

“On the contrary,” she said. “I’m very happy with you. With us. That’s why I’d like us both to keep breathing for a while.”

“There’s no danger. I wouldn’t do that to you again.”

“To me? Why don’t you start thinking of yourself? Check out your own boundaries – what you’ll allow in and what you won’t.”

She bent and kissed my forehead. “I don’t mean to be cruel, baby, but I’m weary of all this surmising and ugliness. You did what you could. Keep telling yourself that.”

I spent the night alone, listening to music but ingesting no harmony, trying to read – anything but psychology – waiting for Robin to come back in the house. By eleven she hadn’t, and I went to bed – early for me – and woke at 4:30 A.M., fighting the urge to bolt, exhausted yet charged, using every relaxation trick in my repertoire to fall back asleep. I endured the tension for two more hours until Robin’s eyes opened and I pretended to be ready to greet the day.

She smiled at me, tousled my hair, showered alone but made coffee for both of us, and sat down with the first section of the paper. If Jane Abbot’s murder had made the edition, she didn’t say. I took the Metro pages. Nothing there.

By eight she’d headed back to the studio and I was ru

I finished up some court reports – a couple of personal injury cases where kids had experienced psychological sequelae and a custody battle with wealthy protagonists that might never end unless the principals died. Printing, signing, sealing, and addressing my findings to various judges, I reviewed my ledger books and tried to figure out if I’d owe taxes in April. By eleven I still hadn’t figured it out. By eleven-thirty Robin bopped in, Spike in tow, and informed me she had to deliver two repaired D’Angelico archtops to the Los Feliz home of a movie star who was considering playing Elvis in an upcoming flick.

“Elvis never played D’Angelicos,” I said.

“That should be the worst of it. This guy’s got a tin ear.” A peck on the cheek – hard, maybe dismissive – and she was off.

By noon I was jumping out of my skin.

At twelve-eighteen I gave up and drove away.

West. Toward Santa Monica. The ocean. Figuring I’d just cruise by Ben Dugger’s high-rise, then take a nice, relaxed drive north on Ocean Front, down the ramp to Pacific Coast Highway.

Malibu. Day at the beach. Nothing to do with Lauren, because Lauren had left no clues in Malibu, and why should I avoid an entire coastline?

I could be as Californian as anyone.

But when I passed the building, Dugger was standing out in front, and I reduced my speed to a crawl.

Standing alone. Checking his watch. Looking rumpled and tense in a tan corduroy sport coat, white shirt, gray slacks. Flicking his wrist again. Glancing at the ramp of the underground parking garage.

Circling the block, I returned, cruising as slowly as I could without drawing the ire of other motorists. That left me mere seconds to stare, but it was enough to catch a glimpse of a green-jacketed figure – the diminutive Gerald – pulling up in Dugger’s old white Volvo, getting out, saluting, opening the door for Dugger.

Dugger gave him a tip and got in.

I drove fifty feet, veered to the curb, parked in front of a hydrant, waited until the Volvo chugged by. Allowing three cars to get between us, I began the tail, knowing this time I couldn’t risk discovery. Figuring I could pull it off. No reason for him to suspect.