Devil's Waltz

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Devil's Waltz Page 35

by Jonathan Kellerman


  Then I heard a shout, looked over my shoulder and saw him waving.

  He said something to the class, sprang to his feet, and loped toward me. I waited for him and when he got to me, he looked scared.

  “I thought it was you. Is everything okay?”

  “Everything’s fine,” I said. “Didn’t want to alarm you. Just thought I’d drop by before heading over to your house.”

  “Oh— sure.” He blew out breath. “Well, that’s a relief. I just wish you’d told me you were coming, so I could’ve scheduled some time for us to talk. As it stands, I’ve got a two-hour seminar until two— you’re welcome to sit in, but I don’t imagine you want to hear about the structure of organizations. And after that there’s a faculty meeting till three and another class.”

  “Sounds like a busy day.”

  He smiled. “My kind of day.” The smile vanished. “Actually, Cindy’s the one with the tough job. I can escape.”

  He smoothed his beard. Today’s earring was a tiny sapphire, inflamed by the sun. His bare arms were tan and hairless and sinewy.

  “Is there anything specific you wanted to talk to me about?” he said. “I can have them break for a few minutes.”

  “No, not really.” I looked around at all the empty space.

  “Not exactly Yale,” he said, as if reading me. “I keep telling them a few trees would help. But I like being on the cutting edge— building something from scratch. This whole area’s the high-growth region of the L.A. basin. Come back in a few years and it’ll be teeming.”

  “Despite the slump?”

  He frowned, tugged on his beard, and said, “Yes, I think so. The population can only go one way.” Smile. “Or at least that’s what my demographer friends tell me.”

  He turned toward the students, who were staring at us, and held up a hand. “Do you know how to get to the house from here?”

  “Approximately.”

  “Let me tell you exactly. Just get back on the freeway— on the One-eighteen— and get off at the seventh exit. After that you can’t miss it.”

  “Great. I won’t keep you,” I said.

  He looked at me but seemed to be somewhere else.

  “Thanks,” he said. Another backward glance. “This is what keeps me sane— gives me the illusion of freedom. I’m sure you know what I mean.”

  “Absolutely.”

  “Well,” he said, “I’d better be getting back. Love to my ladies.”

  27

  The ride to the house wouldn’t take more than fifteen minutes, leaving forty-five to go before my two-thirty with Cassie.

  Remembering Cindy’s odd resistance to my coming out any earlier, I decided to head over there right now. Do things on my terms, for a change.

  Each exit on the 118 took me farther into the isolation of brown mountains, deforested by five years of drought. The seventh was marked Westview, and it deposited me on a gently curving road of red clay darkened by the mountain’s hulk. A few minutes later the clay turned to twin lanes of new asphalt, and red pennants on high metal poles began appearing at fifty-foot intervals. A yellow backhoe was parked on a turnoff. No other vehicles were in sight. Baked hillside and blue sky filled my eyes. The pennant poles flashed by like jail bars.

  The asphalt tabled at a hundred square feet of brick, shaded by olive trees. High metal gates were rolled wide open. A big wooden sign to the left of the aperture read WESTVIEW ESTATES in red block letters. Below the legend was an artist’s rendition of a spreading pastel-hued housing development set into too-green alps.

  I rolled close enough to the sign to read it. A timetable beneath the painting listed six construction phases, each with “twenty to a hundred custom estate homesites, 1/2 to 5 acres.” According to the dates, three phases should have been completed. When I looked through the gates I saw a sprinkle of rooftops, lots of brown. Chip’s comments about population growth, a few minutes ago, seemed a bit of wishful thinking.

  I drove past an untended guardhouse whose windows still bore masking-tape Xs, into a completely empty parking lot fringed with yellow gazania. The exit from the lot fed to a wide, empty street named Sequoia Lane. The sidewalks were so new they looked whitewashed.

  The left side of the street was an ivy-covered embankment. A half-block in, to the right, sat the first houses, a quartet of big, bright, creatively windowed structures, but unmistakably a tract.

  Mock Tudor, mock hacienda, mock Regency, mock Ponderosa Ranch, all fronted by sod lawns crosscut with beds of succulents and more gazania. Tennis court tarp backed the Tudor house; peacock-blue pool water glimmered behind the open lots of the others. Signs on the doors of all four read MODEL. Business hours were posted on a small billboard on the lawn of the Regency, along with the phone number of a real estate company in Agoura. More red pennants. All four doors were closed and the windows were dark.

  I kept going, looking for Dunbar Court. The side streets were all “Courts”— wide, squat strips ending in cul-de-sacs, and ribbing eastward from Sequoia. Very few cars were parked along curbs and in driveways. I saw a bicycle on its side in the center of a half-dead lawn, a garden hose that lay unfurled like a somnolent snake— but no people. A momentary breeze produced sound but no relief from the heat.

  Dunbar was the sixth Court. The Jones house was at the mouth of the dead end, a wide, one-story ranch, white stucco trimmed with used-brick. In the center of the front yard a wagon wheel leaned against a young birch tree too thin to support it. Flower beds edged the facade. The windows sparkled. The loom of mountains behind the house made it look like something constructed from a child’s kit. The air smelled of grass pollen.

  A gray-blue Plymouth Voyager van was parked in the driveway. A brown pickup truck with a bed full of hoses, nets, and plastic bottles was idling in the driveway of the house next door. The sign on the door said VALLEYBRITE POOL SERVICE. Just as I pulled up to the curb the truck shot out. The driver saw me and stopped short. I waved him on. A young, shirtless, ponytailed man stuck his head out and stared. Then he grinned suddenly and gave me the thumb-up, instant buddy sign. Dropping a bronze arm over the driver’s door, he finished backing up and was off.

  I walked to the front door. Cindy opened it before I had a chance to knock, brushing hair out of her face and glancing at her Swatch.

  “Hi,” she said. Her voice sounded choked, as if she’d just caught her breath.

  “Hi.” I smiled. “Traffic was better than I thought.”

  “Oh . . . sure. C’mon in.” The hair was unbraided but still waved by constriction. She wore a black T-shirt and very short white shorts. Her legs were smooth and pale, a little skinny but well-shaped above narrow bare feet. The sleeves of the T-shirt were cut high and on the bias, revealing lots of slender arm and a bit of shoulder. The bottom hem of her shirt barely reached her waist. As she held the door open she hugged herself and looked uncomfortable. Showing more skin than she’d intended for me, I supposed.

  I walked in and she closed the door after me, taking care not to slam it. A modest entry hall ended at ten feet of wall papered in a teal-blue miniprint and hung with at least a dozen framed photographs. Cindy and Chip and Cassie, posed and candid, and a couple of a pretty, dark-haired baby in blue.

  Smiling baby boy. I looked away from him and let my eyes settle on an enlarged snapshot of Cindy and an older woman. Cindy appeared around eighteen. She wore a white bare-midriff blouse and tight jeans tucked into white boots, and her hair was a wide, windblown fan. The older woman was leathery-looking, thin but wide-hipped, and had on a red-and-white striped sleeveless knit top over white stretch pants and white shoes. Her hair was dark-gray and cut very short, her lips so skinny they were nearly invisible. Both she and Cindy wore sunglasses; both were smiling. The older woman’s smile said No Nonsense. Boat masts and gray-green water backgrounded the shot.

  “That’s my Aunt Harriet,” said Cindy.

  Remembering she’d grown up in Ventura, I said, “Where is this, Oxnard Harbor?”

&nb
sp; “Uh-huh. Channel Islands. We used to go there for lunch, on her days off. . . .” Another look at her watch. “Cassie’s still sleeping. She takes her nap around now.”

  “Back to routine pretty quickly.” I smiled. “That’s good.”

  “She’s a good girl. . . . I guess she’ll be up soon.”

  She sounded edgy again.

  “Can I get you something to drink?” she said, moving away from the picture wall. “There’s iced tea in the fridge.”

  “Sure, thanks.”

  I followed her through a generously dimensioned living room lined on three sides with floor-to-ceiling mahogany bookshelves and furnished with oxblood leather couches and club chairs that looked new. The shelves were full of hardcovers. A brown afghan was draped over one of the chairs. The fourth wall had two curtained windows and was papered in a black-and-green plaid that darkened the room further and gave it a clubby look, unmistakably masculine.

  Chip’s dominance? Or indifference to interior decorating on her part? I trailed slightly behind her, watching her bare feet sink into brown plush carpet. A grass stain spotted one buttock of her shorts. She had a stiff stride and held her arms pressed to her sides.

  A dining room papered in a brown mini-print led to a white-tile and oak kitchen large enough to accommodate a distressed pine table and four chairs. The appliances were chrome-fronted and spotless. Glassed cabinets revealed neatly stacked crockery and size-ordered glass-ware. The dish drainer was empty; the counters, bare.

  The window above the sink was a greenhouse affair filled with painted clay pots stuffed with summer flowers and herbs. A larger window to the left afforded a view of the backyard. Flagstone patio, rectangular pool covered with blue plastic and fenced with wrought iron. Then a long, perfect strip of grass, interrupted only by a wooden play-set, that ended at a hedge of orange trees espaliered against a six-foot cinder-block wall. Beyond the wall the ubiquitous mountains hung like drapery. Maybe miles away, maybe yards. I tried to get some perspective, couldn’t. The grass began looking like a runway to eternity.

  She said, “Please, have a seat.”

  Setting a place mat before me, she put a tall glass of iced tea upon it. “Just a mix— hope that’s all right.” Before I could answer, she returned to the refrigerator and touched the door.

  I drank and said, “It’s fine.”

  She picked up a washcloth and ran it over clean counter tiles, avoiding my eyes.

  I sipped a bit, waited till we finally made contact, and tried another smile.

  Her return smile was quick and tight and I thought I saw some color in her cheeks. She tugged her shirt down, kept her legs pressed together as she wiped the counter some more, washed the cloth, rung it out, folded it. Held it in both hands as if unsure what to do with it.

  “So,” she said.

  I looked out at the mountains. “Beautiful day.”

  She nodded, snapped her face to the side, cast a downward glance, and placed the washcloth over the faucet spout. She ripped a square of paper towel from a wooden roller and began wiping the spigot. Her hands were wet. A Lady Macbeth thing or just her way of dealing with the tension?

  I watched her clean some more. Then she gave another downward look and I followed it. To her chest. Nipples poking sharply through the thin black cotton of her shirt, small but erect.

  When she looked up, my eyes were elsewhere.

  “She should be up soon,” she said. “She usually sleeps from about one to two.”

  “Sorry for coming so early.”

  “Oh, no, that’s okay. I wasn’t doing anything anyway.”

  She dried the spigot and stowed the paper towel in a wastebasket beneath the sink.

  “While we wait,” I said, “do you have any questions about Cassie’s development? Or anything else?”

  “Um . . . not really.” She bit her lip, polished the faucet. “I just wish I . . . someone could tell me what’s going on— not that I expect you to.”

  I gave a nod, but she was looking out the greenhouse window and didn’t notice it.

  Suddenly she leaned over the sink on tiptoe and adjusted one of the potted plants. Her back was to me and I saw her shirt ride up, revealing a couple of inches of tight waist and spine-knob. As she puttered, her long hair swayed like a horsetail. The stretch made her calves ride up and her thighs tighten. She straightened the pot, then another, stretched farther, and fumbled. One of the planters fell, hitting the rim of the sink, shattering, and showering planter’s mix onto the floor.

  She was down on all fours in an instant, scooping and collecting. Dirt crusted her hands and streaked her shorts. I got up but before I could help her, she bounded to her feet, hurried to a utility closet and retrieved a broom. Her sweeping was hard and angry. I tore a paper square off the roller and handed it to her after she put the broom away.

  She was flushed now, and her eyes were wet. She took the towel without looking at me. Wiping her hands, she said, “I’m sorry— I have to go change.”

  She left the kitchen through a side door. I used the time to walk around the room, opening drawers and doors and feeling like an imbecile. Nothing more ominous in the cupboards than housekeeping aids and convenience foods. I looked out the door through which she’d left, found a small bathroom and service porch, and checked them out too. Washer and dryer, cabinets choked with detergents and cleansers, softeners and brighteners— a treasury of things promising to make life shiny and sweet-smelling. Most of them toxic, but what did that prove?

  I heard footsteps and hurried back to the table. She came in wearing a loose yellow blouse, baggy jeans, sandals— her hospital uniform. Her hair was loosely braided and her face looked scrubbed.

  “Sorry. What a klutz,” she said.

  She walked to the refrigerator. No independent movement from her chest region, no nipples.

  “More iced tea?”

  “No, thanks.”

  She took a can of Pepsi, popped it open, and sat down facing me.

  “Did you have a nice ride over?”

  “Very nice.”

  “It’s good when there’s no traffic.”

  “Yes, it is.”

  “I forgot to tell you, they closed off the pass to widen the road. . . .”

  She continued to talk. About the weather and gardening, creasing her forehead.

  Working hard at being casual.

  But she seemed a stranger in her home. Talking stiffly, as if she’d rehearsed her lines but had no confidence in her memory.

  Out the big window, the view was static as death.

  Why were they living here? Why would Chuck Jones’s only son choose exurban quarantine in his own faltering housing development when he could have afforded to live anywhere?

  Proximity to the junior college didn’t explain it. Gorgeous ranchland and plenty of country-club communities dotted the west end of the Valley. And funk-chic was still alive in Topanga Canyon.

  Some kind of rebellion? A bit of ideology on Chip’s part— wanting to be part of the community he planned to build? Just the kind of thing a rebel might use to dampen any guilt over making big profits. Though, from the looks of it, profits were a long way off.

  Another scenario fit, too: abusive parents often secreted their families from the prying eyes of potential rescuers.

  I became aware of Cindy’s voice. Talking about her dishwasher, letting out words in a nervous stream. Saying she rarely used it, preferred gloving up and using steaming water so that the dishes dried almost instantly. Getting animated, as if she hadn’t talked to anyone in a long time.

  She probably hadn’t. I couldn’t imagine Chip sitting around for chitchat about housework.

  I wondered how many of the books in the living room were hers. Wondered what the two of them had in common.

  When she paused for breath, I said, “It really is a nice house.”

  Out of context, but it perked her up.

  She gave a big smile, sloe-eyed, lips moist. I realized how good-looking she
could be when she was happy.

  “Would you like to see the rest of it?” she said.

  “Sure.”

  We retraced our steps to the dining room and she pulled pieces of wedding silver out of a hutch and showed them to me, one by one. Next came the book-lined living room, where she talked about how hard it had been to find skilled carpenters to build solid shelving, no plywood. “Plywood gasses out— we want the house to be as clean as possible.”

  I pretended to listen while inspecting the books’ spines.

  Academic texts: sociology, psychology, political science. A bit of fiction, but none of it dated after Hemingway.

  Interspersed among the volumes were certificates and trophies. The brass plate on one was inscribed: SINCERE THANKS TO MR. C. L. JONES III, FROM LOURDES HIGH SCHOOL ADVANCED PLACEMENT CLUB. YOU SHOWED US THAT TEACHING AND LEARNING WERE JUST PART OF FRIENDSHIP. Dated ten years ago.

 

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