'About what?'
'The last time you saw me you were upset. I should know better.'
She frowned. 'Tim tries to protect me... I was upset. But not by anything you did.'
'What, then?'
'Everything. The state of the world - all this change. I know we did the right thing, but... then Baby Boy. One day I'm talking to him, the next day he no longer exists. At the time I guess I was especially vulnerable. I'm better now. Talking to you helped.'
'Till now.'
'Even now.'
She took hold of my wrist. 'You were there for me.'
'For a change.'
She let go and shook her head. 'With all our history, you still need to fish for compliments?'
The spot where she'd touched me itched.
'Sit down,' she said. 'Please. Have more tea. We can be civilized.'
I took a seat.
'Baby Boy was my friend,' she said. 'I had no relationship with China. My only contact with her was that one job, and she wasn't happy with it. Remember how she flipped me off?'
'Flipped us off,' I said. 'I think it was me she didn't care for. She kept calling me Mr Yuppie.'
'She was obnoxious... there's something she didn't
have in common with Baby. He was the sweetest guy in the world. Another difference is that he had real talent. And her body was buried - no, I don't see it, Alex. My bet is she allowed herself to get picked up by the wrong person, maybe shot off her mouth and paid for it.'
'Makes sense,' I said. 'She left the session angry. What about her band? Any of them ever display aggressive tendencies?'
'Those guys?' she said. 'Hardly. They were like China. College kids playing naughty. And why would they kill China? When she died, so did the band. What does Milo think?'
'I haven't asked him, yet.'
'You came here, first?'
'You're a lot better-looking.'
'I guess that would depend on who you ask.'
'No,' I said. 'Even Rick would say you're cuter.' I got up again. 'Thanks and sorry if I upset your biorhythm. Have a good nap.'
I began walking toward the front of the house.
'They're hard, aren't they?' she called after me.
'What?'
'Changes in biorhythm. Tim's wonderful to me, but sometimes I still find myself starting to say something to you... are you okay?'
'I'm fine.'
'She's treating you well?'
'Yes. How's Spike?'
'Too bad he's not here,' she said. 'Periodontal work.'
'Ouch.'
'They're keeping him overnight. You can visit. Call to make sure someone's here.'
'Thanks.'
'Okay,' she said, standing. 'Let me walk you out.'
'Not necessary.'
'Not necessary but polite. Mama raised me right.'
She accompanied me to the curb. 'I'll think more about China, ask around. If I come up with anything, I'll let you know.' Big grin. 'Hey, look at me: girl detective.'
'Don't even think about it,' I said.
She took my hand in both of hers. 'Alex, what I said before is true. You didn't upset me. Not then, and not now.'
'Big tough girl?'
She looked up at me and smiled. 'I'm still pretty small.'
Once upon a time, you took up a big corner of my heart.
'Not to me,' I said.
'You could always do that,' she said. 'Make me feel important. I'm not sure I did that for you.'
'Of course you did,' I said.
She's wonderful. What the hell happened?
Allison's wonderful...
I dropped her hand, got into the car, started up the engine, and turned to give her a wave. She'd already gone inside.
Apartner. The last thing Petra needed. Not that she had any choice. Halfway through her shift, Schoelkopf had summoned her into his office and dangled a scrap of paper in her face. Transfer slip.
'From where?' she said.
'The Army. He's new to the department but he's got serious experience as a military investigator, so don't treat him like an idiot rookie.'
'Captain, I've been doing fine solo-'
'Well, gee, that's great, Connor. I'm so glad the job's giving you intrinsic satisfaction. Here you go.'
Waving the paper. Petra took it but didn't read it.
Schoelkopf said, 'Go. He's due over in a couple of hours. Find him a desk and make him feel at home.'
'Should I bake him cookies, sir?'
The captain's big black mustache spread as he flashed too-white caps. Last summer, he'd been gone for three weeks and had come back with a scary tan and new dentition and what looked like more hair in front.
He said, 'If that's where your girlish talents lie, Detective, go ahead. My personal preference is oatmeal crunch.' He waved Petra away.
When she reached his door, he said, 'That Armenian thing squared away?'
'Seems to be.'
'Seems to be?'
'It's all set with the D.A.'
'What's on your plate, now?'
'The Nunes stabbing-'
'Which one's that?'
'Manuel Nunes. The bricklayer who troweled his wife-'
'Yeah, yeah, the bloody mortar. You on top of it?'
'It's not a whodunit,' said Petra. 'When the blues showed up Nunes was holding the trowel. I'm dotting the t's and crossing the i's.' She resisted the temptation to cross her own eyes and give the bastard a goofy look.
'Well, dot and cross everything - speaking of whodunits, you ever accomplish anything on that musician - the fat boy, Lee?'
'No, sir.'
'You're telling me it's ice-cold?'
'Afraid so.'
'What,' said Schoelkopf, 'some nutcase just walked up and gutted him?'
'I can bring you the file-'
'Nah,' said Schoelkopf. 'So you got stuck. Guess what, it's good for you, once in a while. Gain a little humility.' More caps. 'Lucky for you he wasn't a big-time celebrity. Small potatoes like that, it goes cold, no one gives a shit. What about his family? Anyone squawking at you?'
'He didn't have much family.'
'Lucky for you, again.' Schoelkopf's big smile was
polluted by anger. The two of them had gotten off to a bad start, and no matter what Petra did, she knew it would never improve. 'You're a pretty lucky gal - 'scuse me, lucky woman - aren't you?'
'I do my best.'
'Sure you do,' said Schoelkopf. 'Okay, that's all. Show G.I. Joe the ropes. Maybe he'll turn out to be a lucky guy, too.'
She returned to the detectives' room, calmed herself down, glanced at the scrap. Expecting a capsule background on her new partner. But all Schoelkopf had scrawled on the form was a name.
Eric Stahl
Eric. Cute-sounding. A military guy. Petra got herself a hot chocolate from the vending machine downstairs and climbed back up with her imagination in high gear. Picturing Eric as buff and cut, a Clint Eastwoody type, maybe one of those precision military buzz do's. An outdoor dude who surfed and biked, skydove, bungee-jumped, did all those adrenalized things.
A high-energy partner was fine with her. He could do the driving.
He showed up twenty minutes later. She'd been right about the haircut, but nothing else.
Eric Stahl was thirty or so, five-ten tops, painfully thin, stoop-shouldered and gangly-limbed. The buzz was medium brown, prickly hairs riding the narrow, brooding face of a starving poet. Lord, this white boy was white! A too-many-hours-in-the-library complexion.
Except for incongruous coins of pink on his cheeks -fever spots.
Sunken cheeks. Dagger-point chin, lipless mouth, the deepest-set eyes Petra had ever seen. As if someone had poked them with two fingers and pushed them back into his skull. Same matte brown as the hair. Static.
He said, 'Detective Connor? Eric Stahl,' without extending a hand or moving. Just stood by her desk, wearing a black suit, white shirt, and gray tie.
Petra said, 'Hi, why don't you sit down.'
Indicating a chair at the side of her desk.
Stahl considered the offer, finally accepted.
His black suit seemed to compound her own outfit: an ebony Vestimenta pantsuit she'd bought at the Barney's hanger sale two seasons ago. Funereal; the two of them looked like the welcoming committee at Forest Lawn.
Stahl didn't bat a lash. High energy, indeed. That face... grow out the buzz cut and dress him in leather pants and a bunch of other punky whatnot, and he'd fit right in with any of the dissolute hustlers you saw staggering down the boulevard.
Keith Richard's younger brother. Keith, himself, at the worst of his junkie days.
She said, 'So, what can I do for you, Eric?'
'Cue me in.'
'About?'
'Anything you think is important.'
Up close, Stahl's skin was chalky. No inflection in the guy's voice. Only a throbbing vein at his left temple hinted at ongoing body function.
'You can use that desk,' she said. 'And that's your locker.'
Stahl didn't move. He hadn't brought anything with him.
'How about,' said Petra, 'we drive around, and I show you the neighborhood.'
Stahl waited for her to stand before he did. As they walked down the stairs, he lingered behind her. Creepy.
Schoelkopf had partnered her with a creepy robot.
They cruised down the dark boulevard. Hollywood at 4 A.M. was dotted meagerly with nightcrawlers and shadow-lurkers. Petra pointed out drug bars, illegal clubs, hangouts of known felons, taco joints where transvestite hookers congregated. If Stahl had an impression, he wasn't letting on.
'Different from the Army,' she said.
No answer.
'How long were you in the military?'
'Seven years.' '
'Where were you stationed?'
Stahl thumbed his chin and grew contemplative.
It wasn't a trick question.
'All over,' he finally said.
'All over domestic, or all over foreign?'
'Both.'
'What,' said Petra, smiling, 'were you some top-secret op? If you tell me you have to kill me?'
She glanced at Stahl as she continued to drive. Expecting at least minimal levity.
Nothing.
Stahl said, 'Overseas was the Middle East.'
'Where in the Middle East?'
'Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Djibouti, Dubai.'
'The emirates,' said Petra.
Nod.
'Fun?' said Petra.
Five-second digital delay. 'Not much. They hate Americans. You couldn't bring a Bible in, or anything else that showed you were Christian.'
Aha. A born-again.
'You're religious.'
'No.' Stahl turned away from her, stared out the window.
'Were you involved in the Cole bombing?' she said. 'Stuff like that?'
'Nothing like that.'
'Nothing like that,' Petra echoed.
Stahl said, 'I think that car over there is stolen.'
Indicating a white Mustang two lengths ahead of them. Petra saw nothing fishy about the plates or the way the driver was handling the vehicle.
'Do you?' said Petra.
Stahl picked up the radio and phoned a cruiser. Totally comfortable with the equipment and the LAPD codes. As if he'd been working the division for years.
Petra's jaw hurt from conversational strain.
They rode around for another half hour in dead silence, and when Petra pulled into the parking lot, Eric Stahl said, 'Anything I should do before tomorrow?'
'Show up,' she said, making no attempt to hide her irritation.
'I will,' said Stahl and he left the lot on foot, disappeared into darkness.
What, he took the bus? Or he doesn't want me to see what kind of car he drives?
Later, before she locked up her desk, Petra called Auto Theft and found out the white Mustang had been stolen.
After leaving Robin's house, I went home and got back on the computer, tried to track down China Maranga's band mates.
The guitarist who called himself Squirt was nowhere to be found in cyberspace, but the drummer, self-titled Mr Sludge, and the bass player, Brancusi, were easy to locate.
A year ago, Sludge, nee Christian Bangsley, had been condemned on the 'page of shame' Web site of a music zine called misterlittle: Hot Flash: ex-Chinawhiteboy sells out, peddles junk-slop, ends up cap-pig cancerous bigtiiime!!.1!
During the three years since China's murder, Bangsley had made significant lifestyle changes: moving to Sacramento, investing a 'small inheritance,' and ending up the co-owner of a small chain of 'family-style' restaurants called Hearth and Home. The zine noted Bangsley's plans to 'fester and postulate this tumor of phony-fuck normanrockwellism into a malignant metastasizing !!! franchise!!!. Sludge dludes (sic) himself that he's cleeeen, now, but he's sludgier than ever.'
Along with the tirade, misterlittle ran before-and-after photos, and the contrast was so remarkable that I
questioned the truth of the story.
During his band days, Sludge had been a scrawny, angry-eyed nightcrawler.
Christian Bangsley was well fed and Beatle-mopped, in a white shirt and tie. These eyes sparkled with contentment.
I found Brancusi on his personal Web site. His real name - shockingly - was Paul Brancusi. Local; he worked as an animator for Haynes-Bernardo, a Burbank studio, one of the major players in kids' TV.
Brancusi's bio listed two years as an art major at Stanford, an equal amount of time spent as a member of China Whiteboy, then another year at CalArts, where he'd picked up skills in computer graphics and animation.
He worked on a morning show called The Lumpkins, described as 'Edgy but kindly. Imaginary creatures live in a suburb that evokes some of the humor, nostalgia, and rib-tickling situations of a human neighborhood. But in Lump-kinville, imagination and fantasy reign supreme!'
Home and Hearth's Sacramento corporate headquarters was listed. I called and asked to speak to Christian Bangsley.
The receptionist was cheerful - nourished by family-style food? 'Mr Bangsley's in a meeting. May I help you?'
'I'm calling about an old friend of Mr Bangsley. China Maranga.'
'Could you spell that, please?'
I did.
She said, 'And what shall I tell Mr Bangsley this is about?'
'A few years ago Mr Bangsley played with Ms
Maranga in a band. China Whiteboy.'
'Oh, that. She's dead, right?'
'Yes.'
'So what message should I give Mr Bangsley?'
I rattled off my L.A. police consultantship and told her I wanted to ask Bangsley a few questions.
'I'll be sure to tell him.'
I reached Paul Brancusi at his desk.
He said, 'All this time, and finally something's being done?'
'You don't feel enough was done at the beginning?'
"The cops never found out who did it, right? The thing that bothered me was that they didn't even want to talk to us. Even though we were close to China - closer than anyone, excepting maybe her father.'
'Not her mother?'
'Her mother's dead,' he said. 'Died a year before China. Her dad's dead, too - you don't know much about it, do you?'
'Just starting out. How about filling me in? I can drop by your office anytime today.'
'Let me get this straight: you're what - a shrink?'
I gave him a longer explanation than the one I'd offered the Hearth and Home receptionist.
'Why now?' he said.
'China's death might be related to another murder.'
'Really,' he said, stretching the word. 'So now she matters. And I should talk to you because...'
'Because I am interested in talking to you.'
'What a thrill.'
Jonathan Kellerman - Alex 17 - A Cold Heart Page 10