The same med school had graced me with an identical title.

Twenty years of volunteer work said he’d left V-State a few years after Marlon Quigg.

I phoned the med school, got a receptionist who knew me, and asked for a current address and number for Cahane.

“Here you go, Doctor.”

Ventura Boulevard address in Encino. That had to be office space.

No active license but working? At what?

A woman answered crisply: “Cahane and Geraldo, how may I help you?”

“This is Dr. Delaware calling Dr. Cahane?”

“This is the office of Mister Michael Cahane.”

“He’s a lawyer?”

“Business manager.”

“I got this number from the medical school.”

“The medical school-oh,” she said. “Mr. Cahane’s uncle uses us as a mail-drop.”

“Dr. Emil Cahane.”

“What is it exactly that you want?”

“I trained under Dr. Cahane at Ventura State Hospital and was looking to get in touch.”

“I couldn’t give out his personal information.”

“Could I speak with Mr. Cahane?”

“In a meeting.”

“When will he be free?”

“How about I give him your number.” Statement, no question.

“Thanks. Please let Dr. Cahane know that another staffer from the hospital passed away and I thought he might want to know. Marlon Quigg.”

“How sad,” she said, without emotion. “You get to an age and your friends start dropping off.”

The phone rang nine minutes later. I picked it up, ready with my sales pitch for Dr. Cahane.

Milo said, “Petra and I are having a skull session, feel free.”

“When and where?”

“In an hour, the usual place.”

Cafe Moghul was empty but for two slumping detectives.

Milo’s Everest of tandoori lamb was untouched. Ditto, Petra Connor’s seafood salad.

His greeting was a choppy wave that could be misinterpreted as apathy. Petra managed a half smile. I sat down.

Petra’s a young, bright homicide D working Hollywood Division, a former commercial artist with an especially keen eye and a quiet, thoughtful manner that some mistake for iciness.

She’s got the kind of slender, angular good looks that, rightly or wrongly, imply confidence and imperturbability. Thick, straight black hair cut in a functional wedge is never mussed. Her makeup’s minimal but artful, her eyes clear and dark. She dresses in tailored black or navy pantsuits and moves with economy. Listens more than she talks. All in all, she comes across as the girl everyone looked up to in high school. Over the years, she’d let out enough personal details to tell me it hadn’t been that easy.

Today her lips were pallid and parched, her eyes red-rimmed. Every hair remained in place but her hands clasped each other with enough force to blanch fine-boned knuckles. One cuticle was raw.

She looked as if she’d been on a long, harrowing journey.

Seeing it.

She loosened her hands, placed them flat on the table. Milo rubbed the side of his nose. A bespectacled woman came over in a swoosh of red sari silk and asked what she could get me. I ordered iced tea. Petra ate a lettuce leaf and checked a cell phone that didn’t need checking.

Milo dared to fork some lamb into his mouth, grimaced as if he’d just swallowed vomit. He shoved the platter away, ran a finger under his belt, pushed his chair back a few inches, distancing himself from the notion of eating.

He looked at Petra.

She said, “Go ahead.”

He said, “Number Five is a poor soul named Lemuel Eccles, male Cauc, sixty-seven. Homeless street person, crashed in various alleys, one of which served as his final resting place. East Hollywood, specifically: just north of the Boulevard, just shy of Western, behind an auto parts store.”

I said, “Who found him?”

“Private garbage service. Eccles was left next to a Dumpster.”

“Same technique?”

Petra flinched and muttered “Dear God” before looking away. “Patrol knew Eccles, he’s got an extensive record. Aggressive panhandling, shoplifting, drunk and disorderly, creating a disturbance for shoving a tourist, he was in and out of County.”

“Your basic revolving-door juicehead nuisance,” said Milo.

She said, “Obviously, someone thought he was more than a nuisance. To do that to him.”

“Not necessarily,” I said.

Both of them stared at me.

“Things we’d consider petty could loom huge in our boy’s mind. Righting wrongs, real or imaginary, gives him justification to act out his body-exploration fantasies.”

Petra said, “People irk him so he guts them? Insane.”

Milo patted my shoulder. “Ergo his presence.”

She closed her eyes, massaged the lids, exhaled long and slow.

I said, “Glenda Usfel kicked him out of the clinic. Vita Berlin was constitutionally nasty, it’s not hard to imagine her getting in his face. And Mr. Eccles’s tendency to beg with a heavy hand and become rowdy while drunk would fit, too. Most people would walk away. Shearling took another approach. That section of Hollywood’s commercial and industrial. Meaning at night there wouldn’t be a lot of people around. An elderly wino snoozing in the alley would’ve been easy prey. Were there any other wounds besides the abdominal incisions?”

Petra said, “Black-and-blue mark on his upper lip, right under the nose.”

“A cold-cock, like Marlon Quigg, but from the front because Eccles was probably inebriated. Or sleeping in the alley.”

“Could be, but Eccles’s entire body was full of bruises and most of them looked old. Maybe bleeding issues due to alcohol, or he bumped into things.”

Milo said, “To me the lip bruise looked fresher, I’m betting on a cold-cock while he was out of it.”

“Or,” said Petra, “Eccles heard the bad guy approaching, stirred, and got sent back to slumberland.”

“Fine,” said Milo, “once again we’re getting a notion of how but the why’s still far from clear. Not that I don’t buy your theory about overreacting to small slights, Alex. Giving himself an excuse to do what he loves to do. But Marlon Quigg doesn’t fit any of that. Unless you found out he taught Shearling when Shearling was a tyke, rapped his knuckles with a steel ruler or something.”

“Not there yet, but I’m getting closer.” I told them what I’d learned from the Vanderveul children.

Milo said, “Quigg pays her a visit for moral support? That could mean anything.”

“Not in Gertrude’s case,” I said. “She was adamant about separating work from her home life, had never entertained anyone else from the hospital in that manner. So whatever Quigg had on his mind was serious. And she made sure her kids weren’t around to hear it.”

“Heavy-duty therapy.”

“Maybe heavy-duty advice,” I said. “Like telling Quigg to quit the hospital. And shortly after, he did. Left teaching completely and took up a whole new profession and lied to his wife about his reason.”

Petra said, “Something happened at work that freaked him out.”

“What if he came upon a patient committing acts that alarmed him and warned the staff about it? If he was ignored that could’ve been extremely upsetting. If he wasn’t, it could’ve gotten the patient a transfer to Specialized Care and earned Quigg a serious enemy.”

I described the layout of the ward behind the fence. Curdled silence broken by the occasional ragged

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