has me doubting everything.”
“Cop-thinking,” he said.
“I checked out a couple of books on Belding- including
“The book was a scam, Alex.”
“Sometimes scams are laced with a bit of truth.”
He chewed a breadstick, said, “Maybe. How’d you find it, anyway? I thought the damn thing was recalled.”
“I asked the librarian about that. Apparently, large libraries get advance copies; the recall order only applied to bookstores and commercial distributors. Anyway, it’s been buried there since ’73, very few checkouts.”
“Rare show of good taste on the part of the reading public,” he said. “Anything else?”
I recounted my meeting with Maura Bannon.
“I think I convinced her to back off, but she’s got a source at the coroner’s.”
“I know who it is.”
“You’re kidding.”
“Nope. Your telling me clears something up. Few days ago there was this third-year med student from S.C. rotating through the coroner’s office. Asking too many questions about recent suicides, seemed to be snooping around the files.
“Is he still snooping?”
“Nah, rotation’s over, kid’s outta there. Probably just a boyfriend angling for some white-knight sex from Lois Lane Junior. Anyway, you did right to cool her off. This whole thing keeps getting weirder and weirder and the fix
Milo growled, cracked his knuckles. “Asshole
“I saw him on the news.”
“Wasn’t that a display? Bullshit augmented by horseshit. And more to follow: Word has it Trapp’s pushing the sex maniac angle. But those women weren’t positioned like any sex murder victims I’ve ever seen- no spread legs or sexual posing, no rearranged clothing. And, as far as my coroner source can tell, given the state of the bodies, no strangulation or mutilation.”
“How did they die?”
“Beaten and shot- no way to tell which came first. Hands tied behind the backs, single bullet to the back of the head.”
“Execution.”
“That would be
He took his anger out on a breadstick, crunching and wiping crumbs off his shirt. Then he finished his beer and went to get another one from the fridge.
“What else?” I said.
He sat down, tilted his head back and poured brew down his throat. “Time of death. Putrefaction’s no exact science, but for that much rot to go down in an air-conditioned room, even with the door open, those bodies had to be lying there for a while. There was gas bloat, skin peel, and fluid loss, meaning days, not hours. Four to ten days is my source’s theoretical range. But we know the Kruses were alive last Saturday, at that party, so that narrows it to four to six days.”
“Meaning they could have been killed either after Sharon died, or before.”
“That’s right. And if it was
I nodded.
“So she could have used it to soften Rasmussen up. Angling for some white-knight pussy of his own, he went and played Lord High Executioner.”
“Killing his father all over again,” I said.
“Ah, you shrinks.” His smile faded. “The maid and the wife died because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
He stopped talking. The silence put me somewhere else.
“What’s the matter?”
“Seeing her as a murder contractor.”
“Just a scenario,” he said.
“If she was that cold, why’d she kill herself?”
He shrugged. “Thought you might be able to fill in that one.”
“I can’t. She had problems, but she was never cruel.”
“Fucking all those patients wasn’t an act of charity.”
“She was never overtly cruel.”
“People change.”
“I know that but I just can’t see her as a killer, Milo. It doesn’t sit right.”
“Then forget it,” he said. “It’s all theoretical bullshit, anyway. I can spin you ten like it in as many minutes. And it’s about as far as we’re gonna go, given the state of the evidence- too many unanswerable questions. Like are there phone records tying Rasmussen to Ransom between the time the Kruses died and the time she died? Newhall to Hollywood is a toll call. Normally, that would be easy to trace, except when I tried, the records had been pulled and sealed, courtesy of my employers. And who reported Ransom’s death in the first place? Normally, if I wanted to know that, I’d just take a peek in her file, but there ain’t no goddam file. Courtesy, my employers.”
He got up, rubbed his hand over his face, and paced the kitchen.
“I drove up to her house this morning, wanted to talk to her neighbors, see if any of them had made the call. I even figured out who lived across the canyon and visited them to see if they’d seen anything, heard anything, maybe a peeper with a telescope. Zilch. Two of the four houses in hercul-de-sac were unoccupied- owners out of town. The third’s owned by this free-lance artist, old gal who does children’s books, shut-in, bad arthritis. She wanted to help. Problem is, from her place you can’t see what’s going on in Ransom’s- just the driveway. No good view from any of them, matter of fact.”
“Party pad architecture,” I said.
“Hmm,” he said. “Anyway, from her garden, the artist could see some comings and goings. Occasional visitors- women and men, including Rasmussen- in and out after about an hour’s time.”
“Patients.”
“That’s what she assumed. But all that stopped about half a year ago.”
“The same time she was caught sleeping with her patients.”
“Maybe she decided to retire. Except for Rasmussen- she held on to him. He kept coming, not often, but up until a month ago, the artist remembered seeing the green truck. She also described a guy who sounded like Kruse- he stayed longer, several hours at a time, but she only saw him once or twice. Which doesn’t mean much. She can’t get around too well- it might have been more often. Other interesting thing is that a photo of Trapp didn’t register. Which means he probably wasn’t one of Ransom’s boyfriends. And if the bastard was investigating the case, he never bothered to talk to the next-door neighbor- didn’t even do the basics. Sum total: