'Nice and quiet. How about you?'
'Not bad.'
I kissed her. The wind got stronger and drier, ruffling the cypress trees and shooting a cold stream through the open garage. Robin unclamped the abalone, and put it in her pocket. Her arms were goosebumped. I put mine around them and the two of us headed for the house. By the time we got to the door, the wind was whipping the trees and stirring the dust, causing the bulldog to blink and sniff.
'Santa Ana?' she said.
'Too cold. Probably the tail end of something arctic.'
'Brr,' she said, unlocking the door. 'Leave your jacket in the car?'
I shook my head. We went inside.
'You were wearing one, weren't you?' she said, rubbing her hands together. 'That baggy brown tweed.'
Artist's eye.
'Yup.'
'Did you lose it?'
'Not exactly.'
'Not exactly?'
'I gave it away.'
She laughed. 'You what?'
'No big deal. It was fraying.'
'Who'd you give it to?'
I told her about Little Calcutta. She listened with her hands on her hips, shaking her head, and went into the kitchen to wash her hands. When she came back, her head was still moving from side to side.
'I know, I know,' I said. 'It was a bleeding-heart reflex, but they really were pitiful- it was a cheap old thing, anyway.'
'You wore it the first time we went out. I never liked it.'
'You didn't?'
'Nope. Too philosophy prof.'
'Why didn't you tell me?'
She shrugged. 'It wasn't that important.'
'Snoring, poor taste in haberdashery. What else don't you like that you haven't informed me about?'
'Nothing. Now that you've ditched the coat, you're perfect.'
She ruffled my hair, walked to the French doors, and looked out at the mountains. They were shimmering, denuded in patches, where the foliage was brushed back like blow-dried hair. The pool water was choppy, the surface gritty with leaves and dirt.
Robin loosened her hair. I hung back and kept looking at her.
Perfect female statuary, rock-still against the turbulence.
She unsnapped one overall strap, then the other, letting the baggy denim collapse around her feet, and stood there in T-shirt and panties.
Half turning, hands on hips, she looked back at me. 'How 'bout giving
The dog grumbled. Robin cracked up. 'Quiet, you! You're wrecking my timing.'
• • •
My second summation of the day. I did it quickly, adding what Milo'd told me about the murders and leaving out the gross pathology. Even sanitized, it was bad, and she turned quiet.
I rubbed her lower back, allowing my hand to linger on swells and dimples. Her body loosened, but only for a moment.
'You're sure you've never heard of those other two people?' she said, stilling my hand.
'I'm sure. And there doesn't even seem to be any connection between the two of
'They couldn't be old patients of
'No way,' I said. 'I've been through every one of my case files. To be honest, I don't see the patient angle as too likely, period. If someone has a hangup with de Bosch, why go after the people he treated?'
'What about group therapy, Alex? Things can get rough in groups, can't they? People lashing out at one another? Maybe someone got dumped on badly and never forgot it.'
'I guess it's possible,' I said, sitting up. 'A good therapist always tries to keep a handle on the group's emotional climate, but things can get out of control. And sometimes there's no way to know someone's feeling victimized. Once, at the hospital, I had to calm down the father of a kid with a bone tumor who brought a loaded pistol onto the ward. When I finally got him to open up, it came out that he'd been boiling for weeks. But there was no warning at all- till then he'd been a really easygoing guy.'
'There you go,' she said. 'So maybe some patient of de Bosch's sat there and took it and never told anyone. Finally, years later, he decided to get even.'
'But what kind of therapy group would bring together a real estate agent from the valley and a black janitor?'
'I don't know- maybe
I nodded, trying to imagine it. 'Shipler was a lot older than Paprock- I suppose she could have been a young mother and he an old father.'
We heard scratching and thumping at the door. I got up and opened it and the dog bounded in. He headed straight for Robin's side of the bed, stood on his hind legs, put his paws on the mattress, and began snorting. She lifted him up and he rewarded her with lusty licks.
'Settle down,' she said. 'Uh-oh- look, he's getting excited.'
'Without testicles, yet. See the effect you have on men?'
'But of
I said, 'Maybe Milo can get hold of Paprock's and Shipler's medical histories, see if de Bosch's name or the Corrective School appears on them. Sometimes people conceal psych treatment, but with the cost, it's more likely there's some kind of insurance record. I'll ask him when I see him tonight.'
'What's tonight?'
'We were planning on going back to the freeway, try to talk to more of the homeless people in order to get a handle on this Gritz character.'
'Is it safe going back there?'
'I'll have Milo with me. Whether or not it's productive remains to be seen.'
'All right,' she said uneasily. 'If you want it to be productive, why don't you stop at a market and get those people some food?'
'Good idea. You're full of them today, aren't you?'
'Motivation,' she said. She turned serious, reached up and held my face in both of her hands. 'I want this to be over. Please take care of yourself.'
'Promise.' We managed to maintain a convoluted embrace despite the dog.
I fell asleep, smelling perfume and kibble. When I woke up my stomach was sour and my feet were sore. Inhaling and letting out the air, I sat up and cleared my eyes.
'What is it?' Robin mumbled, her back to me.
'Just thinking.'
'About what?' She rolled over and faced me.