So many mysteries wound into my past: Charlie. My father. Evan. It was almost as if Charlie knew it and was trying to keep me away.
But I wasn’t going away.
I wrapped my arms around my chest against the chill. In a minute I was asleep.
Chapter Twenty-Six
“I think I found something,” I said.
Sherwood’s look suggested I was becoming a nuisance fast. “You think you found something;
I took out the papers I had folded in my jacket. “I think I found the connection between Evan and Walter Zorn.”
I’d called him as soon as I had awakened the next morning. Grudgingly, he agreed to give me a couple of minutes. It came with the promise that if what I had didn’t go anywhere this would be the last time I’d bother him. Along with the looser commitment that if that happened, I’d be on a plane back to New York that afternoon.
He slumped back into his squeaky chair with a glance at his watch, then back at me, impatiently. “Your meeting, doc…”
I pushed the papers across his desk. “Yesterday I heard on the news that Zorn had worked a couple of high- profile cases back when he was on the force in Santa Barbara. One was the Veronica Verklin murder-”
“Don’t tell me your nephew Evan was a fan of sixties porn?” Sherwood clucked, rocking.
I let that pass. “The other was Russell Houvnanian.”
I let
“My brother Charlie lived on the Riorden Ranch for a while.”
He furrowed his brow. “Your brother was a follower of Russell Houvnanian?”
“Not a follower. He only lived there for a while. It was the sixties … The early seventies, to be exact. He was rootless. A lot of people found their way there. He claims he was only there for the music and the drugs. Why, you think he prepped for his current status in life with a career at IBM?”
This time, Sherwood shot me a grin, the tiniest encouragement to go forward.
“He said he just hung out there for a couple of months. Long before anything bad happened. Charlie was a musician back then and Houvnanian was trying to raise money for a record.”
“And the kicker to this is
“The kicker is you were trying to find a connection between Evan and Zorn. I found one. I thought you might…”
“I might
“Thirty-seven,” I said. I heard exactly how it sounded.
“And so you’re saying exactly what?” Sherwood said. “Zorn and your brother shared this six-degrees-of- separation thing, and now, half a lifetime later, the guy tries to contact his son?”
“I’m not sure what I’m saying,” I said, my tone rising. “Other than it’s a connection.
“And this
“No,” I said. “They’re not.”
I pointed to the
“You’re saying what now? That this follower of his, this Susan Pollack, has something to do with your nephew’s death? You’re a doctor. You’re supposed to deal in facts. Not fantasies. It was a suicide! The kid jumped off a cliff.”
I knew there was no one else here I could count on. What I’d said in that TV interview had surely taken care of that. Just people with zero interest in reversing their findings. On a case that had already been put to bed.
And now I was implying the so-called suicide was tied into a horrific, decades-old crime.
“You said you’d look into it,” I said, kind of desperate.
“I said I
“You did?” That took me by surprise. “And you didn’t find anything?”
“Tying Walter Zorn to your nephew?
“So try
Sherwood gave me another grudging smile. He rubbed his jaw. Not in discomfort; more in exasperation or dismay. “There were possible markings on the victim’s body that brought back something familiar…”
“Familiar?”
“To something related to your nephew. Something we found on him. If you chose to look at it that way.”
“Now you’re kind of sounding like me,” I said, holding back a smile. “What kind of markings are we talking about? And familiar how
“I’m afraid I can’t tell you. It’s one of the details not released to the public yet.”
“For God’s sake, Sherwood, I’m a doctor. I think I understand about confidentiality. I’m not going to divulge anything.”
“Just like you didn’t to that reporter?”
“I know. I get it. I screwed up. Look, I’m sorry,” I said, imploring, “but this is about Evan, detective, not me…”
He looked at me a long time. Then he said, as if against his better instincts, “There were knife wounds…”
“Think of this as a kind of asterisk. And if that gets out, I’ll boot your ass back to Westchester so fast you won’t need a plane.”
“Knife wounds…,” I said, nodding that I got the message. “You said they were familiar. Familiar