'If you don't think it has merit, disregard it.'

'How the hell should I know if it has merit?' He stuffed the photos in his jacket pocket, yanked out his pad, opened it and stabbed at the paper with a chewed-down pencil. Then he slammed the pad shut. The cover was filled with scrawl. 'The bag coulda been left behind and ended up in the morgue without being logged.

Sure,' I said. 'Absolutely.

Great,' he said. 'That would be great.

Well, folks,' I said, in a W. C. Fields voice, 'in terms of theory, I think that's about it for today.'

His laughter was sudden. I thought of a mastiff's warning bark. He fanned himself with the notepad. The air was cool, stale, still inert. He was sweating. 'Forgive the peckishness. I need sleep.' Yet another glance at the Timex.

'Expecting company?' I said.

'The yuppie hikers. Mr. Paul Ulrich and Ms. Tanya Stratton. Interviewed them the day of the murder, but they didn't give me much. Too upset-especially the girl. The boyfriend spent his time trying to calm her down. Given what she saw, can't blame her, but she seemed… delicate. Like if I pressed too hard she'd disintegrate. I've been trying all week to arrange the re-interview. Phone tag, excuses. Finally reached them last night, figured I'd go to their house, but they said they'd rather meet up here, which I thought was gutsy. But maybe they're thinking some kind of self-therapy-whatchamacallit-working it through.' He grinned. 'See, it does rub off, all those years with you.'

'A few more and you'll be ready to see patients.'

'People tell me their troubles, they get locked up.'

'When are they due to show up?'

'Fifteen minutes ago. Stopping by on their way to work-both have jobs in Century City.' He kicked dust. 'Maybe they chickened out. Even if they do show, I'm not sure what I'm hoping to get out of them. But got to be thorough, right? So what's your take on Mate? Do-gooder or serial killer?'

'Maybe both,' I said. 'He came across arrogant, with a low view of humanity, so it's hard to believe his altruism was pure. Nothing else in his life points to exceptional compassion. Just the opposite: instead of taking care of patients, he spent his medical career as a paper pusher. And he never amounted to much as a doctor until he started helping people die. If I had to bet on a primary motive, I'd say he craved attention. On the other hand, there's a reason the families you've talked to support him. He alleviated a lot of suffering. Most of the people who pulled the trigger of that machine were in torment.'

'So you condone what he did even if his reasons for doing it were less than pure.'

'I haven't decided how I feel about what he did,' I said.

'Ah.' He fiddled with the turquoise clasp.

There was plenty more I could've said and I felt low, evasive. Another burst of engine hum rescued me from self-examination. This time, the car approached from the east and Milo turned.

Dark-blue BMW sedan, 300 model, a few years old. Two people inside. The car stopped, the driver's window lowered and a man with a huge, spreading mustache looked out at us. Next to him sat a young woman, gazing straight ahead.

'The yuppies show up,' said Milo. 'Finally, someone respects the rule of law.'

CHAPTER 3

MILO WAVED THE BMW up, the mustachioed man turned the wheel and parked behind the Seville. 'Here okay, Detective?'

'Sure-anywhere,' said Milo.

The man smiled uncomfortably. 'Didn't want to mess something up.'

'No problem, Mr. Ulrich. Thanks for coming.'

Paul Ulrich turned off the engine and he and the woman got out. He was medium-size, late thirties to forty, solidly built, with a well-cured beach tan and a nubby, sunburned nose. His crew cut was dun-colored, soft-looking to the point of fuzziness, with lots of pinkish scalp glowing through. As if all his hair-growing energy had been focused on the mustache, an extravagance as wide as his face, parted into two flaring red-brown wings, stiff with wax, luxuriant as an old-time grenadier's. His sole burst of flamboyance, and it clashed with haberdashery that seemed chosen for inconspicuousness on Century Park East: charcoal suit, white button-down shirt, navy and silver rep tie, black wing-tips.

He held the woman's elbow as they made their way toward us. She was younger, late twenties, as tall as he, thin and narrow-shouldered, with a stiff, tentative walk that belied any hiking experience. Her skin tone said indoors, too. More than that: indoor pallor. Chalky-white edged with translucent blue, so pale she made Milo look ruddy. Her hair was dark brown, almost black, boy-short, wispy. She wore big, black-framed sunglasses, a mocha silk blazer over a long brown print dress, flat-soled, basket-weave sandals.

Milo said, 'Ms. Stratton,' and she took his hand reluctantly. Up close, I saw rouge on her cheeks, clear gloss on chapped lips. She turned to me.

'This is Dr. Delaware, Ms. Stratton. Our psychological consultant.'

'Uh-huh,' she said. Unimpressed.

'Doctor, these are our witnesses-Ms. Tanya Stratton and Mr. Paul Ulrich. Thanks again for showing up, folks. I really appreciate it.'

'Sure, no prob,' said Ulrich, glancing at his girlfriend. 'I don't know what else we can tell you.'

The shades blocked Stratton's eyes and her expression. Ulrich had started to smile, but he stopped midway. The mustache straightened.

He, trying to fake calm after what they'd been through. She, not bothering. The typical male-female mambo. I tried to imagine what it had been like, peering into that van.

She touched a sidepiece of her sunglasses. 'Can we get this over quickly?'

'Sure, ma'am,' Milo said. 'The first time we talked, you didn't notice anything out of the ordinary, but sometimes people remember things afterward-'

'Unfortunately, we don't,' said Tanya Stratton. Her voice was soft, nasal, inflected with that syllable-stretching California female twang. 'We went over it last night because we were coming here to meet you. But there's nothing.'

She hugged herself and looked to the right. Over at the spot. Ulrich put his arm around her. She didn't resist him, but she didn't give herself over to the embrace.

Ulrich said, 'So far our names haven't been in the paper. We're going to be able to keep it that way, aren't we, Detective Sturgis?'

'Most likely,' said Milo.

'Likely but not definitely?'

'I can't say for sure, sir. Frankly, with a case like this, you never know. And if we ever catch who did it, your testimony might be required. I certainly won't give your names out, if that's what you mean. As far as the department's concerned, the less we reveal the better.'

Ulrich touched the slit of flesh between his mustaches. 'Why's that?'

'Control of the data, sir.'

'I see… sure, makes sense.' He looked at Tanya Stratton again. She licked her lips, said, 'At least you're honest about not being able to protect us. Have you learned anything about who did it?'

'Not yet, ma'am.'

'Not that you'd tell us, right?'

Milo smiled.

Paul Ulrich said, 'Fifteen minutes of fame. Andy Warhol coined that phrase and look what happened to him.'

'What happened?' said Milo.

'Checked into a hospital for routine surgery, went out in a bag.'

Stratum's black glasses flashed as she turned her head sharply.

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