Authors: Jonathan Kellerman
Tags: #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective, #Crime, #Psychological, #Suspense, #Fiction
Dr. Hargrove said, “Sir, we’re being extremely careful, making sure not to upset anything.”
“Your very presence means the marsh has been upset.”
Hargrove, Liz Wilkinson, and the freckled scientist stared.
Duboff took another look at the bones.
Milo said, “Sir, we need to clear out, let them do their job. Speaking of which, do you have one, Mr. Duboff?”
“What are you implying?”
Milo didn’t answer.
“I most definitely did. Worked at the Midnight Run bookstore.”
“They closed down last year.”
“Ergo ‘did,’ ” said Duboff. “Over the years, I made some investments, can afford to take my time looking. And no wisecracks about oil and gas stocks, okay? I don’t own any.”
“Boy,” said Milo, “must be hard on the shoulders.”
“What is?”
“Carrying around a chip the size of a redwood.”
Duboff’s mouth dropped open.
Taking hold of his arm, Milo said, “Nice meeting you, sir,” and guided him back to the street.
Reed and I watched the two of them walk to Duboff’s dusty Jetta.
Duboff shook a finger at Milo. Milo remained impassive. Duboff got in the car, still ranting. Drove off.
Milo returned, scissoring his hand to mimic moving jaws.
Reed said, “Weird and hostile, but I guess if he was guilty he’d have tried to be friendly. One part of his story is definitely true — stopping by the office after nine and talking to the volunteer. The kid’s name is Chance Brandt, and he’s part of how we found out about Selena in the first place — what I was about to tell you before Numb Nuts interrupted us.”
“Tell away.”
Reed looked at his watch. “Better yet, how about we meet the kid face-to-face, I can fill you in along the way? All I’ve had is phone contact with his father, want to make sure I get the facts right. I’ve got an appointment at their house in thirty, going to be tight unless we start out now.”
“You drive, we’ll ride along, Detective Reed.”
Milo sat shotgun in Reed’s blue-black Crown Victoria. I got in back.
“Moe short for Moses?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Ah.”
“You’re thinking about a baby floating in the reeds, the whole marsh thing?”
“It did occur to me.”
Reed laughed. “Back when I was born, my mother was kinda biblical.” A beat later: “Moses never got to see the Promised Land.”
Milo said, “Tell me about the Brandt kid.”
Good-looking kid, insolent eyes.
Chance Brandt sprawled on an oversized brocade sofa in the oversized great room of an oversized Mediterranean mansion on Old Oak Road in Brentwood. The house smelled of take-out pizza and expensive perfume.
Chance wore tennis clothes. So did his mother, a stunning, long-legged blonde with sea-green eyes and obviously dominant chromosomes. Some of her frosted lipstick had caked and her mouth was pale. She wanted to hold her son’s hand but didn’t dare.
Sitting on the boy’s other side was Dad: dark, beefy, huge-chinned, bald, still in blue dress shirt and gold Hermès tie.
Enraged attorney, always a joy to behold.
“Unbelievable. Now this.” Steve Brandt glared at his son as if Oedipus had materialized.
The boy said nothing.
Brandt said, “I do wills and estates, can’t help you here, Chance.”
Susan Brandt said, “I’m sure there’s nothing to help.”
Her husband aimed venomous eyes her way. She gnawed her lower lip rosy, folded her arms.
Moe Reed said, “Chance, tell us what happened.”
Steve Brandt snorted. “Without benefit of counsel? I think not.”
“Sir, if all he did was take a phone call, there’s no need for counsel.”
Chance smiled.
His father flushed. “Something’s
funny,
genius?”
Susan Brandt’s breath caught, as if snagged on barbed wire. Green eyes moistened.
Milo said, “As Detective Reed explained, we’re investigating a homicide. If Chance is involved, he absolutely does need legal advice and we want him to have it as soon as possible. But we have no indication of that. Certainly, it’s your prerogative to request a lawyer in any circumstance, and if that’s the route you take, we’ll have this conversation at the police station, in an interview room with videotaping, paperwork, et cetera.”
“You’re threatening me,” said Steve Brandt. His smile was unpleasant.
“Absolutely not, sir. It’s simply what we’d need to do. At this point, Chance isn’t being looked at as anything other than a witness. To a phone call, at that. So I really don’t see why you wouldn’t want to cooperate fully.”
Chance’s eyes shifted to us. No more smugness, just confusion.
Steve Brandt folded his arms across his chest.
Milo said, “Okay, sir, please make sure Chance is here tomorrow at seven a.m. when we send a squad car for him. Or, if the paper clears sooner, it could be tonight.”
He started to rise.
Steve Brandt said, “Hold on. Let me talk to my
son
in private. Then I’ll inform you which way we’re going with this… mess. Fair enough?”
Milo sat back down. “We work hard to be fair.”
One hundred fifty-eight seconds later, father and son returned to the room, walking four feet apart.
Father said, “He’ll tell you everything. But could you please let me know how things got to this point? So
I’ll
know he’s being straight with me.”
Son stared at a window with a view of a black-bottomed pool.
Moe Reed looked at Milo. Milo nodded.
Reed said, “At eleven-thirty p.m. we received a call about a dead person in the Bird Marsh. The caller heard about it from someone who heard about it from Chance.”
“How do you know that?” said Steve Brandt.
“Our caller said someone had phoned the marsh volunteer office earlier that evening, talked to Chance, told him to look for a body. Chance thought it was a joke. Our caller took it seriously.”
“Who’s the caller?”
“We’re checking that out.”
The boy’s posture remained slack but sweat had popped on his forehead.
“Thirdhand gossip?” said Susan Brandt. “That doesn’t sound like much.”
Her husband glared. She began fooling with a French-tipped thumbnail.
Steve Brandt said, “Kids blabbing and fantasizing, that’s the sum total?”
“Might’ve been,” said Reed, “except we did find a body. And mode of death was homicide.” Swiveling toward Chance. “We need to know
exactly
what happened.”
The boy didn’t speak. His father placed a hand on his shoulder, thick fingers digging into white pique, nothing tender about the gesture. Chance squirmed out of his grip.
“Tell them what you know and let’s finish with this.”
“Like you said, someone called,” said the boy.
Reed said, “Who?”
“Some asshole with a weird voice.”
“Language, Chance,” said Susan Brandt, in a defeated voice.
Moe Reed said, “Weird how?”
“Um… like hissy.”
“Hissy?”
“Whispery. Like one of those grinder movies. Some death-bot, whatever.”
“Someone disguising their voice by hissing.”
“Yeah.”
“Can you imitate this person, let us know what it sounded like?”
Chance laughed.
“
Do
it,” said his father.
“I’m not in Drama, Dad.”
“You’ve caused plenty of drama in
this
family.”
Shrug. “Whatever.”
“
Do
it.”
The boy’s lips formed an “F.” Steve Brandt’s knuckles whitened.
Milo said, “Someone hissed at you, Chance. What did they say?”
“Like… uh… there’s something down in the marsh. Something dead.”
“What else?”
“That’s it.”
“Male or female?”
“Male… probably.”
“You can’t be sure?”
“It was like… hissy. Bogus.”
“Faking,” said Reed.
“Yeah. I thought I was being pranked.”
“By who?”
“Whatever. Friends.”
Milo said, “Prince Albert in a can.”
Chance’s stare was uncomprehending.
Milo said, “Something dead in the marsh.”
“Uh-huh.”
“What else did this hissing person say?”
“Nothing,” said Chance. “It sounded stupid, that’s why I didn’t tell it to the guy who came in right after.”
“What guy?” said Reed.
“Guy who runs the place, real tool. Always checking on me.”
“What’s the tool’s name?” said Reed.
“Duboff. He’s like a hippie you read about in History.”
“Mr. Duboff came into the office right after you took the call.”
“I didn’t take it. I just listened and hung up.”
“How soon after did Duboff come in?”
“Like
right.
”
“Checking up on you.”
“Yeah.”
“And you told him…”
“Everything’s cool.”
“You made no mention whatsoever of the hissing call.”
“I thought it was bogus,” said Chance. “Ethan or Ben, Sean, whatever.” Peering at us as he dropped the names. Trying to figure out who’d given him away.
Reed said, “What time did this hissy call come in?”
“Um… um, um — like um nine thirty.”
“Like articulate,” said Steve Brandt. His wife looked ready to cry.
Reed said, “Can you give a more precise estimate?”
Chance said, “It was like… oh, yeah, before I looked at my watch and it was like nine twenty something, so it was after that.”
“Nine thirty or so.”
“Uh, yeah, I guess.”
“Jesus,” said Steve Brandt, “it’s not rocket science.”
Chance’s shoulders bunched. His mother had gnawed her lip scarlet.
His father said, “I think it’s obvious math isn’t his strong suit, that’s how we ended up in this mess in the first place. The
indignity
of an algebra test that required
minimum
effort to pass.”
Chance chewed
his
lip. More genetics? Or would living with Steve Brandt drive anyone to it?
Brandt loosened his tie. “We’re still trying to figure out if he
has
a strong suit.”
His wife gasped.
“Get real, Suze. If he hadn’t cheated in the first place, we’d never be talking to the cops.” To us: “Maybe as long as you’re here we should set up some tough love for my son. One of those programs you put youthful offenders into? Working at the morgue, getting in touch with reality?”
Susan Brandt got up and hurried out on elegant, bronze legs. Chance’s eyes were fixed on his father’s florid face.
Brandt said, “You
bet
I’m pissed, kiddo. Work’s piling up and I have to come home in the middle of the day for
this.
And you’re playing
tennis
?”
“Mom said I should get some exer—”
Brandt waved the boy silent. To Milo: “Do you still run those morgue tours?”
“I’m not sure, sir. From what I recall they were for juvenile drunk drivers and such.”
“So, once again, he skates completely.”
Chance’s lips moved.
“What did you just say?” his father demanded.
Silence.
Milo said, “Mr. Brandt, we understand that you’re frustrated with whatever acting-out Chance has done in the past. But from our perspective, he’s being cooperative. If all he did was talk about what he perceived to be a gag call, there’s nothing to ‘skate’ on. If he’s somehow involved in this homicide, a tour of the morgue won’t cut it.”
Some of the color left Steve Brandt’s face. “Of
course
he’s not involved. I’m just trying to prevent any more… complications.”
Chance said, “I’m complications?”
His father smirked. “Oh, you don’t want me to answer that.”
The boy’s turn to flush. “Do your thing, dude — hook me up to one of those fucking lie detectors—”
“Shut your stupid, foul mouth and don’t use that snotty, stupid tone—”
Chance shot to his feet, fists balled. “Don’t call me that! Don’t fucking
call
me that!”
Steve Brandt’s hands slapped brocade. He panted.
Chance’s respiration rate raced ahead of his father’s.
Milo stepped between them. “Everyone calm down right
now.
Chance, sit down — over there, where your mom was. Mr. Brandt, let us do our job.”
“I wasn’t aware I was doing anything but—”
“This is a homicide case, sir — lots of long days for us. We need to make sure that after we leave we won’t be called back on a domestic violence complaint.”
“Ridiculous — have I ever hit you, Chance?
Ever?
”
No answer.
“
Have
I?”
Chance smiled. Shrugged.
His father cursed. “Serpent’s tooth.”
Chance was still on his feet. Milo said,
“Sit.”
The boy obeyed.
“Son, I want a quick answer to this: How soon after the call did Mr. Duboff appear?”
“Right after. Seconds.”
That fit Duboff’s story. Either he’d dumped Selena Bass himself or the killer had watched Duboff clear out before venturing forward.
Or the killer had gotten lucky and just missed Duboff.
Either way, the murder had been called in soon after the dump.
Someone wanting Selena Bass found. And identified quickly.
Burying three other bodies that he’d concealed, but growing confident and progressing to boasting?
Claiming the marsh as his turf. Duboff or someone like him?
Moe Reed said, “Who’d you tell about the hissing call?”
“Just… Sarabeth — who’d she rat me out to?”
“What’s Sarabeth’s last name?”
Steve Brandt said, “Oster. As in malls and shopping centers.” When none of us responded: “They’re big-time, live in Brentwood Park. Sarabeth’s their only child. She comes across sweet and innocent but she’s the one gave him the answers to that goddamn algebra test, so I’d take anything she says with a pillar of salt.”
Chance growled.
His father said,
“Ooh.
I’m
shaking.”
Steve Brandt walked us out to a faux-cobblestone motor court, used a clicker to hold his front gate open.
“So he’s clear?”
“So far, sir.”