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Authors: Jonathan Kellerman

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BOOK: Therapy
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“Yes, ma’am.”

“Kayla,”
she said. “Oh my God, Gavin and Kayla, why didn’t you tell me it was both of them—now I have to tell Paula and Stan—oh God how am I going to—”

“Kayla was Gavin’s girlfriend?”

“Is—was. I don’t know, they were something.” Sheila Quick placed the tissue on the sofa cushion and sat immobile. The crushed paper began expanding, as if by its own volition, and she stared at it.

“Mrs. Quick?” said Milo.

“Gavin and Kayla were off and on,” she said. “They knew each other from Beverly High. After the accident, when Gavin . . .” She shook her head. “I can’t tell her parents, I’m sorry—will
you
tell them?”

“Of course. What’s Kayla’s last name and where do her folks live?”

“You can use my kitchen phone. I’m sure they’re up, at least Stan is. He’s a night person. He’s a musician, composes commercials, movie scores. He’s very successful. They live up in the flats.”

“The last name, ma’am?”

“Bartell. Used to be Bartelli or something Italian like that. Kayla’s a blondie, but she’s Italian. Must be northern Italian. At least on Stan’s side, I don’t know what Paula is. Do you think I should call my husband in Atlanta? It’s really late there, and I’m sure he’s had a busy day.”

*

Milo asked a few more questions, learned nothing, got her to sip from one of the mugs of instant coffee, found out the name of her family physician, Barry Silver, and woke him up. The doctor lived in Beverly Hills and said he’d be over soon.

Milo asked to see Gavin’s room and Sheila Quick took us up a maroon plush-carpeted staircase, flung the door open, flicked a light switch. The room was generous and painted pale blue and stank of body odor and rot. A queen-sized bed was unmade, rumpled clothes were piled on the floor, books and papers were strewn haphazardly, dirty dishes and fast-food cartons filled in the empty spaces. I’ve seen the police leave drug houses more composed after an evidence toss.

Sheila Quick said, “Gavin used to be neat. Before the accident. I tried, I gave up.” She shrugged. Shame colored her face. She closed the door. “Some battles aren’t worth fighting. Do you have kids?”

We shook our heads.

“Maybe you’re the lucky ones.”

*

She insisted we leave before the doctor arrived, and when Milo tried to argue, she pressed a hand to her temple and grimaced, as if he was causing her great pain.

“Let me be with my thoughts.
Please.

“Yes, ma’am.” He got the address for Stan and Paula Bartell. Same street, Camden Drive, but the eight hundred block, one mile north, on the other side of the business district.

“The Flats,” Sheila Quick reiterated. “They’ve got some place.”

*

When you see stock footage of Beverly Hills in the movies, it’s almost always the Flats. Directors favor the sun-splotched, palm-lined drives like Foothill and Beverly, but any of the broad streets wedged between Santa Monica and Sunset will do when the connotation is primal California affluence. In the Flats, teardowns began at 2 million bucks and pumped-up piles of stucco can fetch more than triple that amount.

Tourists from the East usually have the same impression of the area: so clean, so green, such miserly lots. Houses that would grace multiple acreage in Greenwich or Scarsdale or Shaker Heights are shoehorned onto half-acre rectangles. That doesn’t stop the residents from erecting thirteen-thousand-square-foot imitations of Newport mansions that elbow their neighbors.

The Bartell house was one of those, a hulking, flat-faced wedding cake set behind a pitiful front yard that was mostly circular driveway. White fencing topped with gold finials shielded the property. A security sign promising ARMED RESPONSE hung near the electric gate. Through the fence, double doors with frosted-glass panes were backlit teal green. Above them, a giant porthole showcased a white-hot chandelier. No vehicles in front; a four-car garage provided ample shelter for automotive pets.

Milo inhaled, and said, “Once more with feeling,” and we got out. Cars zipped by on Sunset, but North Camden Drive was still. Beverly Hills has a thing for trees, and the ones lining Camden were magnolias that would’ve loved South Carolina. Here they were stunted by drought and smog, but a few were flowering, and I could smell their fragrance.

Milo punched a button on the squawk box. A man barked, “Yes?”

“Mr. Bartell?”

“Who is this?”

“Police.”

“About what?”

“Could we come in please, sir?”

“What’s this about?”

Milo frowned. “Your daughter, sir.”

“My—hold on.”

Seconds later, lights flooded the front of the house. Now I saw that the glass doors were flanked by orange trees in pots. One was failing. The doors swung open, and a tall man walked across the driveway. He stopped fifteen feet from us, shaded his eyes with his hands, took three steps more, into the floodlights, like a performer.

“What’s this all about?” said a deep, hoarse voice.

Stan Bartell stepped up close. Late fifties, Palm Springs tan. A big man with powerful shoulders, a hawk nose, thin lips, a bulky chin. Waxy white hair was drawn back in a ponytail. He wore black-framed eyeglasses, a thin gold chain around his neck, and an iridescent burgundy velvet robe that brushed the ground.

Milo produced his badge, but Bartell didn’t come any closer.

“What about my daughter?”

“Sir, it would really be better if we came in.”

Bartell removed his glasses and studied us. His eyes were close-set, dark, analytic. “You’re Beverly Hills police?”

“L.A.”

“Then what are you doing here—I’m going to check you out, so if this is a scam, you’ve been warned.” He returned to the house, closed the doors behind him.

We waited on the sidewalk. Headlights appeared at the south end of the block, followed by bass thumps as a Lincoln Navigator drove by slowly. Behind the wheel was a kid who looked no older than fifteen, baseball hat worn backwards, hip-hop music bellowing from the interior. The SUV continued to Sunset, cruising the Strip.

Five minutes passed with no word or sign from Stan Bartell.

I said, “How much detail will Beverly Hills PD give him?”

“Who knows?”

We waited another couple of minutes. Milo ran his hand along the white fence slats. Eyed the security sign. I knew what he was thinking: all the safety measures in the world.

*

The electric gate slid open. Stan Bartell stepped out of his house and stood on his front steps and waved us in. When we got to the door, he said, “The only thing they know about LAPD being here is something called a notification on a kid my daughter knows. Let me see your badge just to be safe.”

Milo showed it to him.

“You’re the one,” said Bartell. “So what’s with Gavin Quick?”

“You know him?”

“Like I said, my daughter knows him.” Bartell shoved his hands in the pockets of his robe. “Does notification mean what I think it does?”

“Gavin Quick was murdered,” said Milo.

“What does my daughter have to do with it?”

“A girl was found with Gavin. Young, blond—”

“Bullshit,” said Bartell. “Not Kayla.”

“Where is Kayla?”

“Out. I’ll call her on my cell phone. C’mon, I’ll show you.”

We followed him inside. The entry hall was twenty feet high, marble-floored, a lot larger than the Quick’s living room. The house was an orgy of beige, except for amethyst-colored glass flowers everywhere. Huge, frameless, abstract canvases were all painted in variations upon that same noncommittal earth tone.

Wordlessly, Stan Bartell led us past several other huge rooms to a studio at the rear. Wood floors and a beamed ceiling. A couch, two folding chairs, a grand piano, an electric organ, synthesizers, mixers, tape decks, an alto sax on a stand, and a gorgeous archtop guitar that I recognized as a fifty-thousand-dollar D’Aquisto in an open case.

On the walls were framed gold records.

Bartell slumped onto the couch, pointed an accusing finger at Milo, and pulled a phone out of his pocket. He dialed, put the phone to his ear, waited.

No answer.

“Doesn’t mean a thing,” he said. Then his bronze face crumpled, and he broke into wracking sobs.

*

Milo and I stood by helplessly.

Finally, Bartell said, “What did that fucking little bastard do to her?”

“Gavin?”

“I told Kaylie he was weird, stay away. Especially since the accident—you know about his fucking accident, right? Must’ve had some kind of brain damage the little fu—”

“His mother—”

“Her. Crazy bitch.”

“You’ve had problems with them.”

“She’s nuts,” said Bartell.

“In what way?”

“Just weird. Never leaves the house. The
problem
was their son going after my angel.” Bartell’s fists were huge. He raised his eyes to the ceiling and rocked. “Oh, Jesus, this is bad, this is so fucking
bad
!” His eyes sparked with panic. “My wife—she’s in Aspen. She doesn’t ski, but she goes there in the summer. For shopping, the air. Oh shit, she’ll die, she’ll just crumple up and fucking die.”

Bartell bent and grasped his knees and rocked some more. “How could this happen?”

Milo said, “Why do you think Gavin Quick would’ve hurt Kayla?”

“Because he was—the kid was weird. Kaylie knew him from high school. She broke up with him a bunch of times, but he kept coming back, and she kept letting him down too easy. Little bastard would show up, sniff around even when Kaylie wasn’t in. Bugging me—like kissing up to the old man would help. I work at home, I’m trying to get some work done, and the little fucker is bullshitting me about music, trying to have a conversation like he knows something. I do a lot of jingles, have deadlines, you think I want to discuss alternative punk with some stupid kid? He’d sit himself down, never want to leave. Finally, I told the maid to stop letting him in.”

“Obsessive,” I said.

Bartell hung his head.

“Was he more obsessive since the accident?” said Milo.

Bartell looked up. “So he did it.”

“Unlikely, Mr. Bartell. No weapon was found at the scene, so my instinct is he was just a victim.”

“What are you saying? What the fuck are you—”

Footsteps—light footsteps—made all three of us turn.

A pretty young girl in low-riding, skintight jeans that looked oiled and a black midriff blouse exposing a flat, tan abdomen stood in the doorway. Two belly-button pierces, one studded with turquoise. Over her shoulder was a black silk bag embroidered with silk flowers. She wore too much makeup, had a beak nose and a strong chin. Her hair was long, straight, the color of new hay. The blouse revealed luminous cleavage. A big gold
“K”
on a chain rested in the cleft.

Stan Bartell’s tan faded to blotchy beige. “What the—” He slapped his hand over his heart, then reached out toward the girl with both hands. “Baby, baby!”

The girl frowned, and said, “
What,
Dad?”

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CHAPTER

3

S
tan Bartell said, “Where the hell have you been?”

Kayla Bartell stared at her father as if he’d gone mad. “Out.”

“With who?”

“Friends.”

“I called your cell.”

Kayla shrugged. “I switched it off. The club was loud, I couldn’t have heard it anyway.”

Bartell started to say something, then drew her near and hugged her. She glanced at us, as if seeking rescue.


Da
-ad.”

“Thank God,” said Bartell. “Thank almighty God.”

“Who are these people, Daddy?”

Bartell let go of his daughter and glowered at us. “Leave.”

Milo said, “Ms. Bartell—”

“No!” shouted Bartel. “Out. Now.”

“Who
are
they, Daddy?”

“They’re
no one
.”

Milo said, “At some point, I’d like to talk to Kayla.”

“When pigs take the Concorde.”

*

When we reached the door, Bartell stood on his front steps and jabbed a remote control. The gates began sliding, and Milo and I barely made it through before they clanged shut.

Bartell slammed his door.

Milo said, “Your friendly neighborhood policeman, making friends and spreading good cheer wherever he goes.”

*

As we drove away, he said, “Interesting how Bartell assumed Gavin had done something to Kayla. You used the word ‘obsessive.’ ”

“Bartell’s hostility could just be resentment at someone sniffing around his angel. But obsessiveness can be a side effect of head injury.”

“What about that pigsty room? Kid’s mother claims he used to be neat. That fits with brain damage?”

“Catch a strong blow to the frontal lobes, and there can be all sorts of changes.”

“Permanent?”

“Depends on the severity of the injury. In most cases, it’s temporary.”

“Gavin got hurt ten months ago.”

“Not a good sign,” I said. “I’d like to know how he was functioning, in general. The student ID in his pocket was two years old. Assuming he dropped out, what’s he been doing since then?”

“Maybe getting on the bad side of the wrong people,” he said. “Getting
obsessive
. I’ll have another go-round with Sheila. Bartell said she was weird. You spot anything?”

“The context we saw her in, anything less than breakdown would be weird.”

“Yeah . . . I’ll check the father out when he gets back from Atlanta . . . I love my job—enough for one night. Drop me back at the Glen and nighty-night.”

I got onto Sunset and crossed the border into Holmby Hills. Milo said, “The big question right now is, who was the girl? And why impale her and not Gavin?”

“That and the way she was left says a sexual thing,” I said. “Eliminate the male, have your way with the female.”

“Think the coroner will find evidence of sexual assault?”

“If we’re dealing with a sexual psychopath, the impalement might suffice.”

“Surrogate penetration?”

I nodded.

“So maybe it’s a twisted thing,” he said. “Nothing to do with the victims, they were just a couple of kids happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

“It could go that way,” I said.

He laughed softly. “And I volunteered for this one.”

“Who better than you?” I said.

“Meaning?”

“Meaning you’ll do a good job on it.”

He didn’t answer. I slowed down for a couple of turns, got on a straight stretch, and glanced at him. The merest excuse for a smile wormed its way across his lips.

“What a pal,” he said.

*

The following morning I had an early breakfast with Allison Gwynn before her first patient. Her office is in Santa Monica, on Montana, east of Boutique Row, and we met at a pastry shop nearby. It was 7:40 A.M., and the place hadn’t yet filled with people of leisure. Allison had on a white linen suit and white sandals that set off her long black hair. She never goes out without makeup and an assortment of serious jewelry. Today it was coral and gold, pieces we’d picked up on a recent trip to Santa Fe.

She was there when I arrived, had finished half a cup of coffee. “Good morning. Don’t
you
look handsome.”

I kissed her and sat down. “Morning, Gorgeous.”

We’d been seeing each other for a little over six months, were still in that stage where the pulse quickened and the body flushed.

We ordered sweet rolls and set about getting into conversational gear. At first it was small things, then sexual banter, then work. Shoptalk can kill a relationship, but so far I’d enjoyed it.

She went first. Busy week, grading papers for the courses she taught, a full patient load, volunteering at a hospice. Eventually, we got around to talking about the previous night. Allison takes an interest in what I do—more than an interest. She’s attracted to the ugliest aspects of human behavior, and sometimes I wonder if that isn’t part of what cements us. Maybe it’s life experience. She was sexually humiliated as a teenager, widowed in her twenties, carries a gun in her purse, and loves to shoot at paper human targets. I don’t think much about it. Too much analysis, and there’s no time to live.

I described the crime scene.

She said, “Mulholland Drive. When I went to Beverly, we used to go up there to park all the time.”

“We?”

She grinned. “Me and the other alleged virgins.”

“A religious experience.”

“Not back then, you can be sure of that,” she said. “Young boys and all that—too much enthusiasm, not enough finesse.”

I laughed. “So it was a well-known make-out spot.”

“That you missed out on, you poor Midwest boy. Yup, my dear, Mulholland was
the
make-out spot. Probably still is, though there’s probably less lover’s lane stuff going on because kids are allowed to do it in their own rooms. I’m amazed at how many of my patients go along with that. You know the rationale: Better I should know where they are.”

“There are two families who probably feel that way right now.”

She pushed hair behind her ear. “Tragic.”

The sweet rolls arrived, coated with almond slivers, warm. She said, “A vacant house. That creative we weren’t. They probably spotted the FOR SALE sign and the open gate, seized the opportunity. Poor parents. First the boy’s accident, now this. You said he changed. In what way?”

“His room was a sty, and his mother claimed he’d once been neat. She didn’t say much. It wasn’t the time to press.”

“No, of course not.”

I said, “His ex-girlfriend’s father described him as obsessive.”

“In what way?”

“Showing up at the girl’s house unexpectedly. When she wasn’t home, he’d bug the father, hang around asking questions. The father also implied Gavin had been overly persistent with his daughter. His first reaction when he thought his daughter was dead was that Gavin had done something to her.”

“That could be more like Protective Dad.”

“Could be.”

“Was there any postconcussive syndrome?” she said. “Loss of consciousness, blurred vision, disorientation?”

“Some transitory memory loss is all the mother mentioned.”

“The crash was ten months ago,” she said. “And the mother’s still talking about him as changed.”

“I know,” I said. “The damage might’ve been permanent. But I’m not sure any of that matters, Ally. Make-out spots attract voyeurs and worse. Either Gavin and the girl were interrupted midcoitus, or they were positioned to look that way.”

“A sicko.” She studied her sweet roll but didn’t touch it. Smiled. “To be technical.”

“It’s a little early in the day for technical,” I said.

“Mulholland Drive,” she said. “The things we do when we think we’re immortal.”

*

We strolled the three blocks to her office. Allison’s hand clasped my biceps. Her open-toed white shoes had generous heels, and that brought the top of her head to my bottom lip. A bit of ocean breeze lifted her hair, and soft strands brushed against my face.

She said, “Milo volunteered for this one?”

“He didn’t seem to need any convincing.”

“I guess it makes sense,” she said. “He’s been looking pretty bored.”

“I hadn’t noticed.”

“You’d know better, but that’s how it’s seemed to me.”

“He’ll be getting plenty of stimulation on this one.”

“So will you.”

“If I’m needed.”

She laughed. “Be good for you, too.”

“I’ve been looking bored?”

“More like restless. All that caged animal energy.”

I growled and beat my chest with my free hand and let out a low-volume Tarzan roar. Two women power-walking our way scrunched up their lips and gave us wide berth as they passed.

“You just made their day,” she said.

*

Milo, bored.
He griped so much about work stress, personal stress, the state of the world, anything at hand, that I’d never considered the concept.

When had Allison seen him last . . . two weeks ago. Late-night dinner at Café Moghul, the Indian restaurant near the West L.A. station that he uses as a second office. The proprietors believe his presence ensures them peace and security and treat him like a maharajah.

That night, Allison and I, Rick, and the big guy had been treated to a gut-stretching banquet. Allison and Milo happened to sit next to each other and ended up talking for most of the evening. It’s taken him a while to warm up to her. To the notion that I’m with someone new. Robin and I were together for over a decade, and he adores her. Robin had found happiness with another man. I thought I was dealing with that pretty well as she and I struggled to build a new kind of friendship. Except for when I wasn’t.

I was waiting for Milo to stop acting like a kid caught in a custody dispute.

The morning after the Indian dinner, he called me, and said, “You have your quirks, but when you settle on one, she’s a keeper.”

*

The day after the murder, he phoned. “No semen on the girl, no sign of sexual assault. Unless you count the spear. The same .22 was used to shoot both of them, one bullet each, right to the forehead. Your hostile or out-of-control shooter tends to empty his weapon. Meaning this was a guy with confidence. Cool, maybe with experience.”

“Confident and careful,” I said. “Also, he didn’t want to make a lot of noise.”

“Maybe,” he said. “Though given the site—the nearest house is a couple of acres away—he was probably okay on that account. Also, the gun would have gone
pop pop,
no big explosion. No exit wounds, the bullets bounced around the kids’ brains, did the kind of damage you’d expect from a .22.”

“Has the girl been identified?”

“Not yet. Her prints don’t appear to be in the system, though I can’t say for sure, because the computer’s been screwing up. I’ve talked to our Missing Persons guys, and they’re putting together some paper. I did a bit of calling around to other stations, but young blond girls aren’t a rare commodity when you’re talking MP. My guess is she’ll turn out to be another of Gavin’s Beverly Hills friends. Though if she was, you’d expect someone to miss her by now, and no one called or filed at B.H. on a missing girl.”

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