Devil’s Waltz. By: Jonathan Kellerman

Gabray dropped the cigarette and stomped it out hard.

“She lies,” he said. “Fucking bitch.”

“She made your bail.”

“She owned me. She still owes me.”

“I’et it go, Robert. Think of those letters.”

“Yeah,” said Gabray, tapping his foot. “Whatever. I’m cool with it.

I got a good attitude about life.”

When we were out of the maze and back on San Pedro, Milo turned on his

penlight and studied the Identikit face.

“Think he’s reliable?” I said.

“Not very. But in the unlikely event a real suspect ever shows up,

this might help.”

I stopped for a red light and glanced at the composite. “Not very

distinctive.”

“Nope.”

I leaned over and gave a closer look. “It could be Huenengarth, minus

the mustache.”

“That so?”

“Huenengarth’s younger than the guy Gabray described-midthirties-and

his face is a bit fuller. But he’s thickly built and his hair’s styled

like that. His mustache could have been grown since March, and even if

not, it’s very faint-might have been hard to spot from a distance. And

you said he might be an ex-con.”

“Hmm.”

The light turned green, and I headed back toward the freeway.

He chuckled.

“What?”

“Just thinking. If I ever actually make sense out of the Herbert

thing, my troubles will just be beginning. Sneaking her file out.

Moving in on Central’s territory, offering Gabray protection I had no

permission to authorize. Far as the department’s concerned, I’m a

goddam clerk.”

“Solving a homicide wouldn’t impress the department?”

“Not nearly as much as rank conformity-but hell, I suppose I can work

something out if it comes to that. Give a gift to Gomez and Wicker-let

them take the glory and hope for halfa gold star. Gabray may get sold

out in the process. . . Hell, he’s no innocent screw him. If his info

turns out to be real, he’ll do okay.”

He closed the kit and placed it on the floor.

“Listen to me,” he said, “talking like a goddam politician.”

I drove up the ramp. All lanes were empty and the freeway looked like

a giant drag strip.

He said, “Putting some bad guys out of commission should be enough

satisfaction, right? What you guys call intrinsic motivation “Sure,” I

said. “Be good for goodness’ sake and Santa will remember you.”

We arrived back at my house just after three. He drove away in the

Porsche and I slipped into bed, trying to be silent. Robin awoke

anyway and reached for my hand. We locked fingers and fell asleep.

She was up and gone before my eyes cleared. A toasted English muffin

and juice were at my place on the kitchen table. I finished them off

while planning my day.

Afternoon at the Joneses’.

Morning on the phone.

But the phone rang before I could get to it.

Alex,” said Lou Cestare, “all those interesting questions.

Branching out into investment banking?”

“Not yet. How was the hike?”

“Long. I kept thinking my little guy would tire but he wanted to play

Edmund Hillary. Why do you want to know about Chuck Jones?”

“He’s chairman of the board of the hospital where I used to work. He

also manages the hospital’s portfolio. I’m still on staff there, feel

some affection for the place. Things aren’t going well there

financially, and there’s been talk ofJones running the place down so he

can dissolve it and sell the land.”

“Doesn’t sound like his style.”

“You know him?”

“Met him a couple of times at parties. Quick hello-goodbyehe wouldn’t

remember. But I do know his style.”

“Which is?”

“Building up, not tearing down. He’s one of the best money managers

around, Alex. Pays no attention to what other people are doing and

goes after solid companies at cut-rate prices. True bargains-the

stock-buys everyone dreams about. But he finds them better than anyone

else.”

“How?”

“He knows how to really figure out how a company’s doing.

Which means going way beyond quarterly reports. Once he ferrets out an

undervalued stock about to pop, he buys in, waits, sells, repeats the

process. His timing’s impeccable.”

“Does he ferret using inside information?”

Pause. “This hour of the morning and you’re already talking dirty?”

“So he does.”

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