Devil’s Waltz. By: Jonathan Kellerman

“Ralph Benedict,” he said. “I’ll check with the medical board.”

“Cindy grew up in Ventura. He might still be there.”

“What’s the name of the company who shipped him these cylinders?”

“Holloway Medical. San Francisco.

“Let’s see what else they sent him and when: Cylinders-like empty

tubes?”

“They’re part of a kit.” I described the Insuject system.

“No needles or drugs under the sink?”

“Nope, the needles and the insulin spansules come separately.” I

recounted my search of the bedroom and the refrigerator. “But they

could be anywhere in that house. Any possibility of getting a search

warrant now?”

“Just on the basis of tubes? Doubtful. With needles attached and the

insulin all loaded up, maybe. That would be evidence of premeditation,

though she could still claim the stuff was left over from the aunt.”

“Not if the insulin was still fresh. I’m not sure of insulin’s exact

shelf life, but it’s not four years.”

“Yeah. So find me some fresh insulin and I’ll visit a judge. Right

now, there’s no evidentiary chain.”

“Even with Cassie’s low sugar?”

“Even with. Sorry. Wonder why she left it under the sink like

that.”

“She probably never imagined anyone would look there. It was stuck in

a corner-you d have to be groping around to find it.”

And she wasn’t pissed at all that you were snooping in her john?”

“If she was, she didn’t show it. I made up a story about running out

of toilet paper and going under the sink for a fresh roll. She

apologized for not being a better housekeeper.”

“Eager to please, huh? The boys back in South Carolina sure took

advantage of it.”

“Or she gets people to do what she wants by playing dumb and passive.

I didn’t walk out of that house feeling in control.”

“Ye olde bathroom detective. Sounds like you’re ready for the

ViceSquad.”

“I’ll pass. The whole thing was surreal. Not that I was doing much

good as a therapist.”

I told him how Cindy had thrust Cassie at me, and Cassie’s subsequent

panic.

“Up till then my rapport with Cassie had been progressing pretty

well.

Now, it’s shot to hell, Milo. So I have to wonder if Cindy was

deliberately trying to sabotage me.”

“Waltzing and leading, huh?”

“Something she told me suggests that control is a big issue for her.

When she was a kid, the aunt wouldn’t let her eat any sweets at all,

even though there was nothing wrong with her pancreas. That’s a far

cry from Munchausen, but there is a hint of pathology there-not

allowing a healthy child to have an occasional ice cream.”

Aunt projecting the diabetes onto her?”

“Exactly. And who knows if there were other aspects of the disease the

aunt projected-like injections. Not insulin, but maybe some kind of

vitamin shots. I’m just guessing. Cindy also told me that she

restricts Cassie’s sweets. At face value, that sounds like good

mothering. øReasonable health-consciousness from someone who’s already

lost one child. But maybe there’s a whole weird thing going on with

regard to sugar.”

“Sins of the mothers,” he said.

“The aunt was Cindy’s functional mother. And look at the role model

she provided: a health professional who had a chronic disease and

controlled it-Cindy spoke of that with pride. She may have grown up

associating being female-being maternal-with being sick and emotionally

rigid: controlled and controlling. It’s no surprise she chose the

military right after high school-from one structured environment to

another. When that didn’t work out, her next step was respiratory tech

school. Because Aunt Harriet told her it was a good profession.

Control and illness-it keeps repeating itself.”

“She ever mention why she didn’t finish respiratory tech school?”

“No. What are you thinking-more promiscuity?”

“I’m a big believer in patterns. What’d she do after that?”

“Junior college. Where she met Chip. She dropped out, got married.

Got pregnant right away-more big changes that might have made her feel

out of control. The marriage was a step up for her socially, but she

ended up living in a very lonely place.”

I described Dunbar Court and the surrounding tract.

“Slow death for someone who craves attention, Milo. And when Chip gets

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