Devil’s Waltz. By: Jonathan Kellerman

turned east on Sunset, and headed for Hollywood.

I reached Beverly Hills within minutes and passed Whittier Drive

without slowing. Something on the opposite side of the boulevard

caught my eye: White Cutlass, coming from the east. It turned onto

Whittier and headed up the 900 block.

At the first break in the median, I hung a U. By the time I reached the

big Georgian house, the Olds was parked in the same place I’d seen it

yesterday and a black woman was stepping out on the driver’s side.

She was young-late twenties or early thirties-short and slim.

She had on a gray cotton turtleneck, black ankle-length skirt, and

black flats. In one hand was a Bullock’s bag; in the other, a brown

leather purse.

Probably the housekeeper. Out doing a department store errand for

Ashmore’s grieving widow.

As she turned toward the house she saw me. I smiled. She gave me a

quizzical look and began walking over slowly, with a short, light

step.

As she got closer I saw she was very pretty, her skin so dark it was

almost blue. Her face was round, bottomed by a square chin; her

features clean and broad like those of a Nubian mask. large, searching

eyes focused straight at me.

“Hello. Are you from the hospital?” British accent, publicschool

refined.

“Yes,” I said, surprised, then realized she was looking at the badge on

my lapel..

Her eyes blinked, then opened. Irises in two shades of brownmahogany

in the center, walnut rims.

Pink at the periphery. She’d been crying. Her mouth quivered a bit.

“It’s very kind of you to come,” she said.

Alex Delaware,” I said, extending my hand out the drivers window. She

put the shopping bag on the grass and took it. Her hand was narrow and

dry and very cold.

Anna Ashmore. I didn’t expect anyone so soon.”

Feeling stupid about my assumptions, I said, “I didn’t know Dr.

Ashmore personally, but I did want to pay my respects.”

She let her hand drop. Somewhere in the distance a lawn mower

belched.

“There’s no formal service. My husband wasn’t religious.”

She turned toward the big house. “Would you like to come in?”

The entry hall was two stories of cream plaster floored with black

marble. A beautiful brass banister and marble stairs twisted upward to

the second story. To the right, a large yellow dining room gleamed

with dark, fluid Art Nuuveau furniture that the real housekeeper was

polishing. Art filled the wall behind the stairs, too-a mix of

contemporary paintings and African batiks. Past the staircase, a short

foyer led to glass doors that framed a California postcard: green lawn,

blue pool sun-splashed silver, white cabanas behind a trellised

colonnade, hedges and flower beds under the fluctuating shade of more

specimen trees. Scrambling over the tiles of the cabana roof was a

splash of scarlet the bougainvillea I’d seen from the street.

The maid came out of the dining room and took Mrs. Ashmore’s bag.

Anna Ashmore thanked her, then pointed left, to a living room twice the

size of the dining room, sunk two steps down.

“Please,” she said, descending, and flipping a switch that ignited

several floor lamps.

A black grand piano claimed one corner. The east wall was mostly tall,

shuttered windows that let in knife-blades of light. The floors were

blond planks under black-and-rust Persian rugs. A coffered white

ceiling hovered over apricot plaster walls. More art: the same mix of

oils and fabric. I thought I spotted a Hockney over the granite

mantel.

The room was chilly and filled with furniture that looked straight out

of the Design Center. White Italian suede sofas, a black Breuer chair,

big, pockmarked post-Neanderthal stone tables, and a few smaller ones

fashioned of convoluted brass rods and topped with blue-tinted glass.

One of the stone tables fronted the largest of the sofas. Centered on

it was a rosewood bowl filled with apples and oranges.

Mrs. Ashmore said, “Please,” again, and I sat down directly behind the

fruit.

“Can I offer you something to drink?”

“No, thank you.”

She settled directly in front of me, straight and silent.

In the time it had taken to walk from the entry, her eyes had filled

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