Dr. Death by Jonathan Kellerman

Financial consultant, Mr. Respectable . . . Something else Ulrich had said—one of the first things he’d said— came back to me: So far our names haven’t been in the paper. We’re going to be able to keep it that way, aren’t we, Detective Sturgis?

Concerned about publicity. Craving publicity.

Milo had answered that the two of them would probably be safe from media scrutiny, but Ukich had stuck with the topic, talked about fifteen minutes of fame.

Andy Warhol coined that phrase and look what happened to him… checked into a hospital… went out in a bag . . . celebrity stinks . . . look at Princess Di, look at Dr. Mate.

Letting Milo know that fame was what he was after. Playing with Milo, the way he’d toyed with the Seattle cops.

Getting as close as he could to criminal celebrity without confessing outright.

It had been no coincidence that he and Tanya Stratton had chosen Mulholland for a morning walk that Monday.

Stratton had come out and said so: We rarely come up here, except on Sundays. Resentful about the change in routine. About Paul’s insistence.

She’d complained to Milo that everything had been Paul’s idea. Including the decision to talk to Milo up at the site, rather than at home. Ulrich had claimed to be attempting a kind of therapy for Tanya, but his real motive—multiple motives—had been something quite different: keep Milo off Ulrich’s home territory, and get another chance at deja vu.

Ulrich had talked about the horror of discovering Mate, but I realized now that emotion had been lacking.

Not so, Tanya Stratton. She’d been clearly upset, eager to leave. But Ulrich had come across amiable, helpful, relaxed. Too relaxed for someone who’d encountered a bloodbath.

An outdoorsy guy—Fusco had said Michael Burke skied, fancied himself an outdoorsman—Ulrich had chatted about staying fit, the beauty of the site.

Once you get past the gate, it’s like being in another world.

Oh yeah.

His world.

Amiable guy, but the charm was wearing thin with Stratton. Was she edgy because she’d begun to sense something about her boyfriend? Or just a relationship gone stagnant?

I recalled her pallor, the unsteady gait. Wispy hair. Dark glasses—hiding something?

A fragile girl.

Not a well girl?

Then I understood and my heart beat faster: one of Michael Burke’s patterns was to hook up with sick women, befriend them, nurture them.

Then guide them out of this world.

He enjoyed killing on so many levels. The consummate Dr. Death, and one way or the other the world was going to know it. How Eldon Mate’s fame—the legitimacy Mate had obtained while dispatching fifty lives— must have eaten at Burke. All those years in medical school, and Burke still couldn’t practice openly the way Mate did, had to serve as Mate’s apprentice.

Had to masquerade as a layman.

Because since arriving in L.A., he hadn’t found a way to bogus his medical credentials, had to represent himself as a financial consultant.

Mostly real-estate work . . . Century City address. Nice and ambiguous.

Home base, Encino. Just over the hill. Respectable neighborhood for an upstanding guy.

In L. A. you could live off a smile and a zip code.

The business card Ulrich had given Milo was sitting in a drawer at the West L.A. station. I phoned information and asked for Ulrich’s Century City business listing, was only half surprised when I got one. But when I tried the number, a recording told me the line had been disconnected. No Encino exchange for either him or Tanya Stratton, nothing anywhere in the Valley or the city.

Tanya. Not a well girl.

A relationship on the wane with Ulrich could prove lethal.

I looked at the clock. Just after six. Light through the office curtains said the sun had risen. If Milo had been up all night at the Glendale crime scene, he’d be home now, getting some well-deserved rest.

Some things could wait. I phoned him. Rick answered on the first ring. “Up early, Alex.”

“Did I wake you?”

“Not hardly. I was just about to leave for the E.R. Milo’s already gone.”

“Gone where?”

“He didn’t say. Probably back to Glendale, that double murder. He was out there until midnight, came home, slept for four hours, woke in a foul mood, showered without singing and left the house with his hair still wet.”

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