CHAPTER TWENTY

O’Dell lived in the high rent end of Encino behind electronic gates that, to Chang’s surprise, stood open. A short driveway curved around neat lawns and planters of geraniums, shockingly red in the December weather, to some architect’s fevered dream of a Mediterranean villa that shouted nouveau-riche.

“I’ll do the talking,” Chang said. “All I want you to do is take a good hard look at him, and assure yourself that this really is the guy you saw with Paterson out on Morning View. We don’t want to find out later that the snapshots didn’t develop right on that particular trip.” And King would tear her a new one if she landed them in hot water with this visit, but she kept that to herself.

Bronze doors offered Biblical scenes and a choice of an enormous knocker that would have had her spanking Eve’s derriere—take that, you naughty apple pusher—or a more conventional doorbell. Chang chose the latter. Chimes somewhere within did an impressive imitation of Big Ben. After only a brief pause (had their arrival been announced, despite the open gate?) an olive-skinned young man in tight black silk trousers and a white linen tunic opened it and looked them up and down with limpid eyes that seemed not at all pleased with what they saw.

Chang flashed her badge. “F.B.I. We’d like to talk to Mister O’Dell.”

“I’ll see,” he said, making a question mark of it, and closed the door in their faces.

The wait grew lengthy. Chang was about to ring again—maybe this time she would give Eve a smack—when he returned, holding the door wide for them. “This way,” he said with a slight sniff. He sounded altogether disappointed that he hadn’t been ordered to shoo them away like pesky flies.

They followed him down a wide corridor that split the house in half. The rooms they glimpsed on either side reinforced Catherine’s impression of lots of money and less taste. Too much overdone furniture, too many too large pillows in too many colors. A white-flocked Christmas tree was trimmed all in lavender ornaments, and surrounded by a mountain of packages, all silver and lavender.

Silk-clad hips swayed their way through doors at the far end of the central hallway and onto a Spanish tiled patio with more planters of geraniums. Enormous banana plants in terra cotta pots screened a pool that glittered blue and inviting in the afternoon sunlight. A faint mist of steam rose from its heated surface. Glowing grids on poles kept the chill of winter air at bay. It was December. Even in Los Angeles December wasn’t exactly swimming pool weather, unless you were rich enough to take charge of nature.

Danny O’Dell was draped languidly under one of the radial heaters. Television, with its makeup, its filters and careful lighting, had been kind to him, making him appear a good ten or fifteen years younger than he looked in person. His eyes were puffy, his skin had an unhealthy yellowish pallor, and his gray-brown hair was thin and limp.

He had swapped his nerdy television suit for bathing trunks—not the string bikini she would have guessed, but white baggies with the grinning likeness of Sponge Bob Squarepants. Empathizing with his young audience members, she speculated, just one of the kids? The legs sticking out of the trunks were skinny and white. Sunglasses and a book lay on a table close at hand, along with a tall glass of what looked to her practiced eye like bourbon. A lot of it, hold the ice.

“Please, sit down,” he said, and gestured toward a pair of chairs next to the table. “Some refreshments? A cocktail, perhaps, or there’s iced tea if you prefer?”

“Tea, I think,” Chang said, and Catherine nodded her agreement.

“Sergio, do be a dear and fetch the ladies some tea.” He fluttered one hand vaguely in the direction of the house and Sergio bustled away. “Now, then, Sergio said you were police officers?”

“F.B.I.,” Chang corrected him. “We just wanted to ask your help with a case we’re working on.”

He looked long and hard at her. A faint sheen of sweat glistened on his brow, more than would seem justified from the heater above them.

“Anything I can do, of course.” He reached for his glass and took a long, noisy swallow from it. Chang caught a whiff of bourbon.

“I wonder if you’ve ever heard of anyone called Paterson,” she said.

His eyes blinked rapidly several times. He screwed up his mouth and made a show of thinking. “Paterson? Is he an actor?”

“In a manner of speaking.”

More thinking. “I knew a Waldo Paterson, I think. Or was that Peterson? Oh, and there’s a Theresa Paterson at the station, big woman, blonde, works in publicity, I believe.”

“This is a Lester Paterson. Sometimes goes by the name of Trash Can.”

The eyes did their flutter routine again. He shook his head, Adam’s apple bobbing. “What a cute nickname, I wonder how that came about. No, no I’m sure I would remember anyone who called himself Trash Bag.”

Chang took a folder from her briefcase and handed him the two different pictures of Paterson. He barely glanced at them.

“Are there two of them? Oh, is this really the same person? How striking, I’d love to know who his surgeon is. One day soon I’m going to have to do something about these eyes.” He rolled them at her, a gesture that never failed to delight the children in his studio audience. Chang kept her face carefully bland.

Watching him silently Catherine was thinking of the scene on Morning View Road. There was no doubt in her mind that this was the man she had seen there. She was equally certain he was lying now. Even if she hadn’t seen him with Paterson with her own eyes, she would have been convinced of that. However entertaining he might be to children, he was no actor.

“You know,” O’Dell said thoughtfully, “Now that I think of it, he does look familiar. He’s on television, isn’t he? Oh, wait, you’re here about a case you said. Yes, that’s it, of course. His face was on television, on the news. One of those if-you-see-this-man-call-the-police things. This is who you’re looking for? But what on earth made you think I would know him?”

“It’s routine. You’re name came up in some paperwork.”

“My name? How peculiar. Or maybe not. I am a television personality, after all.” He favored her with what was meant to be a humble smile. She had unnerved him, this odd-looking little woman with the frizzy red hair. And the other one, silent as a Buddha, watching him and sipping her tea as if it were the blood of her enemies.

“You think he might be one of your fans?” Chang looked skeptical.

He laughed unconvincingly and handed the pictures back to her. “You would be surprised some of the people I hear from. Fans. You’d think that would be the most wonderful thing for an entertainer, but it’s a two-handed puppet, isn’t it? Needy little creatures, always trying to get a piece of your flesh, wanting to stand in your light. Mostly I try to keep a distance from them. These days, you can’t be too careful, can you? Since the Manson business, and the Jodie Foster thing, you just don’t know. And those eyes, he does look a mean one, doesn’t he? But, no, I’m sure I’ve never met him. Positive. But that’s not to say I mightn’t have a stalker. Stars have to worry about that sort of thing.”

Chang thought of the gates at the entrance, left carelessly open. Apparently he had no real concern about the possibility of a stalker, any more than she did. It was hard to imagine one of his young fans, average age seven or so, tailing him with malicious intent, though she could certainly imagine a parent or two thinking evil thoughts.

He was talking too much and too fast and was obviously grateful when Sergio arrived with a tray holding two tall, frosted glasses which he offered to Chang and Catherine. Catherine held hers in both hands to keep from flinging it into O’Dell’s face and took a sip. It tasted of bile.

“Perhaps Sergio...?” O’Dell held the pictures up for the houseboy’s inspection. “Does he look familiar? They think he might be a stalker. Maybe a delivery person, or someone hanging around? A would-be gate-crasher?”

Sergio barely glanced in the direction of the pictures, gave a quick shake of his head, and hurried away, practically running.

“Or, he might have written me,” O’Dell said. He took another long swig of his drink, nearly emptying it, and looked wistfully after his houseboy. “Sometimes they write wanting pictures for their children. At least they say it’s for their children, though I often think they just don’t want to admit it’s for themselves. You can check my mail, if you’d like.”

Chang took a picture of Catherine’s daughter from the folder and handed it to O’Dell. “Recognize her?” she asked.

This time his denial seemed sincere. “No.” He shook his head, looking puzzled.

“Or him?” She handed him a picture of Steve Madison, the boy who had disappeared a few days earlier from the park. He glanced at it and looked away almost instantly.

“No,” he said, too quickly. The picture shook. Catherine’s glass broke in her hand, startling them all.

“Sergio,” O’Dell bellowed.

“It’s all right,” Catherine said, standing and dabbing at the spilled tea with her napkin. She had gotten nothing more than a small cut on one finger. She put it to her mouth and sucked the blood from it, carefully avoided looking at their host.

“I can’t imagine how that happened,” O’Dell said. “I shall have to flay that boy for bringing you a cracked glass.” He gave the picture back to Chang, put a hand over his eyes as if the sun was in them and reached for the sunglasses on the table. “Really,” he sighed, “I’m afraid I’m quite weary. Is that all?”

Chang stuffed the pictures back into her briefcase. “You’re certain about this Paterson? You’ve never met him? Maybe at a party? In a bar?”

“I don’t do bars,” he said coolly. “And I’m quite sure I have never met the gentleman.”

“He’s not a gentleman.” Chang stood abruptly.

“Sergio,” he called again.

“Don’t bother, we can find our own way out,” Chang said.

“Sergio,” louder this time, “Please see the ladies to the front door. And bring me a drink, this one is practically tepid.”

* * * *

“He’s lying through his teeth,” Catherine said when they had been escorted carefully out of the house, the door closed solidly, almost slammed, behind them.

“I’m going to love nailing that little weasel’s butt,” Chang muttered.

* * * *

O’Dell hurried along the hall, drinking so greedily that the bourbon sloshed over the rim and puddled unnoticed on the tile floor. He locked the bedroom door after himself. The good stuff was in a locked armoire that he opened with shaking hands. He pulled out a little teak chest inlaid with mother of pearl and opened it with a key from a dresser drawer.

He’d get rid of everything, put it in a plastic bag and dump it into the ocean. He should never have had it in the first place. It was too dangerous. How had he ever let himself get dragged into this? It was all Paterson’s fault.

He snatched up the DVDs lying on top. Just underneath them was a stack of photographs. He looked at the first one, a pretty young boy, the same boy whose picture that crazy looking F.B.I. agent had shown him just minutes ago, leaning back on a sofa, apparently asleep. Or was he drugged? He wouldn’t put that past Paterson. He wouldn’t put anything past Paterson. The man was a monster.

He knew that sofa all too well, too. Paterson had been sitting on it the last time he had seen him. If the picture were found in his possession, it would link him definitely with Paterson.

He picked up the picture, was about to crumple it, but his eyes fell on the one beneath it. A different boy, this one’s wide eyes staring at the camera as if surprised to see it there.

O’Dell put the DVDs aside and lifted the stack of photos out of the box, sank back on the bed with its silk duvet and lilac Frette linens, and began to go through the pictures, savoring them one by one.

Maybe it was silly to think of getting rid of them. Those women hadn’t accused him of anything. It was Paterson they were looking for. No reason to think they really suspected him. That fool Paterson must have had his name written somewhere, but that proved nothing. He was a star. Lots of people must have his name written down.

The Sponge Bob trunks slipped to the floor. The silk whispered faint insinuations.