“Unbelievable… only reason I found out the police were involved was by reading the Daily-the U of W paper. Something to the effect that no progress had been made but local kids were being questioned and Desi’s name was mentioned. Did I say anything? No.”
Milo said, “What do you know about Desi’s ten years on the road?”
“Just what I told you yesterday.”
“Doing the hippie thing.”
“Retro-hippie,” said Ricki Flatt. “Original hippie was my parents’ generation. Then all of a sudden, he shaves his beard, cuts his hair, buys nice clothes, enrolls in architecture school. I remember thinking, so now he wants to build, not destroy.”
“The fire stayed on your mind.”
“I’m not moral enough to be haunted by it, but every so often, it would creep into my mind. Because that boy had died and the police had suspected my brother enough to question him and my parents had acted so weird.”
“Do you have any idea how Desi reconnected to Doreen?”
“None whatsoever.”
“He never mentioned her.”
“He never brought up any woman, Lieutenant. I just assumed he was being himself.”
“Meaning?”
“Playing the field and keeping it casual.”
“Did he mention any women from his years on the road?”
“Not a one. The fifty thousand, you’re pretty convinced he was into something seriously illegal?”
“That’s a lot of cash, Ricki.” She grew silent.
Milo said, “A couple of other kids in Desi’s hiking group were also questioned after the fire: Dwayne Parris and Kathy Vanderveldt. Anything you remember about them?”
“I wouldn’t know them if you showed me a picture. I was three years older. To me they were all a bunch of stupid kids.”
“You mentioned before that Desi was into health. Did he ever mention vegan Jell-O?”
“Sure.”
“He did, huh?”
“Why?” said Ricki Flatt. “What does food have to do with it?”
“Vegan Jell-O’s homemade napalm, Ricki. It might’ve been used in the Bellevue fire.”
She went white. “Oh, my God.”
“What did Desi say about vegan Jell-O?”
“I… I don’t know, it’s just something I heard him mention. It’s really that?”
“Yes, Ricki.”
“I honestly thought it was food, some crazy organic thing.”
“Did he talk about it before the Bellevue fire or after?”
“Let me think, let me think… all I can recall is Desi and some friends in the kitchen, having a snack before… maybe before a hike-I think they were packing trail mix, water bottles, and then someone, maybe it was Desi, maybe it was someone else, I really don’t recall, said something why don’t we pack vegan Jell-O. And everyone started laughing.”
“Was Doreen there?”
“Was she there… probably. I can’t be sure, maybe not, I don’t know.” Wincing. “Vegan Jell-O… Now I have to think about my brother in a whole new way.”
CHAPTER 23
Milo closed the motel door on a fetal Ricki Flatt. “Sweet dreams? Unlikely.”
Back in the car, he said, “Those parents had to know their boy was involved in torching that house.”
I said, “Firefighter dad, too much to handle.”
“Backer does God-knows-what for ten years then decides to be an architect? What the hell’s that, I destroy, I build, the whole God thing?”
“Or a stab at atonement.”
“Fifty grand says he felt no guilt. Wonder if anything in San Luis got the vegan Jell-O treatment while Backer attended Cal Poly.”
“It’s Robin’s hometown, I’ll ask her.”
I instructed the voice-recognition system to “phone cutie.”
She said, “I’ve never heard of anything but I’ll ask Mom.”
Robin’s relationship with her mother is, to be kind, complicated. I said, “Selfless public service.”
She laughed. “If we keep it at serious crime, we’ll be fine.”
Milo said, “I’m in debt to you, kid.”
“Bring wine the next time I cook for you.”
“What did I give you the last time?”
“Orchid plant. Also lovely but don’t you want something you can share?”
“Find me a mansion arson in San Luis two to six years ago and I’ll bring you a case of the best Pinot I can find.”
“Back to you on that, Big Guy.”
She called back three minutes later: “Mom’s never heard of anything like that and neither has my friend Rosa, who’s lived there her entire life and knows everything. If you’d like, I can do a newspaper search.”
“I’d have to put you on regular payroll, kiddo.”
“Like you keep threatening to do with Alex?”
“Point taken,” he said. “Anyway, not necessary, I can push keys.”
“When’s my blue-eyed boy coming home?”
“Right now, if you want him.”
“I always want him, but don’t let me hinder your investigation.”
“If only there was one.”
“That bad?”
“Hey,” he said, “we’re walking, talking, breathing, I’m grateful.” Robin said, “I don’t like that kind of talk from you.”
“I shouldn’t get philosophical?”
“Not on my watch.”
Milo lapsed into that same morose silence. Back at his office, he flung his jacket atop a file cabinet and began the search for mansion arsons throughout the state. Any eco torch-jobs.
Long list. “Quite a few big houses went up during that time frame-here’s an entire luxury housing project in Colorado… animal research lab-that one was high school kids who got stopped early.” Wheeling away from the screen. “It’s all over the country, Alex, but if there’s a pattern, I’m not seeing it. And if Backer was a pro, you’d think something remotely incendiary would show up in his apartment. But the bomb dogs found zilch. Meaning (a) Backer was an architect, nothing more; (b) He did like playing with fire but put off buying his equipment until shortly before the gig; or (c) He kept a storage locker full of combustible goodies. And please don’t remind me about none of the above.”
Sean Binchy rang in from Lancaster. “Hey, Loot, those two thieving brothers are alibied clean for Borodi. Though, if you ask me, they’re still up to no good, there was a truck without tags in their driveway, they definitely didn’t want me looking at it closely. What next?”
“Go home.”
“Just forget about the truck?”
“Notify the locals and call it a day. Regards to your wife.”
“Absolutely,” said Binchy. “I’m sure she sends them back.”
Milo said, “Can’t you just see me explaining this to the brass: revenge by sutma interruptus. Assuming there ever was a murdered Swedish girl. Assuming someone cared enough about her to burn down the house. Assuming Backer and Fredd were involved and dallied around before trying to blow the place up and got offed before they could follow through.”
I said, “If there was a Swedish girl and someone cared enough to avenge her, they might’ve also contacted the Swedish consulate about her being missing.”
He looked up the local number, had a civilized chat with a man named Lars Gustafson, who had no personal knowledge of any Swedish citizen in jeopardy two to three years ago but promised to check.
Milo phoned Moe Reed. “Find that Indonesian girl?”
“Just about to call you, Loo. I was there when they closed up but she wasn’t at work today. Hope talking to me didn’t spook her because I didn’t get a name or an address. Stupid, huh? I was trying to keep her mellow.”
“Judgment call, Moe, don’t get an ulcer.”
“I’ll be there tomorrow before they open up. Need anything else?”
“Go home.”
“Sure, there’s nothing I can do?”
“Get some sleep in case there is, Moses.”
He hung up, sighing.
I said, “What a good dad.”
Grumbling, he logged onto an online yellow pages, searched for storage facilities in L.A. County. A minority refused to divulge client information but most were surprisingly cooperative.
Call after call his torso sagged with each negative. The sum totaclass="underline" no units registered to Desmond Backer. Milo’s eyes closed. His breathing slowed, grew shallow, his big head flopped back in the chair, and his arms dangled.