“Keep going to the top.”
I checked out the neighborhood. Houses to the right, dry embankment to the left. Draped with cactus, of all things. Between the homes was an eastern view that would have been stunning but for a saucer-shaped suspension of airborne filth hovering over the skyline.
“All the way up,” she repeated, sounding impatient. “Right here- okay, now turn left over there- that's Rondo Vista. I'm a block up- pull in right here.”
The Karmann Ghia came to rest on a cracked cement pad. It could have been any L.A. hilltop neighborhood, silent, hot, precarious, houses of all sizes and designs, unevenly tended.
Facing the pad was a closed double garage, next to that, a flat-roofed white box with blue wood trim in need of touch-up. Leading to the blue door was a short walkway topped with corrugated fiberglass panels and lined with hanging spider plants, most of them dead. Pink geraniums in a window box set on the ground weren't doing well, either. A rusting hibachi sat near the front steps, leaking orange onto the cement.
“Ma maison,” she said. “French is the language of physicality.”
She kissed my cheek, waited for me to open the passenger door, then jumped out and marched ahead, as she had in the restaurant, bare arms swinging, narrow hips swaying, pink heels clacking.
She got to the door when I was ten feet behind and opened it. Then she stopped, stared inside, gave a small wave- greeting someone- and closed it.
“Merde, Andrew. We are stymied.”
“What's going on?”
She touched my face gently. “Tsk-tsk, the poor lad is suffused with lust and nowhere to spend… Guests, Andrew. Friends staying over. They were supposed to be gone all day, they've changed their plans. Le grand dragorama, but such is our reality.”
I frowned. “So much for spontaneity.”
“So soddy, my dear.”
I kept the frown going. She put a finger to her lip and looked at her watch.
“I suppose,” she said, glancing at the garage, “I could take you in there and give you a nice quick suck… but, such a shame to reduce our first collision to that- where's your place?”
“The Fairfax district.”
She studied me. “A taste for bagels?”
“A taste for cheap.”
“Do you live alone- of course you do- but, no, it would take too long to get all the way to Semite-town and back, and I really must return to the shop.”
The shop. As if she were selling dainty things.
I said, “Great.”
She stood higher and pulled me down at the same time. Kissed my nose.
“Oh, Andrew, I've done you wrong. Obviously, it just wasn't meant to be. Thanks for lunch.”
“My pleasure.”
“Was it?”
Another kiss, softer, on my chin.
“Yes,” I said. “Very much so.”
“That's nice, Andrew. You're being so gallant about this- look at us, standing here being so civil. Aren't we both being wonderfully decent?”
I laughed and she joined in.
“I tell you, dear,” she said, placing a hand on my chest. “If the erotic moment hadn't passed, I would have dragged you into the garage, laid you across my friends' car, and sucked you to the root. Alas.”
I drove her back to the store and this time she opened the door herself and jumped out.
“Bye, Andrew,” she said, through the open window.
“Shall we meet again?”
“Shall we, shan't we… that depends upon whether or not you'll settle for less than all of me.”
“Meaning?”
“Meaning, in the very immediate future all I can offer you is social contact, dear. Meaning, the closest you'll get to my precious parts might be a surreptitious grab punctuating the chitchat.”
“Chitchat with your houseguests?”
“And others.” She gave a happy-kid grin. “I've scheduled a soiree, Andrew. Tomorrow night. Cocktails at nine o'clock, casual dress. And you are now invited.”
“What's the occasion?”
“No occasion, Andrew. A carpe-diem kind of thing- good fellowship and social intercourse. Fun. Surely you remember fun?”
“With the top one-third of a percent? Are you sure I qualify?”
“Oh, Andrew, is this all too diffuse for you?”
“Diffuse?”
“Sharing me, after we've worked ourselves up.”
She squeezed her small torso farther into the car window and put my hand on her left breast. Pressing down so I squeezed. The mound was unfettered, small, very soft, the nipple a weapon piercing my palm.
“I suppose I'll have to take what I can get, Z.”
She took the hand, flung it off. “Why doesn't that surprise me? Nine tomorrow. Bye-bye, A.”
48
“The old charm works its wonders,” said Milo, stretching in the car. Not the unmarked. A brown Honda I'd never seen before.
Pine boughs darkened the car's interior. He'd pulled up next to me at Sunset and San Vicente and told me to follow him.
The place he chose was in Beverly Hills, the alley behind Roxbury Park's western border. Lots of toddlers and mothers and nannies, the ice-cream man playing his jingle while dispensing popsicles and drumsticks, plenty of parked cars, no reason to notice ours.
“If I needed an ego boost, this wouldn't be it,” I said. “She's beyond aggressive.”
“Aw, don't sell yourself short… Little Miss Sex Pistol, huh?”
“Both guns blazing. Ponsico must have been a trout in a bathtub. It's a good bet it was him she meant when she talked about brains without spine. The DVLL murders probably originated at a Meta meeting- maybe not the whole group, just a splinter. The scenario I like is that Ponsico was enthusiastic in theory but when it came to action, he got cold feet and disappointed her and her friends. Some of whom are staying over, will probably be at the party tomorrow night. Add Sanger's trip tomorrow and it smells like a big night for Meta. And Andrew's invited.”
He frowned.
“What's wrong?”
“I worry when things go too well.”
“Don't you think we're finally due for some good luck on this one?”
“I suppose.”
“There's no way she'd suspect anything, Milo. The time we spent together was divided between intellectual pretentiousness and sex talk. The sex came from her. I played Morose Andrew as hard as I could without turning her off. At one point, I thought I'd gone too far.”
I described Zena's rage at perceived rejection. “Lots of talk about how wonderful she is, but at the core she's fragile.”
“Fragile?” he said. “Or just a rotten temper?”
“The two often go together. The point is, for all her posturing about being brilliant and sexy and slender and peppy, she lives in a shabby house and runs a bookstore with very few customers. The whole femme-fatale bit had a pathetic edge to it, Milo. It didn't take much to touch a nerve. She also called high school a “crucible of cruelty,' meaning she probably hadn't been Miss Popular Cheerleader. She was so upset when I moved her hand away, it actually blemished her face. That kind of volatility could have spelled bad news for Ponsico. Other people, too.”
“Now you're saying Ponsico was killed because he offended her personally? I thought it was because he betrayed Meta.”
“Maybe it was both,” I said. “Someone like Zena might not separate the two. One thing's for certain: She's a eugenics fan. My buying the books is what caught her attention and it didn't take long before she offered her views on the elite and the masses.”
My two purchases were on the dashboard. He'd thumbed through them.
“Mr. Galton and Mr. Neo-Galton,” he said. “Nasty stuff.”
“Nasty store.”
“Speaking of which, we can't find any business partners. Sharavi managed to trace her parents. Lancaster. Mother's dead and her father's a groundskeeper at Santa Anita racetrack, has a drinking problem. No trust fund.”