Sanctuary
Faye Kellerman
The sixth book in the hugely popular Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus series from New York Times bestselling author Faye KellermanA diamond dealer and his entire family have mysteriously disappeared from their sprawling Las Angeles manor, leaving the estate undisturbed and their valuables untouched. Investigating detective Decker is stumped, faced with a perplexing case riddled with dead ends. Then a second dealer is found murdered in Manhattan, catapulting Decker and his wife, Rina, into a heart-stopping maze of murder and intrigue that spans the globe … only to touch down dangerously in their own backyard.
Faye Kellerman
Sanctuary
As always, with love and gratitude to my family.
And a special thanks to Eli Benaron and Yehoshua Grossgold for giving me a wealth of information and for being such terrific tour guides.
Contents
Cover (#u5bafd67e-6b92-5f53-bc50-2bb571d1d2bc)
Title Page (#uf1cccb59-a82a-5261-8dc8-08c4a48b9d6e)
Dedication (#uff5eec8d-187a-57cd-8256-4e41f42d286b)
Part 1: America
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Part 2: Israel
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Part 3: America
Chapter 39
About the Author
Also by Faye Kellerman
Predator (#litres_trial_promo)
Copyright
About the Publisher
PART 1
1
The call was a surprise; the reason behind it even more so. Though Rina had known Honey Klein née Hersh for years—the two girls had been classmates—she had never considered her a close friend. Their small Orthodox high school had had a student body of eighty-seven at the time of Rina’s graduation: twenty-two seniors—twelve boys, ten girls. Rina had been friendly with all the girls. But as the years passed, the two women had crossed paths only sporadically; the chance meetings had held nothing beyond pleasantries. Honey had married young to an ultra-religious Chasidic diamond dealer. She had four kids. She seemed happy.
So when Honey asked if she and the kids might spend a week with Rina and her family in Los Angeles, Rina thought it strange. Her first thoughts were: Why me and why here?
Peter’s ranch was located in the rural portion of the San Fernando Valley. The environs had wide streets and big commercial plots roomy enough for storage centers, wholesalers, and warehouses. Sure, the newer residential neighborhoods sprouted tract homes and apartment buildings, but there were still many ranches large enough to stable horses and livestock—parcels similar to Peter’s homestead, her homestead now. The area was LA’s last refuge of undeveloped scrubland, most of it hugging the timbered foothills of Angeles Crest National Park.
Rina knew Honey had closer friends residing in the heart of the Jewish communities—in the Fairfax area, Hancock Park, or the newer westside area of Beverlywood. Honey had girlfriends who owned homes within walking distance of the Orthodox synagogues, of the kosher restaurants and bakeries. No one deeply religious stayed at the Deckers’ ranch because it was so isolated. But when Rina had mentioned the geography over the phone, Honey had brushed it off.
“So it’s a little off the beaten track,” Honey stated. “I figured it’s about time I let the kids see the other side.”
“The other side?” Rina asked.
“You know … how the other half lives.”
“This isn’t exactly a den of iniquity, Honey. I still cover my hair.”
“No, no!” Honey protested. “I didn’t mean that. I’m not criticizing you. Who am I to judge? By the other side, I meant the fun stuff—Universal Studios, Disneyland, Knott’s Berry Farm, Grauman’s Chinese Theater with the movie stars’ footprints. Is that old relic still around?”
“It’s called Mann’s Chinese Theater now,” Rina said. “You aren’t planning to take the kids to the movies?”
“No,” Honey said. “Just the outside of the building. And the sidewalks with the stars in them. They’re still around, right?”
“Yes.”
“No, we’re definitely not going to the movies,” Honey said, quickly. “It would be too much for them. We don’t have televisions here. We don’t even have phones in the village. Well, that’s not true. There are phones in the produce store, the butcher shop, and the bakery. For emergencies. But we don’t have phones in the houses.”
Rina knew lots of religious people who didn’t own television sets or go to the movies. She knew plenty of Orthodox adults who shied away from popular fiction and magazines like Time and Newsweek. The stories were too lurid, the pictures were prurient. But no phones in the houses was a first.
“Since when is it halachically forbidden to use a phone?” Rina stared at the receiver. “Aren’t you using one now?”
“I’m using the one at the bakery,” Honey said. “I know it sounds like every year some group is trying to outfrum the other. That another group goes to more and more extremes to shut out the outside world. But the Rebbe’s not trying to do that.”
The Rebbe, Rina thought quickly. Which Rebbe? Most people thought the Chasidim were one cohesive group. In fact, there were many Chasidic sects, each one interpreting the philosophy of the Ba’al Shem Tov a little bit differently.
“I’m sure you have your reasons, Honey. I don’t mean to sound disparaging. Goodness knows most people think me strange, being as religious as I am. And poor Peter. The guys at the station house think he’s gone nuts. Like you said, who am I to judge?”
“You have to understand the Leibben philosophy,” Honey said. “Modern machines drive wedges between people.”
Leibben, Rina thought. That’s right. Honey had married a Leibbener Chasid.
“Once you get used to not using a phone, it really is very nice,” Honey explained. “We take walks in the park and schmooze. We have lots of afternoon get-togethers … tea parties. It’s kind of … quaint.” Honey giggled. Rina remembered it as one of the nervous mannerisms Honey had developed after her mother died. “Anyway, if putting us up is too much for you …”
“I’d love to see you, Honey, if I can arrange it. Things are a little hectic since the baby’s—”
“You had a baby?” Honey gasped. “That’s so exciting! When?”
“Hannah’s nine months old.”
“Oh, Rina, how wonderful! You finally got your little girl! You must be thrilled!”
“I’m very lucky.” Rina noticed her voice had dropped to a whisper. The birth had gone smoothly but there were complications afterward. Hannah would be Rina’s last baby and not by choice. There was a long pause. Honey asked her if everything was okay.
“Just fine.” Rina tried to sound chipper. A strain since chipper wasn’t part of her normal vocabulary.
Honey picked up the slack. “So the boys must be big by now … teenagers.”
“Fourteen and eleven.”
“Isn’t adolescence so difficult?”
Actually, Rina found the boys easier the older they got. But she answered, “It can be trying.”
“Mendel’s turned into a very quiet boy. He’s lovely, but I can never tell what he’s thinking. And Minda is so moody. Everything I say, she jumps down my throat. We all really need this vacation. So you think you can put us up?”
“I’m pretty sure I can, but I have to check with Peter.” Rina paused. “Not that it’s any of my business, Honey, but Gershon doesn’t mind doing worldly things like going to Disneyland?”
Honey didn’t answer. There was background chatter over the line.
“Hello?” Rina asked.
“Sorry, I was distracted,” Honey said. “Gershon’s not coming. He’s in Israel. Didn’t I mention that?”
It was Rina’s turn to pause. “I don’t remember. Does he know of your plans to take them to Disneyland?”
“He didn’t ask and I didn’t say. All he knows is that I’m going back to Los Angeles to visit some old friends.”
“Very old,” Rina answered dryly.
“We’re not exactly ready for the glue factory,” Honey said. “Though sometimes it feels that way. Rina, it’s been wonderful talking to you. Thanks so much for everything. And if it’s too much trouble—”
“Not at all,” Rina said. “I’ll ask Peter and call you back.”
“Great. I’ll give you the bakery’s phone number. Just leave a message that you called and I’ll ring you back.”
Honey gave her the number. Rina wrote it down.
“When exactly are you planning to come out, Honey?”
“Soon. In two days.”
“Two days?” Decker looked at his wife. “She didn’t give you much notice, did she?”
Rina spooned yogurt into Hannah’s mouth. “Not a lot.”
Decker sipped his coffee, then took a bite of his turkey sandwich. Watching Rina feed their daughter, he was grateful for the peaceful interlude. His new assignment at the Devonshire station took him farther from the ranch each morning. But work was still close enough to steal an occasional lunch at home. He sat contentedly, smiling as Hannah smeared coffee-colored goop over her mouth … Rina was trying to keep her tidy but it was a losing battle—baby one, parent zero.
Decker’s eyes swept over the cherrywood dining table. Crafted in his bachelor days, it was too small for the family, the surface scratched and gouged. But Rina could be hopelessly sentimental. She refused to part with his handiwork.
“Who is this Honey lady anyhow?” Decker said. “I never heard you mention her name before.”
“That’s because we weren’t close.”
Decker finished half his sandwich. “So what’s she looking for? A free hotel?”
Rina wiped Hannah’s mouth. “I think there’s more to it than that.”
“Such as?”
“Such as why didn’t she call Evie Miller? She and Evie were as thick as thieves. If I were Evie, I’d be hurt.”
Hannah sprayed a mouthful of yogurt in Rina’s direction. Without pausing, she threw back her head and chortled with delight.
“Very funny,” Rina said. But she was smiling herself. “How come I can’t get angry with you, Channelah?”
“Because I’m too cute, Mommie,” Decker answered.
Once again, Rina tried feeding Hannah, but the baby grabbed the spoon and started to bang it on her high chair tray. Rina leaned back in her chair. “I don’t know why she didn’t call Evie.”
“Maybe she did. Maybe Evie doesn’t want her. The woman sounds a little odd.”
“I wouldn’t exactly say she was odd—”
“She doesn’t own a telephone?”
“It’s part of the ethos of the village.”
“The village?” Decker shook his head. “What’s wrong with living in a city or at least a town? Since when is upstate New York sixteenth-century Poland?”
“It’s a psychological thing, Peter. Blocking out the outside world. Less distraction. Easier to learn Torah.”
“They sure don’t mind asking for money from the outside world.”
“Everyone has to live, including scholars.”
“It’s possible to work and learn. I don’t believe in welfare for able bodies, Jews included.”
“The Leibben Chasidim are extreme,” Rina admitted. “Their Rebbe has some very odd ideas about kabbalah and how it relates to the messiah and afterlife. It’s considered very way out, not at all accepted belief.”
“Was Honey always fanatically religious?”
“Not at all. She grew up like me. Modern Orthodox. She had a big crush on John Travolta. I think she saw Saturday Night Fever ten times.”
Decker finished his sandwich and didn’t say anything. Rina poured a half-dozen Cheerios on Hannah’s high chair tray. The little girl dropped the spoon, stared at the O’s, then carefully pinched one between her forefinger and thumb, successfully navigating it to her mouth.
Rina wiped the baby’s plastic bib. “You’ve got the cop look in your eyes, Peter. What is it?”
“What do you think she’s really after?” Decker asked.
“An escape,” Rina said. “But so what? You know how stultifying the religion can be at times.”
“Really now?”
Decker was impassive. Rina hit his good shoulder—the one without the bullet wound. “Why shouldn’t Honey have an opportunity to cut loose?”
“You up for entertaining her?”
“Actually, Peter, I think it would be nice to have a little company. Someone to reminisce with.”
Decker smiled to himself. Could someone as young as Rina actually reminisce? Because she was young—twelve years younger than he was. Something Decker didn’t like to think about.
Rina liberated Hannah from the high chair and gave her to Decker. “So what should I tell Honey? Should I give her the okay to come out?”
“It’s up to you, darlin’. It’s okay by me.”
Decker bounced Hannah on his knee. She was a good-sized baby—tall and long-limbed with red hair and pale skin just like him. But feature for feature, she looked like Rina, thank God. The baby gave him a drooling grin of six teeth, tiny fingers going straight for the mustache. With little hands on his mouth, Decker rotated his mustache to his daughter’s glee.
He said, “I’m just wondering how you get from John Travolta to no phones.”
“How’d you get from being a Southern Baptist to an Orthodox Jew, Peter—a much bigger transition. Life’s just full of little mysteries.”
“I was running toward something, Rina. Mark my words. This woman’s running away from something.”
“Agreed. So let her run here and I’ll find out what it is.”
2
Nine months later and Decker still couldn’t turn off the autopilot. Whenever he pulled out of his driveway, the unmarked strained to go east instead of west. He’d left behind a decade of memories at the Foothill substation—most of them good, some bad, and one overzealous chase-turned-political nightmare that would haunt the city for years to come. He had made few friends and missed few people. But habit was habit, and at times he felt nostalgic for the old country.
Exiting the 118, he made a quick series of turns until he was riding west on Devonshire. At this point, the wide, pine-lined boulevard was bordered by rows of small wood-sided ranch houses resting on patches of pale winter lawn. The driveways played host to older-model compacts and trucks as well as bikes and trikes. Most of the homes had attached two-car garages, ubiquitous mounted basketball hoops hanging above the parking structures.
Anywhere USA. The only hint of Southern California was the full-sized orange trees towering over the houses they framed. The street even held a couple of citrus groves—remnants of LA’s long-gone agricultural days.
Decker lowered the sun visor in the car, cutting the glare, and slipped on a pair of shades. He thought about his new job.
The transition had been easier than expected because Marge had come with him. Originally, Homicide at Devonshire had only one vacant slot. But with a little savvy, Decker had managed to stretch a single into a double. Given the profound need for LAPD to liberalize, the brass was quick to pick up on his drift. Yes, the carefully calculated decision to place Detective Dunn—i.e., Detective Dunn, the woman—in Homicide detail was politically correct. Still, the promotion had been just. Marge had the requisite experience, a keen mind, and lots of patience—a great combination for a murder investigator.
Cranking open the car window, Decker inhaled clean air, enjoying the smogless blue skies common during the cooler months. As he traveled west, the houses gave way to bigger buildings—apartment houses, factory showrooms, a medical plaza, and the ever-present shopping centers. Traffic was light, the area surrounded by foothills made green and lush from the recent rains. The mountains were the boundaries of LA City—to the north was the Santa Clarita Valley, to the west Simi Valley. Most of the hillside areas were still undeveloped plots or regional parkland, giving the San Fernando Valley plenty of breathing room.
Decker thought about his partner.
It was Marge’s first time in Homicide and she was chomping at the bit for a real case. All they’d gotten so far were two gang-related retaliations, a half dozen Saturday night party-hearty shootings, and some irate spouses with problem ’tudes toward their adulterous mates. Messiness with no brainwork.
But thems what it is.
Even if the cases were “routine,” it didn’t mean the victims were any less dead. Marge had treated each assignment with impeccable sensitivity. But having spent some six professional years with the woman, Decker knew she wanted serious cerebral exercise. She wanted to prove herself.
Marge was around Rina’s age—old enough to know the ropes but still full of the fire of youth. Marge was standing on the threshold of opportunity and was bursting to take a giant step forward.
They had been on Homicide detail for less than a year.
Time was on her side.
Living in California earthquake country, Decker couldn’t figure out why Devonshire, like most of LAPD’s station houses, was made out of bricks. Maybe the architect wanted to impress upon the bad guys that the station was wolf-blowing durable and could double as a jail in a pinch. Or maybe the city had a sweetheart contract with a brickyard. Whatever the reason, Devonshire was like the rest of LA’s station houses—a windowless masonry building adorned by an American flag. Except that this substation had the unique pleasure of being located next to power transmitters. Yes, a policeman’s job was a dangerous one, but up to now, leukemia hadn’t been a real concern.
What the hell. So he’d glow in the dark.
He drove the Plymouth to the back lot restricted to “authorized personnel only,” then saw Marge stalking through the parking area. She wore an olive car coat over khaki slacks, her arms folded across her chest. Her face, normally softened by doelike eyes, was stiff with tension. Decker honked, Marge looked up. Immediately, she shifted direction, tramped over to the Plymouth, and plopped down in the passenger’s seat.
“Know what that Davidson asshole did?”
“What?”
“God, I hate that man. He treats me like a peon. While I realize I am a peon in this upper echelon of the boys’ brigade, you’d at least think he could fake it better.”
“Are we talking in the car for a reason?”
Marge extracted a slip of paper from her purse. “I’ve got to go calm down a hysterical woman who thinks Martians kidnapped her brother and his family. Believe it or not, Davidson has classified this as a possible homicide. You want to come with me?”
“What’s the address?”
Marge handed him the paper. Decker looked at the numbers—Mountain View Estates. He did a three-point turn and pulled out of the lot.
“He gives me nothing but bullshit assignments, Pete,” Marge went on. “He doesn’t even try to hide it. He knows they’re bullshit! He wants me to know they’re bullshit, too! You know how he phrased this little jaunt? ‘Get this lady off our backs, Dunn. If something important comes up, I’ll contact Pete and he’ll fill you in.’ Can you believe that jerk? Not even a pretense.”
“Diplomacy isn’t the Loo’s strong suit.”
“The guy has a hard-on for me.”
“Yes, he does.”
Marge did a double-take. “He does?”
“Yep.” Decker turned west onto Devonshire. “Your appointment was shoved down his throat. He’s resentful. But that’s his problem.”
“But I gotta live with it.”
“So live with it.”
“That’s your answer? Live with it?”
“Yep.” Decker headed toward the foothills. “What’s this assignment all about?”
Marge’s jaw began to ache. She forcibly relaxed her mandible. “Just what I said. We gotta make nice to some woman who’s wondering why she hasn’t heard from her brother.”
“How long has it been?”
“I don’t know. At least twenty-four hours. The blues were out there yesterday. At the brother’s house. No one was home but everything looked fine. Apparently that wasn’t good enough. The lady’s been calling nonstop, demanding some detectives.”
“Has she filed a Missing Persons?”
“I don’t think so. It sounds like she wants reassurance more than anything. Someone to look around the house again and convince her that nothing terrible has happened.”
“What kind of family are we talking about?”
“Uh … wait a sec.” Marge pulled out her notebook. “An Officer Mike Gerard interviewed her. Family consists of a mother, father, and two kids—boys. Teenagers specifically. My first thought was an impulsive vacation. But according to Gerard, the woman said no way.”
“That makes sense,” Decker said. “It’s in the middle of the school year. Weird time to take a vacation.”
“Or a great time,” Marge stated. “Beat the crowds. I haven’t talked to the woman directly. She’s been persistent with the calls, a real pain in the ass.”
“What’s her name?”
“Orit Bar Lulu. Bar Lulu is two words.”
“She’s Israeli?”
“You got it. She’s also a real estate agent.”
Decker said, “Why does she think something happened to her brother and his family?”
“I don’t know,” Marge said. “Davidson dismissed me without many details. What do you mean, I should ‘live with it.’ Don’t you think I should say anything?”
“You can do what you want. It’s a free country.”
“You think I should just shut up and do nothing?”
“Let your work talk for you. You’re a great detective, Marge. Eventually, you’ll get a case that’ll show off your balls. When you earn your stripes with Davidson, eventually he’ll leave you be.”
“So the best I can hope for is a grudging acceptance?”
“I don’t know Davidson any better than you do. Maybe he’ll continue to be an asshole. Maybe he’ll come around and turn out to be okay.”
“And in the meantime?”
“In the meantime, we do our job. Which means you’ve got to go out there and calm down a hysterical woman. Take my word for it, Margie. The assignment is no cakewalk.”
Mountain View Estates was a fifty-home development tucked into the Santa Susana pass, replete with communal tennis courts, pools, spas, and a gymnasium for homeowner exercise in inclement weather. Built in the profligate eighties, the customized tract houses, standing on third-of-an-acre lots, started at half a mil. Some of the houses had been originally priced upward of seven figures. But then the nineties hit, and with it a crash in California real estate prices. Decker had known a fair share of people who’d gotten into trouble by overextending themselves. With a sudden downturn in income coupled with a heavy mortgage, people were often forced to sell their bits of paradise at rock-bottom prices.
The given address put them curbside to a mock Tudor roofed in genuine slate and faced with used brick and cross-hatched beams painted deep brown. The lawn was a rolling emerald wave breaking onto a shore of leafy ferns and leggy impatiens that would rebloom when the weather got warmer. The front door was wood-paneled and inlaid with stained glass. Decker parked the Plymouth, and he and Marge got out of the car. They began walking up the basketweave-brick pathway that led to the entrance.
Guarding the manor was a skinny woman with short black hair snipped close to the scalp. She wore a jewel-studded, oversized black T-shirt, black spandex leggings and backless heeled shoes, toenails polished fire-engine red just like her dragon-long fingernails. She had dark eyes and a dark complexion, her cheeks accented with blush. Half-dollar-sized gold earrings hung from her lobes. Decker wondered how a thin fold of skin could tolerate such weight. Her eyes became alive when she saw help had arrived. She tapped her watch.
“Finally!” She began rummaging through a floppy handbag as big as a carry-on suitcase. “You want me to open the door for you? I don’t want to go in the house again. To see it so empty … lifeless.” Her voice faded. “You just tell me everything’s okay, I leave you alone.”
She spoke with a heavy accent.
Marge looked at Decker. The woman suddenly became pale. “You’re the police, no?”
Marge took out her ID. “Yes, ma’am, we are the police.”
“Orit, please. This is my brother’s house. I haven’t heard from him in going on two days.”
“What makes you think something’s wrong?” Marge asked. “Maybe he went on vacation.”
“Impossible,” Orit stated. “Dalia works at my office; she didn’t say anything. The boys are in the middle of school. The school knows nothing. Besides, I come here yesterday. They are still getting the paper and their mail.” She craned her neck to look up at Decker. “My brother’s a diamond dealer. He deals in big stones and lots of cash. It’s hard times. People do funny things. You never know. I’m worried about my brother.”
Marge and Decker exchanged glances, then pulled out their notebooks. Marge said, “You think your brother might have been involved in something … illegal?”
Orit bristled. “Impossible. My family has been in the diamond business for over a hundred years. Our family name is Yalom, which means diamond. My father taught us to cut diamonds before we could read. Arik wouldn’t do shady business. But there are others who are maybe not honest.”
“Are you thinking about anyone specifically?” Decker said.
Orit bit a red bottom lip. “No. No one particular. You go in, okay?”
Marge said, “The officers who were out here yesterday said everything looked fine.”
Orit waved her hand in the air. “I didn’t like them—their attitudes. They looked unhappy to help me. Like why is this crazy foreigner wasting our time.”
“I’m sure that wasn’t the case,” Marge said.
She shrugged. “Fine. You can think what you want.”
“Did you tell the officers that your brother’s a diamond dealer?” Decker asked.
“No. Why should I give personal information to people who sneer at me? You two at least take out notebooks and look like you’re listening. You pretend good.”
Decker smiled. “We’re not pretending. We’re here to serve the community. When was the last time you heard from your brother?”
Orit said, “Two days ago. I called police yesterday, then again today. I don’t like this. I’m nervous.”
“Place seems pretty quiet,” Marge said. “Family have any pets?”
“No. Arik doesn’t like animals.” Orit sighed. “Maybe I’m over-acting. But this is crazy. Arik wouldn’t leave without telling me. Dalia wouldn’t leave without telling me. And the boys? Where are the boys? Why would they pull them out in the middle of the term and not tell me—even for a few days?”
“Do they go to the local high school?” Marge said.
“Yes. My daughter is in the same class as Dov. Gil is a grade older.”
“Have you asked your daughter about her cousins?” Marge asked.
“Yes, of course, what you think?” Orit shook her head. “She knows nothing. Something’s wrong.”
Decker slipped his notebook into his suit jacket, then ran his hand through ginger hair. “Do you want to open the door for us?”
Again, Orit began hunting through her purse. “Yes. I can wait out here?”
Marge said, “You can wait out here.”
Orit pulled a key from her valise. “Ah, here it is.” She snapped open the dead bolt and pushed the door wide open. “Take your time and look around.” She gave them a wan smile. “Please, tell me I am hysteria. Tell me I’m wrong.”
3
The first thing Marge noticed was how cold it was inside. Lots of stone and marble—elegant but not friendly. Footsteps echoed as she and Decker ambled around the massive two-story entry. The house appeared to be a center-hall plan—living room to the right, dining room to the left, and straight back was the family room. She stopped and peered upward at a coffered ceiling fifteen feet away.
“Pretty nifty spread. Guess diamonds are recession proof.”
“Guess so.”
“What do you think about Ms. Bar Lulu?” Marge asked.
“She made me curious.”
“Me, too,” Marge said. “Think she knows more than she’s letting on?”
“Maybe.” Decker looked around. The place was massive, made even a person as big as he was feel small. First thing Decker noticed was an ornate, oversized mezuzah on the doorframe—a sterling-silver sculpture of vines and grape leaves and fruit. In his house, it would have looked grossly out of place. But here, it added to the splendor. Yet something about it disturbed Decker. He shrugged the feeling off.
“I’ll take the downstairs, you take the upper story … stories. I thought I saw some dormer windows. Could be just a storage attic.”
“Or a place to stuff bodies,” Marge said. “I’ll holler if I notice something.”
“Ditto.”
Marge disappeared. Sketching the floor plan, Decker took in the entry area. It was big enough to be furnished—a large center table holding abstract scuplture, flanked by a couple of brocade wing chairs. Two open-shelf display cases sat against opposite walls. The one on the left, announcing the dining room, contained china plates on stands. The right sidewall held figurines and a bowl.
Decker studied the pieces in the case on the right wall. There were two multicolored porcelain fighting dogs, a set of cloisonné parrots, a set of aqua vases decorated with fire-breathing dragons, and a simple green bowl with a cracked glaze that probably cost a month’s salary.
He stared at the pieces, eyeing them longer than he should have. The dogs were standing in a perfect line, the bright-colored glazes running into one another. The bowl was obviously the centerpiece of the cabinet. It took up a shelf by itself. The parrots looked very old; the blue enamel was dulled and drab. The vases were shaped like a thermometer bulb, dragons snarling as they encircled the bases and curled up the stems.
Interesting pieces, yet, again, something about them was off kilter. The house was taking on the appearance of an Escher drawing—lots of steps leading nowhere. He exhaled forcibly, then shrugged it off and moved on. He walked through an arched doorway and stepped into the living room.
It was more a museum than a room in a house—cavernous, with a vaulted ceiling and a white marble floor covered at strategic spots with lush, floral area rugs. Artwork adorned apricot-colored walls that were topped with carved crown molding. The furniture was grand—giant sectional sofas holding tapestry pillows and throw covers. Lots of tables but no lamps on them. Decker looked up. Small, recessed lights were set into ceiling molding.
He began to jot down some notes.
Lots and lots of porcelain—vases and figurines sitting on tables, resting on the mantel and in a six-foot-long mirrored display cabinet. An expensive collection, yet the pieces didn’t appear to be affixed to the surfaces. He wondered if the Yaloms had earthquake insurance.
He went on.
There was a semicircular outpouching off the living room. Decker stepped inside, turning on the light switch with a latex glove. A high-gloss wood-paneled space filled with books. The library. Neat … clean … nothing seemed out of order.
He reversed directions to examine the other side of the first floor. The dining room was designed on the same large scale as the living room. One entire wall was taken up by a breakfront that sparkled with china and crystal. Another wall was the backdrop for an antique clock.
Yalom seemed well-heeled. Once, Decker would have assumed the man rich. But the last decade’s pernicious policy of spend-now, pay-later made it hard to tell. Decker wondered how many of the items had been bought and paid for. He walked through the butler’s pantry and into the kitchen.
It was bigger than Marge’s apartment—a sterile expanse with white lacquer cabinets and dark granite counters. A booth was tucked into the corner. He ran a gloved finger over the surfaces. They seemed clean, at least devoid of blood.
Women are murdered in the bedroom, men in the kitchen.
Decker opened the cutlery and utensil drawers. Nothing seemed to be missing, the carving knives seemed to be complete.
Decker continued to open the kitchen cabinets. The couple was obviously Jewish, but they didn’t appear to keep kosher. Decker found only one set of everyday dishes and one set of fancy china. He turned the plate over. Limoges—tref Limoges. For some stupid reason, he was bothered by Israelis not keeping the dietary laws, especially since they had a grandiose mezuzah in the entry hall.
He thought a moment, then looked at the kitchen doorframe. No mezuzah. That wasn’t unusual. Only Orthodox homes seem to have mezuzahs on every doorframe.
Onward—through the kitchen into a utility bathroom and a service porch. The door leading out to the backyard was locked. He flipped the bolt and scanned the rear portion of the property. Most of it was taken up by pool and patio. A long strip of flowers against a stucco wall marked the end of the property. It didn’t look large enough to bury bodies, but he’d check it out later.
Back inside into the family room. Like the library, it was wood-paneled. But the room was lighter, the walls’ picture frames fashioned from blond, burled maple. The furniture was casual, but expensive. There was a large leather sectional littered with patterned pillows and woolen throws; off to the side were suede game chairs around a green felt-top table. One wall was taken up by a floor-to-ceiling fireplace; opposite the hearth was a mirrored wet bar. The mirrored shelves held cut-glass crystal and a modern glass-sculptured menorah. Decker had to look twice but that’s what it was. The two remaining walls were hung with family photos. Decker took a closer look at the snapshots.
The Yalom boys as babies, as toddlers, then as bar mitzvahs holding the Torah, with their prayer shawls draped over their shoulders. They were still prepubescent in the religious photos. A year later—in graduation pictures from junior high—the boys showed progression toward adolescence. The most recent pictures captured the boys doing sports—basketball and soccer for one, swimming for the other.
From Orit, Decker knew the boys were a year apart. But it was damn near impossible to tell which one was the elder from the photos. After studying the pictures for the longest time, he came to the conclusion that Gil was the swimmer—he had a small mole under his eye. Dov, according to Orit, was a year younger.
Handsome kids—muscular, with curly black hair and dark eyes. They looked like their dad. There were several family photos—a few formal eight by tens and one casual eleven by seventeen group picture. Dad and the boys were standing, dressed in T-shirts and denim. Seated in front of them was Mom, wearing a flowing, flowered dress and laced-up boots.
Mom.
She looked out of place—a different genetic strain, with light eyes, poker-straight auburn hair, and a peaches-and-cream complexion. Her expression was soft, the eyes seemed gentle. The body language of the photo showed the boys leaning toward her, not the father … whatever that meant. Kids usually felt closer to their mother.
He walked over to the wet bar and looked in the drawers. Inside were bottle openers, ice tongs and pick, glass stirrers, plastic toothpicks, and an ice pick. Lo and behold, it wasn’t covered in blood.
Decker tapped his pencil against his notebook. On a superficial level, everything seemed fine. He closed his notebook and went upstairs.
“Four bedrooms,” Marge said. “Parents’ room, guest room, and each of the boys had his own room.” She brushed her toe against the soft maroon carpeting of an upstairs circular landing. “The boys shared a bathroom; the master bath is a marble palace.” She threw up her hands. “I didn’t grid-search the place, but I looked carefully. Nothing jumped out at me. How about you?”
“Nothing slapped me across the face, either,” Decker said. “What about the attic?”
“Unfinished. Nothing up there except for furnace equipment. Did you take a peek under the house?”
“Just crawl space except for a small wine cellar which looked untouched.”
“No secret torture chamber?”
“Not that I could find.” Decker perused his notes. “The garage had all three cars in it. I also looked around the yard, in the pool house, in the flower bed. Nothing.”
“I did find a few pieces of luggage,” Marge said. “They don’t have a perfectly matched set. There could be a piece missing and I wouldn’t know. Clothes seem complete, but again—take a pair of pants out, who’d know the difference?”
“They’re going to make this hard on us,” Decker said. “I’ve got a couple of questions. This guy’s supposed to be a big diamond dealer, right?”
“Right,” Marge said. “You’re wondering if there is a safe. None that I could find. I looked in closets, behind pictures, underneath area rugs. I take it you came up dry as well. Otherwise you wouldn’t be asking the question.”
“What a pro,” Decker said. “No, I came up empty.”
“Nothing in the cellar?”
“Unless it’s behind all those collectible bottles. I didn’t pull them all out.”
“And I didn’t look behind the furnace in the attic,” Marge reported. “But I did check out the toilet tank—where druggies hide their stash. Nothing. Did you check the freezer?”
“Yep. There was food and ice—the H
O kind.”
“Why don’t we ask Sis about the safe? See what she has to say. What’s the next question, Rabbi?”
“The guest bedroom upstairs. I did a quick search inside. There were no clothes in the closet or in the dresser. The bathroom was spotless—no toothpaste mucking up the counter or sink. It was also decorated with guest towels, not regular towels.”
Marge was puzzled. “Guest towels generally go in the guest room.”
“That’s the point,” Decker said. “It is definitely a guest room.” He rolled his stiff, beefy shoulders. “There was no maid’s room downstairs, Margie. A house this big … think Mom cleans it by herself?”
Marge said, “So the maid isn’t a live-in. You want to know who she is.”
“It’s always good to take a look at the staff.”
Marge’s eyes lit up. “You’re thinking an inside job?”
“I’m just thinking out loud.”
Marge laughed. “So I’m leaping to conclusions. It relieves the boredom. I’ll go ask Sis to step inside now. You want to do the primary questioning?”
“You do it,” Decker said. “It’s officially your assignment.”
Marge paused, then shook her head.
“What?” Decker asked.
“There’s something spooky about this case.”
“Agreed,” Decker said. “We comb the house and everything looks in military order. There are clothes in the closet, food in the refrigerator, and three cars in the three-car garage. Everything’s perfect except where are the people? It’s as if the place had been nuked with a neutron bomb.” He paused. “Ready to talk to the sister?”
Marge nodded. They walked down the stairs into the marble entry. Suddenly Decker placed a hand on Marge’s shoulder, stopping her from opening the front door.
“Wait a second.” Decker crooked his finger, then pointed to the display cabinet. “What is wrong with this picture?”
Marge stared at the case. “What do you mean?”
“Something looks … out of place.”
Marge eyed the pieces up close, then took a step backward and studied the case. “The shelves are open. Aren’t most display cabinets enclosed?”
Decker said, “Now that you mention it, that’s a little weird, too. But that’s not what’s bothering me.”
Marge took another step forward and scanned the pieces one by one. The top glass shelf was host to two fighting dogs, the second one held a simple green bowl, the third had a set of metal parrots, and the bottom one gave support to two aquamarine vases with bas-relief dragons on them.
“Nothing looks broken.”
“Nope.”
“Strange dogs,” Marge commented. “All those colors dripping into one another. And the aggressive pose. Their backs are arched and they’re baring their teeth. They’re disconcerting.”
Decker nodded. It was the dog statues. Something about them was bugging him. He zeroed in on the teeth. Each statue had four pronounced canine teeth—two uppers and two lowers, all of them perfectly pointed. Not a chip or a crack to be seen.
Marge brushed hair out of her eyes. “You know, Pete, if I were displaying the dogs, I’d have them facing each other instead of lining them up tail to trunk, elephant style—”
“That’s it,” Decker interrupted.
“That’s what was bothering you?”
“On the nose,” Decker said.
“You’re more of an aesthete than I gave you credit for.”
Decker laughed. “You know why it looks off?”
Again, Marge looked at the pieces.
“It’s the parrots, Marge,” Decker said. “The parrots are facing each other. But the dogs aren’t.”
Marge said, “So what does that have to do with the price of eggs in Outer Mongolia?”
Decker shrugged. “Maybe nothing. But I’ll ask Sis about it anyway.”
“She’ll know why the dogs aren’t facing each other?”
“Maybe she helped Mom position the pieces,” Decker said. “Just maybe she knows how much eggs cost in Asia.”
4
As she tucked the phone receiver under her chin, Rina’s attention was diverted by Hannah’s babbling. She was sitting next to her baby, the two of them playing on a comforter spread out on the living-room floor. It was a busy blanket, toys sewn into the quilting—a mirror, a teething ring, several blocks that squeaked, and lots of fuzzy decals. But Hannah had grown tired of eliciting peeps from the bunny’s tummy. She started to complain.
Of course, the phone rang. Rina made the big mistake of picking up the call. Hannah’s vocalizing increased in volume and frequency every time Rina spoke into the mouthpiece. The baby soliloquy finally culminated in a loud, wet raspberry.
“Hold on, Honey.” Rina attempted to swipe Hannah’s mouth. The baby protested with a shake of the head and a loud abababababa.
Honey said, “Should I call back later, Rina?”
“No, we’re really fine. She’s just expressing her opinion.”
“She sounds adorable,” Honey said. “I love babies. I love children. I think it’s the innocence. I should have had a dozen more.”
Honey sounded riddled with regret. So much so, Rina wondered why she didn’t have a dozen more. Within their culture, it wasn’t the least bit unusual to find families with kids numbering in the double digits. It gave Rina pause for thought. Maybe something had prevented Honey from having more. Maybe they had a lot more in common than Rina had first thought.
“Just enjoy her,” Honey went on. “I don’t have to tell you this, but they do grow up so fast. One minute they’re snuggle bunnies, the next minute, they’re big boys who’ll maybe give you a peck on the cheek on your birthday.” She giggled. “At least I get a peck. I know quite a few women whose sons refuse to touch them.”
“That’s ridiculous,” Rina said. “Negiah—men and women touching—doesn’t apply to mothers and sons.”
“Of course it’s ridiculous,” Honey said. “So what else is new? The Rebbe is just floored by this extremism. Sure he doesn’t like phones. But machines are one thing, love is another. Love is what’s important. Love between Man and Hashem, between Man and Man, between Man and Woman—it’s what makes the world such a beautiful place. Love is what distinguishes us from the animals.”
Rina looked at Ginger, the family Irish setter. The big, rust-colored animal was seated on the blanket as well, her snout nuzzling Hannah’s leg. Rina didn’t know a lot about dogs—she’d married Peter, she’d married his animals—but it seemed to her that Ginger had an infinite capacity to love. Rina had always felt that it was conscience and repentance that made man different from animals. But Honey sounded so sincere, and her thought was a nice one.
“Love is wonderful,” Rina said. “We have wonderful families, Baruch Hashem.”
Rina heard a stretch of quiet. She could make out background noises, someone asking for a dozen poppy-seed bagels.
Honey said, “Rina, thank you for getting back to me so fast. And thank you for putting us up. I can’t tell you how excited I am to be actually going on vacation.”
“I’m glad, Honey.”
“Ababababababbam,” Hannah shouted. “Yeeeeeeee!”
Rina gave the baby a bottle. “Do you want me to call the old gang for you?”
A pause. Then Honey said, “Truthfully no. I just want an opportunity to spend some time with the kids away from people. That’s why—” She stopped herself.
“That’s why you called me,” Rina said. “It’s okay. I’m not offended. You want to relax away from everyone. The community has grown, Honey. It used to be we knew everyone who wore a yarmulke. Not so anymore. It’s pretty easy to go about your business without someone bugging you. But I don’t think it’ll ever fully lose the provincialism. It’s what makes us close. But we both know it can be a little restricting.”
“I just need a vacation.” Honey sounded desperate. “You don’t know what a tova you’re doing. Thank you so much.”
“You’re welcome.”
Hannah threw her bottle across the living room. Immediately, Ginger leaped to her feet to retrieve it. At first when Hannah had learned to toss items, Ginger would chase after them, then sit by them, crying until someone picked them up. Rina had since coaxed her into retrieving. Since Peter never hunted, it was nice that Ginger was finally allowed to do her genetically encoded job. The dog gave Hannah the bottle again, only to see the baby throw it in the other direction. Again, the setter was up on her feet. The dog loved the game.
Rina said, “So, Honey, when exactly are you coming out?”
Honey clucked her tongue. “Would tomorrow morning be too soon?”
Actually, it would be very soon. But there was something needy in Honey’s voice. Rina said, “Anytime you want.”
“Wonderful!”
Rina could almost see Honey’s smile through the line.
“And don’t you dare put yourself out,” Honey insisted. “Just putting us up is dayenu. It’s enough! I don’t know the flight yet so I’ll call you when we arrive in LA. If you’re not home, don’t worry. We’ll wait at the airport. It’s the first time the younger kids have flown, so they’ll be very excited about everything.”
Rina said, “I’ll be sure to be home all morning.”
“Thanks, Rina,” Honey said. “From the bottom of my heart, thank you.”
“A safe?” Orit looked surprised. “Why would he have a safe? He keeps all his loose stones in the vault downtown.”
“Surely your sister-in-law has some nice pieces,” Marge said. “Where does she keep them?”
“Downtown.” Orit walked around the entry hall, rubbing her arms. “When she wants to wear a piece, she calls Arik up and asks him to bring it home. That’s what I always do.”
Decker said, “You keep pieces with him?”
Orit nodded. “They’re family pieces—for me, for my brother, too. If Dalia wants to wear it … okay. Someday my daughter will wear them at her wedding, ken yirbu.”
As Orit smiled, webbing appeared at the corner of her eyes.
“My father is a very clever man. He managed to smuggle out of Europe some beautiful pieces. They are in the family for hundreds of years. What jewelry Papa didn’t use to bribe the border guards, he swallowed stone by stone. On the boat, he had a very bad case of diarrhea.”
She laughed, but it was tinged with sadness.
“They almost didn’t let him into Israel—it was British Palestine back then. But the British were as bad as the Germans. A stone here, a stone there, all of a sudden the guards changed Mendel Stein into Moshe Yalom. They gave him a new identity, a new passport, everything. That’s why my father taught Arik and me to cut stones—a profession to carry on the back.”
Decker said, “Let me ask you this, Orit. You call up your brother and ask him to bring home the piece you want to wear, right?”
“Nachon,” she answered. “Correct.”
“So you go out for the evening, wearing the jewelry. Then you go back home, right?”
“Yes.”
“Where do you keep the piece until you give it back to your brother the following morning?”
Orit didn’t answer.
Decker said, “You’re going to have to trust someone, Orit, if you want to get to the bottom of this.”
“You think something’s wrong, don’t you?”
“We’re a little concerned,” Marge said.
Orit shrugged. “On my dresser. If I want to hide it I don’t put it in my safe.”
“So you do have a safe,” Marge said.
“Yes, but only for the robbers.”
Decker and Marge looked at each other.
“They know you’re in diamonds, you have to give them something if they break in. Otherwise, they get mad. But you don’t keep the good stuff there … only junk.”
Again, Marge and Decker traded glances.
“I learned that from my father, too,” Orit said.
“What else did you learn from Dad?”
Orit hesitated, then spoke in a burst. “Before my father got a vault at the diamond center in Tel Aviv, he had to keep lots of loose stones at home. He used to hide them in the toilet.”
Marge said, “We checked.”
“You did?” Orit was shocked.
“Drug dealers keep their goods in the water tank,” Decker explained. “We also checked the freezer—another common spot. Nothing. Any other suggestions?”
Orit stared at them, then shook her head no.
Marge looked around. “If I were diamonds, where would I be?”
Decker tapped his foot. Again his eyes went back to the mezuzah. Being new to the Jewish religion, Decker realized, was why it had taken him so long to see what was wrong. Outside-door mezuzahs were supposed to be posted on the outside of the doorframe. This one was on the inside. Maybe because it was so fancy, they didn’t want it sullied.
But then again.
Decker slipped on a latex glove. “Detective Dunn, could you get me a screwdriver from the trunk of the car?”
“You got it, Sarge.”
“What you’re going to do?” Orit asked.
“You stick around,” Decker answered. “I want a family witness here in case we find the mother lode.”
“What do you mean—mother lode?”
“Cash, money … possibly diamonds.” Decker pointed to the mezuzah. “There.”
“What?” Orit said. “You’re crazy. That’s a religious article.”
“I know what a mezuzah is, Ms. Bar Lulu. I also know where they are supposed to be posted. Beytecha oovesha’arecha—your houses and gates—on the outside.”
Orit stared at him. “You speak Hebrew?”
“No, but I know the Sh’ma.”
“I knew I liked you.”
Marge came back in and handed Decker the screwdriver. Carefully, he unwound the top and bottom screws that affixed the scroll holder to the wall. They came out more easily than he had expected. He peered inside the hollow rut of the silver casing.
Empty—where was the parchment that contained the holy prayer?
Was there ever a parchment?
He showed the empty holder to Orit. “Can I bag this for evidence?”
“Evidence of what?” Orit asked.
“I want to have this dusted for prints.”
“You think Arik kept money there?”
Marge asked, “What do you think, Ms. Bar Lulu?”
“I think it’s funny the Sh’ma’s not there, yes. But Arik is not a religious man.”
“So why put up a mezuzah period?”
“Maybe for the boys.” Orit waved her hand. “Yes, take it for evidence. As long as it comes back.”
“Ms. Bar Lulu,” Decker said, “does your sister-in-law have a maid?”
“Not now. Dalia had wonderful help for six years. Amelia went back to El Salvador a month ago. Dalia is still looking. She is very particular who is in her house.”
“So who’s been cleaning the house?” Marge asked.
“My lady, Bonita, helps Dalia once a week. Not much to do except laundry. The boys do their own rooms. Bonita was going to come tomorrow. What do I tell her?”
Marge said, “Tell her to hold off until we find out where the family is.”
“That’s what I think, too.”
Decker said, “Do you know anything about the porcelain dogs in the front entry hall?”
“Dogs? What dogs?”
Guess that answered that, Decker thought.
“You want to take dogs, too?”
Decker shook his head. “Just the mezuzah. I’ll need you to sign something that states we have your permission to take it,” Decker said. “Make sure that everyone’s satisfied that we did this by the book.”
“By the book?” Orit asked.
“That we acted kosher,” Decker said.
“Ah, that I understand.”
5
Sitting at the conference-sized dining table, Decker felt like a movie mogul. The tabletop was a slab of pink marble swirled with white and blue—no doubt some custom job out of an exotic quarry. Orit Bar Lulu was at his right; Marge sat across the rose-colored sea. Orit seemed scared. Their prolonged presence had justified her suspicions and that was not good news. Decker placed his notebook on the stone, wondering if he could write without scratching the surface. He gave Marge the go-ahead.
“I’d like to ask you a few questions, Ms. Bar Lulu,” Marge said.
“Of course. Why else am I here?”
Marge cleared her throat. “When was the last time you saw or heard from your brother?”
“Two days ago.” Orit sighed. “We had lunch together—Arik came to the office—the real estate office where Dalia and I work.”
“The name?”
“Manor One Realty.”
Marge wrote it down. “Anything special happen at lunch?”
“Not a thing. Everything was regular.”
“They didn’t seem nervous? Excited maybe?”
“I saw nothing. Of course, I wasn’t looking for something wrong, you know?”
Marge nodded. “Then what happened?”
“What happened?” Orit shrugged. “Nothing happened. We ate lunch, talked about the kids. Then Arik and Dalia left.”
“Together?”
“Yes. It was close to quitting time so she left with him. The next day Dalia didn’t come to work. I didn’t think anything about it. Real estate agents work from their homes all the time. So maybe she took the morning off. I called her in the afternoon to ask her to pick up Sharoni. No answer. I called two, three times maybe. No machine, nothing. I thought that was strange so I called my brother at work. His partner told me he didn’t show up today—no explanation, nothing. Shaul was mad, I could tell. I didn’t want to get Arik in trouble, so I made excuses.”
“What kind of excuses,” Marge said.
“Oh, the usual. Something came up … ehhhh, he must have something important to do. Shaul didn’t like my excuses. He’s very hard on Arik, but that’s not new.”
“What do you mean, ‘Shaul’s hard on Arik’?” Decker asked as he wrote.
“They’re partners. But they are very different—fire and water.”
Marge caught Decker’s eye. They’d go over that one later.
Orit didn’t seem to notice. “But just like life needs fire and water, they needed each other. So what if they don’t get along?”
“They fought publicly?” Marge asked casually. “Or was it more like a cold war.”
“Both.”
“What’s the problem?”
Orit appeared to be thinking. “Shaul’s … slow, not slow, but …”
“Deliberate?” Decker tried.
“Exactly. Shaul’s deliberate. Arik has creativity—all the ideas. Some work, some don’t. The boys are a perfect mix for business, but they get on each other’s nerves. Shaul’s always mad at Arik for being careless. Arik’s always mad at Shaul for slowing him down. But they don’t give up on each other. They’re too smart for that.”
Decker didn’t know if it was a language problem, but Orit’s choice of words seemed telling. “What do you mean by Arik being careless?”
Orit said, “What do I mean?”
Marge picked up on Decker’s drift. “Is Arik careless with Shaul’s money?”
Orit shook her head. “I don’t mean careless. It’s a difference in personality. Arik wants to go, go, go. Shaul says, ‘Now, wait a minute.’”
“Does Shaul have a last name?” Decker asked.
“Gold. Shaul Gold.”
“He didn’t know where Arik was?”
“No,” Orit said. “He was angry that Arik didn’t come to work.”
Marge looked up from her pad. “Shaul was mad at Arik?”
“Very mad,” Orit said. “And that made me worried. Why didn’t Arik show up? Despite what Shaul says, Arik is very responsible. I called the police. They send two men who looked at me like I’m crazy.”
Marge said, “The policy is to wait twenty-four hours before reporting an adult missing.”
“This is not just an adult, this is a whole family.” Orit started to bite her nail, then stopped herself. “When Sharoni—that’s my daughter—she tells me the boys weren’t in school, I start to get real nervous. That’s when I called the police again and asked for someone else. You think there’s something wrong, too, no?”
Decker said, “It’s unusual for a family to leave without notifying someone.”
Marge said, “You haven’t heard from your brother or sister-in-law in two days?”
“Or my nephews.” She shuddered. “God only knows where they are.”
“What do you mean?” Decker asked.
Orit bit her lip. “I mean if something happened to Arik, why take it out on the boys?”
“What could happen to Arik?” Marge said.
Orit looked over her shoulder, then leaned toward Marge. She was squirming, Decker noticed. As if the place was bugged. Maybe it was.
Or maybe she was squirming from guilt.
Orit said, “Suppose someone wanted to rob my brother. You know, force him to go down to the vault in the Mart. Maybe they would take Dalia as hostile.”
“Hostage,” Decker corrected.
“Yes, hostage, I mean. So they take Dalia. But why take the boys? Why not just leave them in school and leave them alone?”
“Maybe they were home when it happened,” Marge said. “Maybe they were witnesses.”
“But they’re boys!”
Marge didn’t answer. Orit threw up her hands. “I’m sick with worry. Those boys are like my sons.” Suddenly, she sprang up and began to pace, chewing on a nail as red and lacquered as a candied apple.
Marge said, “Have you asked Shaul if he’s seen Arik?”
Orit turned to Marge. “If he …” She punched her hand in her fist. “No, he wouldn’t. I talk crazy.”
“He wouldn’t what?” Marge asked.
“If he hurt my brother, I’ll kill him.” Orit nodded forcefully. “I’ll chop his head off.”
Again, Marge and Decker traded looks.
Marge said, “Do you suspect Shaul has something to do with Arik’s alleged disappearance?”
“Do I suspect?” Orit sighed. “I don’t know. They have been partners for years. But times change, people change. Diamonds is a moody business. You win big, you lose big. Shaul is very dark and moody. You will talk to him?”
“Definitely,” Marge said.
Decker said, “Anyone else we should know about, Orit?”
Orit paused, then shook her head.
“I hate to have to ask you this, Ms. Bar Lulu,” Marge said. “But do you know if either your brother or sister-in-law was having an affair?”
Orit’s eyes widened, then she clucked her tongue. “Oh, you people are terrible.”
Marge and Decker said nothing.
Orit let go with a faint smile. “Not that I know. Arik’s a very handsome man. When we were little in Israel, he had many girls. I’m sure he could if he wants. But he is devoted to Dalia, takes good care of her.”
“That doesn’t mean he can’t have someone else.”
“Maybe. But I don’t know if he does.”
Marge said, “Do they have any close friends we should know about?”
“I’ll get you a list of all their friends I know.”
“That would be helpful,” Decker said. “Does Ms. Yalom have family here?”
“All in Israel,” Orit said.
“And your parents live in Israel?” Decker said.
“Yes.”
“Have you called your parents—”
“They are not there,” Orit interrupted. “I am sure.”
Decker paused. He didn’t like her adamant tone of voice. Was she hiding something? He’d deal with it later. “Do you have any other family in the States?”
Orit shook her head.
“Do you have an address and phone number for Shaul Gold?” Marge asked.
“Just the number downtown,” Orit said. “At the Diamond Center. I give you my brother’s work number. I don’t know if Shaul’s there or not.”
Marge said. “We’ll find him. Tell us a little about Dalia and the boys.”
“What’s to tell? She’s sweet. They are good kids.”
“You say the younger boy is friends with your daughter?”
“Yes. Dov and Sharoni are friends.”
“I’d like to talk to your daughter, Ms. Bar Lulu,” Decker said.
“Of course,” Orit said. “Go to the school. Talk to her now. Maybe she knows something I don’t!”
Decker hung the mike back onto the car radio. “Secretary says Gold’s in a meeting and won’t be back in the office until tomorrow morning.”
“A ruse?” Marge asked.
“Who knows?” Decker lowered the unmarked’s visor, trying to block out the western sun. “We’ll find his home number and try him tonight. If he split, we’ll have either our first suspect or another victim.”
“What do you think about Gold and Yalom not getting along?” Marge asked. “Think she’s setting him up?”
“What do you think?”
“She seemed nervous.”
“Yes, she did. But her brother’s missing.”
“You think she’s clean?”
“I’m reserving judgment,” Decker said. “Bar Lulu’s right about one thing. The boys missing means something’s wrong. Either the family took off in a hurry or someone herded them as a unit to parts unknown. We don’t get any action on this by tomorrow, we may want to contact the media for help.”
“You’re really bugged about the boys.”
Decker said, “My sons are around the same age.”
Marge looked at him. “You have kids about every age, don’t you?”
“A young adult, two teens, and an infant. I’m raising my own grandchild.”
Marge smiled. “Should we go back to the station and file for a full-blown MP case? Then we could come back and check out the neighbors. Find out what they’ve heard over the past couple of days. Or over the past couple of years. Maybe the neighbors, unlike Orit, were aware of something fishy. They pick up on things like that.” She paused. “Except the ones that thought the serial killer was a nice, quiet guy.”
“Just a regular Joe except for the vats of hydrochloric acid kept in the basement.” Decker turned the unmarked onto Devonshire, headed toward the station house. “We have enough of a case to ask Davidson for time to canvass the area, check out the parents’ workplaces.”
Marge clapped her hands. “Let’s do it.”
Dispatcher’s static was beaming through the squawk box. Decker tuned out the noise automatically except if the crime happened to go down near his location. Funny how the ear adjusts to what’s important.
Marge said, “The school’s on the way back to the station. Want to stop by first?”
“Sure, why not?”
They rode a few minutes in silence.
“I’ll do the talking with the administration there,” Marge said. “That’s okay, right?”
“It’s your case.”
“You really see it that way?”
“That’s the way Davidson saw it.”
“Davidson was giving me busywork.”
Decker said, “He may have been giving you bullshit, but if it turns into something big, he won’t take it away from you.”
“You don’t think so?”
“Nope. Why risk a discrimination suit?”
“And if he does take it away from me?”
“Go to Strapp. I’ll support you.”
Marge grinned. “Really?”
Decker was insulted. “What the hell do you think? Marge, you’re letting your imagination drag you down. Stop thinking worst-case scenarios and let’s concentrate on the present. How old are the Yalom boys again?”
Marge paged through her notes, pleased by Decker’s support. Okay, so she was getting on his nerves. So what? They were partners.
She paused.
Partners. Just like Yalom and Gold.
Decker was irked by Marge’s silence. “The case, Marge?”
“Yeah, sorry.” Quickly, she sifted through her notes. “The boys … are … fifteen and sixteen. Gil’s the oldest. Dov is in the class with Sharoni. How about if I take the administrators and the records, and you talk to the girl. You’re better with teenagers, having raised one yourself.”
“Fine.”
“How’s Cindy doing? Is she still interested in police work after the Bellson/Roberts affair?”
Decker felt his jaw tense and willed it to relax. “’Fraid so.”
“She’d make a good cop.”
“Bite your tongue, Dunn.”
Marge shrugged. “We could use bright and brave women like her on the force.”
“She’s too smart to be a cop.”
Marge glared at him. “Thanks for the compliment, Deck.”
“Stop going testy on me.” Decker glared back. “She’s my kid, Marge. I want her safe, not battling gangs in the street.”
“It’s her decision in the long run.”
“Right now, I’m still in the short run. My preference for her is a job that doesn’t require expertise with a piece. You want to fuel up with some java before we hit the high school?”
“No, I’m fine,” Marge said. “You changed the subject away from Cindy, Pete.”
Decker grinned. “My, you’re astute. You must be a detective.”
Marge grinned back. “Homicide, baby. And don’t you forget it!”
6
It surprised Decker that the Yaloms sent their children to public school. Although the West Valley didn’t have a big white-flight problem, private schools still abounded, and folks with money took advantage of the fancier prep schools. Education was important in Judaism. But the Yaloms weren’t religious, and perhaps, being immigrants, they didn’t feel comfortable in a high-brow environment.
West Valley was a good school—an old-style public institution built at a time when land was cheap and so were construction costs. Like most of LA Unified, West Valley ran full, sometimes overfull. Classes were large and the teaching staff always needed more than the district was willing to pay for.
Just like Devonshire. The department gave them nada. Most of the furniture and electronics in the squad room were donated by the public. As a result, nothing matched. Every desk had a different configuration, every computer had a different keyboard setup. But no one cared as long as it worked. Thank God for community spirit. Without it, the Dees would still be communicating via tin cans and a string.
The school sprang up on the right side. Decker turned into a wide, open parking lot before pulling up to a loading zone at the side of the school. They got out, Marge sticking the “official police business” placard on the unmarked’s windshield.
Inside, the central hallway was filled with students dressed in a haphazard manner, and teachers dressed almost as casually. The corridors were old, but the floor gleamed and the walls were free of graffiti, and that said a lot. They found the principal’s office and presented their badges to the red-dressed secretary. She was young and black, her hair straightened and clipped short. She glanced at their shields, her eyes resting on the metal for only a moment before settling back onto her word processor. She was singularly unimpressed.
“Which one is it this time?”
Decker and Marge exchanged tired smiles. Police presence was sadly nothing new even in the supposedly good public schools.
“We’re not arresting anyone,” Marge said. “We just want information.”
The red-dressed woman looked up. “About whom?”
“Gil and Dov Yalom,” Marge said. “Any idea where they are?”
“Gil and Dov …” The secretary scratched her head. “Names aren’t familiar.” She pointed to two empty chairs. “Have a seat and I’ll see if Mr. Maldenado’s in.”
She disappeared behind a door and Marge and Decker sat down. A moment later, the door reopened and a bald-headed black man motioned them into his sparsely furnished office.
Everything about Maldenado was smooth—his head, his dark-complexioned cheeks, even the backs of his hands. He was medium height and weight, his wireless glasses framing eyes that were hooded and tired. He motioned them to sit, then sank into a worn leather chair. In front of him were piles of charts and papers. Decker had a feeling the man hadn’t seen his desktop in years.
Maldenado rubbed his eyes. “Who did you say you wanted?”
Marge said, “We’re looking for Dov and Gil Yalom.”
“Dov and Gil?” Maldenado was surprised. “They’re good kids. What’d they do?”
“Nothing,” Marge said. “They’re missing. Any idea where they are?”
Maldenado hesitated. “Missing?”
“Their aunt called us,” Marge said. “She can’t seem to locate the family. We thought maybe you’d know something.”
“Me?”
“The school,” Decker clarified. “Did the parents mention anything to the school about a winter vacation?”
“I wouldn’t know,” Maldenado said. “You’d have to check with records.”
“Maybe the boys talked to some school chums,” Marge said. “Mind if Detective Sergeant Decker talks to their friends while I check records?”
“It’s all right with me.” Maldenado leaned back in his chair. “What exactly do you mean by missing?”
“Just that,” Marge said. “We can’t seem to find where the family went.”
“And the boys are missing, too?”
“Appears that way,” Decker said.
Maldenado looked upset. “Ordinarily, I’d think of runaways even from nice families. But with both brothers and the parents being gone … I hope this resolves very soon.”
Marge said, “That’s why we’re here.”
Decker started with Sharona Bar Lulu sitting in Geometry I. It was her last class of the day—the last period of the day—and geometry was a subject she shared with Dov Yalom. Maldenado gave Decker a note to present to the teacher, asking her to excuse Sharona—less intimidating than presenting a badge in front of forty hormonally erratic teens.
But Sharona was still wary when Decker pulled her out of class. They were in the outside hall, the girl as stiff as a board, Decker trying to appear casual by leaning against the wall. She stuck close to the classroom door, her eyes darting around the hallway, looking for passersby, looking for someone to take her away from the uncomfortable position. Decker showed her his credentials. The girl studied them but they did little to calm her.
“Did your eema tell you she called the police about your uncle, aunt, and cousins?”
Sharona jerked her head up. “My eema?” In a soft voice, she said, “Are you Jewish?”
“Yes, ma’am.” Decker pocketed his billfold. “Your eema is worried about your uncle and his family. We’re trying to locate them. Would you have any idea where they might be?”
The girl shook her head, eyes fixed on the notebook she was clutching. She had black, straight hair that hung down to her waist. A pelt just like Rina’s. Except Rina was very fair. This one was dark-complexioned like her mama. She had expressive eyes topped by thick, inky lashes and brows.
Decker said, “Frankly, I’m a little concerned about them, too. It’s unusual to go off without letting someone know where you’re going.”
Sharona just shrugged.
“Did Dov say anything to you about a vacation?”
“No. I already told my mother that I don’t know where he is.” She grew agitated. “I don’t know where anyone is, I swear.”
Decker stood motionless, then raised his eyes. “You swear, huh?”
“What do you want from me?” The girl burst into tears.
Decker blew out air. “Can we talk somewhere a little more private?”
Sharona took two steps backward. “Who are you?”
She was clearly spooked. Decker said, “Sharona, we can talk right here. Or if you’d prefer, I’ll come to your home tonight and talk to you with your parents around—”
“No!”
Decker was surprised by the vehemence in her voice. “No? Why not?”
“Just …” Sharona’s voice had become tiny. “Just because. Please don’t make me talk in front of my parents. Please! I don’t want anyone mad at me. I didn’t know what …”
The girl appeared to be swaying. Decker gently took her arm and led the frail teen to an empty room. He placed her in a chair, then sat across from her, making sure the door was kept open. He took out his pad and a pencil. “Sharona, it’s important for you to tell me everything you know.”
Sharona’s eyes went from her lap, to the door, to Decker, back to the door, then to the ceiling.
Decker said, “You care about your cousins?”
The girl nodded.
“Talk to me.”
“He told me not to tell anyone.”
“Who? Dov or Gil?”
“Dov. Told me not to tell anyone he called.”
“When did he call?”
“Two days ago. Before Eema called the police.” She glanced at Decker, then looked away. “He said he was going away. He didn’t say where. He sounded nervous. He told me not to tell anyone, especially Eema and Abba. I asked him if he was in trouble …”
Decker nodded encouragingly.
Sharona met his eyes. “He hung up. That was it.”
“And you haven’t heard from him since?”
“I swear I haven’t.”
“Why didn’t you tell your eema about the call after she called the police?”
“I don’t know.” Her lip began to quiver. “I was scared she’d get mad at me for not telling her sooner. And I kept expecting to hear from Dov. I didn’t know Dov would be … I didn’t know the whole family …”
“Yes?”
“I didn’t think they were missing. I thought Dov had just had enough. I thought he just needed to get away from it all, you know?”
Decker said, “No, I don’t know. Please tell me.”
Sharona covered her face, then wiped her cheeks. “My uncle’s a diamond dealer. He’s very rich. Did you see the house?”
Decker nodded.
“Isn’t it humongous?”
Again, Decker nodded.
“Uncle Arik is really rich. I mean really, really rich! He made a fortune in diamonds during the eighties. Dov told me he made lots of his money selling big stones to the Japanese and the Chinese living in Hong Kong.”
“Dov seems to know a lot about the business.”
“He works there. They work there—both of them. My cousins … you’d think they’d be spoiled rotten, right?”
“Possibly.”
“Well, they’re not, at all. They have to beg for everything they get. That’s my uncle. Eema used to say he was the same way as a kid.”
“What does she mean by that?” Decker asked.
“I think she meant he was always a tightass—” Sharona blushed. “I mean he was tight with a buck.”
“His kids resent him?”
The girl looked at her lap. “It’s not like my cousins don’t believe in work. I believe in working, too. Everyone has to work to feel useful. My mom doesn’t have to work but she does. Aunt Dalia certainly doesn’t need to work, but she does. My uncle just overdoes it. Dov and Gil are carrying a full load at school, plus after-school sports and music lessons. Gil’s a top swimmer. They’re both good students. But that’s not enough. Uncle Arik makes them go downtown two days a week and on the weekends to learn about the diamond business. I don’t talk to Gil so much, but I know it’s a big drain for Dov. He’s very resentful.”
“How does he express his resentment?”
“Sulks. Escapes into his head. What can he do?”
“Escapes? You mean drugs?”
Sharona shrugged. “Maybe a little pot. But mostly I meant escape by being spiritual. He used to be very religious. I think deep down he’s still religious, but …”
Decker encouraged her to continue.
“Dov wanted to be more Orthodox … traditional.”
“I’m traditional, I understand.”
Sharona eyed him. “You don’t look Jewish, you know that?”
“So I’ve been told. Go on, Sharona. What happened to Dov’s journey into religion?”
“Nothing, that was the problem. Uncle Arik is very anti-Orthodox. Dov wanted to try to keep kosher, but my uncle wouldn’t do it. See, Uncle Arik wasn’t simply … disapproving. He was mean about it.”
“He made fun of Dov?”
“Exactly. Like his feelings weren’t important.” Sharona shrugged. “To Uncle, they weren’t. He wanted his sons to be clones of himself.”
Good luck, Decker thought. “What about Gil?”
“Gil is happy-go-lucky. He can fake things better.” The girl bit her nail. At that moment, she reminded Decker of her mother. Sharona looked up. “I don’t think Gil likes the business any more than Dov does.”
“Does Gil get along with your uncle?” Decker asked.
Sharona shrugged. “My uncle gets on Gil’s nerves, too.”
“Your uncle seems to get on a lot of people’s nerves,” Decker remarked.
“You mean his partner, Mr. Gold?”
Decker didn’t say anything, surprised that the kid knew about the conflict.
Sharona said, “Dov and I talk a lot. He said his father and Mr. Gold were always yelling at each other. And you know what?”
“What?”
“Dov said that Mr. Gold was right most of the time. Once Dov agreed with Mr. Gold right in front of his father. His father had a cow. The last couple of months, Dov and his father were fighting all the time.”
“Gil, too?”
“Gil has a car,” Sharona said. “Gil avoids fights by escaping—literally.”
“But Gil has to work in the business, right?”
“Like I said, Gil can fake it better. Dov has a harder time lying. I told you he’s very spiritual.” Sharona took a deep breath. “So when Dov called me … I thought he was running away to find himself. I thought he had finally had enough of his father and couldn’t take it anymore. I didn’t dare tell Eema. But I guess I should have.” The teen’s eyes watered. “If something happened to them—”
“Don’t torture yourself,” Decker said. “They could be safe and sound somewhere. You thought you were keeping your cousin’s secret. You couldn’t have known that it might be something bigger.”
Tears flowed down the girl’s cheeks. “You think it might be something bigger?”
“Yes, I do,” Decker said.
“Like … what?”
“I’m not sure yet. I need to ask you a few more questions. Tell me exactly what Dov said when he called.”
Sharona closed her eyes. “Something like … ‘Shar, I’m going away for a while.’ I asked him where he was going. He didn’t answer. He just said he needed to get away. Then he made me swear I wouldn’t tell anyone he called, especially Eema or Abba. Then I asked him if he was in trouble and he hung up.”
“Where did he call you?”
“On my phone.”
“Do you have a private line?”
The girl nodded.
“I’ll need your phone bill. I’m going to have to tell your eema why I need it. Do you want to tell your eema about the conversation or should I?”
The girl blew out air, lifting bangs off her forehead. “I’ll tell her. We have to do this right away, don’t we?”
“Yes, we do. I know Dov told you to keep this quiet. But I think he was really begging for help.”
“I sure hope you’re right.” She looked upward. “Because I’m going to get grounded. I don’t care. It’s worth it if it’ll help Dov.”
“It’ll more than help, Sharona. Who knows? It could even save a life.”
7
At least the jerk was listening, Marge was forced to admit. She and Decker were sitting across from the Loo in his office. Old Thomas “Tug” Davidson—once a Marine, always a Marine—still wore his hair in a crew cut. The fifty-five-year-old geezer didn’t realize that crew cuts had come full circle and were considered a statement by white boys with ’tudes. Fashion didn’t interest Davidson. He wore black suits, white shirts, black ties, and oxfords as oversized as the same-named dictionary. Tug was built like a barn—wide and strong. Marge felt he had probably declared holy war on fat many years ago.
“Go over this one more time,” Davidson said.
Marge repeated the pertinent information. The family had disappeared two days ago, the only hints of foul play—a one-minute phone call and an empty silver case that should have held a prayer parchment. The Yaloms’ sister had called the police in a panic. When interviewed, she had seemed on the level, but who knew?
“This guy, Yalom, is a diamond dealer?” Davidson said.
“Yep,” Decker said. “Does very well for himself judging by the house. But to hear his niece talk, Yalom’s a tightwad. I was wondering why he didn’t send his kids to private school. Maybe he’s too cheap.”
“Or maybe the niece is your average bimbo teenaged girl with a big mouth.” Davidson said, “The school doesn’t know shit about the boys’ whereabouts?”
“Not a thing,” Decker said. “I interviewed quite a few of their chums. They seem in the dark as well.”
“Except for the niece who got a phone call,” Davidson said. “Where was the booth?”
Decker said, “About two miles from the house. It’s a three-block shopping center. I have nothing definitive at this point. Tomorrow, I’d like to interview the store owners. It’ll take time, but something might pan out.”
Davidson nodded, folding sausage-shaped fingers into fists. “Tell me about this silver case.”
“It’s a standard Jewish talisman, for lack of a better word,” Decker said. “The one for the front door is always posted on the outside frame. The Yaloms had theirs posted on the inside—”
“Could be an oversight,” Davidson said.
“Not a chance,” Decker said. “It would be like wearing your underpants on the outside. It was deliberate. I think it once held valuables—diamonds, maybe.”
“Somebody took them,” Davidson said. “A robbery?”
“Or a convenient source of cash if the family had to split suddenly,” Marge said. “The sister said that was how her family dealt with the Nazis. The father paid off the border guards in stones.”
“An old habit that served them well in the past,” Decker said.
“What if it was a robbery?” Davidson asked. “Hiding diamonds in a weird place like that. Looks to me like it would have to be an inside job. What kind of help do these people have?”
“We’re working on finding the gardeners,” Marge said.
“Inside job might also be one of the kids,” Davidson said. “Kid swipes the stones, then makes a panic call to his cousin. So what do we got so far?” Davidson held up his thick hand and began ticking off options. “An inside robbery. A family on the lam. A Solomon thing. Or maybe even a Menendez thing. Any comments?”
Decker thought about Tug’s observations. Menendez and Solomon. Two big cases. The Menendez brothers had shotgunned their parents to death. The Solomons had been a family that disappeared off the face of the earth. No bodies had ever been recovered—the case an open hole on the books.
Decker said, “As far as we could tell, there was no killing done in the house. And all the cars were still in the garage—”
“Including the older boy’s car, right?”
“Yes,” Marge said.
“What’s his name?”
“The older boy?” Marge said. “Gil. Dov’s the younger one, the one who made the call to the cousin.”
“Okay, I got the names straight,” Davidson said. “Back to the cars. If all the cars were in the garage, you’ve got to be thinking about a family abduction. Because if the boys lured the parents to a spot in order to whack them, a car would be missing.”
Marge said, “Unless the boys returned the car to their house before disappearing.”
Davidson looked at her and squinted.
“Good point,” Decker said.
Davidson glared at him. “I know it’s a good point, Decker. You don’t have to stroke her ego.”
Decker’s voice was flat. “I’m just a nice guy.”
Davidson looked disgusted. “All right. So there’s a chance the boys whacked the parents.”
“The bimbo cousin also mentioned the father argued with his sons,” Marge said. “Especially the younger boy.”
Davidson squinted. “I argued all the time with my old man. I never thought of whacking him.”
“Just presenting motive,” Marge said.
“And I’m saying what a prosecutor would be saying,” Davidson said. “Kids and parents fight all the time. Most of us don’t wind up murdering our parents.”
Nobody spoke, then Davidson said, “Okay, it’s a consideration. The boys whacked the parents or someone whacked the whole family. What about the family taking off for parts unknown?”
“We thought about that,” Marge said. “We didn’t find the passports. Of course, the search was superficial. Could be Yalom kept them in his vault.”
“Vault?”
Decker said, “Yalom has a vault down at the Diamond Center.”
Davidson thought a moment. “He keeps his passport in the vault?”
Decker shrugged. “You know, Loo, even if we found passports it might not mean much. If Yalom suddenly went underground, he’d have to establish a new identity anyway. He wouldn’t need his old passports.”
Davidson said, “Why would he go underground?”
“Escape,” Marge said. “Maybe one of his diamond deals turned sour.”
“Guy’s a wily Israeli in a high-money business,” Davidson said. “Maybe he knows things the Feds would be interested in.”
Marge said, “He’s running from the Feds?”
“Maybe he’s working for the Feds,” Davidson said. “Maybe the guy was forced to sign up for the Witness Protection Program and that’s why the family just upped and disappeared.”
“I’ll check it out.”
“Yeah, do that, Dunn,” Davidson said. “Something’s out of kilter here. Poke around the neighborhood. See if they noticed strange suits and ties coming in and out of the house.” He turned to Decker. “Speaking of inside jobs, who’s gonna do Yalom’s partner?”
“Yo,” Decker said.
Davidson turned to Marge. “So you’re doing the paper on Yalom?”
“Yes.” Marge skimmed her notes. “Social Security number, credit cards, tax ID numbers, bank statements and info, passport office.” She looked up. “I’ll also call the Feds.”
“So tell me about the partner, Decker,” Davidson said.
“Shaul Gold.” Decker recapped what he knew. “I finally got hold of him. He seems cooperative. We’ve got a scheduled meeting with him tomorrow at eight in the morning.”
“He seem jumpy?”
“Surprised,” Decker said. “‘What do you mean my partner is missing?’ That kind of thing. But he was cooperative.”
“How long has he known Yalom?”
Marge said, “Sister says they’ve been partners for years. But they don’t get along.”
Davidson squinted. “So what? A lot of partners fight.”
Decker said, “A lot of partners kill each other.”
“Not the whole family, Decker.”
“Except that we’re talking about diamond dealers,” Marge said. “Lots of money.”
Davidson scratched his head. “Money. I take it the partner’s another little, wily, shrewd Israeli?”
“Gold is Israeli,” Decker said. “I don’t know if he’s wily, shrewd, or little.”
Davidson squinted. “I was thinking the guy might be a flight risk.”
Decker threw up his hands. “I can’t find evidence to detain him.”
Marge said, “We don’t have a drop of blood, let alone a body.”
Davidson drummed his fingers. “No justification for pulling him in. We’ll have to take our chances. All right. Leave the partner until tomorrow.” The lieutenant took out a notebook. “So this is what I got. Decker, you’ll do the shopping mall and the partner. Dunn, you’ll do paper and the neighborhood. This … voodoo silver case has been turned in to forensics for printing. Anything else you got in mind?”
“Not at the moment,” Decker said.
“Keep me informed,” Davidson said.
“We thought we’d stop by the neighborhood tonight, sir,” Marge said. “Before we go home.”
Davidson squinted at both of them. “They musta whipped you two hard at Foothill, huh?”
“No, we’re just bucking for overtime,” Decker grinned.
Davidson cracked a smile. “You’re barking up the wrong tree. You want money, get a law degree.”
“He’s already a lawyer,” Marge said.
Davidson leaned back in his chair. “No shit?”
“No shit,” Decker said.
“No wonder you’re such a wiseass.” Davidson waved them away. “Do what you want, but forget about overtime. Jackass county keeps voting down police bonds, we’ll be lucky if we draw our salaries.” He turned to Marge. “You got a look on your face, Dunn. What is it?”
“Do you want us to contact the media for assistance?” Marge asked.
The lieutenant gave it some thought. “Wait until you see what you’ve dug up. If you draw blanks, we’ll contact the networks.”
“You got it.” Marge started to rise, then sat back down. “Something else, Lieutenant?”
Davidson ran the palm of his hand across his crew cut. “Nah, I’m through. Get out of here. Both of you.”
“Don’t stroke her ego,” Marge fumed.
Decker sat down at his new desk recycled from a branch of the LA County Library that was shut down because of budget cuts. It was a gun-metal gray institutional number, but it had a kneehole large enough to accommodate his oversized legs, and two big file banks for case folders. Marge had a marred but functional oak desk donated by an office manager who had been forced to fire his secretary. The desks were placed front end to front end, which meant Decker and Marge sat across from each other.
Decker pulled out a manila folder and started a file on the Yaloms. “At least he took us seriously, Marge.”
“He had to. The case warranted it.”
“That’s for damn sure.” Decker started filling out the paperwork and handed forms over to Marge. “I’ll start a file on each of the boys; you do the parents. We’ll Xerox all our papers and notes so we’ll each have copies at our fingertips.”
“Rabbi Organized. How do you feel about your fellow countrymen disappearing?”
“You mean the Yaloms?”
Marge said, “The little, wily, shrewd Israelis.”
Decker said, “Why do I feel Old Tug has some preconceived notions about Jews and money.”
Marge said, “Probably has notions about women and blacks and Hispanics—”
“Oh, don’t start getting all pissy PC on me. I don’t think Davidson’s a racist. He probably hates everyone. Anyway, the Yaloms aren’t my countrymen. I’m American, remember?”
“You don’t feel any special twinge because they’re Jewish?”
“Nah.” Decker smoothed his mustache and went back to writing. “The only twinge I feel is for the boys.”
“If they’re victims.”
“If they’re victims,” Decker repeated.
Marge started filling out a Missing Persons form. “I think you scored a notch on Davidson’s belt.”
“By giving up law?” Decker continued to write. “Yeah, I saw that, too.”
“Why did you give up law?”
“’Cause I’m a gun-toting macho man and not a pussy wimp-ass in a designer suit.”
Marge laughed. “The real reason?”
“I gave it up because Jan had forced me into it. She wanted me to take over Daddy’s firm. Daddy did wills and trusts. It bored me to tears. I should have joined the District Attorney’s Office.”
Marge smiled. “Who knows? But for a slip of fate, you might even have been attorney general today.”
“I wouldn’t have been nominated,” Decker said. “I have balls.”
“Oh, don’t start becoming a pig on me.”
“It’s not a pig, it’s sour grapes.” Decker smiled. “S’right. I’ll keep my balls and let your sex take on the Attorney General’s Office.”
Marge lowered her voice artificially. “See what a broad can do.”
Decker laughed without looking up from his desk.
Marge pulled out a sheet and started doing paper on Arik Yalom. She thought of the photos in the family room. A dark, muscular, handsome man with money. He had a lot going for him. What the hell happened?
She said, “The case is getting … complicated.”
“Messy is the operative word,” Decker said.
“So many different angles of approach,” Marge said.
“So here’s a chance for you to prove yourself. Just don’t get bogged down with Davidson and his archaic attitudes. And let’s try not to overdo it with the overtime. Sure, it’s okay in the beginning for us to go the extra mile. But take it from me, Marge. Homicide detail will suck all the air from you if you let it. Don’t get obsessed with your cases.”
“Why not? You get obsessed with your cases all the time.”
“No, I don’t.” Decker went over the list of Yalom’s friends one by one. Nine of them. It was going to take a while. He’d better call Rina, tell her to hold his supper. “I don’t get obsessed, Marge, I just do my job.”
8
“Peter’s going to be late,” Rina said to her parents. “He said to eat without him. You want to get the boys, Mama? I’ll start serving supper.”
Magda Elias turned to her husband. Though she had lived in America for almost thirty years, she still spoke in an off-the-boat Hungarian accent. “You get the boys, Stefan. I’ll help Ginny with supper.”
The old man didn’t answer.
“Stefan, do you hear me?”
“What? What?”
“Peter isn’t going to make it for dinner, Papa,” Rina said. “Can you call the boys to the table?”
Stefan slapped the paper down on the armrest and hoisted himself out of the living-room rocker. “Everything’s okay?”
“Everything’s fine. He’s just working on a new case.”
“What kind of a case?”
“A family disappeared. An Israeli diamond dealer.”
Her parents waited for more.
“That’s all I know,” Rina said.
“Akiva’s looking for a family?” Magda asked. “I thought he was in murder now.”
“Maybe he thinks they were murdered, Mama.”
“Will he be home tonight, Ginny?” her father asked.
Rina smiled to herself. Her parents called her Regina—Ginny—which was her English name. And for some reason, they called Peter by his Hebrew name, Akiva. Maybe Peter sounded just too goyishe for them.
“Of course.” Rina turned to her mother. “Do you want an apron? I don’t think grease does well on silk.”
“This old thing?” Magda pinched the fabric of her blouse and let it drop.
Again, Rina held back a smile. It was a game with Mama. A way to amass compliments without looking needy. The woman was always dressed perfectly. Yet Mama had always been approachable even when Rina was a sticky-fingered child.
“Come into the kitchen,” Rina said. “Let me get you an apron.”
“If you insist,” Magda said. “Stefan, get the boys. Let’s eat before the baby wakes up.”
Rina came back to the dining room, holding a baking dish filled with spinach lasagne. She placed it on a tile trivet, and a moment later, her sons shuffled into the dining room. They plopped themselves down on the chairs after ritually washing their hands and breaking bread. Their long legs sprawled under the table. Rina looked at their pants cuffs—short again. Each must have grown another inch in the past month. The boys were generally good-natured except when they were tired.
Which was all the time.
Between the pounds of homework the school loaded on and the hormones of burgeoning adolescence, they were a cranky lot. Thank God for Peter—a stolid island of refuge in a sea of emotional turmoil.
Sammy adjusted his yarmulke and poured himself a glass of lemonade. “Wow. Lasagne. Is it dairy, I hope? I don’t want to be fleshig.”
“It’s dairy,” Rina answered. “Why don’t you want to be fleshig?”
“I want to eat a milk-chocolate candy bar.”
That’s a reason? Rina thought.
Magda brushed sandy-colored hair away from the boy’s brown eyes. “Think you would like to say hello to your omah?”
Sammy scooped up a double portion of lasagne and looked up at his grandmother. Her sentence came out “Tink you vould like to say hello to your omah?”
“Hi, Omah.” He stuffed a forkful of lasagne in his mouth. “Hi, Opah.”
“Hello, Shmuel,” Stefan said. “How are you today?”
Sammy smiled through a mouthful of noodles. “Okay.”
Stefan spooned a portion onto his younger grandson’s plate. “And how’re you doing, Yonkie?”
The younger boy smiled, pushing black hair off his forehead. “I’m doing okay. Thanks for the lasagne, Opah. Take some for yourself.”
“I will,” Stefan announced. “I love lasagne.”
“He eats my lasagne like candy,” Magda said.
Rina brought in a salad. “You make delicious lasagne, Mama.”
Magda blushed. “I’m sure yours is twice as good.”
“I’m sure it isn’t,” Rina said, smiling.
“Where’s Dad?” Sammy poured salad dressing over a mound of lettuce. “He’s never home anymore.”
“Yes, he is, Sammy,” Rina said. “He’s on a new case. Whenever he starts a new case, he has to put in extra hours.”
“He works too hard,” Magda stated.
“He’s on Homicide, Mama. It demands long hours.”
“How can he work with so many dead people?” Magda said.
Stefan said, “He doesn’t work with the dead people, Magda. Only the live ones.”
Rina laughed softly. Her father was serious. “Have some green beans, Mama. They’re Italian cut.”
“I’ll take some green beans,” Jake said.
“Certainly,” Magda said. “They’re good for you.”
“Who was whacked?” Sammy asked.
“Whacked?” Rina said. “Is that how they teach you to talk in yeshiva?”
“That’s how Dad talks.”
“No, he doesn’t.”
“Yes, he does,” Sammy insisted. “He talks like that to Marge all the time. Just not to you.”
It was true. Rina said, “No one was murdered. A family has disappeared.”
“Israeli diamond dealer,” Stefan said.
“Anyone we know?” Jake asked.
“I don’t think so,” Rina answered.
“Isn’t your friend who’s coming out married to a diamond dealer?” Magda asked.
“Honey?” Rina said. “Yes, she is.”
Sammy looked up from his plate. “Who’s coming out?”
“An old friend of mine and her kids—”
“Great. I’m going to lose my room.”
“Hospitality is a mitzvah, Sammy,” Rina said. “I’m sure they taught you about hachnasat orchim somewhere in your yeshiva education.”
“How long?” Sammy turned to his brother. “Pass the beans, Yonkie.”
Jake gave his brother the bowl. “They can have my room, Eema. I’ll move into the attic.”
“You will not move into the attic. Your father hasn’t put in the heater and we don’t even have a decent staircase up there yet.”
“So I’ll be careful and use double blankets. I like it up there. It’s quiet and I have a view.”
“It’s a perfect solution,” Sammy said. “Please pass the lasagne, Omah.”
Magda placed another portion on her grandson’s plate. “Anyone else like as long as I got the spatula?”
“I’ll take another piece,” Stefan said.
“You like the lasagne, Stefan?”
“It’s good, but it isn’t yours, Magda.” He winked at his daughter. “No offense to you, Ginny.”
“None taken. I agree.”
Magda tried to hold back a smile and was unsuccessful.
“So how long is this friend coming out for?” Sammy said.
“I think she said a week.”
Magda said, “She was a very strange girl growing up. Always very nervous.”
“She was okay,” Rina said.
“Meaning she’s weird,” Sammy said.
“She’s not weird,” Rina said.
Magda said, “Didn’t her mother pass away when she was young?”
Rina stared at her mother, then whispered yes. Magda instantly realized her faux pas and glanced at the boys. They were quiet. They had accepted Akiva as their father so completely, she had momentarily forgotten about Yitzchak. She clasped her shaking hands.
“I’m a stupid old woman,” she muttered behind tears.
“Oh, forget it, Omah,” Jake said, patting her hand. “We love you.”
Sammy kissed his grandmother’s cheek. It had become quite bony over the past year. Like always, Omah was decked out. “Stop worrying, Omah. You can mention Abba here. We do it all the time. Even Dad talks about Abba.” He took the spatula out of her hand. “Here. Take some more of Eema’s lasagne. Even if it isn’t as good as yours.”
Magda wiped her eyes. “You are such good boys.” She suddenly stood and hugged her grandsons fiercely. “I want you to know that I loved your abba.”
“Of course you did, Mama,” Rina said. “Just enjoy the meal and relax.”
“It’s just I get stupid with my words.” Magda sat down.
“Yitzchak is not insulted,” Stefan said. “He knows we all loved him. Believe me, he knows. Now the important question. Who is Honey, Ginny? I don’t remember her.”
“She had blond hair,” Magda said. “Very nice hair. She married a very religious man, didn’t she, Ginny?”
Rina nodded. “A Leibbener Chasid.”
“Terrific.” Sammy’s smile was snide. “Another fringy Chasid.”
“Shmuel, show some tolerance,” Rina said.
“The Leibbeners are weird,” Sammy said. “They don’t use phones.”
“What you mean they don’t use phones?” Stefan asked.
“Just that,” Sammy said.
“That’s ridiculous.”
“I think it’s true,” Rina said.
“Why?” Stefan asked.
“Because they’re weird,” Sammy said.
Jake said, “I really don’t mind sleeping in the attic.”
“Is the baby crying?” Magda asked.
The room fell silent for a moment. Rina shrugged and went back to her lasagne.
“If your friend has a husband who is diamond dealer,” Stefan said, “maybe he knows the family that disappeared.”
“What are you talking about, Stefan?” Magda asked.
“The case that Akiva’s working on,” Stefan explained. “The family that is missing.”
Rina said, “I think there’re a lot of diamond dealers in the country, Papa.”
Jake said, “Why’s she coming out with her kids?”
“You usually travel with your kids,” Rina said.
“In the middle of school?” Jake asked. “Do they have vacation or something?”
“I don’t know.” Rina paused. “There’s no holiday that I can think of right now.”
“So she’s pulling them out of school?” Sammy grinned. “Sounds like my kind of mother.”
“Just eat your lasagne, Shmuel, and stop opining.”
“Why does she come out now, Ginny?” Stefan asked.
Rina thought about that. It was a good question.
9
Marge opened the passenger door of the unmarked and slid in, kicking off her shoes.
“It’s great to get off my feet.” She rubbed her toes.
“I drew blanks,” Decker said. “Neighbors said the family seemed nice, but nothing beyond that. What about you? Did you get anything for your fallen arches?”
“Matter of fact, I did. The next-door neighbor …” Marge paged through her scribblings. “Mindy Herrero … she did say that there was a black Lexus parked outside during the day at least twice a week for years. This made me curious.”
“I’ll bet.”
Marge smiled. “The Yaloms don’t own a black Lexus. And neither does Orit Bar Lulu. But guess who does?”
“The partner—Shaul Gold.”
“Right on, Rabbi. He and Yalom may have hated each other, but Gold was here a lot. It could be that Gold and Mr. Yalom were doing business at the house. Or it could be Gold and Mrs. Yalom were doing monkey business. I saw the missus’s photos in the family room. Dalia’s a good-looking woman.”
“In a quiet, shy way.”
“It’s the shy ones you have to watch.”
“Interesting,” Decker said. “All right. Suppose Gold and Dalia Yalom were having an affair. That still wouldn’t explain why the whole family disappeared. If Gold wanted Arik out of the picture, only Arik would be gone.”
The car was quiet for a moment.
Marge said, “Maybe he whacked the husband, then told Dalia to take the kids and run.”
“Then why would he stick around?”
Marge said, “Somebody’s got to earn a living.”
“And the kids?” Decker said.
“Hey, Sharona implied they hated the father. Good riddance to bad rubbish.”
“I don’t like it, Marge.”
She paused. “Okay, try this. Suppose Arik found out about the affair and went crazy. He killed his wife in a rage, then killed his kids, who weren’t turning out like he had wanted, took his diamonds stashed in the silver case posted on the doorframe, and split the country. Maybe he even forged some documents and created himself a new identity. It could be another case of List.”
Decker thought about her theory. John List was a man who murdered his entire family and disappeared, taking on a new identity and eluding the police for about twenty years. He was finally caught after a nab-your-own-fugitive show aired the case on prime-time TV.
“It’s possible,” Decker said. “But we’ve got some major differences. First off, the bodies of List’s wife, mother, and children were found butchered inside the house, making him a prime suspect. Here we don’t have bodies, only an entire family that vanished.”
“Maybe Daddy lured the crew somewhere into the boonies.”
“Except the cars are still in the garage.”
“So he rented a car.”
“Could be,” Decker said. “You want to check out local rent-a-cars?”
“I’ll put it on my list—no pun intended.” Marge wrote it down. “What other differences do you see between this and the List case?”
Decker said, “John List was swimming in debt. The house he had was big and expensive but empty, because he couldn’t afford to furnish it. He claimed he had no way out. By all accounts so far, Yalom seems well heeled. He wouldn’t have to murder to escape. He could have just taken the money and run.”
“Divorce is expensive,” Marge said. “Yalom’s got a rep as a tightwad. Just like List, I might add. What other differences do you see?”
“This probably isn’t important,” Decker said, “but I’ll throw it out anyway. List had confessed his crimes to a minister, stating he felt that the murders were the only way to ensure his sinful wife and children’s arrival in heaven.”
“Kill the body to save the soul,” Marge said.
“Exactly,” Decker said. “Yalom isn’t or wasn’t a religious man.”
“So what’s the point?”
“I’m not sure there is a point,” Decker said. “Just that Arik seemed to disdain God. Dov was the spiritual one.”
“Maybe he was killing the body to save the soul,” Marge said. “So we’re back on the son or sons. Unfortunately, we still don’t have a shred more of evidence.”
“No, we don’t,” Decker said. “But one thing at a time.”
It caught Rina’s ear so she turned up her car radio. Top of the hour and the news station was presenting its feature stories—among them, something about a missing family. It had to be Peter’s case. How many missing families could there be, even in a city as large as Los Angeles? Details would be given out soon, after the traffic report and a commercial for carefree aluminum siding.
She changed lanes and reduced the speedometer to fifty-five. It was smooth sailing this morning. Usually, the North Valley freeways were lightly traveled because the population in the Outback was less dense than in LA proper. She enjoyed the congestion-free asphalt, knowing cars would begin to back up as soon as she neared LAX.
Not to worry even if she did hit a jam. Honey didn’t seem in a rush. Maybe she was just being polite, but Rina didn’t think so.
Take your time, Rina. We’re all so excited just to be somewhere new!
They’re not exhausted?
Are you kidding! The kids are thrilled to be in a place so full of hustle and bustle—so full of life.
Honey’s emotions sounded genuine and that made Rina introspect. Imagine being excited over an airport! She supposed it could hold a fascination for children—all the big jets flying up and down—but Honey herself sounded buoyant. Maybe she was just so happy to get away from her provincial existence, anything would be wonderful.
Take your time! Honey’s voice had been full of melody. We’re in no hurry.
Maybe it was time to stop and smell the jet fuel.
Hannah started to whimper. Rina gave her a bottle of apple juice. The baby drank greedily, hitting the bottle as she sucked.
Her analysis of Honey was cut short when the news item came back on the radio. Again, Rina had heard the word “disappearance” but had missed the name of the family.
They lived in West Hills. A fancy private housing development. Nothing seemed out of place. Confused and concerned neighbors. An interview with one of them. Police were asking the public’s help.
The newscaster finally repeated the last name—Yalom. Yes, it was Peter’s—and Marge’s—case. She couldn’t forget a name like Yalom. Rina had commented to Peter that yahalom meant diamond in Hebrew.
There probably was a Stein somewhere in his family tree.
Peter had been amazed. What’s your secret, Sherlock?
Stein means stone in German … Yiddish. It was probably Hebraized when the family moved to Israel. They do that a lot.
Peter’s expression was flat. Maybe you should take the case? If you spoke to Bar Lulu in Hebrew, something sub rosa might come out.
He hadn’t elaborated. Rina was getting better at reading Peter. He’d been joking of course, but there had been a hint of truth behind his suggestion. She had responded lightly, said something about posing as an assistant if it would help. Peter had smoothed his mustache and said nothing. Meaning he hadn’t ruled it out.
Not that she was anxious to get involved in Peter’s work. Or any work for that matter. Rina was quite content to stay at home and take care of Hannah—her last baby. One swift cut from the surgeon’s knife and she no longer could bear children.
How many times had she replayed the scene in her head? Yes, it had been an emergency. Yes, the doctor had been absolutely right. Yes, it had been the surgery versus her life. Everything had been handled letter perfect. She should feel grateful.
And she did.
But not all the time. At thirty-one, Rina had expected and had wanted more children. She’d always felt that she was born to nurture. Unlike many women in this modern age, Rina considered childrearing a privilege and not a chore. Not that she didn’t get mad at her kids, pound her head against the wall from time to time. But it was all in a day’s work. There was no perfect way to raise children. Parenthood was filled with fuzzy borders and shades of gray. Some people were confused without a blueprint. Rina found the freedom exhilarating. Probably because she had worked so many years with numbers—first as a math teacher, then as a bookkeeper. Precision had made her a nervous wreck.
Rina had wanted lots of children. But that wasn’t an option anymore. She was constantly telling herself not to dwell on the past. Anyway, raising kids was an occupation of planned obsolescence. They get big, they move on, they have their own lives. If you want lifelong, unconditional devotion, buy a dog.
Oh, stop brooding, she chastized herself. Enjoy your baby and your sons while they’re home.
If only there was some way to harness her nurturance into a profession she could do at home. She had considered running a day-care center, but the required regulations and the insurance had turned it into a prohibitive proposal. Besides, with Hannah around, there might be too much opportunity for conflict. It might be hard for her to share her toys with the all-day interlopers. Hannah deserved to be queen for a good couple of years.
Rina switched the radio dial to an oldies station. As she tapped out rhythm on her steering wheel, she became philosophical. Something would come up.
There was enough luggage to sustain the Kleins for a year in deepest Africa. Thank God, Rina had remembered to bring the bungee cords. Honey was sheepish.
“I guess I didn’t know what to pack so I packed everything.” Honey stuffed another suitcase into the hatch of the Volvo. “If it’s too much, I’ll take some of the valises and follow you in a cab.”
“Cabs are expensive, Honey.” Rina hoisted a case on top of the car. “I think we can make it if you don’t mind squeezing. We’ll have to double-belt, though. I’ll keep the car seat up front.”
“Whatever is easiest,” Honey said. “Mendie, help her with the suitcases. Rina, let him do it. He’s a big boy.”
Mendel was thirteen—gangly and sullen. Rina waved him off as she secured the last of the batch to her car’s roof. “I think we’re just about set.” She eyed the precarious cargo. “I’ll just take it slow and hope I don’t get a ticket.”
Honey said, “Isn’t your husband a police officer?”
Rina eyed the load once more. “Membership has its privileges, but I refuse to pull rank.” She smiled at the kids. “I hope you don’t mind being squashed for just a bit.”
The children were silent. Four of them—ages ranging from fifteen to five. Two boys with payis, dressed in black suits, white shirts, and big, black kippot that covered their scalp-shorn hair. The two girls had long plaits and wore long-sleeved, high-necked dresses over opaque tights. All of them were loaded down in heavy winter coats, sweating under their weight.
Guilt caused Rina’s eyes to linger on their dress.
Two years ago, Rina had made a radical decision. She had pulled her boys out of the black-hat yeshiva of Ohavei Torah and shipped them off to a modern Orthodox yeshiva in North Hollywood. There, secular education was an important part of the curriculum, and college wasn’t a dirty word. The boys were game, willing to give it a try since both were academically-minded. But during the transition, whenever Rina closed her eyes, she saw Yitzchak’s face. It was never a stern face—Yitzy was a gentleman and a gentle man. But it was a sad face.
She had changed since her first marriage, away from the insular black-hatted religious, toward the modern Orthodoxy she grew up with. Of course, she still covered her hair whenever she went out, but it was in a more modern way. Today, her head was topped with a knitted tam, her long black hair braided and tied into a knot. But the head covering didn’t obliterate all her natural hair. The tam was not as kosher as the shaytel she used to wear.
Her eyes drifted to Honey and her shaytel. The wig was a good one—thick and multicolored and slightly waffled. Very natural-looking. And it covered every inch of her hair.
Like the one Rina used to wear.
Both women were garbed in long-sleeved sweaters and over-the-knee skirts. Rina still refused to wear pants or go sleeveless. But she had changed. Her marriage to Peter had made her more modern, just as her marriage to Yitzchak had made her more Orthodox.
Honey took Rina’s confused expression as a chance to make contact. She scooped up Rina’s hands and swung them. It was an adolescent gesture and Rina was suddenly transported back to her teens. Honey still retained her girlish—almost boyish—figure. As thin and straight as a stick.
“Thanks for taking us in.”
“We’ll have fun,” Rina said.
Honey’s teal eyes beamed. “Fun. I like that word.” She turned to her kids, started to speak in Yiddish, then stopped herself with a giggle. “I’m not used to speaking English. Come on, kids. Let’s go.”
“They should probably take off their coats and lay them on their laps,” Rina suggested. “It’s going to be a tight fit as is.”
The children didn’t move.
Honey said in English, “You heard Mrs. Lazarus. Take off your coats.” She clapped. “C’mon, people. Let’s get this show on the road.”
Quickly, the kids obeyed.
Honey turned to Rina. “It isn’t Lazarus anymore, is it?”
“It’s Decker.”
“Sorry.”
“Don’t worry about it. Come on, troops. Pile in.”
Slowly, the kids inched toward her Volvo. The girls crowded together on the left, the boys leaned to the right. They looked stunned, in complete contrast to Honey, who seemed joyous. She cranked down the backseat window and peered out expectantly. Rina slid into the driver’s seat and turned around to the back.
“Kids, you’re going to have to put on your seat belts.”
They glanced at each other, dumbfounded.
Honey began hunting around. “Seat belts. Like we wore in the airplane. They have them in cars.” She smiled at Rina. “In the village, all we have is old jalopies for major hauling. We never use cars for traveling. Everything’s in walking distance.” She reached over and pulled the harness belt. “Come on, kids. Cooperate.”
Rina felt the kids weren’t being stubborn. They were just confused. Buckling up took them another few minutes.
“Doesn’t Gershon work in the city?” Rina asked.
“Of course. The village owns a bus,” Honey said. “Several buses. The men take the bus into the city. Gosh, you should see how they’ve altered it. It has tables and benches for learning, and a bookcase full of sepharim. I was shocked when I first saw it. A bais midrash on wheels. Now I’m used to it. The women have their own bus, too, but we don’t use it very often. Everything we need is in the village. Good! We’re all set, Rina.”
Rina started the engine and pulled out of the loading zone. Glancing in the rearview mirror, she noticed the kids were still huddled together. Honey was oblivious to their uneasiness. She was too busy looking out the window.
“Look out there, kinder! Winter back home and here everything’s green. Can you imagine that? Do you know they can grow oranges and tangerines out here? They pick them right off the trees in their own backyards.”
Honey’s youngest, a boy, said, “We have trees in our backyard.”
“Not orange trees, Pessy,” the oldest girl said, derisively.
“Will you have some patience, Minda?” Honey scolded her. She smiled at Pessy. “I’ll show you the trees.” She spoke up to Rina. “You still have orange trees here, don’t you?”
“We have a whole citrus grove on our property,” Rina said. “It’s a ranch with horses and hay and a barn.”
Honey grinned. “Oh, Pessy, trees, and horses and a barn! Like we see in the countryside. Isn’t that exciting!”
The boy looked curious. “Horses like cowboys ride?”
At least he knows about cowboys, Rina thought. She said, “Yes, horses like the cowboys ride. My husband’s a cowboy … of sorts.”
That was too much for Pessy. He knitted his brow and fell silent.
Honey said, “I’m still amazed. When we left it was thirty degrees outside. Our village was a carpet of snow and ice. Walking three blocks hurt your lungs. Then you get on a plane, five hours later, it’s sunshine and greenery.”
“It’s been raining,” Rina said. “That’s why it’s so green. Anyone hungry?”
Honey began rooting through her handbag. “I think I have a package of crackers.”
Rina laughed. “I packed some fruit in a bag, Honey. It’s under your feet. Help yourself.”
Honey retrieved the bag from under her seat and pulled out an apple. “You thought of everything. Who wants?”
Pessy was about to pipe up when Mendel elbowed him in the ribs. The little boy sank back in the seat and was silent.
“Mendie, do you mind, please?” Honey spoke in Yiddish. “Take it, Pessy. That’s what it’s here for.”
Slowly, little fingers extended toward Honey. She gave him the apple.
Mendel said, “B’racha!”
Pessy looked at Mendel, said a prayer, then took a bite of the apple. He told Rina thank you in English.
“You’re welcome,” Rina answered.
“Anybody else want?” Honey asked.
Once again, the car fell silent. Rina hadn’t heard boo out of the younger girl. She was fair like her mother, with a smattering of freckles on each cheek.
“Maybe later, Honey,” Rina said.
“Well, I’m going to have a tangerine. It looks good.”
Honey broke off a small bit of peel. “Rina, I didn’t officially introduce you to my kids, did I?”
“Not officially.”
Honey kissed her elder daughter’s cheek. “This is Minda. She’s fifteen and beautiful—”
“Mama!” the girl whispered.
“Oh don’t shush me. You are beautiful, right, Rina?”
“Right,” Rina answered.
The girl blushed, holding back a smile at the compliment.
“Mendel is my scholar. Contrary to what you might think, he does know how to smile.”
“Only if I’m forced,” Mendel said, dryly.
Rina laughed. “You’re going to get along with Shmuel just fine. What mesechet are you learning, Mendel?”
The boy paused, perplexed by Rina’s interest in his studies. Girls just weren’t supposed to be aware of these things. But he answered just to be polite.
“Sukkos.” Mendel paused. “Do you have a Shas at your house?”
Rina let out a small laugh as she named the many Hebraic tomes in her library. “We have a standard Shas, we have a Steinzaltz Shas. We have a Shulchan Aruch, a Mishna Torah, Me’am Loez, plus some others. Will that help you out?”
Mendel nodded, but didn’t speak. Yet he seemed more relaxed. Perhaps he finally realized his mother wasn’t taking him to Sodom and Gomorrah.
Honey said, “See, Mendie, you’ve got nothing to worry about.” To Rina, she said, “He’s always afraid he’ll fall behind in his shiur, so he studies and makes himself go ahead. Did I introduce you to my younger daughter, Bryna, who is almost eight?”
“Hi, Bryna,” Rina said.
The girl smiled, showing missing side teeth.
“Are you excited about your vacation?”
The girl nodded.
“And you’ve met my sweetie pie, Pessy, who just turned five.” Honey clapped her hands. “So what should we do first, children? How about the zoo? Is that far from where you live, Rina? We can take the bus.”
“I’ll take you as soon as we unload all the luggage.”
Honey squeezed Bryna’s shoulder. “What do you think about that? Would you like to see real lions and tigers?”
Rina peeked in her rearview mirror. The girl seemed interested. Pessy could hardly contain his excitement.
“I wanna see them, Mama. Can I pet them?”
“You can’t pet a lion, Pessy,” Minda said. “Besides, they’re in cages.”
“How do you know about a zoo?” Mendel asked.
“We once went to the Brooklyn Zoo. We took a picnic lunch and spent the day in the park. Remember that, Mama?”
Honey nodded. “Do you remember that, Bryna? You were about two.”
The younger girl shook her head.
Honey smiled. “Wasn’t that fun, Minda?”
“Actually, I felt sorry for the animals,” Minda said. “All caged up.”
“The animals here aren’t in cages,” Rina said.
Bryna’s expression became petrified.
“They’re in enclosures,” Rina said quickly. “They can’t get out and walk around. But they live in big open spaces that are supposed to be like the animal’s natural habitat.”
Again, the car fell silent. Bryna whispered something in her mother’s ear.
Honey smiled. “How would you translate habitat?”
“The animal’s natural home,” Rina said. “It’s a lovely park. You have to see it to appreciate it.”
“The lions can’t get out?” Bryna said.
“No.”
“What happens if they do get out?”
“They just don’t, Bryna.”
“But if they do?”
“They take a gun and shoot them, Bryna,” Minda said. “And if you don’t behave, they shoot you, too.”
“Minda!” Honey was exasperated. “Your sister’s talking stupid, Bryna. Don’t pay attention to her.”
“I’ll see the lions, Mama,” Pessy said, bravely.
Honey tousled his kippah. “Isn’t he a doll, Rina?”
“Yes.”
“Speaking of dolls, you have a really cute one in front.”
“I love her.”
“What’s her name?”
“Channah,” Rina said, using her Hebrew name.
“Hello, Channaleh,” Honey cooed. “You must be enjoying her so much.”
“Very much.”
“And your husband?”
“He’s in seventh heaven.”
“He wasn’t mad it wasn’t a boy?”
“No, not at all.”
“That’s nice. Some men are real strange that way.”
Rina didn’t answer.
“Every child is a gift from Hashem,” Honey said.
“Absolutely.”
Honey scratched her wig. “Boy, girl? Who cares?”
“I certainly don’t.”
“Of course, husbands do like to learn with their sons. Gershon liked it when Pessy was born. Made a big deal about now having mezuman.”
Rina didn’t answer. Mezuman—a quorum of three men—was needed to recite a special blessing before Birkat HaMazon, the grace after meals. When the boys got big, Gershon could now say the extra blessing each time he ate.
Rina said to Mendel, “Your father must enjoy learning with you.”
Mendel didn’t answer. His expression said it was none of her business. Honey hadn’t noticed, as she was back observing the scenery. Eyes focused out the window widened as the car passed an industrial park, its walkways and parking lots lined with palms. She took her younger children’s hands. “Those are palm trees, kids! Aren’t they just majestic and beautiful? Don’t you feel like you’re in a tropical rain forest?”
Rina re-eyed the industrial park. It took a big stretch to imagine a tropical rain forest, but she said nothing. The kids were also quiet, perplexed by their mother’s enthusiasm.
Honey laughed softly. “I keep forgetting. They haven’t grown up with TV and all those kinds of fun picture books. They have no idea what tropical means.”
10
The recent rains had not only greened the mountains but had washed the rankness from the streets of metro LA. As in most cities, the downtown area was hardly pastoral, but it wasn’t as beaten as others Decker had seen. It was a mixture of gentrification and seediness, a city with an identity problem. Central LA played host to the seat of city government as well as a few fine hotels. In addition, the area had the old, established banking and law firms. But there was more to downtown than just maintaining the past.
Signs of urban renewal—the recently constructed neon-green convention center complex, a top-of-the-line apartment city, a spanking new library. Like the phoenix, the building was resurrected from the ashes of the old one. Decker heard people talking about the city going down the tubes, yet he remained optimistic. Sure he’d seen the worst aspects of human nature. Yet he’d also seen plenty of everyday heroes—ordinary men and women who had risked their lives to help others. He wasn’t just a fair-weather Angelino. He was in it for the long haul.
Today, Decker’s spirits were high. It was the weather. The air was crisp, the sky as soft as cashmere, gauzed with filmy, mother-of-pearl clouds. Tall buildings were bronzed by the low sun, the beams bouncing off glass and metal. The urban decay seemed softened as if photographed through a hairsprayed lens. There was a lot of foot traffic—the business suits, the immigrants, the homeless, the vendors—but it was flowing smoothly. A steady breeze rippled through the parade of clothing.
He negotiated the unmarked through a series of turns until he found the diamond center—a twenty-story monolith of granite near Sixth and Hill. Luck was with him and he found street parking. He eased the Plymouth curbside and shut off the motor, checking his notes before he went inside. Satisfied, he got out and walked through the center’s doors.
The lobby, like the exterior, was fashioned from the same gray granite and presented as hard as a steel vault. The reception area was fronted by a mountainside of stone which held the building’s directory. On either side were banks of elevators. Decker knew the unit number and pushed the button for the Otis special. The elevator soon opened and out came an array of foreign speech and Chasidic dress. His eyes followed the black robes of the ultra-Orthodox Jews and he almost missed the elevator.
He knew there were lots of Orthodox Jews in the diamond business. He also knew there were lots of secular Israelis like Yalom in the business as well. He wondered how they got along.
Then he wondered if there were other people besides Jews in the business at all.
He got off on the thirteenth floor, walked down a carpeted hall until he got to 1306. The door sign said YALOM AND GOLD, INC. The doorframe held a small, metal-cased mezuzah.
This mezuzah was on the outside doorframe. Yalom knew the difference.
Decker peered down the foyer. Lots of mezuzahs. And lots of closed-circuit cameras. He rang the buzzer to 1306. An accented female voice asked who was there. He answered and was allowed to pass through the portal.
Yalom and Gold, Inc., wasn’t much for decorating. The reception area was basically a carpeted sally port—a passageway from the outside to the inner sanctum. A young, pretty receptionist sat behind a glass cage. She had a coffee-colored complexion set into drawn curtains of shiny, ebony hair. Brown eyes looked him over. Decker smiled and took out his identification.
“One minute,” she said, speaking through a voice amplifier. She picked up the phone. Her lips moved but Decker couldn’t hear what she said. Holding the receiver up to her ear, she said, “May I see your identification again, please?”
Decker took out his shield and accompanying card. The woman looked it over carefully. “Mr. Gold will be right with you.” She turned off her mike and went back to work.
No chitchat with this one. Decker looked around, feeling as if he were about to enter prison. Two more closed-circuit cameras were placed in the upper corners. He thought about waving, then nixed the idea. With no place to sit, he stood in place and rocked on his feet.
A minute later, a fifties-plus man came through the inner door, his appearance slightly unkempt—shirt wrinkled at the collar, tie askew, pants unpressed. He was balding, his salt-and-pepper hair combed to the side. Built solidly with a big chest and thick wrists, he looked like a man used to physical labor, uncomfortable in the black suit he was wearing. His eyes seemed sharp, his expression marked with suspicion. But he held out his hand in an effort to appear friendly. Decker took the proffered hand.
“All night I’ve been making phone calls.” The man also had a thick accent. “It’s meshuga, Arik taking off like this. It doesn’t make sense.”
“Shaul Gold?” Decker asked.
“Yes, yes, of course.” Gold was irritated. “Who else would I be? Let’s go in the office. Yochevet is trustworthy but she has a big mouth.”
“Not as big as yours,” the receptionist’s amplified voice piped in.
Gold waved her off but she didn’t seem offended. “This way.”
Yochevet buzzed them through. Decker followed Gold down a short hallway into an office as bright as an atrium. Two walls of glass allowing a full view of the action from a thousand feet up. Not a place for an acrophobic. Or a claustrophobic.
Because the office was tiny.
It was set up like a lunch counter. Two stools sat tucked under a black Formica bartop. Gold pulled out a stool and motioned Decker to sit. He went around to the other side and sat as well, behind him a panoramic view of Pershing Square still under construction. At Gold’s right was a brushed-steel vault. Above the safe were TV monitors showing the front entrance as well as the sally port. So far, the coast was clear. Between the TV monitors was a picture of the recently deceased Lubavitcher Rebbe. He wore a black hat that covered his head and a full beard took up most of his face. But it was easy to see the great Rav was smiling in the photo—the kind, crinkly eyes.
Since Arik had been described as anti-religious, Decker wondered if the picture of the rabbi was Gold’s doing. He didn’t seem religious, though. He wasn’t wearing a yarmulke.
Decker’s eyes went back to the counter. On the top was a scale, a scoop, a jeweler’s loupe, and a two-by-two desk calendar, each square marked with appointments and obligations in multicolored inks and pencil. On the fifteenth, spilling over to the sixteenth, sat a heap of loose diamonds.
Decker kept his face flat, but was floored. Thousands of dollars of gems carelessly scattered on an old, marked-up calendar. Gold fingered them gently.
“I’ll finish up later.” In one clean motion, Gold picked up the scoop and swooped the stones off the calendar. He stopped and studied Decker. “Unless you’re interested. I give you a good price.”
Decker smiled. “Some other time.”
Gold said, “Once a salesman …” He poured the diamonds into an envelope and stowed them behind the counter. His features weren’t bad—light, gentle eyes softened a strong chin and a bulbous nose—the kind that comes from genes rather than booze. Gold rubbed his arms. “Sure you’re not interested? It’s a new shipment.”
“Positive,” Decker said. “Do you always leave your diamonds in the open like that?”
Gold’s eyes met Decker’s straight on. “I have a gun under the counter. Someone starts something, I finish it. You want to see my license?”
“Not necessary.”
Gold said, “Besides, you’re the police. If you steal from me, you’re in worse trouble than me.”
“How do you know I’m the police?”
“I saw your ID through the cameras when you showed it to Yochevet. If I don’t like what I see, I don’t buzz you in.” Gold rotated his neck and pointed to the TV monitors. “We’ve got cameras and more cameras. On the outside, on the inside. The system works so you can’t open the outside door and the inside door at the same time. For my protection. Still, everyone here walks around looking over their shoulders.”
“You’ve had incidents?”
“We’ve had robberies. Terrible.” Gold shook his head. “One man was beaten so bad he almost died. Why you think I got a gun? Six years I spent in the Israeli army. One thing it does is make you comfortable with guns. That’s a good thing. When you don’t know what you’re doing, that’s when you screw up.”
“The old man who was beaten,” Decker said. “Did they mug him in the hallway or come into his office?”
“In the hallway. But there have been muggings in both places.”
“Does Arik have a gun?” Decker asked.
“This is a shared office. We share the gun. So far, no need for it, Baruch Hashem.”
“Does Arik have a gun at home?”
Gold was quiet for a moment. “No, I don’t think so. He didn’t want guns around the house because of the boys. Teenage boys can do some very dumb things.”
“His boys ever do anything real dumb?”
Gold shrugged. “I suppose, yes. When I was a teenager, I did dumb things. I’m sure Arik did dumb things, too. That’s why I’m nervous about him. He can be reckless.”
Decker took out his notebook. “Anything different going on in his life as far as you could tell?”
“As far as I can tell, no.” Gold shook his head. “Arik’s Arik. Quick, sharp, fast-thinking, a big pain in the ass.” He ran his hand over his face. “You want to ask me if he has enemies?”
“Does he?” Decker said.
“Arik has many people who hate him. Me? I can’t stand the bastard. He’s reckless, but he’s also stingy. He hoards and hoards! I keep telling him we don’t make money by keeping diamonds, only by selling. But I admit a good thing about Arik. He has a nose for top dollar. Like I say, he is very sharp. He knows when to buy, when to sell.”
“And what do you know?”
“I know how to sell,” Gold said. “Arik and I are good for each other.”
Decker said, “Are you also good for Mrs. Yalom?”
Gold’s eyes narrowed. “You can explain that?”
“Mr. Gold, why is your Lexus parked outside Yalom’s house on an average of two days a week during daylight hours?”
Gold broke into laughter. “You think something naughty is going on between me and Dalia? You have a very dirty mind, Sergeant.”
“Can you answer the question?”
“I’m doing business with my partner,” Gold said. “Real business.”
“You do business with Mr. Yalom at his house?”
“All the time. Like you saw—about two, three days a week.”
“Then why bother with the office?”
“For the clients.”
Gold’s face was unreadable. Decker didn’t buy his story. “Mrs. Yalom doesn’t get in your way?”
“Dalia works. Even if she’s home, I rarely see her. We go into Arik’s office, shut the door …” Gold shrugged. “Certain things are better discussed away from Yochevet.”
“You’re not worried about Dalia hearing things?”
Gold remained stone-faced. “No.”
Six years in the Israeli army. Guy’s a tough cookie. Decker said, “And you haven’t seen or heard from Mr. Yalom in the past two days?”
“Nothing. I’m very concerned. Maybe he got too reckless.” Gold took out a pack of cigarettes. “Do you mind?”
Decker shook his head.
“Yochie hates it.” Gold lit up. “Says I smell up the office. That girl has a big mouth.”
“Why do you keep her?”
“Because she’s good.”
Good in what capacity? Decker said, “Tell me about Mr. Yalom.”
“I told you all I know.”
“That Mr. Yalom is stingy. How stingy could he be, living in a house like that?”
“That’s for Dalia.” Gold blew out smoke. “The house was bought with her money.”
Decker perked up. “Dalia has money?”
Gold nodded. “Her father is a very wealthy diamond dealer in Israel. When she met Arik, he was nothing but a poor stonecutter.”
“I thought his family had money … jewels smuggled out from Europe.”
“Yes, the Yalom family owns a few nice pieces of jewelry. But nothing compared to Mr. Menkovitz.” Gold took a final puff of his smoke, then crushed the butt. “It was Dalia’s father who gave Arik money to invest in diamonds. She set him up.”
“Is it a sore spot with Mr. Yalom?” Decker asked. “His wife setting him up?”
“Mah pitom?” Gold said. “Why should it be a sore spot? Arik has done very well by himself.”
Decker said, “But Dalia still has independent wealth?”
Gold said, “Her father takes care of her.”
Decker now wondered if someone was out to get Dalia. Who would gain from her demise? First, Arik, then her sons. Maybe this was all some messy family affair. He said, “I heard Arik didn’t get along with his sons.”
Gold said, “Where’d you hear that?”
“Is it true?”
Gold rubbed his chin. “Does Arik fight with his boys? Of course he does. But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t love them.”
“What about Mrs. Yalom? Does she fight with the boys?”
“Dalia? No.” Gold’s face softened. “Dalia doesn’t fight with anyone. She is soft. Like her mother.”
“You know the family?”
“I knew them before Arik did. I’m old family friend. I grew up in the neighborhood. I baby-sat Dalia.”
“How’d she meet Arik?”
“Her father introduced them.”
“And you approved of the match?”
Gold studied Decker. “What does my opinion matter? The family approved. Dalia approved. They get married. End of story.”
“But you’re still in the picture.”
Gold smiled. “Arik invited me in the business. I take opportunity. That is all, Mr. Sergeant. That is all.”
Come back to that one, Decker thought. He said, “I heard Arik fought a lot with Dov.”
“He can be hard on him, yes.”
“What about the older son?” Decker asked. “How does Gil get along with his father?”
“Gil is easygoing. And he’s no student. He knows eventually he’ll have to come into the business. Arik knows it, too. He’s not concerned with Gil. Dov is another story … brighter. He has options. So he wants nothing to do with the business. That makes Arik feel bad. What does this have to do with the family missing?”
“I’m just wondering if the family didn’t have one bad fight and things got out of hand.”
Gold genuinely looked horrified. “You think one of the boys … not a chance in hell!”
Decker said nothing.
“I don’t care what you’ve seen in your America.” He pointed to himself. “I know Arik’s boys. They are good kids. It is impossible. Start thinking about other things because you are on the wrong side.”
The diamond dealer was vehement in his opinion. Was he doing it on purpose to bring attention to the boys? Take the search away from him? Decker started thinking. Who else might benefit from Yalom’s demise? Perhaps Gold himself.
“Orit last saw her brother around two-thirty Friday afternoon,” Decker said. “Did you see him after that?”
Gold thought a moment, then checked a desk calendar. “Two-thirty Friday, I was just finishing up business with a client.” His finger scanned down the calendar. “Last I saw Arik was maybe Friday morning around … ten.”
“You have no idea where the family might have gone?”
“None whatsoever. I don’t mind telling you I’m scared for the family. People think they have plenty of money just lying around the house. What we have is inventory and investments, but burglar doesn’t know that. He puts gun to your head anyway. Says open the vault. He doesn’t see cash, he sees stones that are hard to fence.”
“I take it you’ve checked the vault?”
“As soon as you called and told me about the family is gone, I checked the common vault. Nothing is missing.”
“Does Arik have his own private inventory?”
“I think no.”
“You’re sure?”
“Yes. We’re partners.”
Decker smiled. “You’ve never heard of partners cheating each other?”
Gold waved him off. “That is not a problem, I promise you.”
Decker paused. “You check up on him, don’t you, Mr. Gold.”
“Cheating is not a problem,” Gold stated once again.
“I’m just wondering if Mr. Yalom has diamonds that are not part of your business partnership. Maybe diamonds acquired from Mrs. Yalom’s wealth.”
Gold shrugged, then lit another cigarette. “Maybe. I never thought about that … but maybe.”
“The thought seems to bother you.”
Gold hid behind a cloud of nicotine. “What do I care what Arik does with his money?”
Decker waved the smoke away from his face but didn’t answer.
Gold put out the cigarette. “Why do you ask about Arik’s money?”
“If somebody robbed him, Mr. Gold, I’m wondering what they would take from the house if the vault is here in the diamond center.”
“Maybe Arik has a safe at home. We’re partners, but I don’t know everything about his personal life.”
“How’d you two become partners?”
“He brought me into the business as a salesman. Arik is a terrible salesman.” Gold sat back in his chair. “I can sell anything. Believe me, Mr. Detective, I could have even sold you a diamond if I want. So it works well that Arik picks the diamonds and says when to sell. And I get the clients and match the stones to the clients. I just wish we could get more of the good stuff. It’s not always easy to pick up stones at the right price. They keep the quantity limited, you know.”
“Who does?”
“VerHauten. You know about them?”
“It’s a South African diamond company, isn’t it?”
“More than a company. VerHauten is a nation to itself.”
“Tell me about them.”
“What’s to tell? They own eighty percent of the diamond mines. VerHauten mines a little more, they bring in more diamonds to sell and they make money. They mine less, they bring in less diamonds, the price of diamonds goes up, they make money, too. They not only own the mines, they own the distribution of the stones. No one can compete against them.”
Decker sensed that Gold was talking from a point of personal experience. “You’ve tried competing with them?”
Gold burst into laughter. “Me? I’m nothing. A glob of spit. I can’t compete with VerHauten.” Again, he laughed. “No, it’s impossible even for the big dealers, let alone small potatoes like me and Arik. No one even tries.”
“You said they own eighty percent of the mines,” Decker said. “Who owns the other twenty percent?”
“There are other mines—in Africa, in Canada, in Russia,” Gold said. “Big mines in Russia in the north area. A region called Yakutia. They are government mines. The last I heard the Russian government was setting up a joint venture with VerHauten. It’s a smart move. The Russians may be able to mine diamonds, but they can’t distribute them without VerHauten’s blessing.”
“Why not?”
“Where would they set up shop?”
“Why not in Russia?”
“The minute VerHauten finds out about competitors, they either buy them out or undersell them. They own the market. What does this have to do with Arik?”
Decker gave a noncommittal shrug. “You said Arik was a hoarder. Maybe he was hoarding too much for VerHauten’s liking.”
Gold grinned. “You know how much inventory we have? Around two million. It seems like a big number, but no one can survive in this business if their inventory drops below five or six hundred thousand. You don’t have stones on hand, buyers find other people. So we put money in stones. You know what VerHauten’s worth?”
“More than two million,” Decker said, dryly.
“Try three to four billion. I don’t think they lose sleep about Arik and me.”
Decker said, “Still, two million dollars is well worth robbing for.”
“Except that nothing’s missing in the vault.” Gold shook his head. “It doesn’t make sense.”
Decker said, “Do you know of anyone who might want to shut you and Arik down?”
Gold took out another cigarette. “That’s what worries me. Arik can be reckless and rude in dealing with people. Maybe some dealers would like to shut us down. They know we have the good stones. Not good stones, great stones. I’ve made many good contacts over the years.”
Gold lit up his smoke.
“I’ve got to give Arik credit, too. He has a great eye for stones—cut and uncut. He can tell at a glance what the stone will look like when it’s cut. All those years working as a stonecutter. He learned the trade from his father. Arik’s taken me to Antwerp a few times. He looks at a diamond. To me, it doesn’t look like much. He says, ‘Shaul, this is the one I want.’ Doesn’t have to cut a window in it or anything.”
“Cut a window?”
“Cut a window,” Shaul repeated. “Open the stone. VerHauten sets a certain price for the uncut stone. Nonnegotiable. But what they will let you do is open a small facet so you can look inside and see what you’re buying before you buy it. Arik doesn’t even need to do that. He can smell it.”
“Where is Antwerp?” Decker asked.
“Belgium. It’s where VerHauten distributes its stones. Everyone big goes to Antwerp.”
“Why Antwerp?”
“Why do you go to the supermarket to buy milk? Because it’s where diamonds are.”
Decker held back a smile. “I meant why did VerHauten set up distribution there? Why not in South Africa?”
“VerHauten wants a center in Europe. And Belgium gives them easy laws.” Gold paused. “Sometimes for a special client, Arik goes to Belgium and buys big uncut stones. Mostly we go to Israel and buy cut, mid-sized stones. More diamonds are cut in Israel than anywhere else in the world.”
Gold rested the cigarette in his ashtray.
“Still, I don’t know anyone who would hurt Arik to put us out of business. This whole thing is very strange.”
Decker flipped the cover over his notepad. “Yes, it is.”
Gold ran his hand over his face. “Even with the gun, I’m worried. Because I don’t know who this enemy is.” He looked at Decker. “You keep looking for them?”
“For a while,” Decker said. “But without a body, we can’t justify looking for an extended period of time. The family may have taken off on their own accord.”
He stood and so did Gold. “We’ll keep in touch.”
Decker walked over to the door, then paused. “Mr. Gold, do you know where Yalom might keep his passport?”
Gold was quiet for a moment. “No. Why?”
“If he took off for anywhere international, he’d need his passport.”
“I don’t know about Arik’s passport,” Gold said. “Come. I’ll walk you out.”
Decker realized that Gold was inching him down the hallway. Yalom’s partner had been cooperative, even loquacious at times. But Decker couldn’t shake the feeling that Gold was holding back. He spoke at length about VerHauten, but little about Arik and his business dealings.
They reentered the sally port. Yochie was about to buzz them out. She said, “Uh-oh. You get company, Shaul.”
Decker looked at the outside TV monitor. A Chasid with a white beard. He was wearing a tall black hat and long black coat.
“Shnorrers,” Gold said with resignation. “They don’t leave me alone.”
“No, they don’t,” Decker agreed.
Gold looked at him. “You know about shnorrers?”
Decker nodded. Ostensibly, they collected money for worthy causes. Sometimes the worthy causes were themselves. Since he had married Rina, they had invaded his house with outstretched hands, and always at inconvenient times. But Rina had a soft heart. She always gave them something.
Shaul said, “Open the door, Yochie.”
She complied. The Chasid touched the mezuzah, kissed his hand, then walked inside. But Gold pushed him back out. Decker followed them into the hallway.
Gold said, “Every day, it’s someone else.”
The Chasid started a pitch in a foreign tongue.
“Maspeek.” Gold opened his wallet and took out a twenty. “That’s all I have. Go.”
The shnorrer didn’t budge.
Gold showed the man his empty wallet. “No more kesef. Lech. Mayveen?”
The shnorrer said, “Ani mayveen.” He looked at Decker.
Decker blew out air, then took out a twenty from his wallet and gave it to the man. The shnorrer pocketed the money, muttered some blessing, then moved on to the next mezuzah down the hallway.
11
Even though it was the job, Marge felt like a snoop. Decker had warned her about the feeling. True she had gone through other houses from the rafters to the baseboards, but in those cases, the occupants had been alive. Though Marge had no evidence that the Yaloms were dead, it didn’t look good. Though the paper still came and the mail was still being delivered, the only living things left in the Yalom place were houseplants.
So with key in hand, courtesy of Orit Bar Lulu, Marge plundered through items, bit by bit, with no one standing over her shoulder, nobody protesting her presence, or cussing her out.
They couldn’t have just fallen off the planet!
Within three hours, she had amassed an abbreviated biography of the Yaloms’ lives, had discovered private matter … secrets.
Dalia Yalom was on the pill and was a hidden lover of the soaps. To wit: magazines featuring daytime serials stowed in a hatbox, along with an autographed eight by ten glossy of a handsome but plastic man. Dalia’s closets were well stocked although there wasn’t an obscene amount of clothing for a woman of her means. But she did have odd tastes. A shoe collection made up of dozens of sneakers—beaded ones, painted ones, embroidered ones. She had tennis shoes made of everything from buckskin to terry cloth, from silk to see-through plastic. A variation of the glass slipper.
Though Marge had sifted through the shoes, one by one, she had found nothing. Satisfying herself that the master bedroom was devoid of clues, she’d moved on to the boys’ rooms.
She’d found Dov’s small stash, not much more than a few measly crumbs of cannabis. Dov’s escape from an overbearing father. She’d also discovered voluminous writings and stories crammed into three binders in the back of his closet. In light of what Decker had told her, Dov’s stories about loneliness and alienation had come as no surprise.
What had surprised Marge had been the secret poetry of the older brother, Gil. Here was a sensitive soul. The writing was amateurish, excessive as only teens can be, but it was thoughtful. The older boy’s poems spoke of flowers budding in a mire of human greed, of good emanating from a cesspool of evil, of the birth of a child cradled from the ashes of the fire. Marge wasn’t quite sure to whom or what the kid had been referring, but the message seemed unusually positive for an adolescent.
Marge had looked and Marge had learned.
Decker fingered the Israeli passports with gloved hands. “Where’d you find these?”
“In a billfold inside the Cross briefcase.” Marge pointed to a black-leather attaché with a gold clasp. “I didn’t even see this luggage set the first time around because the attic closet has such an odd shape.”
“The briefcase was hidden?”
“Not at all,” Marge said. “I just didn’t see it. I thought the closet door just led to finished attic space. At that point, the roof comes down at such a severe angle, you can’t even stand up. So I just poked my head inside and saw the area was empty. It wasn’t until the second time around that I actually ducked inside—at much expense to my back muscles—and saw the space was actually a closet that wraps around the house. There’s this huge storage area on the other side containing the main family luggage. I’ll show it to you if you want, but I’ve already been through it all. The rest of the valises were empty.”
Decker sorted through the papers inside the case—Xeroxes of birth certificates, Social Security cards, insurance cards, INS papers. He wondered where the originals were. If Yalom took the papers with him, why did he leave behind the passports?
Because the two passports he held were the originals. And they were up-to-date. He said, “You didn’t find the boys’ passports?”
“Nope,” Marge said. “And I looked. That could be significant. If the boys whacked the parents, maybe they took an international one-way flight.”
Decker thumbed through Yalom’s passport—pages of stamped entries back into the States, Yalom’s residing country. Then there were many other pages of foreign ink—Canada, Mexico, countries of Western and Eastern Europe including Russia, entries from the Far East, Latin America, and Africa. Lots from Africa—Egypt, South Africa, Kenya, Namibia, Liberia, Angola, Sudan, Ethiopia, Zaire, plus a host of other countries Decker didn’t know existed.
Dalia’s visa was simpler—stamps from Western Europe, Hong Kong, Japan, and the United States every time she reentered the country.
Marge said, “Yalom was quite the Phileas Fogg.”
Decker said, “You sound skeptical about something.”
“An Israeli going to Russia? I thought the Jews were leaving Russia for Israel.”
“Yalom’s a diamond dealer,” Decker said. “Russia has diamond mines.”
Marge paused. “Oh.”
Decker said, “What were you thinking about?”
“I don’t know. Maybe Yalom was helping some of his countrymen to get out of Russia … something like that.”
Decker didn’t answer.
“Farfetched, huh?”
“I wouldn’t say that,” Decker said. “You see a passport like this, you wonder what’s going on.”
“I’m thinking the guy’s an agent. Maybe that’s why the family disappeared.” Marge took his passport and leafed through it. “Lots of Third World countries.”
“I noticed.”
“Okay, so South Africa has diamond mines. His travels there make sense. But what’s in Namibia or Angola?”
“Don’t know.”
Marge handed the passport back to Decker. He flipped through the booklet again. Several entries for each African state he had visited. “I don’t even know why he’d even bother going to South Africa. From what Yalom’s partner told me, VerHauten brings the uncut stones to market in Antwerp, Belgium. The cut stones are bought in Israel.” Decker recapped his conversation with Gold.
Marge said, “So Yalom—even being a diamond dealer—really has no need to go anywhere except Antwerp and Israel.”
“If I understood Gold correctly, that’s true.”
“And if Russia is only dealing with this VerHauten, what could Yalom possibly hope to gain by going to Russia?”
“Only thing that comes to me is maybe Yalom’s talking to people sub rosa,” Decker said. “Maybe he’s making inroads that Gold doesn’t know about.”
“He’s double-dealing his partner?”
“It’s been known to happen.”
“His partner finds out, gets mad, and whacks him?”
“It’s been known to happen.”
“I still like the idea of him being an agent,” Marge announced. “What else could explain all that traveling?”
Decker laughed softly.
“Go ahead,” Marge said, testily. “Scoff.”
Decker smiled again. “No, it’s not that.” He glanced around the house. “I’m just thinking that Mossad must pay pretty damn well.”
“Didn’t you say the wife paid for the house?”
Decker nodded. “I’ll ask Gold about his partner’s wanderlust.”
“Maybe they’re in some kind of covert operation together, Pete,” Marge said. “Maybe that’s why they used to meet at Yalom’s house instead of the office downtown.”
Decker remembered Gold not wanting to talk in front of the secretary. And when he asked about the meetings at the house, about Mrs. Yalom.
Dalia is not a problem.
Yalom and Gold—agents.
Six years in the Israeli army. Makes you comfortable with guns.
Decker didn’t know what comprised mandatory conscription for the Israeli army. He made a mental note to ask Rina. Then he laughed to himself, surprised by his runaway imagination.
“What’s so funny?” Marge asked.
Decker said, “Nothing really. Just thinking about the blanks in the case, how the mind fills in the blanks with foolishness. We should stick to what we know.”
“Which isn’t much.”
“We know a family disappeared. Yet the house looks undisturbed to the eye. No signs of sudden packing, valuables in place.”
“So let’s assume the family didn’t take off on their own. Assume murder.”
“What would be the motivation for a murder?” Decker asked. “No apparent robbery had taken place. By Gold’s own account, no stones were missing from inventory.”
“That’s why I like my spy theory. Someone wanted them out of the way for reasons other than money.”
Decker’s head began to pound. “Money could still be the motive.”
“What do you mean?”
“Marge, who would benefit from the parents missing?”
“The boys.”
“Right. And their passports are missing. Who else would benefit?”
“Possibly Orit. And maybe the partner, Gold, too.”
“Also consider this,” Decker said. “We really don’t know if the stones are missing. Could be Gold took the diamonds or Orit took the jewels. They could be telling us that nothing’s missing, but in reality, they could have cashed out the goods.”
Marge was silent. Then she said, “What we really need is an old-fashioned body.”
“It would help.” Decker rubbed his eyes with his bicep. “I’m going over to that shopping center. Where Dov made the phone call to Sharona. At least it puts him alive as of forty-eight hours ago.”
“I still like my spy thing,” Marge said.
Decker said, “So do I.”
“You do?”
“Yeah. I’d love to get my hands on Gold’s passport. See if it’s as funny-looking as Yalom’s. I wonder if we’re getting in over our heads.” Decker smiled. “Maybe I’ve read too many novels about Mossad.” Again, he waited a beat. “Then again, Mossad agents did kill the wrong guy in Norway about a decade ago. Even spies make mistakes.”
Marge said, “Hey, if you think this guy is into some kind of secret shit, I’m outta here. Cattle prods on the genitals is not my idea of a good time.”
Decker said, “Let’s not get carried away. But I am keeping an open mind. Though he downplays himself, Gold’s no dummy. I wouldn’t put anything past him.”
“Know what I do think?” Marge said.
“What?”
“I think it’s time to get some lunch.”
Decker’s house was eerily quiet except for the electronic chatter of a game-show host.
Rina never watched game shows.
A moment later, Ginger pranced out and jumped on Decker’s chest, spraying a cloud of red fur and dander into his eyes.
“What’s going on, girl?” Decker asked the Irish setter. “Who’s watching TV?”
The dog licked Decker’s face. Decker shouted out “Hello?” but there was no answer.
“Someone leave the TV on, girl?”
Decker stepped into the dining area and stopped in his tracks. Seated around his homemade cherrywood table were four children who looked straight from the prairie. The two girls were garbed in high-necked dresses and opaque stockings; the boys had on black suits, white shirts, and hats. The eldest, who looked to be around Sammy’s age, was reading a volume of Talmud. The other three kids were engaged with the TV. Upon Decker’s entrance, their eyes went from the screen, to Decker, then back to the screen. The oldest boy looked up from his religious book, then quickly buried himself back in his study.
No one said anything. No one moved. Decker cleared his throat. “You’re the Klein kids?”
Silence except for the television. Finally, the older girl spoke, her eyes still on the TV monitor. “Are we in your way?”
Decker hesitated. “Uh, no. Not at all.”
The youngest, a boy, raised his head and caught Decker’s eye. Shyly, he asked, “Are you the cowboy?”
His sister elbowed the boy in the ribs.
“The cowboy,” Decker repeated. “Well, I ride horses and wear a hat. So I guess some people would call me a cowboy. Anyone know where Mrs. Decker is?”
Again, the elder girl piped up. “She had a doctor’s appointment with the baby that she forgot about. She’ll be back soon. Then we’re going to the zoo or something like that. Our mother told us to sit here and don’t move a muscle. Are you sure we’re not in your way? If we are, we can move.”
The kids didn’t seem unduly nervous at being dropped into a foreign land. As a matter of fact, they seemed unusually trusting, a testament to their sheltered life.
“I’m positive you’re not in my way.” Decker paused. “Your mother went with Mrs. Decker?”
The youngest boy said, “She took a walk. She told us to sit here and not move.”
The older girl squinted at the TV, eyes a mixture of awe and cynicism. “I don’t understand what’s going on.”
“Pardon?” Decker asked.
“In this game. I think if she guesses the price of the washing machine, she actually gets to keep it?”
Decker bit his mustache. “Uh, yeah, I think that’s how it works.”
The girl turned to him, her face full of confusion. “It isn’t a joke?”
“Uh … no, it’s no joke.”
“That is unbelievable!” the girl said. “You mean they just give that lady a washing machine?”
“If she wins, yes.”
“How can they do that!” the girl exclaimed. “Why would they give away a washing machine? Isn’t that expensive?”
“And the automobile,” the little boy chimed in. “That’s real ispensive!”
Decker paused. How do you explain the corporate world and prime-time advertising to kids who never owned TVs.
The girl still had her eyes glued to the monitor. “How do you get to play that game? You got to give them money or something?”
“Minda!” the oldest boy rebuked her sharply. “This is not our world!”
“Mendel, Mama could really use a new washing machine.”
“Then Papa will buy her one.”
“Yeah, sure. He never buys us anything.”
“Minda!” the boy scolded.
Minda fell silent. The little boy smiled at Decker. “I saw the horses.”
Decker smiled back. “Would you like to ride one?”
The boy’s eyes grew big. “Can I?”
“Pessy, wait for Mama,” the oldest boy said.
“Good idea,” Decker said, wondering where the hell Mama was. Instead he turned to Mendel and asked him what he was learning. The teenager shrugged, leaning over the volume of Talmud as if hiding his paper from a potential cheater.
Again, Decker bit his mustache. “Anyone hungry?”
“We’ll wait until our mother comes back,” Mendel said. “But thank you anyway.”
Decker shuffled his feet. “How long has your mother been gone, kids?”
Minda said, “About half an hour. Before Joker in the Deck … will you look at that! She won a whole living room full of furniture! I can’t believe it!”
Decker smiled tightly. “Is anyone hungry?” He looked at the youngest. “Are you hungry, Pessy?”
“He’ll wait,” Mendel said.
“Don’t be such a meanie, Mendel,” Minda said. “Are you hungry, Pessy?”
The little boy looked at his brother. His brother nodded. Pessy said, “I’m a little hungry.”
“I can fix you a sandwich,” Decker said. “What would you like? Tuna? Egg salad? Peanut butter and jelly?”
“Peanut butter and jelly,” Pessy said. “Please.”
“Coming right up.” Decker stood. “How about you, Mendel? Anything?”
Mendel blushed. “I’m okay.”
“You’re sure?”
Minda said, “Go ahead, Mendel. You already checked out the kitchen. It was fine.”
Mendel glared at his sister. Decker said, “I’m glad you checked out the kitchen. I want you kids to feel comfortable here.”
Minda said, “Thank you very much. And thank you for letting us stay here. I’ve never seen a game like this in my life. It’s fascinating!”
“It’s beetul Torah,” Mendel said.
“Mendel, relax, okay?” Minda said. “It’s vacation!”
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