bed was custom-made and of no standard size, and she couldnât justify spending so much money on a mattress when she spent so little time there. And as Dean had callously pointed out, the mattress had to at least date from after 1951. The previous one would have been soaked with blood.
Jilly shivered, rubbing her arms in the warm evening air as she sat on the deserted terrace at La Casa. Would it have been too much to ask, to have a good day for once, just to make the ordeal of this evening easier? But no, her job wasnât overburdened with good days, and today was one of the worst.
Working as an historic preservationist in Los Angeles was a classic exercise in futility, and sheâd known that going into it. Los Angeles was based on money and power, and history and aesthetics were commodities of little value. In the three years Jilly had worked for the Los Angeles Preservation Society sheâd watched landmark after landmark be turned into rubble and then transformed into Bauhaus boxes. The best she could preserve were memories.
Today was particularly bad. Sheâd spent the day scrambling over debris at the Moroccan Theater, snapping pictures with the digital camera, taking notes, taking measurements. In a few more days it would be gone, its last reprieve used up. And at one point Jilly sat in one of the dusty, plush velvet seats and wept, not sure if she was weeping for the building or her own life.
Dean and Rachel-Ann were gone by the time she got home in the middle of the afternoon, and chances were they wouldnât be back until late. Just as well. Handling Coltrane was difficult enoughâshe didnât want to have to worry about her siblings at the same time.
Sheâd showered the dust and rubble off her body, made herself a tall glass of iced tea and wandered out on the terrace to watch the sun set over the huge expanse of overgrown lawn. She loved the terrace, the old iron furniture, the flagstones, the stone columns weathered and chipped from the years, the towering palms surrounding them. But down in the middle of the lawn, some two hundred yards away, lay the dank, algae-covered pool, and Jilly could never look at it without shuddering.
It was past time to get someone in to drain it again, she thought idly. It hadnât been used in years. As a child sheâd had an unexpected dread of it, even though she spent all her free time in her friendsâ pools. Maybe it was the trees looming overhead, or the odd patterns in the tiles, or maybe an excess of teenage imagination. Whatever it was, Jilly had stayed away from the pool most of her life.
When theyâd inherited the house sheâd had it drained, but each year it would fill again, water seeping in from a crack in the lining. There was no way she could afford to hire heavy machinery to come in and bulldoze it, so it just sat there, dank and malevolent, with only the wild tangle of rosebushes to shield it.
Jilly perched on the wide stone railing, breathing in the scent of roses mixed with the acrid perfume of exhaust from the surrounding city. There was nothing she wanted more than to climb into her huge marble bathtub and stay there until her skin got wrinkled. She didnât want to see anyone, talk to anyone, save anyone. Not tonight. She most particularly didnât want to have to deal with Z. R. Coltrane.
At least sheâd found out that much about him, even if she couldnât fathom what Z. R. stood for. It seemed an apt enough name for a Hollywood cutthroat.
Not that she had any particular reason to consider him a cutthroat, apart from her instinctive dislike of all lawyers. She wasnât particularly trustful of good-looking men, eitherâyears in Los Angeles had taught her to be wary, and Alan had finished the lesson. Of course Coltrane didnât look the slightest bit like her former husband. Alan was dramatically beautiful, with long, flowing dark hair, a poetâs face, an artistâs hands, a