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The ceiling soared and was lined with massive beams that had been carved and embellished with petroglyphs, the cave figures looking like something found in the Southwest. The walls were festooned with layers of gilt paneling and held museum-sized tapestries. Decker would have probably kept gawking, enraptured by the sheer size of the place, had he not caught the eye of a uniform who motioned him forward.

      Proceeding down a half-dozen steps, he walked into a living room with double-height ceilings and more painted beams. Same hardwood on the floor, only most of it was covered with dozens of authentic-looking Navajo rugs. More gilt paneling, more tapestries along with enormous art canvases of bloody battles. The room was furnished with mammoth-sized couches, chairs, and tables. Decker was a big guy—six four, 220-plus pounds—but the scale of his surroundings made him feel positively diminutive.

      Someone was talking to him. “This place is bigger than the college I attended.”

      Decker regarded Scott Oliver, one of his crack Homicide detectives. He was in his late fifties and carried his age very well, thanks to good skin and repeated rounds of black hair dye. It was almost four in the morning, yet Oliver had dressed like a CEO at a board meeting: black pin-striped suit, red tie, and a starched and pressed white shirt.

      “It was only community college, but the campus was still pretty big.”

      “Do you know the square footage?”

      “A hundred thousand, give or take.”

      “Man oh man, that is …” Decker stopped talking because words were failing him. Although there was a uniformed officer at each doorway, there were no evidence markers on the floor or on the furniture. No one from CSI was busy dusting or dabbing. “Where’s the crime scene?”

      “The library.”

      “Where’s the library?”

      “Hold on,” Oliver told him. “Let me get my map.”

       2

      The labyrinthine hallways should have confounded any ordinary burglar’s escape route. Even with printed directions, Oliver made a couple of wrong turns.

      Decker said, “Marge told me there were four bodies.”

      “We are now up to five. The Kaffeys, a maid, and two guards.”

      “Good lord! Signs of a robbery? Anything ransacked?”

      “Nothing so obvious.” They continued down endless foyers. “No single perpetrator, that’s for certain. Whoever did this had a plan and a gang of people to carry it out. It had to be an inside job.”

      “Who reported the crime? The injured son?”

      “I don’t know. When we got here, the son was being loaded into the ambulance and was out of it.”

      “Any idea when the shootings occurred?”

      “Nothing definite, but rigor has started.”

      “So between four and twenty-four hours,” Decker said. “Maybe the contents of the stomachs can narrow it down. Who’s out from the morgue?”

      “Two coroner investigators and an assistant coroner. Turn right. The library should be through the double doors ahead.”

      As soon as he walked inside, Decker felt a tinge of vertigo brought on by not only the gargantuan size of the room, but the lack of corners. The library was a rotunda with a domed ceiling of steel and glass. The curved walls were covered by black walnut paneling and bookshelves and floor-to-ceiling tapestries of mythological creatures gamboling in the forests. There was a walk-in fireplace big enough to contain a raging inferno. Antique rugs sat atop the oceanic wooden floor. Lots of furniture: sofas and love seats, tables and chairs, two grand pianos, and lamps too numerous too count.

      The crime scene was a story in two parts. There was action near the fireplace and action in front of a tapestry of a gorgon devouring a young lord.

      Oliver pointed to a spot. “Gilliam Kaffey was sitting in front of the fireplace, reading a book and drinking a glass of wine; Dad and son were having a conversation in those two club chairs over there.”

      His finger was aimed at a grouping of two brown leather, nail-studded chairs where Marge Dunn was working in front of the man-eating gorgon. She was talking animatedly to one of the coroner’s investigators wearing the standard morgue issue: a black jacket with the identifying yellow lettering on back. Dunn saw Decker and Oliver and motioned them forward with a gloved hand. Marge’s hair had grown a little longer in the past few months, probably at the urging of her newest boyfriend, Will Barnes. She had on beige pants, a white shirt, and a dark brown cable-knit sweater. Rubber shoes on her feet. Decker and Oliver made their way over to the crime scene.

      Guy Kaffey was on his back in a pond of blood with a gaping gorge in his chest. Tissue and bone had exploded over the man’s face and limbs and what hadn’t spilled onto the floor was splattered on the better part of the tapestry, giving the hapless lad and his plight unasked-for verity.

      “Let me get you orientated.” Marge reached into her pocket, removed a map, and unfolded it. “This is the house and we are right … here.”

      Decker took out his notepad and glanced around the windowless room. When he commented on it, Marge said, “I was told by the surviving maid that the artwork here is very old and sensitive to direct light.”

      “So someone else besides the son survived the attack?” Decker asked.

      “No, she came in and discovered the bodies,” Marge said. “Her name is Ana Mendez. I have her in a room guarded by one of our men.”

      Oliver said, “We also need to interview the groundskeeper and the groomsman. They’re also being guarded by L.A.’s finest.”

      Marge said, “All of them in separate rooms.”

      “The groundskeeper is Paco Albanez—maybe around fifty-five—who’s worked here for about three years.” Oliver checked his notes. “The groomer is Riley Karns. He’s around thirty. I don’t know how long he’s been here.”

      Decker said, “Do you know who called the crime in?”

      Marge said, “We’re sorting that out. The maid said that someone called an off-duty bodyguard and maybe he called 911.”

      “It was the maid who found the surviving son lying on the floor,” Oliver said. “She thought he was dead.”

      “Who is the off-duty bodyguard that she supposedly called?” Decker asked.

      “Piet Kotsky,” Marge told him. “I spoke to him on the phone. He’s coming in from Palm Springs. It works like this … I think. The bodyguards stay on-site only when they’re working. They work in twenty-four-hour shifts, rotating through eight people. There are always two bodyguards in the main house and two men manning the guardhouse located at the entrance gate of the property. Both of those guys are dead. Gunshot wounds to the head and chest. All the camera equipment and closed-circuit TVs are smashed and destroyed.”

      “Names?” Decker asked.

      “Kotsky doesn’t know who was on duty tonight, but he said once he sees them, he can identify them.”

      “What about the two guards in the main house?”

      “They appear to be missing,” Marge said.

      “So two guards missing and two guards murdered.”

      Marge and Oliver nodded.

      “Oliver mentioned a murdered maid?”

      “In the servant’s bedroom downstairs.”

      “And how did Ana Mendez manage to dodge the bullet?”

      “She was off tonight,” Oliver said. “Her story

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