I always liked working tough murder cases with Kyle Craig, so I was glad that he would be joining Jamilla Hughes and me in Los Angeles later that day. I was surprised, however, when I saw him already at the murder scene in Beverly Hills when we arrived. The body had been found at the Chateau Marmont, the hotel where John Belushi had overdosed and died.
The hotel looked like a French castle and rose seven stories over the Sunset Strip. As I entered the lobby, I noticed that everything looked to be authentic 1920s, but dated rather than antique. Supposedly, a studio boss had once told the actor William Holden, If you have to get into trouble, do it at the Chateau Marmont.’ Kyle met us at the door of the hotel room. His dark hair was slicked back and it looked like he’d gotten a little sun. Unusual for Kyle. I almost didn’t recognize him.
‘This is Kyle Craig, FBI,’I told Jamilla.’Before I met you, he was the best homicide investigator I ever worked with.’ Kyle and Jamilla shook hands. Then we followed him into the hotel room. Actually, it was a hillside bungalow: two bedrooms, a living room with a working fireplace. It had its own private street entrance.
The crime scene was as depressingly bad as the others. I recalled something typically pessimistic that a philosopher had written. I’d once had this same thought at a grisly crime scene in North Carolina: ‘Human existence must be a kind of error. It is bad today and every day it will get worse, until the worst of all happens.’ My own philosophy was a little cheerier than Schopenhauer’s, but there were times when he seemed on the mark.
The worst of all had happened to a twenty-nine-year-old record company executive named Jonathan Mueller, and in ............