Vol Ii Part 125 (2/2)

Bosch stared a long time before breaking away and looking at Rider.

”What've you got, Kiz?”

”Her real name is Virginia Lampley. She says she knows Elias from TV, not as a client. But she says Elias's investigator was here a few weeks ago, asking questions just like us.”

”Pelfry? What did he ask?”

”A bunch of bulls.h.i.+t,” Regina said before Rider could answer. ”He wanted to know if I knew anything about that little girl that was murdered last year. The daughter of the car czar from TV. I told him I didn't know why the h.e.l.l he was asking me about that. What would I know about it? He tried to get rough but I got rough right back. I don't let men f.u.c.k with me. He left. I think somebody put you on the same wild goose chase he was on.”

”Maybe,” Bosch said.

There was silence for a moment. Bosch was distracted by what he had seen in the closet. He couldn't think of what else to ask.

”He's staying.”

It was Edgar. He came up the stairs and handed the cuff key back to Regina. She took it and made a big production out of returning it to her bra, looking at Bosch all the while.

”All right, let's go,” Bosch said.

”Are you sure you don't want to stay for a c.o.ke, Detective?” Virginia Lampley asked, a clever smile on her face.

”We're going,” Bosch said.

They went silently down the steps to the door, Bosch the last in line. On the landing he looked down into the dark room. The glow of the red light was still there and Bosch could see the faint outline of the man sitting on the chair in the corner of the room. His face was in darkness but Bosch could tell the man was looking up at him.

”Don't worry, Detective,” Regina said from behind him. ”I'll take good care of him.”

Bosch turned and looked at her from the door. That smile of hers was back.

20

On the way back to the station Rider repeatedly asked exactly what they had seen in the lower room but neither Bosch nor Edgar told her more than the basic fact that one of Mistress Regina's clients was shackled in the closet. Rider knew there was more to it and kept pressing but she got nowhere.

”The man down there is not important,” Bosch finally said as a means of ending that part of the discussion. ”We still don't know what Elias was doing with her picture and web address. Or for that matter, why he sent Pelfry to her.”

”I think she was lying,” Edgar said. ”She knows the whole story.”

”Maybe,” Bosch said. ”But if she knows the story, why keep it secret now that Elias is dead?”

”Pelfry is the key,” Rider said. ”We should run him down right now.”

”No,” Bosch said. ”Not tonight. It's late and I don't want to talk to Pelfry until we've gone through Elias's files and know what's in them. We master the files, then we brace Pelfry about Mistress Regina and everything else. First thing tomorrow.”

”What about the FBI?” Rider asked.

”We meet the FBI at eight. I'll figure something out by then.”

They drove the rest of the way in silence. Bosch dropped them off at their cars in the Hollywood station parking lot and reminded them to be at Parker Center at eight the following morning. He then parked his slickback but didn't turn in the key because the file cartons from Elias's office were still in the trunk. After locking the car he went to his own car.

He checked the clock as he was pulling out onto Wilc.o.x and saw it was ten-thirty. He knew it was late but he decided to make one last call before going home. As he drove through Laurel Canyon to the Valley, he kept thinking about the man in the walk-in closet and how he had turned his face away, wis.h.i.+ng not to be seen. Working homicide for so many years, Bosch could not be surprised anymore by the horrors people inflicted on each other. But the horrors people saved for themselves were a different story.

He took Ventura Boulevard west to Sherman Oaks. It was a busy Sat.u.r.day night. On the other side of the hill the city could be a tinderbox of tensions but on the main drag in the Valley the bars and coffee shops seemed full. Bosch saw the red-coated valets running to get cars in front of Pinot Bistro and the other upscale restaurants that lined the boulevard. He saw teenagers cruising with the top down. Everyone was oblivious to the seething hatred and anger that churned in other parts of the city-beneath the surface like an undiscovered fault line waiting to open up and swallow all above.

At Kester he turned north and then made a quick turn into a neighborhood of tract houses sandwiched between the boulevard and the Ventura Freeway. The houses were small and with no distinct style. The hiss of the freeway was always present. They were cops' houses except they cost between four and five hundred thousand dollars and few cops could afford them. Bosch's old partner Frankie Sheehan had bought early and bought well. He was sitting on a quarter of a million dollars in equity. His retirement plan, if he made it to retirement.

Bosch pulled to the curb in front of Sheehan's house and left the car running. He got out his phone, looked up Sheehan's number in his phone book, and made the call. Sheehan picked up after two rings, his voice alert. He'd been awake.

”Frankie, it's Harry.”

”My man.”

”I'm out front. Why don't you come out and we'll take a drive.”

”Where to?”

”It doesn't matter.”

Silence.

”Frankie?”

”Okay, give me a couple minutes.”

Bosch put the phone away and reached into his coat pocket for a smoke that wasn't there.

”d.a.m.n,” he said.

While he waited he thought about the time he and Sheehan were looking for a drug dealer suspected of having wiped out a rival's operation by going into a rock house with an Uzi and killing everyone in it-six people, customers and dealers alike.

They'd repeatedly pounded on the door of the suspect's apartment but no one answered. They were thinking about their options when Sheehan heard a tiny voice from inside the apartment saying, ”Come in, come in.” They knocked on the door once again and called out that it was the police. They waited and listened. Again the voice called out, ”Come in, come in.”

Bosch tried the k.n.o.b and it turned. The door was unlocked. a.s.suming combat stance they entered the apartment only to find it empty-except for a large green parrot in a cage in the living room. And lying right there in full view on a kitchen table was an Uzi submachine gun broken down and ready for cleaning. Bosch walked over to the door and knocked on it once again. The parrot called out, ”Come in, come in.”

A few minutes later, when the suspect returned from the hardware store with the gun oil he needed to finish his work on the Uzi, he was arrested. Ballistics matched the gun to the killings and he was convicted after a judge refused to throw out the fruits of the search. Though the defendant claimed the entry of the apartment was without permission and unlawful, the judge ruled that Bosch and Sheehan were acting in good faith when they acted on the invitation from the parrot. The case was still winding its way through the nation's appellate courts, while the killer remained in jail.

The Jeep's front pa.s.senger door opened and Sheehan got into the car.

”When did you get this ride?” he asked.

”When they made me start driving a slickback.”

”Oh, yeah, forgot about that.”

”Yeah, you RHD bigshots don't have to worry about that s.h.i.+t.”

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