Выбрать главу

Alex and I didn’t speak until we got into the car. “You think the press will find out Dale got shivved?” he asked.

“I sure hope not.” It might get Dale some sympathy, but more likely, it’d just look like even the inmates hated him. I was worried that we might be late for my new paying client, but we hit a light pocket in the traffic and made it back to the office with a half hour to spare.

When I told Michelle what’d happened to Dale, she was almost as upset as I’d been. “What the hell are those guards smoking? Don’t they realize-”

“Right. I know.” It pissed me off all over again. “I talked to the nurse about extra security. But there isn’t much we can do, other than threaten a lawsuit.” The problem was, that’d only piss off the jail staff, which was the last thing Dale needed.

Michelle shook her head. “Well, hopefully it’ll dawn on someone in that place how much you can cost them.” She looked at her monitor. “You’ve only got fifteen minutes till your five o’clock gets here, so give me a quick update: What happened with Marc’s friends? Get anything good?”

I told her about the interviews and that we got a lead on a photographer named Russell Kitson who seemed to know Paige. “I want to talk to him. The sooner the better. Alex has his contact information.”

“Got it. And do you want me to try and get the police and autopsy reports on Marc?” she asked.

“No. If you start asking for that stuff, someone’s bound to tip off the DA.” I didn’t want to leave tracks for anyone to follow. My best bet was to see if my cop buddy Hank could get the reports on the down low. “I’ll take care of it.”

And I had another reason to talk to Hank. I wanted to find out more about Ignacio Silva, see if he had a downside that might come back to bite me in court. That was another thing I didn’t want Zack to know about. If he heard I was asking around about Ignacio, he’d figure out why pretty quickly. Hank could snoop around under the radar.

My five o’clock was right on time. Lane Ockman announced himself on the intercom, and Michelle buzzed him in.

Michelle always has new clients fill out an information sheet before bringing them in to see me. But when I heard him tell Michelle he wasn’t going to fill anything out until he had a “face-to-face” with me, I knew it was trouble.

There was one sharp rap on my door. Before I could say anything, the door opened and Ockman filled the doorway. He was tall, about six foot one, and he was built like a heavy bag-square and solid. He had small, dark eyes; short, dark hair; and a soul patch. I opened the left-hand drawer of my desk, where I kept my.38, and stood up.

He paused for a second to give me the once-over, then closed the door behind him and moved to the center of the room. With a smile that was more like a grimace, he introduced himself, and I motioned to the chair next to him. “Have a seat, Mr. Ockman.”

“I’m okay. Thanks.”

I leaned closer to my desk drawer, my hand open and ready to grab for the gun. “What do you want?”

He folded his arms. “For now… just to talk.” His eyes slid over to the open drawer. “So you won’t be needing that.”

I didn’t budge. “I guess that’ll be my call to make. Get to it.”

“You harassed a very dear friend of mine, and I want to make sure you understand what it’ll cost you if it happens again.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“Does the name Jaylene Thomas ring a bell?”

The drug dealer on the studio lot. Now I had a pretty good idea what this was about. “I don’t know what she told you, but she was the one who lost her shit. She took a swing at me.”

“She tells it a little differently. But she’s a big girl; she can fight those battles herself. My concern is that you might be planning to unjustly accuse her of being involved in the drug trade. My boss can’t have that.”

“I have no intention of getting her busted for dealing.”

He gave me a hard look. “But you are about to set her up to take the fall for killing those girls.”

“Who told you that?”

He gave me an impatient look. “I don’t need to be a lawyer to figure out why you wanted to talk to her.”

I supposed that was possible. “I’m just following up on all leads.”

“Good, then I’m here to help you with that. As of this moment, you realized that lead was going nowhere. Jaylene is off your radar. You’re not going to subpoena her, you’re not going to talk bad about her to the press, and you’re not going to point any fingers at her.”

I glared at him. “Or else?”

“Or else your father won’t be so lucky next time.”

I froze. Dale’s stabbing hadn’t hit the news. I’d been checking ever since we left the jail. Ockman had set it up.

Ockman nodded at my expression with a cold smile. “If you don’t back off Jaylene, your daddy won’t have to worry about going to court anymore.”

I stared at him. My hand itched to reach for my gun. He held my stare for a moment, then turned and left. I came out of my office just in time to see the front door close behind him. Michelle and Alex were staring after him, their expressions a mix of puzzlement and alarm. I told them what he’d said.

Alex set his jaw. “So he’s Jaylene’s boss. And he didn’t want his operation to wind up in the spotlight.”

I nodded. “That’s my take.” I looked at Michelle. “When did he call you to get this appointment with me?”

“Yesterday.”

“Right after we had the run-in with Jaylene. That was plenty of time to set Dale up to get stabbed. And there’s no other way he could’ve found out about Dale this fast.”

Alex shook his head. “Ockman’s probably got more than one inmate working for him. What are we going to do?”

We’re not going to do anything. At least not right now.”

Michelle was irritated. “So we’re just going to do nothing?”

“I didn’t say that. I might have someone on the inside who can help.”

Tuck Rosenberg, a former client and one tough giant of a man, was a high-ranking member of the Aryan Brotherhood-a notorious prison gang. He’d been facing twenty-five to life in prison for a murder, but I put together enough evidence to persuade the DA that he’d acted at least partly in self-defense. He wound up with manslaughter and a short enough sentence to do his time in the Twin Towers jail.

Michelle frowned. “How? I kind of doubt Lane Ockman was his real name.”

“I’m sure it wasn’t. But I’ll find out soon enough.” I held up my cell phone. “When I heard him say he wouldn’t fill out the information sheet, I thought he might be trouble. So I propped up my phone behind the money tree.” The little jade tree Michelle had given me for inspiration.

I hit play. The picture wasn’t great-the little bells on the tree got in the way-and the voice was somewhat muffled. But it might be enough to figure out who he was.

Michelle’s brow furrowed. “Who knows how long it’ll take to get his real name with that? And in the meantime, Dale’s just lying there in the infirmary.”

I was just as worried. He couldn’t be more vulnerable. “Yeah, I know. The only thing I can do is back off Jaylene and hope my inside guy can get Dale some protection.”

Michelle shook her head. “It seems like every time I turn around, something else is blowing up. First Jenny Knox’s BS rape charge gets leaked, then her murder, now this.”

Alex frowned. “It is a lot of bad luck. But this Ockman asshole just strikes me as business. He doesn’t want his salesman in the spotlight. The leak… that’s a different story. Still no luck with Trevor?”

I shook my head. “My guess is it’s probably a low-level civilian employee, and the LAPD has more than three thousand of them. The only thing Trevor might be able to do is figure out who’s paying for it-”

“Like a tabloid?” Michelle said.