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“What’s this concerning?” he asked.

“Paul Klein,” I said and didn’t elaborate further.

Although Jason was eighteen, I offered him the option of either speaking to him at his house in the presence of his parents or meeting him somewhere. Jason decided he didn’t want a cop questioning him in front of his parents and suggested we meet at a coffee house on North Beverly.

“I’ll be easy to spot,” I said. From experience I knew it was better to get the matter of my appearance out of the way early. “Just look for a guy with an ugly scar on his mug.”

When I arrived at the coffee shop, I found all the outside tables deserted, which was as I hoped. Southern Californians aren’t known for braving the elements, and with the thermometer hovering around sixty degrees, they had retreated indoors. I told Sirius to park himself and then went inside. There wasn’t much in the way of food still available, but I found an egg salad sandwich that didn’t look too mushy.

The sandwich went well with the hot coffee, or at least what I ate of it did. Sirius got the lion’s share. While waiting for Jason, I called Gump. He and Martinez were still working the crime scene at the park and would probably be there most of the night. According to Gump, LAPD Media Relations was in the process of releasing a statement to the press detailing the circumstances of Paul Klein’s death.

“The shit’s just about to hit the fan,” Gump said. “The media air force has been trying to get footage all day. They know there’s a body in the tree, and they know there’s something muy hinky about this one.”

As if to emphasize what Gump was saying, I could hear the sounds of a helicopter flying low over the crime scene.

“I guess the kid’s father is some bigwig, right?” Gump asked.

“He’s a producer.”

“That figures. Media Relations tells me he’s got a press conference scheduled right after their announcement. Supposedly, he’s going to offer a million-dollar reward for information leading to the arrest of his son’s killer.”

“That’s all we need,” I said, knowing that kind of money would bring every crackpot with supposed information to the party. “We’ll have to pull some uniforms to handle the calls.”

“Yeah, we might as well just open our own psychic hotline.”

A preppy-looking kid, hands in his designer jeans, made a slow approach to where I was sitting. He acted wary, looking from me to Sirius and then back to me again.

“I’ll get back to you,” I told Gump.

I pocketed my phone and motioned for the kid to sit, saying, “The dog’s friendly.”

Before sitting he asked, “Can I see some ID?”

I pulled out my badge wallet and showed him my detective shield. When he finished looking at it, Jason Davis sat down in a chair opposite me.

“Michelle Klein told me you’ve known Paul for a long time.”

“My whole life,” he said.

“If you haven’t heard then, I am afraid Paul is dead.”

Jason’s mouth opened and he stared at me in disbelief.

“He was murdered yesterday,” I said.

I continued to watch him. Jason’s surprise and shock looked real.

“Do you know anyone that might have wanted to harm Paul?”

He shook his head and said, “I can’t believe it.”

“Are you aware of anyone that threatened Paul?”

“No. This is crazy.”

“Paul’s body was purposely put on display. He was nailed to a tree, which suggests to me that this killing was personal. Can you think of anything Paul might have done that might have made anyone want to do that to him?”

Jason shook his head again.

“When was the last time you saw Paul?”

He thought for a moment and said, “Yesterday at school. He was supposed to meet up with us last night but he was a no-show. We called him a few times, but he never picked up.”

“Where was he going to meet you?”

“At the Music Hall.”

Laemmle’s Music Hall 3 is a movie theater on Wilshire Boulevard.

“Who else was there with you?”

“Sam Drexler, David Popkin, and me.”

I already had the other boys’ names; they were part of Paul’s group.

“Were you surprised when Paul didn’t make it?”

“We just figured something came up.”

“So you saw the film without him?”

He nodded.

“Michelle Klein said your group is close and that Paul called you his entourage.”

“That’s what he sometimes called us,” Jason said, “but we usually call our group the Agency.”

“Like the CIA?”

“More like CAA.”

Creative Artists Agency is one of Hollywood’s biggest talent agencies. These kids had grown up in Tinseltown. It made sense that they’d wrap themselves in its glittery fabric.

“So the Agency is sort of a club?”

“That sounds like something with rules. We’re just a group of guys that hang out together.”

“That’s what gangbangers always say.”

“It isn’t like that. We don’t break laws or wear certain colors. We don’t even have a secret handshake. What we are is more like a team. The six of us have been playing lacrosse together all through high school.”

“Was Paul a good player?”

“He’s been one of the best the last few years. That’s why he was picked as captain his junior and senior years.”

“Was he bossy?”

“He liked to be in charge.”

“Did Paul use drugs?”

Jason’s answer was immediate: “No.”

“He didn’t drink?”

“Well, yeah.”

“What about weed?”

“Hardly ever,” Jason said. “Paul was a runner and didn’t want his lungs to get messed up.”

“Can you think of a reason why Paul was carrying a baggie full of OC and Ecstasy?”

A head shake. “Not even one.”

“And you don’t know of anyone that would have wanted to hurt Paul?”

“Not really.”

“Not really?”

“Most people liked Paul.”

“Who didn’t?”

He shrugged. “I don’t know. It’s possible some losers were jealous of him.”

“Such as?”

“I really couldn’t say. Paul sometimes acted cocky, though, and there might have been one or two kids that weren’t from old Beverly Hills that he rubbed the wrong way.”

“What do you mean by old Beverly Hills?”

“People from around here.”

“I’m still not following.”

“There are a lot of kids at our school that go around speaking different languages, like Farsi.”

“And Paul didn’t like that?”

“Lots of people in Beverly Hills don’t like it. A few years back there was this big fight when election ballots came out in Farsi. And the people of Beverly Hills got so sick of houses being torn down and Persian Palaces being put up that the zoning laws were changed.”

“Persian Palaces?”

“Everyone calls them that.”

“So Paul didn’t like these newcomers?”

“What he didn’t like was when they acted like they were still in Tehran. When he heard kids speaking in Farsi, he’d start talking real loud in pig Latin.”

“He targeted Iranian students?”

Jason shook his head. “It was more like a joke.”

“But others might not have found it funny?”

“I don’t know. You wanted to know if anyone could have disliked Paul; that’s all I could think of. But I don’t think his speaking pig Latin is the kind of thing that could have gotten him killed, do you?”

I almost said, “There are some people you’d be advised to not say ‘Uckfay Ouyay’ to,” but instead I just asked him another question.

CHAPTER 7:

TOWER OF BABEL, TOWER OF HOPE

Gump and Martinez were still working the case at two a.m. when I took my leave of them. None of us had turned up any real suspects. Paul’s friends-I had talked to all five members of the Agency-couldn’t think of anyone that would have wanted him dead. The only person that had offered a motive for Paul’s death was his father. Adam Klein said he believed his son’s death and crucifixion were payback from organized crime.