“What do you mean?” Viv asked suspiciously.
The psychologist said, “Police officers become prematurely cynical from seeing the worst of people and ordinary people at their worst. They don mental and emotional armor in self-defense. They tend to scoff at anything extraordinary. Your suggestion regarding the ladder and the roof was rebuffed as far-fetched, but it wasn’t. You were not cynical. You were trying to be a good police officer by imagining a very unlikely scenario that ultimately came true.”
Viv didn’t say anything and the psychologist said, “Had you ever seen something very horrific before? Something involving helpless children?”
Viv hesitated and then said, “I remember one case when an Eighteenth Streeter who called himself the Tax Collector pistol-whipped a street vendor for not paying protection money. He decided he needed to teach all the vendors a lesson and he shot the man’s baby right there in his stroller.”
The psychologist shook her head slowly and said, “I can only imagine how you felt when you got there.”
Viv said, “And there was the time we got a call that taught me why detectives who work child abuse are the only coppers who’re never asked about their work by their civilian friends. The call came right after we cleared from roll call. This tot had been burned real bad in the bathtub and his mother said it was an accident. Except that his flesh was burned off from his elbows, straight down from that demarcation line. That meant that the child had been held by the wrists and put down into the scalding water. It turned out that the mother’s boyfriend did it when he got frustrated during a potty training session. When the man was arrested, he said he didn’t know the water was that hot. I was told later that they had to put the skin from dead people on the third-degree burns. It happened on the child’s second birthday. His name was Stevie.”
The psychologist said, “You know that you can come back and see me anytime, Vivien. You don’t have to wait until you’re ordered to come here.”
Viv gave the shrink a lopsided smile and said, “Don’t you know that cops consider it wussy to run down here and talk to you people?”
The psychologist smiled and said, “Oh, yes, how well I know. We have a lonely job around here because of the rampant machismo and super-self-reliance of your colleagues in blue. Believe me, I know all about that.”
“Well, then, you get it,” Viv said and fell silent.
The psychologist was quiet for a moment watching Viv gaze through the window as though she’d like to escape. Then she said, “Had you ever felt a strong impulse to foster a child before the incident in Little Armenia?”
“No, I hadn’t,” Viv said, and looked at the shrink again with a hint of defiance. And again she said, “Why should I?”
“You shouldn’t,” the psychiatrist said. “But this case was different, wasn’t it? This had to do with Carly’s mother and her baby brother, and feelings of great… discomfort that you were experiencing because of what happened to them. Isn’t that true?”
“Maybe,” Viv conceded. “Are you trying to tell me that you think I do feel somehow responsible?”
“That man Louis Dryden was responsible,” the psychologist said. “Cindy Kroll bore some responsibility also. She refused to go to a shelter where she and her children would’ve been safe until your detectives could have contacted Louis Dryden and warned him to stay away. You are obviously an extremely responsible person, Vivien, but none of this should become your burden. Given all that was known, the actions of you and your colleagues were reasonable and understandable. This event was an anomaly.”
“Have we been talking about some sort of… hidden guilt feelings here?” Viv asked. “Is that what we’re talking about?”
“If we are, I hope we can dispel it,” the shrink said. “The event itself was exceptionally horrific. You saw things that night that nobody should ever see.”
“I suppose so,” Viv said. Then she said, “That incident in Little Armenia… it would rattle anybody, wouldn’t it?”
“It certainly would,” the shrink said.
“And on top of that…”
The psychologist was quiet until she finally said, “And on top of that? What, Vivien?”
“Carly was so traumatized and confused that she kept… she kept calling me… Mommy.”
Both women were silent and Viv was startled to taste tears in her mouth. And then she broke down and wept in her hands. The psychiatrist moved a box of tissues from her desktop closer to Viv Daley’s chair and waited for her tears to stop.
At midwatch roll call that evening the word was passed from cop to cop that one of the Department’s highest-ranking brass had been caught on a dark street in south L.A. with a hooker in his car. And she was not some special Beyoncé look-alike but just a grungy old streetwalker who probably had every known STD and some new ones that weren’t yet cataloged. When he badged the patrol unit that caught him, he offered the lame excuse that he was “interrogating” the hooker, who quickly got out of his car and continued on her way.
The two cops assured him that this contact would remain confidential, but by the end of watch they had each texted more than a dozen coppers, who each texted a dozen more, in a chain that didn’t end until everybody in the LAPD and beyond knew about it. It was a perfect example of how well things remain confidential in police work, and why cops howl in laughter when cop-hating commentators on TV refer to “the blue wall of silence” or “closing ranks” in controversial cases involving allegations of excessive force and other misconduct, usually involving ethnic minorities.
On that subject, Sergeant Murillo said at roll call, “I could offer to buy a brand-new car to any copper around here who could keep something on the down-low for even one day, and I’d never have to worry about ever touching my life savings. Which I think amounts to about four hundred dollars last time I checked.”
After they cleared for calls that evening, Flotsam and Jetsam were not on the street five minutes before a late-model Mustang cruising slowly in the curb lane blew a stoplight on east Sunset Boulevard and caused several drivers to jump on their brakes and yell curses.
“You’re up,” Jetsam said and did a U-ee, pulling behind the Mustang with his lights flashing. He honked the horn to get the driver to notice.
The driver was so busy talking on his cell phone and driving so erratically that they thought he was DUI. When he finally saw them in his rearview mirror, he pulled to the curb. He was fumbling around so much that they thought he might be trying to hide some contraband or even a weapon, so both cops jumped out quickly and ran up to the Mustang, Flotsam on the driver’s side with his hand on his Glock.
Jetsam approached on the passenger side, and since it was still light, they could both see well, and what they saw was a white-collar guy with his shirttail hanging out his fly.
Flotsam said, “License and registration, please.”
The tall cop looked across the Mustang roof and grimaced at his partner. Since this was sometimes a whore track after dark, it figured that the motorist was looking to pick up a hooker on the way home from work. It was reasonable to assume that maybe he was doing some phone sex at the same time and it all got to be a libido overload.
Flotsam wrote the ticket on the hood of their shop, and Jetsam said, “Bro, whatever you do, don’t shake hands with him.”
Flotsam got back to the car and handed the man the citation book and his ballpoint pen. While the driver signed the ticket, Flotsam looked at the damp spot on the man’s shirt where he’d wiped his fingers, and said, “You can keep the pen, sir. Compliments of the city of Los Angeles.”
Hollywood Nate and Snuffy Salcedo got a message on their dashboard computer regarding “a female 5150 at Hollywood and Highland” on the Walk of Fame. Snuffy punched the en route button, and Nate glanced at the message and said, “A female mental case on the Walk of Fame. How remarkable. That description could apply to anybody on Hollywood Boulevard, since gender around here is always questionable anyway.”