He took the pistol with him and bailed out the door and limped toward the brush, where he thought he’d be safe. Where they’d never find him. Where he’d have time to wait them out and then go home. He had money. If he could just get away from this place. If he could get to a taxi, he could still make it!
But Jonas didn’t make it to the thick brush on the hillside. He almost limped right into a small figure with a flashlight. He heard a woman’s voice behind the beam of light yelling, “Drop it! Drop it!”
He didn’t drop it. He raised the pistol toward the flashlight, toward the voice, and Britney Small fired her Glock from ten feet away.
Jonas Claymore saw the first fireball and that was all. Two of the.40 caliber rounds missed him completely but three slammed into his bony chest and sunken belly. He went down on his back, eyes open, and they never closed again.
There was pandemonium then, with Della Ravelle running to Britney, her shotgun pointed at the supine body of Jonas Claymore. And Viv Daley came running with her shotgun, and Georgie Adams pointed his pistol at the unmoving body.
Hollywood Nate and Snuffy Salcedo helped pry open Flotsam’s door. He had blood on his face and on one hand, but he wouldn’t get out of the car. He was yelling at them, “Get an RA! Now, goddamnit!” Then he turned to Jetsam, who was moaning in agony, his right foot trapped by mangled metal, and Flotsam said, “Easy, bro! Easy, partner! We’ll get you outta here!”
It took both Hollywood Nate and Snuffy to pull and pry at the passenger door of 6-X-32’s Crown Vic before they got it open, and when Nate shined his light onto Jetsam’s right foot, he yelled to Viv Daley, “Get me a tourniquet or a belt or anything!”
By the time the rescue ambulance arrived, Jetsam was lying on the roadside and was going gray. Kneeling beside him, Flotsam waved away Della, who’d torn open a first-aid kit and wanted to tend to the bleeding contusion at Flotsam’s hairline.
He kept saying to his partner, “Easy, bro. Stay with me. Don’t go nowhere, bro. Stay here with me. I ain’t gonna leave you, so don’t you leave me!”
The tall surfer cop insisted on riding in the back of the ambulance when they loaded Jetsam aboard, and he talked to him all the way to Cedars-Sinai, even when the paramedic said that the officer was showing signs of shock and wouldn’t understand him. Flotsam remained outside the ER until Hollywood Nate and Snuffy Salcedo came to get him and transport him to Hollywood Station.
Before they were separated and before Force Investigation Division arrived at the station, Della Ravelle took her rookie partner to the women’s locker room and said to the shaken young woman, “You have nothing to fear from FID or anybody else, Britney. It was an in-policy shooting, a good shooting.”
“Funny thing,” the young cop said. “It doesn’t seem right to call killing somebody a good shooting. It doesn’t feel good. I don’t feel good.”
“He’s dead and you’re alive,” Della said. “That’s good. Very good.”
“He was my age,” Britney said.
“And you would never have gotten a day older if you hadn’t done what you did,” Della said. “Now listen to me. After you get interrogated and after they say you can return to duty, you’re gonna be treated different. The male cops, particularly the macho OGs, will pat you on the back and praise you and show you some deference. You won’t get treated like a rookie anymore.”
“Because I killed somebody?” Britney said.
“Because you’ve proven yourself to them,” Della said. “Just go with it and smile politely and you’ll find that your job will go better in this man’s world we live in. From now on, you won’t be a little female boot they make fun of. They’ll respect you and even admire you. Like it or not, girl, you’re now an authentic and bona fide gunfighter.”
By daybreak, both Hollywood Division and Beverly Hills homicide detectives had worked out what had transpired at Wickland Gallery on Wilshire Boulevard. Their reports said that Jonas Claymore, who had recentely been arrested for felony possession of controlled substances, had probably been in a drug-induced state when he’d entered the gallery and caught Nigel Wickland by surprise in a blitz attack, cutting his face with a knife that was found in the wrecked van. There were signs of a life-and-death struggle in which Nigel Wickland apparently managed to get his hands on a Smith amp; Wesson 9-millimeter pistol registered to him. However, he was overcome in the struggle and was shot dead by the assailant, who then stole the gallery owner’s wallet and wristwatch, which were found in Jonas Claymore’s pocket after he was shot and killed.
Because an art gallery wasn’t the kind of business that would be a normal target for this kind of attack, the detectives made a note that the gallery owner was openly homosexual. They surmised that because Jonas Claymore was a handsome young man, he may have had a past intimate relationship with the victim, a relationship that had soured and turned violent. The fact of the van having been in Jonas Claymore’s possession on at least one other occasion when officers of Hollywood Division had questioned him tended to validate the theory of an intimate relationship between victim and assailant.
By the next afternoon, Ruth Langley, the only employee of the Wickland Gallery, told detectives through copious tears that she was led to believe that the young man who had borrowed her employer’s van on the prior occasion was his nephew. Nigel Wickland had described him as a kind of black sheep. But the deceased killer’s mother, who lived in Encino, denied that they were related to Nigel Wickland. She could offer no explanation for her son’s bizarre behavior other than that he had been using drugs heavily and had lately been living with a young woman whose name she did not know. Jonas Claymore’s mother suggested that the young woman had no doubt enticed her son into the drug use that led to his death.
Ruth Langley of Wickland Gallery could not account for the poster-board photographs of two Impressionist paintings that were found in the wrecked van. She told detectives that they must have been something that Nigel Wickland had picked up from one of the many art dealers he knew, perhaps to frame and hang in his condominium. She told the detectives that the pictures had no value other than as decorative art and that she would like to have them as mementos of her years working at the Wickland Gallery.
Two days after the murder of Nigel Wickland, Hollywood Nate Weiss went to Cedars-Sinai before reporting for duty at Hollywood Station. The floor nurse told him that the patient’s mother and two sisters had just been there, and the patient’s father had visited separately. She added that the police partner of the patient was in his room now and that the patient should only have visitors for brief periods of time.
She asked Nate if he was aware that the patient’s foot could not be saved, and Nate said that everyone at Hollywood Station knew about it. She said that if he wished, he could join the officer and the patient’s partner for a little while but added that the patient would soon need to rest.
Hollywood Nate walked down the corridor and was surprised that his palms were moist. He didn’t know what he’d say to Jetsam other than something trite: “You’re looking great. Are they treating you okay? Everyone sends their best. Is there anything you need? Anything at all?”
Nate stopped at the door to Jetsam’s room to try to think of something better to say and he heard the voices from inside. He decided to listen to them for cues on how he should handle this. Flotsam’s voice sounded somber even though his words were meant to be uplifting. Jetsam just sounded feeble.
Flotsam said, “Dude, I talked to the captain, and you don’t have to worry about only working the desk when you come back. You’ll be working in the field with me just like always.”