As I stood on my tiptoes to get a better look, a deep, gravelly voice that sounded vaguely familiar drew my attention.
“How long you gonna keep me here? You know, I got work to do, just like you guys.”
On the far side of the taped-off circle, I saw a big guy wearing a black bandanna around his head Hulk Hogan-style. Even from twenty feet away, I recognized Dominic Rostoni, highly successful custom motorcycle dealer and white supremacist gang leader. Bailey and I had run into him on our last case, and I knew he lived just off Mulholland in Calabasas-not all that far from this place. This mountain was probably a great ride for bikers.
Bailey was conferring with the officer who made the first response. I tapped her on the shoulder and pointed to Dominic.
“What’re the odds?” she asked.
“Pretty good, when you think about it.”
Bailey did, for about a second, then nodded. We made our way over to his side of the crime scene.
“Hey, Dominic,” I said. “Long time no see.” I didn’t offer to shake hands.
He looked up with a frown, then his expression cleared. “Yeah, I remember you. Hey, can you tell these guys to let me go? You know where to find me.”
“You found the body?” I replied.
“Yeah. Came up for a smoke.”
I further assumed he didn’t mean cigarettes. Just the thought of navigating these roads on a motorcycle while high on…anything, gave me vertigo.
“You touch anything?” I asked.
He looked offended. “What you take me for? An idiot?”
The true answer was “Yes, you neo-Nazi asshole.” But sometimes the truth does not set you free. I did believe he was smart enough not to mess with a dead body unless he was the reason it was in that condition. And, obviously, he must’ve called the cops as soon as he found it, because I doubted they’d be doing routine patrol here in this weather.
“What were you really doing out here, Dominic?”
“Really, I was just out for a ride.”
“Right after a storm like this.” I raised an eyebrow.
Dominic sighed and looked away for a moment. “Wife and I had a fight. I needed some cooling-off time. Soon as the rain stopped, I went out for a ride. Didn’t expect to wind up here, tell you the truth…”
“And you called the cops?”
He nodded and glanced toward the mound of dirt. “Poor kid. Got one of my own, you know.”
I didn’t know. And I wasn’t thrilled to hear that these cretins procreated. I restrained the impulse to ask what his kid was doing with his life. I didn’t want to hear he’d joined the “club.”
“You come here pretty often?”
“Maybe once a month.”
“You happen to notice anything else unusual?”
Dominic shook his head. “Even if there was, with this weather it’d be long gone anyways.”
Anyways. Didn’t he say that last time too? This stuff made me nuts. “Anyway, Dominic. There’s only one. Right?”
He snickered briefly. Guess I had mentioned it last time.
“Yeah. Anyway, I didn’t see nothin’ out of the norm.”
I wondered if he was smart enough to use the double negative on purpose, just to mess with me, but decided that was probably giving him too much credit. Besides, bad grammar was the least of his deficits. I looked at Bailey, who was suppressing a smile with only partial success.
“Your information still the same?” she asked him.
“Yeah. ’Course.”
Bailey gave the officer next to Dominic the high sign. “You can let him go. And thanks.”
The coroner’s wagon pulled up as Dominic’s bike gave a throaty growl. He steered out to the road and touched two fingers to his forehead in a salute, then roared off. I didn’t recognize the coroner’s investigator who jumped out of the wagon. He was a smallish black man with a neat mustache and goatee.
Bailey and I introduced ourselves as he stood outside the tape and gloved up.
“George Harrison.”
I wanted to say “You’re kidding, right?” but his serious expression gave me the answer. Without another word, he ducked under the tape, and Bailey and I followed him. He immediately turned back and frowned at us.
“I’m going to have to ask you to stay back until I’m done.”
“Mr. Harrison, how long have you been with the coroner’s office?” Bailey asked, her tone on the borderline between irritation and genuine pissitivity.
“With this office, four months. In Seattle for five years, and in New York for ten.” He said it without a hint of self-importance; it was just a statement of fact. That itinerary explained his accent-as in, he had none whatsoever. That was a lot of years on the job for someone who looked like he was in his twenties. Our skepticism must’ve shown, because he added, “Black don’t crack.”
The slang was so out of place in his King’s English voice, I chuckled in spite of myself and I saw that Bailey did too. George gave us a little smile and unwound a bit. “You can watch from over there right now. When I get ready to wrap him up, I’ll let you in for a closer look.”
Bailey and I stood back and watched. George was one hell of a thorough worker-calm, careful, slow, and steady. After what felt like hours, he gestured to us. “Take a look, but stay back.” He left to get the body bag and gurney.
I scanned the area around us briefly and imagined what it would be like to be alone up here in the dead of night. Scary, desolate…and worst of all, isolated. No one would ever hear you scream. Bailey and I picked our way carefully across the river of loose rocks and mud that had streamed from the grave. As our steps brought us closer, I steeled myself for a sight that was likely to be gruesome. But nothing could have prepared me for what lay inside the crime scene tape. The body of Brian Shandling, né Maher.
20
As I stared at the pale, wet face, body frozen in rigor, his aunt’s words repeated in my head: “gentle soul,” “sweet boy.” Her words had fallen on cynical ears at the time. Now, I was more inclined to believe they were true. And if they were, this was yet another child who’d been ripped from the world before he even had a chance to live. I wasn’t ready to deal with the tragedy of another young death this soon. My only path of escape was to focus on the evidence.
“George, can you give me an estimate for time of death?” I asked.
“Just a very rough one. I’d say he’s been dead for about three days now.”
Three days. That would put his death very close in time to Hayley’s. We’d get a tighter frame when the autopsy was done for both of them-though, contrary to popular belief, it wouldn’t be down to the minute, or even the hour. Usually, the best a coroner can do is narrow the time of death down to a window of a few hours. Even then, an estimate as narrow as a couple of hours requires more information than a pathologist can gather on his own. For example, stomach contents can be helpful, but without certain information like a witness who can say when the victim last ate, or how fast that victim digests, or how much physical activity the victim engaged in after the meal, and so on-the coroner can’t give a precise time of death. Since no one we’d spoken to so far had seen Brian after Iris Stavros had a glimpse of him on Monday, we weren’t likely to find anyone who could say when he last ate. We’d need other information to prove conclusively that he’d died shortly before or after Hayley. I motioned for Bailey to join me and we moved outside the crime scene tape to a spot where we could talk.
“You could’ve told me who the victim was,” I said, more than a little irritated at the way I’d been blindsided.
“Sorry. It’s just that the cop wasn’t sure.” Bailey glanced at me. “It’s just…I didn’t want to jump the gun…”