Michael Connelly
Nightshade
For Callie
1
The marine layer was as thick as cotton and had formed a thousand-foot wall that shrouded the entrance to the harbor. The Adjourned was late and Stilwell waited for it in his John Deere Gator by the fuel dock behind the Casino. The harbor was almost empty, the red-and-orange mooring balls floating free in lines across the glass surface. Stilwell knew that as soon as the layer burned off, the weekenders would start arriving. The harbormaster’s office had reported that it would be at full capacity for the first big weekend of summer. Stilwell was ready for it.
He heard another cart pull up behind his. An electric. Soon the seat next to Stilwell was taken by Lionel McKey.
“Good morning, Sergeant,” he said. “I thought I might find you here. Waiting for the Adjourned?”
“What can I do for you, Lionel?” Stilwell asked.
“Anything new to say about the mutilations up at the preserve? I’ve got about four hours till my deadline.”
“Mutilation, not mutilations. One mutilation. It’s still under investigation and I’ve got nothing new to report at this time. When I do, you’ll be the first to know.”
“Is that a promise?”
“It’s a promise.”
His answer was punctuated by a foghorn from somewhere inside the layer. Stilwell knew by the tone that it was the Catalina Express about to come through the shroud. He wanted to be over there to watch the arrivals as he did most free mornings, counting the number of tourists who came believing that the Casino was a gambling house only to learn that it was a grand ballroom and movie theater. But meeting the Adjourned was more important this morning than counting fools.
“So what are you putting in the paper about it?” he asked.
“Well, not much,” McKey said. “I don’t want to look like an idiot, you know.”
“I think that’s wise.”
“Why, because you know something?”
“No, but I mean, use your common sense, Lionel. You really think it was a close encounter of the green kind?”
“No, not really.”
“Well, there you go. What time’s your deadline?”
“Two.”
“If anything changes before then, I’ll be sure to let you know.”
“Okay, thanks. I’ll be at the Call.”
“And I’ve got your numbers.”
“Have a good weekend.”
“If I can. It’ll be busy.”
“For sure.”
McKey hopped out of the Gator and went back to his cart. As he drove off, Stilwell saw the Catalina Call logo of linked Cs painted on the side panel.
A few seconds later the prow of the Express poked through the fog layer and headed toward the ferry landing on the other side of the harbor.
Following in its wake fifty yards behind was the Adjourned. It had been a smart move using the bigger vessel as a lead through the layer instead of coming in blind. The Express had the most modern navigational tools at the fingertips of its captain and crew.
The Adjourned was a forty-year-old Viking 35. Judge Harrell kept it clean and well maintained. It was white with distinctive blue trim and matching canvas over the salon’s windows. Stilwell watched it cut down the first mooring lane, past the floating dock behind the Black Marlin Club, and come to the last orange ball. Harrell cut the engines and used a gaff to hook the line under the ball. He was wearing a wet suit, which told Stilwell he would not need a dinghy pickup. The judge quickly moored the boat, then climbed over the stern to the fantail and jumped into the cold water.
Stilwell got out of the cart and went to the storage box on the back. He unlocked it and got two green-and-white-striped towels out and draped one of them over the passenger seat. By the time he had it in place, Harrell was climbing up the ladder onto the fuel dock.
Stilwell threw him the other towel.
“Looked like some thick stuff out there, Judge,” he said.
“Trojan-horsed on the tail of the Express,” Harrell said.
Before getting into the Gator, he toweled off the wet suit and draped the towel over his head.
“I saw that,” Stilwell said. “Smooth move.”
“Anyway, sorry to be late,” Harrell said. “I called Mercy and she’s cued everything up.”
Harrell took a seat in the cart on the towel Stilwell had spread.
“Yes, sir,” Stilwell said. “Just a few D-and-Ds and a wobbler.”
“Tell me about the wobbler,” the judge said.
Stilwell circled the Casino and headed toward the justice center in town.
“Well, technically, it’s a burglary of an occupied dwelling with a firearm enhancement,” Stilwell said. “But the dwelling is occupied by the suspect’s ex-girlfriend, and he claims he was stealing back his Glock because he was afraid of leaving it with her, like she might harm herself with it.”
“How noble,” Harrell said. “You know this man?”
“Kermit Henderson, born and raised here. Works up at the golf course running mowers and doing general maintenance. The girlfriend is Becki Trower, another local. I was thinking maybe you work a deal like you did with Sean Quinlan and we get some maintenance done around the sub. Especially since Sean is coming off his time.”
“Okay, we’ll hear him out. If that’s all you’ve got, I might get some fishing in later.”
“There’s also this.”
Stilwell leaned forward, reached into his back pocket, and pulled out the document he had printed earlier that morning and folded lengthwise to fit. He handed it to the judge, who unfolded it and started to read.
“Search warrant,” Harrell said.
He got quiet as he read the summary and probable cause statement. Then he shook his head, not because he disagreed with anything he had read but because it made him angry.
“You got a pen?” he said.
Stilwell took the pen out of his shirt pocket and handed it to Harrell. The judge scribbled his signature on the appropriate line and handed the pen and the warrant back to Stilwell.
“I gave up a long time ago trying to understand why people do what they do to each other,” Harrell said. “But cruelty to animals still gets to me. If this guy did what you suspect, then he better find a good lawyer and hope I don’t get the case.”
“I hear you,” Stilwell said. “I’m the same.”
A few minutes later they were at the justice complex on Sumner Avenue. Stilwell and Harrell went into the sheriff’s substation, where the judge kept his clothes and black robe in a locker.
Stilwell unlocked the holding facility so that Harrell could use the shower and get dressed for court. Kermit Henderson, unable to make bail, was in one of the cells. He watched the judge go by, leaving wet footprints on the gray linoleum.
Stilwell saw no sign of Sean Quinlan. He texted him to tell him to mop the jail after the judge was finished showering and getting dressed. It would be Quinlan’s final duty, as the judge was set to release him from probation.
Stilwell went into the courtroom and saw that Monika Juarez was already in place at the prosecution table. Mercy Chapa was at the clerk’s desk for her one-morning-a-week gig. The rest of the time she was manager, dispatcher, and general overseer of the sheriff’s substation, and Stilwell’s right hand.
Juarez was a small woman with brown skin. Her hair was in black ringlets that framed her thin face but did not fully hide the whitish scar that ran along the left side of her jaw. Stilwell had never asked her about it but thought that however she got it, it probably had something to do with why she’d become a prosecutor. She was about thirty and assigned to the superior court in Long Beach. Like Judge Harrell, she came to Catalina once a week to handle the island’s cases, but she preferred to come over the night before on the Express, stay at the Zane Grey at county expense, and then go directly to court in the morning.