“No, you don’t. Not anymore.”
“You’re entitled to your opinion.”
“But not to work my case.”
“Again, that is not what I’m saying. You keep putting it in a way that is not—”
“It’s too late, Marty. It’s about to break.”
“Break how?”
“I needed information about my victim. I went to the paper she worked for and traded information. I’m working with a reporter on it. If I blow it off now, he’ll know why and it will be a bigger story for that than for me closing it.”
“You son of a bitch. What paper? In Sweden?”
“Denmark. She was from Denmark. But don’t think it’ll stay in Denmark. The media is global. The story may break over there but it will ping-pong right back here—eventually. And you’ll have to answer to why you killed the investigation.”
Maycock grabbed a baseball off his desk and started working it with his fingers like a pitcher breaking in a new ball.
“You can go now,” he said.
“Okay. And?”
“And just get the hell out. We’re done.”
Bosch paused, then started moving toward the door.
“I will keep all public relations issues in mind as I proceed,” he said.
It was his meager offering.
“Yes, you do that, Detective,” the chief said.
As he left the suite, Bosch thanked Alta Rose for getting him in.
11
It was 6 P.M. when Bosch knocked on the door of the house on 73rd Place. Normally residential search warrants were executed in the morning hours so they drew little notice in the neighborhood. People were at work, at school, sleeping late.
But that wasn’t the plan this time. Bosch didn’t want to wait. The case had momentum and he didn’t want it to stall.
The door was answered after the third knock by a short woman in a housedress and a colorful bandana wrapped around her head. Tattoos rose like a scarf around her neck and up to her jawline. She stood behind a security gate, the kind most of the houses in the neighborhood had.
Bosch stood front and center on the front stoop. This was by design. Behind him were two white officers from the Gang Enforcement Detail. Jordy Gant and David Chu were standing farther back in the front yard and to the left. Bosch wanted to hammer home to the woman of the house that she was in for a major intrusion—uniformed white police officers searching through her home.
“Gail Briscoe? I’m Detective Bosch with the LAPD. I have a document here giving me access to search your home.”
“Search my home? For what?”
“This specifies that we are searching for a Beretta model ninety-two handgun known to have been in the possession of Trumont Story, who resided here until his death on December first, two thousand and nine.”
Bosch held the document out to her but she couldn’t reach for it because of the security door. He was hoping she wouldn’t anyway.
Instead, she went into full outrage.
“You gotta be fucking kidding me,” the woman said. “You ain’t comin’ in here and searching my place. This is my home, motherfuckers.”
“Ma’am,” Bosch said calmly. “Are you Gail Briscoe?”
“Yes, I am, and this is my motherfucking house.”
“Would you please open the door so you can read the document? It is fully enforceable whether you cooperate with us or not.”
“I don’t want to read a goddamn thing. I know my rights and you can’t just show me a piece of paper and expect me to open my door.”
“Ma’am, you—”
“Harry, can I talk to the lady?”
It was Gant, coming up to the stoop at just the right moment and just according to the script they had worked out.
“Sure, knock yourself out,” Bosch said gruffly, as if he was more annoyed with Gant’s intrusion than with Briscoe. He stepped back and Gant stepped up.
“She’s got five minutes to open up, or we cuff her, put her in a car, and then go in. I’m calling backup now.”
Bosch pulled his cell phone out and walked into the scrub grass out in front so Briscoe could see him making the call.
Gant started speaking in a low voice to the woman in the doorway, doing the Louis Gossett Jr. act, trying to sweet-talk his way to the prize.
“Momma, you remember me? I came by here a few months back. They brought me along here to try to keep the peace, but there’s no stopping them. They’re coming in and they’re going to be looking through all your stuff. Opening things, gettin’ into your private things, gettin’ into whatever anybody else’s got in here. You want that?”
“This is some bullshit. Tru been dead goin’ on three years and now they come around here? They haven’t even solved his damn murder and they sticking a warrant in my face?”
“I know, Momma, I know, but you gotta think about yourself here. You don’t want these guys tearin’ up your house. Where’s the gun at? We know Tru had it. Just give it up and these guys will leave you be.”
Bosch clicked off his phony call and started back toward the house.
“That’s it, Jordy. Backup’s coming and time’s up.”
Gant held a hand back with the palm up.
“Hold on a sec, Detective, we’re talking here.”
He then looked at Briscoe and tried one last time.
“We’re talking, right? You want to avoid this whole thing, right? You don’t want your neighbors seeing this, you sittin’ cuffed in a car, now, do you?”
He paused and Bosch paused and everybody waited.
“Only you,” Briscoe finally said.
She pointed through the gate at Gant.
“That’s cool,” he said. “You going to lead me to it?”
She unlocked the security gate and pushed it toward him.
“Only you come in.”
Gant looked back at Bosch and winked. He was in. He went through the doorway and Briscoe pulled the gate closed and locked it again.
Bosch didn’t like that last part. He moved up the steps and looked in through the bars. Briscoe was leading Gant down a hallway toward the rear of the house. For the first time, he noticed a boy of about nine or ten sitting on a couch playing a handheld video game.
“Jordy, you okay?” he called.
Gant looked back and Bosch put his hands on the security gate’s handle and shook it to remind him that he was locked in and his backup was locked out.
“We’re cool,” Gant called back. “Momma’s going to give it up. She doesn’t want you crackers tearing her place up.”
He smiled as he disappeared from sight. Bosch stayed at the door, leaning close to it so he would hear any sound that might be trouble. He put the phony warrant—dummied off an old one—into his coat’s inside pocket to be used another day.
He waited five minutes and heard nothing except the electronic beeps of the boy’s game. He assumed that the kid was Trumont Story’s child.
“Hey, Jordy?” he finally called out.
The boy didn’t look away from his game. There was no reply.
“Jordy?”
Again no reply. Bosch tried the door handle, even though he knew it was locked. He turned back to the two GED cops and signaled them to go around the house to the back, to see if there was an open door. Chu jumped up on the stoop.
Then Bosch saw Gant appear at the mouth of the hallway. He was smiling and holding up a large Ziploc bag containing a black pistol.
“Got it, Harry. We’re good.”
Bosch told Chu to retrieve the two GED guys and he let out his first full breath in ten minutes. It was the best way to have worked it. There was no way O’Toole would have approved his going for a search warrant. There wasn’t enough probable cause for a judge to okay a search three years after the subject’s death. So the dummy warrant scam was the best way. And Gant’s script had worked perfectly. Briscoe had given them the gun voluntarily, without their having to illegally search the house.