“How'd you get it?” said Brad.
“Hiking. Rock climbing. I fell, tore my back up, got stitched.”
“Not stitched very well,” said Brad. “That's some scar.”
And the hopeful knew what he was thinking. What both of them were thinking:
Ugly.
Because it was. Pink, puckered, glossy. Keloid fibrosing. Especially conspicuous because the surrounding skin was so smooth and bronze. So perfect.
Severe keloiding. Crappy surgical technique, the books said. And genetics. Black people keloided a lot. In Africa it was considered a sign of beauty.
Well, I'm white!
The treatment: shots of cortisone right into the wound early on. Too late, now. The only hope, more surgery, and that was a big maybe. Not that he could afford it yet. In more ways than one. Open that can of worms…
“Must have been quite a fall,” said Brad. Smugness in his voice.
It set off the feeling.
Like turning on a steam spigot.
Hot, boiling, iron-foundry rage. Foaming up from his gut and working its way to his chest. Like a heart attack, but he'd been through the nights of panics, cold sweats, knew his heart was fine. His heart…
His hands wanted to clench and he forced them to remain open. Forced the sweat to remain inside.
No one talked.
The hopeful kept his back to the two of them, knowing the smallest glimpse of the rage would kill any chance he had for a good-guy part.
Like there was still a chance. But keep going. In this business, you just keep going…
“What mountain were you climbing?” said Paige, and he knew she was mocking him.
Okay, thanks, babe. Ciao.
Don't call us, we'll call you.
“Does it matter?” he said, slipping the sweatshirt on and turning around.
Nearly falling over in surprise.
Because Brad and Paige were holding guns and badges.
“Looks more like a surgical scar,” said Brad. “Looks more like some kind of serious operation. Isn't that part of the back where the kidney is?”
The hopeful didn't answer.
Brad said, “And the Oscar goes to… okay, put your hands behind your back, Mr. Muscadine, and don't move.”
Smiling. Judging.
Some of the rage must have leaked through because Brad's smile died and his green eyes got even brighter. Yet colder. The hopeful had never known green could get that cold… He took a step backward.
“Easy, pal,” said Fat Brad. “Let's make this easy.”
“Up with the hands, Reed,” said Paige. Sharp voice, hostile, no longer on his side. Never on his side.
He stood there. Looked at them.
Poor specimens. Pathetic.
He was very big, very strong, could probably do some damage.
Not that it would make a difference in the long run.
But what the hell, might as well get something out of this shitty afternoon.
He dove for Paige.
Because he really didn't like women.
Tried for a jaw-breaking punch but only managed to slap her fucking face before Brad hit him on the back of his head and he went down.
36
After the uniforms took Reed Muscadine away, I came out from behind the dirty mirror.
Milo drank Evian water and plucked at his Hawaiian shirt. “Sleek, huh?”
Detective Paige Bandura said, “I think it suits you, Brad.”
“That right?”
“Sure. Nice and caj. Joe Beachbum.”
“Caj.” He looked at me. “So what do you think?”
“I think you could have a new career. Hell, maybe you can be Dirk.”
“Spare me.”
“I mean it, I really like the shirt,” said Paige. “If you don't like it you can donate it to the Ivy. The one at the beach. They've got Hawaiian shirts hanging on the wall.”
“Hoo-hah,” said Milo. “How do you know about such things, Detective Bandura?”
“Rich boyfriend.” She grinned, removed the black wig, and fluffed her clipped chestnut curls. “Need me for anything else, Milo?”
“Nope, thanks.”
“Hey, any time. Always wanted to act- how'd I do, Doctor?”
“From where I was sitting,” I said, “great.”
“Haven't acted since high school. Pirates of Penzance. Wanted to be Mabel, but they made me a pirate.”
“You were terrific,” I lied.
It made her smile and she walked off with a spring in her step.
“What's her usual detail?” I said.
“Car theft.” Milo sat down in the same chair he'd occupied as Brad.
Just the two of us in the room now. The empty space smelled of toxic sweat.
“Good work, Sig,” he said.
“Luckily.”
“Hey, you had a hypothesis. I always respect your hypotheses.”
A hypothesis.
About what Hope and Locking and Cruvic had in common.
Then back to square one: the conduct committee.
One particular case. Someone pressured to take a blood test.
I'd tested it out:
Confirmed Big Micky was on Imuran, the most commonly used antirejection drug. Meaning he was off dialysis. Had received yet another kidney transplant.
After that, the details had flooded my head: Reed Muscadine's clothes the day I'd spoken to him in his apartment. Short shorts, which matched the heat of the day, but a heavy sweatshirt that didn't. The sleeves cut off. Baring the arms, but covering his torso.
Mrs. Green the landlady telling me he'd been laid up with a bad back for over a month.
Muscadine telling me more: Tried for three-twenty on the bench press. It felt like a knife going through me.
A slip? Or playing with me?
Acting?
A good actor. Professor Dirkhoff's prize student. Dirkhoff had been distressed because Muscadine had dropped out to take a job on a soap opera.
A job that sounded definite.
But Muscadine had lost the part.
I can practice Stanislavsky from now til tomorrow, but if the bod goes so does my marketability.
Not remembering the name of the soap opera. Unlikely. Starving actors attuned themselves to every detail.
But giving me enough to sound credible.
Something about spies and diplomats, foreign embassies.
That had narrowed it down enough for Suzette Band to come up with a name.
Embassy Row. She'd gotten me the number of the show's casting director, a woman named Chloe Gold, and I'd called her posing as Muscadine's new agent. Asking her if Reed could get another chance because the boy was really talented.
She'd looked him up in her files and said No, thanks, he was bumped 'cause of physical factors.
What physical factors?
You don't know? You're his agent.
We haven't gotten into-
Ask him. Gotta go.
Physical factors.
The blood test, not just for HIV, but also for tissue compatibility. Hope with faculty clout, getting access to the sample.
It fit.
Not hard evidence but enough to hypothesize.
Cruvic's real clinic was the house on Mulholland Drive.
Honor thy father…
Milo drank the rest of the water and looked up at the track lighting. “Maybe we should throw a wrap party. Maybe the department will even compensate me for the rental and the ad in Variety.”
“You paid for it yourself?”
“Department doesn't authorize sting dough on the basis of hypotheses and I didn't want to spend six goddamn months going through channels. And what other choice was there? The wimpo judge said no warrant on Muscadine's medical records and apartment 'cause he doesn't like hypotheses. Meaning if I'd just walked up to the asshole and yanked his shirt up it would be no grounds, illegal search, and the scar would be excluded from evidence. Let alone forcing him to take an X ray, see if his kidney's missing.”