“Maybe so, but I consider it solved and a closed case.”
“How long will it take them to decide?”
Before Ballard could answer, they were approached by a woman who also wore a blue blazer and had a wire loop over her ear, though hers was better camouflaged by her long hair.
“Are you the detectives from L.A.?” she asked.
“We are,” Ballard said. “I’m Renée Ballard, this is Maddie Bosch.”
“Marty Branch. Ballard, Bosch, and Branch — has a nice ring to it.”
They shook hands. Branch was in her forties. She was short and wide in the hips, and she eyed Maddie the way the first security man had.
“Honey, you look like a baby,” she said. “How old are you?”
“Twenty-six,” Maddie said. “And I’m a vol—”
“I’m sorry,” Ballard interrupted. “We’re working on a breaking case. We’re looking for a possible witness named Rodney Van Ness. His LinkedIn page says he works here as a security supervisor. Do you know him?”
“Rodney? Yes, I know Rodney,” Branch said. “But he hasn’t worked here in a good long time.”
“How long is a good long time?”
“Oh, two, three years at least.”
“Do you know why he left?”
“I know he was asked to leave and I got his job.”
“Why was he asked to leave?”
“That you’d have to get from HR — confidential.”
“Do you know where he went from here?”
“I heard he went to the Nugget but I don’t think that lasted too long. After that, I don’t know. I haven’t heard anything.”
“Do you have any records that would give us a home address?”
“Don’t you people have access to the DMV database? I’m sure the folks at Vegas Metro would help you out with that.”
“We checked the DMV. This is the address on his license. Do you have an office where we could maybe sit down and talk? We’re working a case involving multiple rapes and at least one murder, and Mr. Van Ness may have information that will help us identify a suspect.”
Branch nodded as she considered what to do.
“We wouldn’t have driven all the way over here just because of a LinkedIn profile if it weren’t important,” Ballard added.
Branch nodded again.
“Let’s go to the security office,” she finally said. “You two can wait at my desk while I talk to HR about this. But don’t you go flipping through my little black book, now. This way.”
She led them through a door at the side of the concierge counter to an employees-only elevator, which they took to the third floor.
“Did you all come over this morning or last night?” she asked.
“This morning,” Ballard said. “We left at six.”
“That’s early. How you fixed for coffee?”
“We could probably use some.”
“I can get that going.”
“Thank you.”
42
They arrived at the address that Marty Branch’s little black book had provided for Rodney Van Ness, a run-down apartment building in the Fremont East neighborhood of downtown. The book had also provided a cell phone number and work numbers that were different from the numbers posted on LinkedIn. But the entries in her book were at least three years old, and Branch had told them she could not vouch for the accuracy of any of the information. Ballard was worried. She didn’t want to have wasted a day and leave Las Vegas without finding and talking to Van Ness.
The Fremont Crest apartment building was two stories with exterior walkways branching right and left from a center entrance and staircase. It was white stucco with aquamarine doors and accents. The parking lot was located in front of the building, and there had been no effort — at least in recent years — to put any desert flora into the baked brown ground of its unpaved areas.
Prior to arriving, Ballard and Maddie had scouted the neighborhood for a location to take Van Ness to if he agreed to speak to them. The plan was simple. They wanted to take him out of the comfort zone of his own home. Based on a recommendation from Branch, they scoped out and chose a nearby restaurant called the Triple George Grill because it offered private booths and was favored by local law enforcement.
The apartment building’s security gate had not closed and locked after its last use and that allowed Ballard and Maddie to get to the second floor without having to use the call box. Ballard knew it was always better to knock directly on doors and keep the element of surprise.
They stopped in front of apartment 202 and Ballard leaned an ear toward the door. She heard no music, TV sounds, or people talking. She whispered to Maddie, “This reminds me of the sign your dad supposedly kept at his desk,” she said.
“‘Get off your ass and knock on doors,’” Maddie said, doing a not-so-good impression of her father. “Words for a detective to live by.”
Ballard nodded and knocked sharply on the door. After half a minute there was a verbal response from within the apartment. It was a female voice:
“Who is it?”
Ballard looked at Maddie and then responded.
“We’re looking for Rodney Van Ness.”
“He’s sleeping.”
Ballard pulled her phone and looked at the time. It was noon.
“Well, ma’am, wake him up,” she said. “This is a police matter.”
That got no response, so Ballard knocked on the door again, this time hard and loud enough that hopefully she could wake Van Ness herself.
“Hello?” she called. “Open the door, ma’am. This is the police.”
The door was finally opened by a young woman wearing a short silk robe and seemingly nothing else. Her unkempt hair and heavy-lidded eyes made it clear she had been roused from sleep
“He’s coming,” she said. “What’s this about anyway?”
“Who are you, ma’am?” Ballard asked.
“Harmony.”
“Harmony Van Ness?”
“Shit, no. We’re not married. We work together. That’s it.”
“Where do you work?”
“The Library.”
“You’re a librarian?”
“It’s a club.”
Ballard was getting the picture now. When you’ve been blackballed on the casino security circuit in Vegas, the next tier down was strip clubs, which were plentiful in Vegas and ran the gamut from hole-in-the-wall brothels to high-end nightclubs that catered to rappers and all manner of the rich and famous. It did not take a leap of imagination to guess what Harmony did for a living and where Van Ness would fit in with that.
“How long has Rodney been working at the Library?” she asked.
Before Harmony could respond, a deep male voice came from behind her:
“Don’t answer that.”
It was a command. Harmony stepped back, and the doorway was filled by a man Ballard recognized from the yearbook as Rodney Van Ness. He was taller than she had guessed from the yearbook photos, but then, a lot of kids shot up in their late teens. He was barefoot and wore board shorts and a misbuttoned Hawaiian shirt with a sailboats-on-water motif, the blue of the ocean matching the door-frame he leaned against. He had the same hair and beard as the kid in the yearbook prom photo. But he had grown into a two-hundred-plus-pound wedge in the twenty-five years since graduation.
“Go get dressed,” he said to Harmony.
He turned to watch Harmony go, the hem of her robe not quite covering the lines of her spray-tanned bottom. He turned back to Ballard and Maddie.
“Strippers,” he said, rolling his eyes. “What do you want?”
Ballard was not sure if that was a rhetorical question about strippers or a direct question to her and Maddie. But her quick take on Van Ness was that he was not much of a rhetoric man.