None of the three had spoken to him much. They went their way, he went his.
“During the day I’m mostly out shooting film. When I go out at night, it’s in the Valley, ’cause that’s where my friends live. Sometimes I spend the night there.”
“At your friends.”
Arnaz looked away briefly. “Yeah, or my folks.”
Scared by the neighborhood, he returns to mom and dad at night.
He said, “They don’t like me living out here. I tell them it’s cool.”
Petra said, “Makes total sense, though. Long as you’re out there, avoid the drive back.”
“Yeah,” said Ovid Arnaz. “And I know my equipment’s safe.”
CHAPTER 24
Mac Dilbeck looked at the photo of Marcella Douquette. “Our victim.”
Petra said, “Maybe our main victim. She’s got no record but was living with a member of a known criminal enterprise. Could be the other kids just happened to be in the parking lot at the wrong time.”
The two of them were having coffee at Musso and Frank, the front room, one of the stiff-backed booths. Hollywood oldsters and retro types Petra’s age loped in and out. Petra was having apple pie and Mac had chosen rhubarb with vanilla ice cream. Luc Montoya, occupied with his new case, a Selma Avenue stabbing, was off the Paradiso case permanently.
Mac forked loose an equilateral triangle of pie and guided it smoothly into his mouth. It was five P.M. and he’d been on for a day and a half, but his gray sharkskin suit was immaculate and his white shirt looked freshly pressed. Petra had left a message with Isaac at USC, canceling their P.M. meet. She felt exhilarated by the I.D. on Douquette but on the verge of letdown because of all the whodunit that remained.
Eleven days till June 28, but this was more important, this was now.
Mac said, “You did great work.” He wiped an already clean mouth with a linen napkin. “Out of nowhere you pull an I.D.”
“Abracadabra,” said Petra. She waved an imaginary wand.
Mac smiled. “So, you’re thinking this Lyle character’s the one.”
“He and Sandra Leon lived with Marcella in Venice. The landlord said Leon paid six months rent in advance, hard cash. Gave the name Lewis Tiger.”
“Leon means ‘lion’ in Spanish right?” said Mac. “Lion, Tiger. Cute.”
“If he did this he’s a damned snake,” said Petra. “The Players have no rep for violence but maybe internally it’s different. Maybe Robert Leon rules with an iron fist from his cell in Lompoc. Sandra never visited him but Marcella did, last year. And guess what, she’s the only female who did.”
“You’re thinking she offended the boss.”
“The coroner said she’d had a recent abortion. Maybe that broke some kind of rule.”
“Getting pregnant or having the abortion?”
“Could be either,” said Petra. “Maybe the father was an outsider. Or Lyle. He was living with both girls in a very small house, anything could’ve happened. For all we know, getting pregnant was the ideal- the females’ role in the group is to breed- and by terminating she committed a big-time no-no.”
“Providing young’uns for the clan,” said Mac. “Sounds like a cult. What about Sandra?”
“Sandra’s sick. Hepatitis A. That could’ve prevented her from conceiving, or Lyle knew about it and stayed away. Or he was the one who gave it to her.” She repeated what Katzman had told her about unsanitary sex.
Mac excised and ate a smaller triangle of pie. “Kind of ironic, her trying to fake out like she had cancer and she’s sick with something else.”
“Maybe the group knew all along she was sick and has been taking advantage of it to pull off medical scams.”
“Dangerous game, no? I assume viral hepatitis is pretty serious.”
“Type A goes away by itself, usually by six months.”
Mac put his fork down and ran his index finger along the border of the postmortem photo. “Assuming Marcella was hit by Lyle or another Player, you think Sandra knew about it?”
“When I interviewed her she wasn’t shocked. She was edgy, that’s why I noticed her. Maybe she’s learned to keep things to herself.”
“The Players,” said Mac. “Never heard of them.”
“They mostly work the north end of the state and Nevada.”
“Isaac got you all this?”
Petra nodded.
“The Genius,” said Mac. He pushed his plate away, the pie a half-eaten polygon. “It’s progress, but I’m not sure it’s good enough to keep the downtown boys at bay.”
“We hand them the I.D. and the probable cause and they chase it down?”
“You know how it works, Petra. Maybe it’s best that way. D’Ambrosio’s their captain. He wants five guys, he gets five. He asks for ten, he gets ten. That kind of coverage could be what the case needs.”
“Fine,” said Petra.
“It isn’t, but…” Mac folded his napkin into a rectangle. “I’ll do my best to see you get credit for developing the lead.”
“Don’t worry about it,” she said.
“Fair is fair.”
“On what planet?”
“Sorry,” he said. “Wish there was a choice.”
“I understand,” she said. But she was thinking: Maybe there is a choice.
CHAPTER 25
The gun didn’t weigh that much, but Isaac felt the difference in his briefcase.
He’d swaddled the twenty-two in a cheap blue bandanna purchased at a ninety-nine-cent outlet a few blocks from Cantina Nueva, stuffed the package in the bottom of the case, under his laptop.
Tools of the trade.
USC was a short bus ride from the bar and he made it on time for his appointment with Dr. Leibowitz.
Avuncular Dr. Leibowitz. At their first meeting, Isaac had thought, “Too good to be true.” Later, he’d seen that Leibowitz was supportive of all his students. A year from retirement, a man at peace.
The meeting went well, as always, Leibowitz smiling and fooling with an empty briar pipe. He’d been off tobacco for years but kept the pipes and a collection of smoking accoutrements as props. “How’re those multivariates coming along?”
“Some of my initial hypotheses seem to be panning out. Though the process seems to be infinite. Each new finding engenders another hypothesis.”
In truth, he hadn’t looked at his calculations for over a week. Caught up with June 28. The rhythm of the detectives’ room, all that noise and anger and frustration.
Petra.
Leibowitz nodded sagely. “Such is science.”
Fortified by Leibowitz’s strong tea, Isaac headed straight for a seldom-used men’s room at the end of the hall. Pressing his back against the door, he placed the briefcase on the floor, removed the gun, unwrapped it. Hefted it.
Pointed it at the mirror and scowled.
Tough guy.
Ludicrous.
Footsteps in the hallway caused him to panic. He dropped the gun and the bandanna back in the case. The weapon landed with a thud.
The footsteps continued on and he stooped and rewrapped the twenty-two. Added another layer of concealment- the brown paper bag from the lunch Mama had fixed him today.
If anyone looked inside, they’d see a grease-specked care package redolent of chili and cornmeal.
Mother love.
Getting the gun into the station was no problem. Since nine-eleven, front security at the Wilcox Station had been tighter but inconsistent. On most days, eyeball scrutiny of incoming traffic sufficed. When the terror alert rose to a warm color, a portable metal detector was wheeled in and all the cops entered through the rear door on the south side of the building.
Isaac’s political connection had gotten him an official-looking clip-on LAPD badge and a 999 key that unlocked the rear door. He rarely needed to use the key. The station was old, with an inefficient cooling system, and the door was generally left open for circulation.