Read L a Requiem (1999) Online

Authors: Robert - Elvis Cole 08 Crais

L a Requiem (1999) (37 page)

BOOK: L a Requiem (1999)
7.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

"Wasn't that her decision to make?"

"I made the decision for all of us."

"So she doesn't know that her husband killed himself."

"No."

Pike just stood there, and I thought that this was his single lonely way of protecting the woman he loved, even if it had cost him any chance at her love, forever and always.

Pike would take that weight.

And had.

I said, "All this time, all these cops hating you for nothing."

Pike cocked his head, and even in the dim light of the little building the glasses seemed to glow.

"Not for nothing. For everything."

"Okay. So now what?"

"She still gets his survivor benefits. I want to make sure that whatever leaves here doesn't affect that."

"Even if it's something that could help you?"

The corner of Pike's mouth twitched. "I didn't come this far to quit now."

"Then let's see what we find."

We sat in a Denny's just off the freeway for the next two and a half hours, drinking tea and going through the day books. The Denny's people didn't mind. With the heat, they didn't have much business.

We started with the most recent book and worked backward. Eight pages were missing from that book, but the rest were there, and legible. Wozniak's entries were often cryptic, but pretty soon they made sense to me.

At one point I saw that Pike had stopped reading, and asked him, "What?"

When he didn't answer, I leaned closer and found what had stopped him.

"This Pike is a sharp lad. He'll make a good cop."

Pike pulled back the book, and kept reading.

Many of the entries were about arrests that Wozniak made, with notes on crimes and criminals and witnesses that he took for future reference, but much of what he'd written was about the street kids whom Wozniak had tried to help. Whatever he had become, Wozniak had been sincere in his efforts to help the people he was sworn to protect and to serve.

In all seven books, only three names were used in a context that suggested they might be informants, and only one of those seemed a possible, that being in an entry dated five months prior to Wozniak's death.

I read that entry to Pike.

"Listen to this. 'Popped a kid named Laurence Sobek, age fourteen, male hustler. Likes to talk, so he might be a good source. Turned out by the Coopster. ID? Fucked up kid. Gonna try to get him inside.' " I looked up. "What's that mean, get him inside?"

"Get him into a halfway house or a program. Woz did that."

"Who's the Coopster?"

Pike shook his head.

I stared at the page.

"Could it be DeVille?"

Pike considered it. "Like a nickname. Coupe DeVille."

"Yeah."

"Thin."

"You remember Laurence Sobek?"

"No."

"Anything else in here look good?"

Pike shook his head again.

"Then this is what we go with."

We paid the bill, then brought the books out to our cars. I took the notebook that mentioned Laurence Sobek with me.

"How can I reach you?"

"Call the shop and tell them you need me. I'll have a pager."

"Okay."

We stood in the heat and watched the trucks go by on the freeway. Behind us, the windmills churned for as far as we could see. Pike was driving a maroon Ford Taurus with an Oregon license plate. I wondered where he'd gotten it. When I finally looked over, he was watching me.

I said, "What?"

"I'm going to beat this. Don't worry about me."

I made like Alfred E. Neuman. "What, me worry?"

"Something's eating you."

I thought about telling him about Lucy, but I didn't.

"You take care of yourself, Joe."

He shook my hand, and then he drove away.

Chapter 33

It was late when I got home, but I called Dolan anyway. I called her house twice, leaving messages both times, but by the next morning she still hadn't gotten back to me. I thought that she might be at Parker Center, clearing her desk, but when I called her direct line there, Stan Watts answered.

"Hey, Stan. It's Elvis Cole."

"So what?"

"Is Dolan there?"

"She's over, man. Thanks to you."

Like I needed to hear that.

"I thought she might be there."

"She's not."

Watts hung up.

I called Dolan again at home, still got her machine, so this time I took Wozniak's notebook and drove over there.

Samantha Dolan lived in a bungalow on Sierra Bonita just a few blocks above Melrose, in an area more known for housing artists than police officers.

I parked behind her BMW, and heard music coming from the house even out in my car. Sneaker Pimps. Loud.

She didn't answer the bell, on my knock, and when I tried the door, it was locked. I pounded hard, thinking maybe she was dead and I should break in, when the door finally opened. Dolan was wearing a faded METALLICA tee shirt and jeans and was barefoot. Her eyes were nine shades of red, and she smelled like a fresh dose of tequila.

"Dolan, you've got a drinking problem." She sniffed like her nose was runny. "That's what I need today, you giving me life advice."

I walked in past her and turned off the music. The living room was large, with a nice fireplace and a hardwood floor, but it was sloppy. The sloppy surprised me. A big couch faced a couple of chairs, and a mostly empty bottle of Perfidio Anejo tequila sat on the floor by the couch. The cap was off. An LAPD Combat Shooting trophy sat on top of the television; the room smelled of cigarettes. I said, "Why didn't you call me back?"

"I haven't checked my messages. Look, you want me to talk to your friend, 1 will. I'm sorry about what happened last night." "Forget it."

I tossed Wozniak's binder to her.

"What's this?" She scooped a pack of cigarettes off the floor, and fired up, breathing out a cloud of smoke like a volcanic fog.

"A day book that Abel Wozniak kept." "Abel Wozniak as in Pike's partner?" "Read the pages I marked."

She frowned through another deep drag, reading. She flipped back several pages, then read forward past the point I had marked. When she was done, she looked at me. The cigarette forgotten.

"You're thinking this kid is talking about DeVille?"

"This kid had a relationship with Wozniak, that much we know. He was turned out by someone called the Coopster. If that's DeVille, then DeVille links Sobek to Karen Garcia, too."

Dolan squinted at me. "You're saying Sobek killed Dersh."

"I'm saying maybe he killed everybody. Krantz and the Feds have been chasing a serial killer, but maybe this guy isn't, Dolan. At first I thought the connection was through Wozniak, but maybe these killings don't have anything to do with Wozniak. Maybe they're about DeVille."

She shook her head, scowling and cranky. "I was one of the cops trying to find a connection, remember? We didn't."

"Did you check out DeVille?"

She waved her cigarette. "Why in hell would we?"

"I don't know, Dolan. I don't know why you didn't find anything, but you ordered DeVille's file from the DA's Record Section, right? Let's check it out and see what's there."

She took another pull on the cigarette, and stared into the cloud. I could almost see the wheels turning, weighing the odds and what all of this might mean. For her, it was a shot at getting in again. If she could turn something that advanced the case, it could keep her on Robbery-Homicide and save her career.

Dolan pushed off the couch, went to her phone, and called Stan Watts, asking him if she'd gotten anything from DA Records. When she hung up, she said, "Give me five."

She showered and dressed and took almost twenty.

When we went outside, she said, "Move your car and we'll take mine."

"No way, Dolan. You scare the hell out of me."

"Move your goddamned car or I'll back into it."

She powered up the Beemer as I moved my car.

We drove to Parker Center without saying very much, each of us keeping our thoughts to ourselves. She pulled into the red zone by the front door, told me not to touch anything, then hurried inside. Ten minutes later she came out with De-Ville's file.

"You didn't fuck with the radio, did you?"

"No, I didn't fuck with anything."

We parked a block away in a little parking lot. Dolan went through the file first, peeling away pages and dropping them on the floorboard.

"What's that?"

"Lawyer crap. This stuff won't tell us anything. We want the detective's case presentation."

The lead detective in charge of the case was a Rampart Division sex crimes D-2 named Krakauer. Dolan told me that the case presentation was the sum total of the compiled evidence used in building the case, and would include witness statements, testimonial evidence, interviews; anything and everything that the detective accumulated along the way.

When Dolan had the lawyer crap separated, she took half of the detective's case presentation, gave me the other half, and said, "Start reading. The case will be divided by subject and chronology."

I was hoping for some indication that Sobek was connected to DeVille, and perhaps had been the informant that put Pike and Wozniak in that motel room on the day Wozniak died, but most of what I read concentrated on Ramona Ann Escobar. There were statements from her neighbors and the motel desk clerk and her parents, and a transcribed statement from Ramona describing how DeVille had paid her ten dollars to take off her clothes. Ramona Ann Escobar had been seven years old. It was uncomfortable to read, but I read in hopes of finding Sobek.

I was still searching when Dolan quietly said, "Oh, holy shit."

She was pale and stiff.

"What?"

She handed me a witness list that compiled the names of the people who had lodged complaints about DeVille. The list was long, and at first I didn't understand until Dolan pointed at a name midway down the list.

Karen Garcia.

Her face still ashen, Dolan said, "Keep reading."

They were all there, the first five victims, plus the newest, Jesus Lorenzo. Dersh wasn't there, but he was the exception.

Dolan stared at me. "You were right, you sonofabitch. These people weren't random. They're linked. He's killing everyone who helped put away Leonard DeVille."

All I could do was nod.

"Maybe you're the world's greatest fuckin' detective, after all."

Only one of the six victims actually gave testimony against DeVille, that being Walter Semple, who had seen DeVille at the park from where the little girl disappeared. The others were part of what Dolan called the clutter, people who had been questioned by Krakauer because they had lodged sex crime complaints against a man Krakauer believed to be DeVille, but not directly related to the case for which DeVille was finally prosecuted.

Dolan's breast rose and fell as we read through the rest of the file. A copy of DeVille's criminal arrest record was attached, listing several aliases, one of which was the Coopster.

I said, "It's Sobek. It's got to be Sobek. We have to take this to Krantz. The other people on this list have to be notified."

"Not yet. I want more."

"What do you mean, more? This will break open the case. It's a showstopper."

"It links Sobek with DeVille, but it doesn't prove he's the shooter. If I can bring them the shooter, Bishop's gotta let me on again,"

"You've already got something, Dolan. We've found a connection between these people, and we've got leads. You're going to turn this case around."

"I want more. I want to put the whole thing right on the table. I want the headline, Cole. I want to push Krantz's face in it. I want it so tight that Bishop can't not take me back on the team."

I stared at her, and thought that if I were her I would want it this badly, too. But maybe I wanted it more. If we got the shooter, then maybe that would clear Joe Pike. "Okay, Samantha. Let's find this guy."

We drove back to her place. It took Dolan almost two hours of phone calls, but we learned that Laurence Sobek wasn't in the adult system, and the system had no record of his present whereabouts. This meant one of two things: Either he'd straightened out and gotten his life together, or he'd moved away before the age of eighteen. Of course, he could always be dead, too. Boys who work the streets often end up that way.

While Dolan made the calls, I went into her kitchen for a glass of water. A couple of million photographs were stuck to her refrigerator with little magnets, including several of Dolan posing with the actress who'd played her in the series. Dolan looked like she could kick your ass and would enjoy doing it, but the actress looked like an anorexic heroin addict. Showbiz.

The picture that Dolan had taken of me at Forest Lawn was stuck near the handle with a little Wonder Woman magnet. Seeing it there made me smile.

BOOK: L a Requiem (1999)
7.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

I Remember You by Scarlett Metal
Caruso 01 - Boom Town by Trevor Scott
Brian's Choice by Vannetta Chapman
Licorice Whips by Midway, Bridget
Salem's Sight by Eden Elgabri
Healing Rain by Katy Newton Naas