Read Michael Connelly Online

Authors: the Concrete Blonde the Black Ice The Harry Bosch Novels: The Black Echo

Tags: #FIC031000

Michael Connelly (115 page)

BOOK: Michael Connelly
6.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“I know the ruling is a disappointment, so I’m allowing you some leeway as far as not coming down on you for that showing
of your apparent disrespect for the wishes of this court. I said no more argument, Mr. Belk, so I’ll go over this only one
time. The fact that this note of unknown origin led directly to the discovery of a body bearing all the similarities of a
Dollmaker victim is in itself a verification of some authenticity. This is no prank, Mr. Belk. No joke. There is something
here. And the jury is going to see it. Let’s go. Everybody out.”

Court had no sooner been called into session than the next debacle occurred. Belk, perhaps dazed by his defeat in chambers,
waltzed into a trap Chandler had deftly set for him.

Her first witness of the day was a man named Wieczorek, who testified that he knew Norman Church quite well and was sure he
had not committed the eleven murders attributed to him. Wieczorek and Church had worked together for twelve years in the design
lab, he said. Wieczorek was in his fifties, with white hair trimmed so short his pink scalp showed through.

“What makes you so confident in your belief that Norman was not a killer?” Chandler asked.

“Well, for one thing, I know for a fact he didn’t kill one of those girls, the eleventh, because he was with me the whole
time she was getting … whatever. He was with me. Then the police kill him and pin eleven murders on him. Well, I figure, if
I know he didn’t kill one of those girls, then they are probably lying about the rest. The whole thing is a cover-up for them
killing —”

“Thank you, Mr. Wieczorek,” Chandler said.

“Just saying what I think.”

Belk stood and objected anyway, going to the lectern and whining that the entire answer was speculation. The judge agreed
but the damage was done. Belk strode back to his chair and Bosch watched him leaf through a thick transcript of a deposition
taken of Wieczorek a few months earlier.

Chandler asked a few more questions about where the witness and Church were on the night the eleventh victim was murdered
and Wieczorek answered that they were at his own apartment with seven other men holding a bachelor party for a fellow employee
from the lab.

“How long was Norman Church at your apartment?”

“The whole time of the party. I’d say from nine o’clock on. We finished up after two in the morning. The police said that
girl, the eleventh one, went to some hotel at one and got herself killed. Norman was with me at one o’clock in the morning.”

“Could he have slipped away for an hour or so without you realizing it?”

“No way. You’re in a room with eight guys and you know if one mysteriously disappears for a half hour.”

Chandler thanked him and sat down. Belk leaned to Bosch and whispered, “I wonder what he’s going to do with the new asshole
I’m going to tear him.”

He got up armed with the deposition transcript and lumbered to the lectern as if he were lugging an elephant rifle. Wieczorek,
who wore thick glasses that magnified his eyes, watched him suspiciously.

“Mr. Wieczorek, do you remember me? Remember the deposition I took of you a few months back?”

Belk held the transcript up, as a reminder.

“I remember you,” Wieczorek said.

“Ninety-five pages, Mr. Wieczorek. Nowhere in this transcript is there any mention of any bachelor party. Why is that?”

“I guess because you didn’t ask.”

“But you didn’t bring it up, did you? The police are saying your best buddy murdered eleven women, you supposedly know that’s
a lie, but you don’t say a thing, is that right?”

“Yeah, that’s right.”

“Care to tell us why?”

“Far as I was concerned, you were part of it. I only answered what I was asked. I wasn’t volunteering shi — uh, nothing.”

“Let me ask you, did you ever tell the police this? Back then, back when Church was killed and all the headlines said he killed
eleven women? Ever pick up the phone one time and tell them they got the wrong guy?”

“No. At the time I didn’t know. It was only when I read a book that came out on the case a couple years ago and there were
details in there about when that last girl got killed. Then I knew he was with me during that whole time. I called the police
and asked for the task force and they said it was disbanded long ago. I left a message for that fellow the book said was in
charge, Lloyd, I think it was, and he never called me.”

Belk exhaled into the lectern’s microphone, creating a loud sigh that indicated his weariness in dealing with this moron.

“So, if I can recap, you are telling this jury that two years after the murders, when this book came out, you read it and
immediately realized you had an ironclad alibi for your dead friend. Am I missing anything, Mr. Wieczorek?”

“Uh, just the part about suddenly realizing. It wasn’t sudden.”

“Then what was it?”

“Well, when I read the date — September 28 — it set me to thinking and I just remembered that the bachelor party was on September
28 that year and Norman was there at my house all that time. So then I verified it and called Norman’s wife to tell her he
wasn’t what they said he was.”

“You verified it? With the others at the party?”

“No, didn’t have to.”

“Then how, Mr. Wieczorek?” Belk asked in an exasperated tone.

“I looked at the video I had of that night. It had the date and time down in the corner of the frame.”

Bosch saw Belk’s face turn a lighter shade of pale. The lawyer looked at the judge, then down at his pad, then back up at
the judge. Bosch felt his heart sink. Belk had broken the same cardinal rule Chandler had broken the day before. He had asked
a question for which he didn’t already know the answer.

It didn’t take a lawyer to know that since it was Belk who had drawn out mention of the videotape, Chandler was now free to
explore it, to move to introduce the videotape as evidence. It had been a clever trap. Because it was new evidence from Wieczorek,
not contained in his deposition, Chandler would have had to inform Belk earlier if she planned to draw it out on direct examination.
Instead, she had skillfully allowed Belk to blunder in and draw it out. He now stood there defenseless, hearing it for the
first time along with the jurors.

“Nothing further,” Belk said and returned to his seat with his head down. He immediately pulled one of the law books on the
table onto his lap and began paging through it.

Chandler went to the lectern for redirect.

“Mr. Wieczorek, this tape you mentioned to Mr. Belk, do you still have it?”

“Sure, brought it with me.”

Chandler then moved to have the tape shown to the jury. Judge Keyes looked at Belk, who lumbered slowly to the lectern.

“Your Honor,” Belk managed to say, “can defense have a ten-minute recess to research case law?”

The judge glanced at the clock.

“It’s a little early, isn’t it, Mr. Belk? We just started.”

“Your Honor,” Chandler said. “The plaintiff has no objection. I’ll need time to set up the video equipment.”

“Very well,” the judge said. “Ten minutes for counsel. The jury can take a fifteen-minute break and then report back to the
assembly room.”

While they stood for the jury, Belk was flipping pages in the heavy law book. And when it was time to sit down, Bosch pulled
his chair close to his lawyer’s.

“Not now,” Belk said. “I’ve got ten minutes.”

“You fucked up.”

“No, we fucked up. We are a team. Remember that.”

Bosch left his teammate there while he went out to smoke a cigarette. When he got to the statue, Chandler was already there.
He lit a smoke anyway and kept his distance. She looked at him and smirked. Bosch spoke.

“You tricked him, didn’t you?”

“Tricked him with the truth.”

“Is it?”

“Oh, yeah.”

She put a half-smoked cigarette in the sand of the ash can and said, “I better get back in there and get the equipment set
up.”

She smirked again. Bosch wondered if she was that good or it was Belk who was that bad.

• • •

Belk lost his half-hour argument to keep the tape from being introduced. He said that since it was not brought up during deposition,
it was new evidence which the plaintiff could not submit at so late a date. Judge Keyes denied his claim, pointing out what
everyone knew, that it had been Belk who had brought the tape to light.

After the jury was brought back in, Chandler asked Wieczorek several questions about the tape and where it had been for the
last four years. After Judge Keyes dismissed one more objection from Belk, she rolled a TV/VCR combination to a position in
front of the jury box and put in the tape, which Wieczorek had retrieved from a friend sitting in the gallery. Bosch and Belk
had to stand up and move into the gallery seats to get a view of the TV screen.

As he made the move, Harry saw Bremmer from the
Times
sitting in one of the back rows. He gave a small nod to Bosch. Harry wondered if he was there to cover the trial or because
he was subpoenaed.

The tape was long and boring but was not continuous. It was stopped and started during the evening of the bachelor party but
the digital readout in the lower right corner kept the time and date. If it was correct, it was true that Church had an alibi
for the last killing attributed to him.

It was dizzying for Bosch to watch. There was Church, no toupee, bald as a baby, drinking beer and laughing with his friends.
The man Bosch had killed, toasting a friend’s marriage, looking like the All American nerd that Bosch knew he had not been.

The tape lasted ninety minutes, climaxing with a visit from a telegram stripper who sang a song to the groom-to-be, dropping
lingerie on his head as she removed each piece. In the video, Church seemed embarrassed to be seeing this, his eye more on
the groom than on the woman.

Bosch pulled his eyes from the screen to watch the jury and he could see the tape was devastating to his defense. He looked
away.

After the tape was finished, Chandler had a few more questions for Wieczorek. They were questions Belk would have asked but
she was beating him to the punch.

“How is the date and time set on the video frame?”

“Well, when you buy it, you set it. Then the battery keeps it going. Never had to fiddle with it after I bought it.”

“But if you wanted to, you could put in any date you wanted, anytime you wanted, correct?”

“I s’pose.”

“So, say you were going to take a video of a friend to be used later as an alibi, could you set the date back, say a year,
and then take the video?”

“Sure.”

“Could you put a date on an already existing video?”

“No. You can’t superimpose a date over an existing video. Doesn’t work that way.”

“So, in this case, how could you do it? How could you make a phony alibi for Norman Church?”

Belk stood up and objected on the grounds that Wieczorek’s answer would be speculation, but Judge Keyes overruled him, saying
the witness had expertise with his own camera.

“Well, you couldn’t do that now ’cause Norman’s dead,” Wieczorek said. “So what you are saying is that in order to make a
phony tape you would have to have conspired with Mr. Church to make it before he was killed by Mr. Bosch, correct?”

“Yes. We’d have to have known that somewhere down the line he’d need this tape and he’d have to’ve told me what date to set
it on and so on and so forth. It’s all pretty farfetched, especially because you can pull the newspapers from that year and
find the wedding announcement that says my friend got married September thirtieth. That’ll show you that his bachelor party
had to have been the twenty-eighth or thereabouts. It’s not a phony.”

Judge Keyes agreed with Belk’s objection to the last sentence as being nonresponsive to the question and told the jury to
disregard it. Bosch knew they didn’t need to have heard it. They all knew the tape wasn’t a phony. He did, too. He felt clammy
and sick. Something had gone wrong but he didn’t know what. He wanted to get up and walk out but he knew that to do so would
be an admission of guilt so loud the walls would shake as if during an earthquake.

“One last question,” Chandler said. Her face had become flushed as she rode this one to victory. “Did you ever know Norman
Church to wear a hair-piece of any kind?”

“Never. I knew him a lot of years and I never saw or heard of such a thing.”

Judge Keyes turned the witness back over to Belk, who lumbered to the lectern without his yellow pad. He was apparently too
flustered by this turn-about to remember to say, “Just a few questions.” Instead he got right to his meager damage-control
effort.

“You say you read a book about the Dollmaker case and then discovered this tape’s date matched one of the killings, is that
right?”

“That’s right.”

“Did you look into finding alibis for the other ten murders?”

“No, I didn’t.”

“So. Mr. Wieczorek, you have nothing to offer in terms of defending your longtime friend against these other cases a task
force of numerous officers connected to him?”

“The tape put the lie to all of ’em. Your task —”

“You’re not answering the question.”

“Yes I am, you show the lie on one of the cases, it puts a lie to the whole shooting match, you ask me.”

“We’re not asking you, Mr. Wieczorek. Now, uh, you said you never saw Norman Church wear a hairpiece, correct?”

“That’s what I said, yes.”

“Did you know he kept that apartment, using a false name?”

“No, I did not.”

“There was a lot you didn’t know about your friend, wasn’t there?”

“I suppose.”

“Do you suppose it is possible that just as he had that apartment without you knowing, that he occasionally wore a hairpiece
without you knowing?”

“I suppose.”

“Now, if Mr. Church was the killer police claim him to be, and used disguises as police said the killer did, wouldn’t it be
—”

“Objection,” Chandler said.

“— expected that there would be something such —”

“Objection!”

BOOK: Michael Connelly
6.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Bilingual Being by Kathleen Saint-Onge
Darius: Lord of Pleasures by Grace Burrowes
Brown-Eyed Girl by Virginia Swift
The Promise in a Kiss by STEPHANIE LAURENS
Promenade a Deux by ID Locke
The Nutmeg of Consolation by Patrick O'Brian
Dumfries by Todd, Ian