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Authors: Michael Connelly

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BOOK: The Crossing
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Bosch planned to take a second look at the phone records in the murder book when he got back to Los Angeles. Before he dismissed the watch from having any significance to the case, he still had work to do.

As he was cruising through Primm, the last stop for gambling before the California border, Bosch got a call. It was marked
Unknown Caller
on his screen but he took it because this most likely meant it was a cop.

“Harry, say it ain’t so.”

“Who is this?”

“Tim Marcia. The word around here today is that you’ve crossed over.”

Marcia had been in the Open-Unsolved Unit with Bosch. He was still fighting the good fight and if anyone deserved an explanation from Bosch it was him.

“Only temporarily,” Bosch said. “And it’s a Sheriff’s case, not LAPD.”

“Well, I’m not sure that’s going to make a lot of difference around here,” Marcia said. “But that’s all right with me. Especially the temporary part.”

“Thanks, Tim. So who’s putting out the word?”

“What I heard was that the Sheriff’s Department was checking you out. Somebody over there put in a call to the captain and then he was more than happy to spread the word that you were working for the other side.”

“No surprise there. Look, like I said, this is temporary. And for the record, I think the Sheriff’s may have blown this case and gotten the wrong guy.”

“I hear ya. Just keep your head down, brother.”

“Yeah, will do.”

Bosch disconnected and went back to grinding the case but was soon interrupted by another call from an unknown caller. He took this one and didn’t recognize the male voice.

“This is Kim.”

“Okay. What’s up, Kim?”

Bosch couldn’t think of who he knew named Kim.

“I have phone number of dead guy’s friend,” Kim said.

Bosch realized he was talking to the manager of Haven House.

“That’s good,” he said. “But I’m on a freeway and can’t write. Can I call you back as soon as I can?”

“You buy number,” Kim said. “Fifty dollar.”

Bosch remembered the bounty he had offered Kim for connecting him to any friends or associates of James Allen.

“Okay, I owe you fifty,” Bosch said.

“You pay me now first,” said Kim.

“Okay, okay. I’m out of town right now. As soon as I get back I will come see you, okay?”

“You pay me. I give you number.”

“That’s a deal.”

Another hour went by and he soon realized he had fueled himself on nothing but coffee and adrenaline through the day and had to stop to eat. He took the Route 66 exit into Victorville and ordered a hamburger at a roadside diner.

The hamburger came between two slices of sourdough toast. It hit the spot and he was soon heading back to the 15. At a truck stop by the freeway entrance, he was gassing up the Cherokee when his phone buzzed and the ID once again said
Unknown Caller
. He took the call and did not recognize the voice that cursed him.

“You asshole, Bosch. You ever come up against me on a case and I’ll kick your ass.”

“Who is this?”

“It’s your fucking conscience. You know you’re betraying a lot of people around here. You—”

“Fuck off.”

Bosch disconnected. He knew not every one of his former brothers and sisters in blue were going to be as understanding as Tim Marcia and Lucia Soto. He finished gassing up and walked around the Cherokee to eye check the tires, a long-held habit. He then got back out on the road.

Five minutes after he merged onto the freeway, his phone buzzed with yet another call from an unknown caller. Bosch decided he didn’t need the aggravation and distraction. He didn’t take the call and was surprised when the message alert sounded. Leaving a recording of a threatening nature was not smart. Curious about who would make such a bad move, he played the message.

“Harry Bosch, this is Dick Sutton with the Sheriff’s Department. I need you to call me as soon as you get this message. We have a situation here and it’s urgent.”

Sutton left his cell number and before ending the message once again urged Bosch to call back quickly.

Bosch did not immediately return the call. He thought about things first. He knew Dick Sutton. Bosch had worked with him on a few interagency task forces, and though they never got closer than that, Bosch had formed a good opinion of the man. Sutton was a plainspoken Oklahoman who didn’t play games. He was a senior investigator in the Sheriff’s Homicide Unit and Bosch wondered if he was now somehow involved in the Lexi Parks case.

Harry listened to the message one more time to memorize the number, then made the call back. Sutton answered immediately.

“It’s Harry Bosch.”

“Good, Harry, where are you?”

“The fifteen freeway coming back from Vegas.”

“You were in Vegas today?”

“That’s right. What’s up?”

“Harry, we need you to come in and talk to us. How far out are you?”

“Depending on traffic, two hours max. What do I need to talk to you about, Dick?”

“There was a double-homicide today in West Hollywood. Two guys who run a jewelry store in Sunset Plaza. A place called Nelson Grant and Sons. You know it?”

“You know I do, Dick. You found my business card, right?”

“Uh, yeah, that’s right. When were you in there?”

“This morning, when one of them unlocked the door and opened up.”

There was a long pause before Sutton responded.

“Well, Harry,” he said. “You got lucky.”

“Tell me about it.”

“I will when you get here. Come straightaway, okay?”

“No problem. But let me ask you something, Dick. Am I a suspect?”

“Harry, come on, you and I, we go way back. You’re not a suspect. We need your help. We don’t have anything going on this and can use all the help we can get.”

“You at the scene?”

“I am now but I’ll be leaving soon for the West Hollywood substation to start talking to people.”

Bosch knew this meant that others had been brought in to be interviewed.

“You know where it is, right?” Sutton asked.

“On San Vicente,” Bosch said.

“That’s the one.”

“I’ll see you there.”

After disconnecting, Bosch thought about what Sutton had said about him not being a suspect. It was counter to the other thing he said about not having anything going on the investigation. The rule was that when you were drawing blanks on a case, then everybody was a suspect.

Bosch liked and respected Sutton but he had to recognize the situation he was in. He was on the other side of the aisle now, the so-called dark side, and Sutton would certainly view him differently than he did when they were fellow homicide investigators working out of different law enforcement agencies.

Bosch decided to call Mickey Haller to tell him what was going on. There was no answer, so he left a message.

“It’s Bosch. At seven o’clock tonight I’m going to need you to meet me in front of the Sheriff’s West Hollywood substation. I’m going in to see a homicide investigator named Dick Sutton and I think I might need a lawyer.”

Bosch almost disconnected at that point but then added one more thing.

“And Haller, be careful. I don’t know what’s going on but … just watch your back.”

31
 

H
aller was waiting for Bosch on the front steps of the Sheriff’s substation on San Vicente Boulevard by the Pacific Design Center. Before going in, Bosch filled him in on what he knew and what he guessed was about to go down. Haller said he would protect Bosch from making any misstep but that he also wanted Bosch to think about what best served their client before he answered every question.

“Remember, you don’t carry a badge anymore,” Haller said as he opened the front door of the substation.

Dick Sutton was waiting for Bosch in the detective bureau. As a well-known defense attorney and former candidate for district attorney, Haller was immediately recognized by Sutton.

“Oh, come on, we’re old friends here,” he said. “A defense attorney, Harry? Really? There’s no need for extreme measures.”

“I don’t think that protecting oneself legally is an extreme measure,” Haller said.

“Sorry, Dick,” Bosch said. “But I’ve got a kid and no wife and I need to make sure I get home tonight.”

He didn’t bother to mention that his kid was out in Big Bear for the next three nights.

“Well, I’ve got a double homicide and I think you might be the only man who can help me make sense of it,” Sutton responded. “Let’s go into the meeting room and put our cards on the table.”

He escorted Bosch and Haller into a large meeting room with a wide oval table big enough to seat the board of directors of a midsize company. It was a smooth move on Sutton’s part, not putting Bosch into a regular interrogation room. That would have iced things over. Instead, he was trying to make Bosch feel like he was part of the investigation, not the subject of it.

Waiting and already seated were Cornell and Schmidt, whom Bosch had just met that morning, and another man he didn’t recognize but assumed was Sutton’s partner.

“I understand you already know Detectives Cornell and Schmidt,” Sutton said. “And this is Gil Contreras, who puts up with me.”

Sutton pointed to the visitors and introduced Bosch and his lawyer. A mild grumbling about the lawyer followed, and Haller attempted to quell it by holding his hands up as if in surrender.

“I’m just here to protect my client and facilitate an exchange of information I hope will be beneficial to us all,” he said.

Haller and Bosch pulled out chairs next to each other and sat down. Sutton moved around the table and sat next to his partner and directly across the table from Bosch.

“Isn’t that some kind of a conflict of interest?” Schmidt said.

Haller calmly clasped his hands together on the table and leaned forward so he could see past Bosch and down the table to Schmidt.

“How so, Detective?” he asked.

“He’s your investigator on the Parks case and now you say he’s your client,” she said.

“I don’t see it,” Haller said. “But if you want to postpone this meeting until we can find a lawyer for Mr. Bosch that passes your conflict test, then we can do that. Not a problem.”

“We don’t want to do that,” Sutton interjected quickly. “Let’s just have a talk among friends here.”

He threw Schmidt a look that said,
Stand down
.

“Then, where do we start?” Haller said.

Sutton nodded, appearing to be happy to get by the potential roadblock Schmidt had blundered into. He opened a file that was on the table in front of him. Bosch could see several notes written on a piece of paper clipped to the left side. On the right side was a plastic sleeve used to protect documents that had evidentiary value in an investigation.

“Let’s start with this,” Sutton said.

He picked up the sleeve and slid it across the table to a spot where both Bosch and Haller could see it. It contained what Bosch assumed was the same business card he had given Peter Nguyen that morning in the jewelry store.

“Is that your card, Harry?” Sutton asked.

“Looks like it,” Bosch said.

Haller put his hand on Bosch’s arm, a warning about answering questions before he had legally vetted them. Bosch had called Haller but that was for the larger picture. He was not going to engage in games with Sutton for the sake of games. Harry had been across the table from that kind of guy before and it was the last person he wanted to be.

“Can you tell us who you gave it to?” Sutton asked.

“We’re going to step outside,” Haller said quickly. “It’ll just be a quick minute.”

“These are basic questions,” Sutton said, protest in his voice.

“Just a quick conference,” Haller said.

He got up and Bosch reluctantly followed, embarrassed that he was acting the way he had seen so many suspects act with their attorneys over his years as a detective.

They stepped into the hallway and Haller pulled the door closed. Bosch spoke first.

“Look, I need to tell them what I know,” he said. “This may actually help Foster. I didn’t call you out so you could object to every—”

“It’s not Foster that I’m worried about,” Haller said. “If you think they’re not looking at you for this, then you are not as smart as I thought you were, Bosch.”

“They have nothing. When you have nothing, everybody’s a suspect. I get that. They’ll see pretty quick that I’m not the guy.”

Bosch made a move toward the door.

“Then, why am I here?” Haller asked.

Bosch paused with his hand on the doorknob. He looked back at Haller.

“Don’t worry, I’m going to need you,” he said. “But not until we get this basic stuff out of the way.”

“Let me try one thing when we go back in,” Haller said. “Just a quick thing. Let me talk first.”

“What?”

“You’ll see.”

Bosch frowned but opened the door and they went back to their seats.

“Detectives, let’s make this a fair playing field,” Haller said. “Let’s make it a fair trade of information.”

“We’re not trading information on a double homicide,” Sutton said. “We ask questions, Harry answers them. That’s how it goes.”

“How about we ask a question for every question you ask?” Haller insisted. “For example, what are Cornell and Schmidt doing here? Is this double homicide you’re investigating related to the Parks case?”

Sutton looked annoyed and Bosch knew why. The one lawyer in the room was trying to hijack the interview.

“We don’t know what this case is related to,” he said impatiently. “Harry’s card was found at the crime scene and it so happened that I heard these two talking about Bosch earlier today. So I called them out. Does that answer your question? Can I ask mine now?”

“Please,” Haller said. “It’s a two-way street.”

Sutton turned his attention to Bosch.

“Harry, this card was found in the coat pocket of one of two men shot to death late this morning in the rear room of the Nelson Grant and Sons jewelry store. Can you tell me about it?”

“I’m assuming it was in the pocket of Peter Nguyen,” Bosch said. “I gave it to him this morning when I was in the store.”

BOOK: The Crossing
3.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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