The Last Word (4 page)

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Authors: Lee Goldberg

BOOK: The Last Word
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Teeg missed her and the children but managed to spray half the block and Wilbur C. Gant’s living room with bullets before speeding off, sideswiping a car in the intersection on his way.
Fearing that Teeg would come back to finish what he’d started, LaShonda shifted her car into reverse and floored it without looking back, immediately colliding with the minivan right behind her and injuring the driver, a gardener named Julio Martinez.
Julio, who didn’t speak much English, was less concerned about the damage to his van and the nasty cut on his forehead than he was about being arrested for driving without a license, insurance, or U.S. citizenship.
All in all, the situation had the makings of a long, miserable night for Steve.
He called out to Amanda. “Any surprises?”
“Yeah, there’s a big one.” She looked up at him with a perplexed expression on her face. “This man was already dead when the bullet hit him.”
Steve felt a stab of anxiety in his chest. “What do you mean, he was already dead?”
“As in no longer living,” she said. “That kind of dead.”
“Then how did he die?”
“He was killed by a rattlesnake bite,” she said.
“Oh hell,” Steve said. “Are you sure?”
“I think I know a rattlesnake bite when I see one,” she said. “You may want to bring Mark in on this.”
“I’m perfectly capable of figuring out what happened here myself,” Steve said.
“He’s really good at this stuff,” she said.
“So am I,” Steve said. “I’m sure there’s a simple explanation for everything.”
“Really? What do you figure the odds are of a guy getting bitten by a rattlesnake and then getting hit by a stray bullet in a drive-by shooting?” Amanda asked. “Doesn’t that sound a little unbelievable to you?”
It did.
And his father had a special ability to make sense of unbelievable situations like this.
He groaned and reluctantly fished around in his jacket pocket for his cell phone. There was no doubt that Mark would end up insinuating himself into the investigation anyway, so Steve figured he might as well bring his father into it now. It meant Steve would get a lot of grief from his superiors, who felt that every time Mark was brought in on a case it made the LAPD look incompetent.
He was about to speed-dial his father’s number when Amanda burst out laughing. So did her two assistants, who were standing off to one side waiting with a gurney and a body bag.
Steve glared at her. “You were kidding.”
“I told you it was unbelievable and you
still
bought it,” she said, a big smile on her face. “I really have to play poker with you again. I could use the money.”
Steve shoved his cell phone back into his pocket. “You took advantage of my trust.”
“I took advantage of your gullibility,” she said. “It’s a wonder to me that you catch any bad guys at all.”
“It was the context of the conversation. You’re at a crime scene, engaging in your official duties,” Steve said. “I naturally assumed you were behaving in a professional manner. Obviously, I was wrong.”
“Oh, Steve, don’t get all grouchy on me. A girl is allowed to have a little fun. Besides, you didn’t need me to tell you how this man died. Isn’t it obvious? He was shot in the neck.”
Steve turned his back on Amanda, furious with himself for letting her fool him again. She loved to tease him, which he wouldn’t mind if she wasn’t always doing it in front of other people. He’d told her that. But she didn’t think there was much fun in teasing him if there wasn’t some potential for embarrassing him, too.
At least only her assistants and a couple of crime scene techs had heard her. He never would have lived it down if any other cops had witnessed it.
He strode over to question LaShonda Wilkes, but she held up her hand to stop him as he approached. She was busy yelling at someone on her cell phone, using some inventive combinations of profanity that Steve hadn’t heard before, and she didn’t want to be interrupted.
Steve nodded, said a few words to a uniformed cop, and was jotting down some of LaShonda’s more colorful phrases for future reference when an unmarked LAPD Crown Vic drove up and a Hispanic woman got out, a badge and a gun clipped to her belt.
She strode over to him. He liked the way she strode. She was in her thirties, had black hair, dark skin, and even darker eyes. She introduced herself as Detective Olivia Morales, West Valley Homicide. They shook hands. She had a handshake firm enough to crack walnuts.
“Do you speak Spanish?” Steve asked.
“You think just because my name is Morales that I speak fluent Spanish.”
“Yeah,” Steve said, “I do.”
“That’s racial stereotyping, Lieutenant.”
“No, it’s not,” he said.
“Just because you’re Nordic, I don’t immediately assume you speak Norwegian.”
“You think I’m Nordic?” Steve asked.
“You’re tall, blond, and look like you’d be comfortable wearing a Viking helmet.” She shrugged. “That’s Nordic to me.”
“Do Nordics speak Norwegian?”
She shrugged again. “How the hell would I know what Nordics speak? I was trying to make a point. So, why do you want to know if I speak Spanish?”
Steve gestured to Julio Martinez. “Could you tell him that he’s free to go after he gives us his statement and that we aren’t going to arrest him or turn him over to immigration?”
She nodded. “I’ll get around to it when I’m finished here. I’m surprised you didn’t ask me to take care of those two kids, seeing as how I have a uterus and you’re Nordic and all.”
“That was going to be my next request,” Steve said.
“Aren’t you curious why I’m here?”
“I thought it was to talk to the gardener and keep an eye on those kids,” Steve said, smiling. “Was there something else?”
Olivia gestured to LaShonda. “Her boyfriend, Teeg Cantrell, is a wanted fugitive.”
“What is he wanted for?”
“He went into a 7-Eleven in West Hills last Friday night. He bought a six-pack of beer, three Milky Way bars, and a box of donuts. The cashier rang him up, but Teeg was two dollars short. When the cashier wouldn’t give him the stuff anyway, Teeg shot him twice and walked out.”
“The cashier still alive?”
“Would the hottest Latina homicide detective in the San Fernando Valley be standing here if he was?”
“Teeg sounds like a terrific guy,” Steve said. “I wonder why LaShonda let him go.”
“We could ask her,” Olivia said.
“She’s talking on the phone and doesn’t want to be interrupted.”
“And you’re waiting?”
“Actually, judging by her use of language, I’m guessing she’s talking to her ex-boyfriend right now.”
“What kind of language?”
Steve showed her his notes. One of Olivia’s thin, etched eyebrows arched. He liked the way it arched.
“Yeah,” she said. “She’s talking to her boyfriend. Are we tracing the call?”
“We are,” Steve said. “But it’s only going to give us the general area.”
“If he’s on the move,” Olivia said, “maybe we can get a chopper up and spot his car.”
“That’s the idea,” Steve said.
LaShonda abruptly snapped her phone shut and stomped over to the two detectives.
“How much longer do I have to stick around here?” LaShonda said irritably, her hands on her wide hips. “We haven’t had dinner yet.”
“We’ll get you and the kids some burgers in a few minutes,” Steve said, then introduced himself and Olivia to her.
“I know who she is,” LaShonda said, glaring at Olivia. “I told you before I don’t know where Teeg is. Ask one of his sluts.”
“I’ve been talking to his sluts,” Olivia said. “They send their regards. You want to tell us what happened here?”
“What’s it look like to you?” LaShonda asked. “Teeg tried to smoke me.”
“Why did he want to do that?” Steve asked.
“Because I threw his sorry ass out of the house for partying with sluts,” LaShonda said. “And then I told him he couldn’t see his kids until he started paying me some support.”
“Was that your boyfriend you were just talking to?” Steve motioned to her phone.
“Teeg isn’t my man no more and never will be again,” LaShonda said. “Nobody shoots at me and gets back into my bed.”
“I have the same policy,” Steve said. “Did he call you or did you call him?”
“He called me. He said he was gonna come after me again and he wasn’t going to miss this time. I laughed at him. I told him he can’t even hit the toilet when he aims his—”
Steve interrupted her before she could finish that lovely thought, but he got the image anyway. “Could I see your phone, please?”
She gave it to him. Steve flipped it open and scrolled through the menu to see if he could find the number of the last call received. He could.
He turned the phone towards Olivia so she could see the number on the screen.
“We call this police work,” he said.
“Impressive,” Olivia said. “You’ve been watching
Law and Order
, haven’t you?”
“I have to do something while I’m shining my Viking helmet.”
CHAPTER SIX
Mark got back to Community General shortly after eleven p.m. No one was expecting to see him there, least of all Jesse, who was reviewing Corinne’s X-rays and CT scans with Ramin Akhavan, the radiologist.
“What are you doing here?” Jesse asked Mark.
“I couldn’t sleep,” Mark said.
It wasn’t exactly a lie. On the drive down from Sunrise Valley, alone in the car, all he could think about was Carter Sweeney. Mark knew that if he went back to his empty beach house in Malibu and tried to go to bed, he’d be up all night, churning over the events of the day and the nightmares of the past. So he chose distraction. And the absence of a homicide to solve left the hospital as his only salvation from his thoughts.
“So you get up, get dressed, and drive to work,” Ramin said. “Haven’t you heard of the Internet? Television? A good book?”
“I’m a people person,” Mark said.
“That’s what chat rooms are for,” Ramin said. “You don’t even have to get dressed.”
The idea of sitting naked at a computer talking to strangers didn’t strike Mark as very appealing under any circumstances.
“How is it going tonight?” Mark asked Jesse.
“It was slow until this patient came in,” Jesse said, referring to the X-rays. “Her name is Corinne Adams. She fell down a flight of stairs at UCLA.”
One glance at the X-rays and CT scans showed Mark what Jesse was dealing with, but he didn’t say anything. He’d let Ramin go through the formality of explaining the results. He knew how much experts enjoyed the opportunity to show their expertise.
“What’s the prognosis?” Mark asked Ramin.
“Not good. As you can see, she has a skull fracture here.” Ramin pointed to a long crack on the left side of the head. “And massive bleeding.”
“I don’t see a subdural hematoma,” Jesse said.
“All the bleeding is inside the brain,” Ramin said.
“What’s her EEG look like?” Mark asked.
“What you’d expect with these test results,” Jesse replied. “There are no sparks at all. Her pupils are blown, her reflexes are shot. We’ve got her on a ventilator in the ICU.”
Mark nodded. There was nothing more that could be done for her. She was brain-dead, with no hope of recovery.
“Is she a good candidate for organ donation?”
“One of the best I’ve ever seen. Young, fit. She didn’t smoke or drink. She’s even got a donor card,” Jesse said. “It’s like her whole life was leading up to this.”
“Maybe it was,” Ramin said. “Maybe she was put on this earth for the sole purpose of saving the lives of a dozen other people.”
The actual number of sick and injured people who could receive organs or other parts of her body, like corneas, tendons, and bones, was far higher than a dozen. Both Mark and Jesse knew there could easily be three times that many people whose lives could be saved or made markedly better by recycling Corinne Adams.
“I believe in fate,” Ramin said.
“Does she have a family?” Mark asked Jesse.
“She was single, no husband or kids, if that’s what you mean,” Jesse said. “Not even a boyfriend.”
“Fate,” Ramin repeated to himself.
“Her sister Lurline is downstairs,” Jesse said. “I spoke briefly with her. I didn’t have much to say at the time.”
He still didn’t. The situation was pretty simple, just painful to share with a loved one.
She had a donor card, so at least that spared him the uncomfortable task of convincing her grief-stricken sister to let him harvest her organs. Corinne had already given her consent.
Over the next twenty-four hours, Jesse would have a lot of work to do. First, he’d have to find out who was next in line for each organ and work with the pathology lab to oversee the battery of tests to determine their compatibility with the donor. At the same time, he’d have to schedule the operating rooms and recruit surgical teams, as well as keep the brain-dead patient’s body alive and healthy until the operation.
“Would you like me to talk to the sister?” Mark asked Jesse.
Grateful and relieved, Jesse nodded. “That would free me up to start making calls.”
Mark could have offered to take over all the other work, too, so Jesse could return to the ER. But he knew how much Jesse wanted to coordinate the complex organ transplantations.
It wasn’t Jesse’s first time. In fact, he’d harvested kidneys and a liver from a donor only a week earlier. But each new experience further honed his skills, both administratively and surgically. Even so, Mark would keep his eye on the process, helping out where he could and smoothing over any wrinkles that emerged.
The first wrinkle was the grieving family. Although they didn’t need the sister’s permission to proceed, Lurline could make things a lot harder than they had to be if she disapproved of the procedure.

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