Изменить стиль страницы

I scanned the sheet again. “There are no details on any of the calls beyond the street location. Is that kosher?”

“On a no-arrest it is. Even if it wasn't kosher, with Baker being a supervisor, there'd be no one looking over his shoulder unless something iffy happened- brutality complaint, that kind of thing. Basically, D-FARS are stashed and forgotten, Alex.”

“Wouldn't the calls come in through the dispatcher?”

“For the most part, but cruisers also get flagged down by citizens or the blues see things on their own and report to the dispatcher.”

“So there'd be no way to verify most of this.”

“Nope- anything else about it catch your eye?”

I studied the form one more time. “It's not balanced. All the activity's in the morning. You say Baker liked giving tickets but he issued ten before lunch and not a single one afterward… no real documentation for their activities for a solid hour prior to sign-off. More than an hour, if you include the Country Mart call. Even more if Baker bogused the entire afternoon log.”

I looked at him. “During the time Irit was being stalked, abducted, and strangled, Baker and Nolan had the perfect alibi: doing police work. No way to disprove it- no reason to doubt it. Two with uniforms, a team. Watching the kids get off the bus, selecting Irit, grabbing her- both of them were strong and with two working together, it would have been a snap. Baker probably chose gentle strangulation because he wanted to pretend he wasn't just another psychopath. Wanting to set it up as a sex crime, yet discriminate it from sex crimes.”

“God,” he said in a voice that burst out of him like a wound. Looking closer to tears than I'd ever seen him. “The fucking bastards. And they- I'm sure it was Baker's idea, that calculating fuck- did more than set up a one-day alibi. They prepared for weeks.”

“What do you mean?”

He got up, made a move to the fridge, stopped, sat down. “I looked through a whole bunch of their D-FARS. The pattern- busy mornings, quiet afternoons- began two weeks before Irit's murder. Prior to that they had an even workload: calls throughout their shift, Code 7s at normal times, normal lunch breaks. Two weeks before Irit was murdered, they altered it, and they continued altering for three weeks after. That's how calculating they were. Jesus!”

“Three weeks after,” I said. “At which point, Baker headed over to Parker Center and Nolan transferred to Hollywood. Distancing themselves. Now we know why Nolan was willing to give up a plum assignment.”

“Covering his ass, the fuck.”

“Maybe something else, too, Milo. He could have been distancing himself from the murder because the guilt started seeping in. I'm sure that's why he killed himself. I'm also sure Baker and the others took steps so Helena wouldn't look into it too deeply.”

I told him about the break-ins, the snapshots in the Dahl family album.

“Hookers,” he said. “Dark-skinned street girls like Latvinia.”

“Maybe Baker introduced him to Latvinia. Maybe Baker, by himself or with a friend, came back and finished Latvinia off. But what I still don't get is what kept Nolan from going public.”

“Helena,” he said. “Baker threatened to kill her if Dahl squawked.”

“Yes,” I said. “Makes perfect sense. It would have intensified Nolan's conflict, led him closer to total escape.”

“So who are the others?”

“Zena, maybe Malcolm Ponsico, til he changed his mind and received a lethal injection. Maybe Farley Sanger, though I didn't see him at the party. Definitely Wilson Tenney. Because he was there.” I described the park worker's altered appearance.

“You're sure it was him.”

“Do you have his DMV shot?”

He produced it from the attachÉ.

“Yes,” I said, handing it back. “No doubt about it.”

“Unreal- a goddamn psycho club.

“Club within a club,” I said. “Meta offshoot. A bunch of eugenics freaks sitting around over their three-dimensional chess boards, telling themselves how smart they are, griping about the decay of society and one of them- probably Baker- says why don't we do something about it, the police are idiots- believe me, I know from experience. Just use different techniques, clean up the physical evidence, and distribute the murders one per district. Detectives from different districts never talk to one another. Let's have some fun with it. Or maybe it started off theoretically- one of those murder-mystery games- committing the perfect crime. And at some point, they took it further.”

“Fun,” he said.

“At the core, these are thrill crimes, Milo. They can't seriously think they're creating any societal impact. This is Leopold and Loeb taken a step further: pleasure-kill under a veneer of ideology. Pleasure at showing how brilliant they are, so just to be extra-cute, they leave a message. DVLL. Some coded in-joke the police are sure never to notice. Maybe an insult to the police, like Raymond's bloody shoes left at the Newton station. And even if the letters are discovered, they know the message will be impossible to figure out.”

“Baker,” he said. “That's exactly his style. Esoteric. Leader of the pack, sucking everyone into his goddamn games.”

A vein, thick and knotted, was throbbing at his temple, and his eyes burned. “Killers in blue. Oh shit, Alex, you know the department and I don't have a perfect marriage, but this! Just what LAPD needs after Mr. Scumbag Rodney King and the riots and Mr. Scumbag O.J. Just what this city needs!”

“Which leads me to another question,” I said. “Is Dr. Lehmann doing some butt-covering? He told me Nolan had problems Helena really didn't want to know about. I got a clear message to back off. If he knew Nolan had committed murder, he'd be under no obligation to report it unless another potential victim was in clear danger. I can see him wanting to keep the fact that his patient was homicidal quiet, for his sake and the department's- he gets lots of business from the department. But then why say anything at all? Why bother to meet with me in the first place? And now that I think about it, when I was there he tried to turn the tables. Asking me about Helena. Trying to figure out how much she knew.”

He stared at me. “Checking you out? He was in on it, too? Instead of helping Dahl, he somehow drove the asshole to eat chrome?”

“Who better than Dahl's therapist, Milo? And as police consultant, working downtown, he's someone Wes Baker may have known. Someone to whom Baker could have referred Nolan.”

“Oh, my,” he said. “Oh my, oh my… How far does it go?”

He looked at his Timex. “Where the hell is Sharavi? Haven't heard from him since he and Petra tagged Sanger to the Beverly Hills Hotel. She got Sanger's room number, went home, and Sharavi did a solo tail.”

Pulling out his cell phone, he punched.

“The mobile customer is out… Okay, let's lay out this blood-club scenario again: A bunch of Meta assholes get together, decide to play a different kind of game. How many members do you see in the club?”

“There couldn't be too many,” I said. “Too dangerous sharing a secret like that with a crowd.”

Without opening his mouth, he produced a frightening zoo-cage sound. “Okay, so Baker takes charge- he assigns Tenney to do Raymond Ortiz?”

“Maybe not specifically Raymond, just some kid at the park. A kid Tenney judged defective. Or maybe Tenney volunteered to go first and suggested Raymond because he'd seen Raymond, knew he was retarded. We know Tenney was bucking authority on the job, had been reprimanded. What better way to thumb his nose at the job than to use the job to commit murder?”

“Man with a uniform,” he said, staring at Tenney's photo.

“Average-looking man in a uniform,” I said. “Race discrimination goes both ways and this time it played in Tenney's favor: To the homeboys at the park, Tenney was just another faceless Anglo.”