“Could be an oversight,” Davidson said.
“Not a chance,” Decker said. “It would be like wearing your underpants on the outside. It was deliberate. I think it once held valuables-diamonds, maybe.”
“Somebody took them,” Davidson said. “A robbery?”
“Or a convenient source of cash if the family had to split suddenly,” Marge said. “The sister said that was how her family dealt with the Nazis. The father paid off the border guards in stones.”
“An old habit that served them well in the past,” Decker said.
“What if it was a robbery?” Davidson asked. “Hiding diamonds in a weird place like that. Looks to me like it would have to be an inside job. What kind of help do these people have?”
“We’re working on finding the gardeners,” Marge said.
“Inside job might also be one of the kids,” Davidson said. “Kid swipes the stones, then makes a panic call to his cousin. So what do we got so far?” Davidson held up his thick hand and began ticking off options. “An inside robbery. A family on the lam. A Solomon thing. Or maybe even a Menendez thing. Any comments?”
Decker thought about Tug’s observations. Menendez and Solomon. Two big cases. The Menendez brothers had shotgunned their parents to death. The Solomons had been a family that disappeared off the face of the earth. No bodies had ever been recovered-the case an open hole on the books.
Decker said, “As far as we could tell, there was no killing done in the house. And all the cars were still in the garage-”
“Including the older boy’s car, right?”
“Yes,” Marge said.
“What’s his name?”
“The older boy?” Marge said. “Gil. Dov’s the younger one, the one who made the call to the cousin.”
“Okay, I got the names straight,” Davidson said. “Back to the cars. If all the cars were in the garage, you’ve got to be thinking about a family abduction. Because if the boys lured the parents to a spot in order to whack them, a car would be missing.”
Marge said, “Unless the boys returned the car to their house before disappearing.”
Davidson looked at her and squinted.
“Good point,” Decker said.
Davidson glared at him. “I know it’s a good point, Decker. You don’t have to stroke her ego.”
Decker’s voice was flat. “I’m just a nice guy.”
Davidson looked disgusted. “All right. So there’s a chance the boys whacked the parents.”
“The bimbo cousin also mentioned the father argued with his sons,” Marge said. “Especially the younger boy.”
Davidson squinted. “I argued all the time with my old man. I never thought of whacking him.”
“Just presenting motive,” Marge said.
“And I’m saying what a prosecutor would be saying,” Davidson said. “Kids and parents fight all the time. Most of us don’t wind up murdering our parents.”
Nobody spoke, then Davidson said, “Okay, it’s a consideration. The boys whacked the parents or someone whacked the whole family. What about the family taking off for parts unknown?”
“We thought about that,” Marge said. “We didn’t find the passports. Of course, the search was superficial. Could be Yalom kept them in his vault.”
“Vault?”
Decker said, “Yalom has a vault down at the Diamond Center.”
Davidson thought a moment. “He keeps his passport in the vault?”
Decker shrugged. “You know, Loo, even if we found passports it might not mean much. If Yalom suddenly went underground, he’d have to establish a new identity anyway. He wouldn’t need his old passports.”
Davidson said, “Why would he go underground?”
“Escape,” Marge said. “Maybe one of his diamond deals turned sour.”
“Guy’s a wily Israeli in a high-money business,” Davidson said. “Maybe he knows things the Feds would be interested in.”
Marge said, “He’s running from the Feds?”
“Maybe he’s working for the Feds,” Davidson said. “Maybe the guy was forced to sign up for the Witness Protection Program and that’s why the family just upped and disappeared.”
“I’ll check it out.”
“Yeah, do that, Dunn,” Davidson said. “Something’s out of kilter here. Poke around the neighborhood. See if they noticed strange suits and ties coming in and out of the house.” He turned to Decker. “Speaking of inside jobs, who’s gonna do Yalom’s partner?”
“Yo,” Decker said.
Davidson turned to Marge. “So you’re doing the paper on Yalom?”
“Yes.” Marge skimmed her notes. “Social Security number, credit cards, tax ID numbers, bank statements and info, passport office.” She looked up. “I’ll also call the Feds.”
“So tell me about the partner, Decker,” Davidson said.
“Shaul Gold.” Decker recapped what he knew. “I finally got hold of him. He seems cooperative. We’ve got a scheduled meeting with him tomorrow at eight in the morning.”
“He seem jumpy?”
“Surprised,” Decker said. “‘What do you mean my partner is missing?’ That kind of thing. But he was cooperative.”
“How long has he known Yalom?”
Marge said, “Sister says they’ve been partners for years. But they don’t get along.”
Davidson squinted. “So what? A lot of partners fight.”
Decker said, “A lot of partners kill each other.”
“Not the whole family, Decker.”
“Except that we’re talking about diamond dealers,” Marge said. “Lots of money.”
Davidson scratched his head. “Money. I take it the partner’s another little, wily, shrewd Israeli?”
“Gold is Israeli,” Decker said. “I don’t know if he’s wily, shrewd, or little.”
Davidson squinted. “I was thinking the guy might be a flight risk.”
Decker threw up his hands. “I can’t find evidence to detain him.”
Marge said, “We don’t have a drop of blood, let alone a body.”
Davidson drummed his fingers. “No justification for pulling him in. We’ll have to take our chances. All right. Leave the partner until tomorrow.” The lieutenant took out a notebook. “So this is what I got. Decker, you’ll do the shopping mall and the partner. Dunn, you’ll do paper and the neighborhood. This…voodoo silver case has been turned in to forensics for printing. Anything else you got in mind?”
“Not at the moment,” Decker said.
“Keep me informed,” Davidson said.
“We thought we’d stop by the neighborhood tonight, sir,” Marge said. “Before we go home.”
Davidson squinted at both of them. “They musta whipped you two hard at Foothill, huh?”
“No, we’re just bucking for overtime,” Decker grinned.
Davidson cracked a smile. “You’re barking up the wrong tree. You want money, get a law degree.”
“He’s already a lawyer,” Marge said.
Davidson leaned back in his chair. “No shit?”
“No shit,” Decker said.
“No wonder you’re such a wiseass.” Davidson waved them away. “Do what you want, but forget about overtime. Jackass county keeps voting down police bonds, we’ll be lucky if we draw our salaries.” He turned to Marge. “You got a look on your face, Dunn. What is it?”
“Do you want us to contact the media for assistance?” Marge asked.
The lieutenant gave it some thought. “Wait until you see what you’ve dug up. If you draw blanks, we’ll contact the networks.”
“You got it.” Marge started to rise, then sat back down. “Something else, Lieutenant?”
Davidson ran the palm of his hand across his crew cut. “Nah, I’m through. Get out of here. Both of you.”
“Don’t stroke her ego,” Marge fumed.
Decker sat down at his new desk recycled from a branch of the LA County Library that was shut down because of budget cuts. It was a gun-metal gray institutional number, but it had a kneehole large enough to accommodate his oversized legs, and two big file banks for case folders. Marge had a marred but functional oak desk donated by an office manager who had been forced to fire his secretary. The desks were placed front end to front end, which meant Decker and Marge sat across from each other.
Decker pulled out a manila folder and started a file on the Yaloms. “At least he took us seriously, Marge.”