“You’re ambitious.”
“And knowing my stock, that surprises you?”
A grin this time. “You’re gonna do just fine, Decker.”
High praise coming from Greg.
“While I talk to the people on your list, you cordon off the area and look around for anything that might give us a clue as to who the mother is. I suppose at this late hour, our best bet could be a request for public help on the eleven o’clock news.”
A news van pulled up just as the words left his mouth. “You’re prescient, Detective. Here’s your chance.”
“ABC, eh?” A flicker of hesitancy shot through his eyes. “Is that the one with the anchorwoman who has the white streak in her black hair, like a skunk?”
“I don’t know… There’s NBC. The others can’t be far behind.” I patted his shoulder. “It’s show time.”
“How’s your Q, Decker?”
“Me?” I pointed to my chest. “You’ve got the gold shield, Greg.”
“But you found the baby.”
“Yeah, but I stink and you’re in a suit.” I waved him off. “I’ll go yellow-tape the area and look around.”
“You sure?” But he was already straightening his tie and smoothing his hair. “Yeah, tape off the area. Don’t sweat it too much, Decker. I can pretty much take it from here. And hey, I’ll take you up on your offer… to canvass the area tomorrow.”
“That’ll work for me.”
“Good. We’ll coordinate in a moment. Just let me get these clowns off my back.”
“Of course.”
“Show ’em what a real detective looks like, huh?”
“You tell ’em, Greg.”
Van Horn made tracks toward a grouping of handheld Minicams, lurching like a cowboy ready for the showdown.
In Hollywood, everybody’s a star.
?
A half block from the restaurant was a pool of something that didn’t smell like water and shone ruby red under the beam of the flashlight. There were also intermittent drips from the puddle to the Dumpster behind The Tango. Because of the location, I thought of a homeless woman or a runaway teen, someone scared and unstable. She would have to be on the skids, pushing out a baby in a back alley, all alone amid a host of bugs and rats.
The blood of childbirth-if we were lucky.
If the mother was someone local, it would narrow the search. Maybe knocking on doors wouldn’t be the answer. Maybe my best bet would be to hunt down the throwaways, to crawl through the underbelly of Hollywood, a city that offered so much but rarely made good on its promises.
I showed the spot to Greg Van Horn after he did his dog-and-pony show for the nightly news. He regarded the blood while scratching his abundant nose.
“Homicide?” I asked him.
“Can’t be ruled out.” His jaws were bulging as if chewing on something hard. “My instincts tell me no. The configuration doesn’t look like a murder.”
“The concentration of blood in one spot as well as the absence of spatter.”
Van Horn nodded. “Yeah, exactly.”
“I was thinking about someone homeless. Who else would squat in a back alley?”
“I’ll buy that.” Eyes still on the pond of blood, he took out his cellular phone. “Time to call in the techs.”
“Want me to walk around the area, sir? See if I can find some street people?”
“Did you finish roping the area?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Sure. Go pretend you’re a gold shield, Decker.”
Low blow, Greg.I said with a smile, “Just testing out my mettle.”
“I thought you already passed that test.”
This time the smile was genuine. “That was nice. Thank you.”
“Get out of here.”
I skipped over the yellow tape, walking about a hundred yards north through the alley and onto Hollywood Boulevard. The sidewalks weren’t paved with gold, but they were filled with lots of black-stoned stars set into red granite. Each star represented a different icon of the entertainment media-TV, film, radio, or the recording industry. The good news was that recent gentrification and climbing real estate prices had preserved some of the older architecture and had cleaned up lots of the seedier aspects of the area.
The western part of the boulevard was breaking through, probably like Times Square had done a dozen or so years ago. The city planners were smart enough to face-lift its known quantities, like the famous movie houses-Mann’s Chinese Theatre, Egyptian, and El Capitan-as well as the sideshow carnival attractions like Ripley’s Believe It or Not and the Hollywood Wax Museum. In addition, the renovated sector now boasted several eye-catching shopping galleries and a spanking-new gold-and-black-granite live theater built by Kodak. These landmarks drew lots of tourists, those hoping to be touched by magic or, at the very least, bask in its afterglow.
It was the night that brought out the predators, individuals who thrived on marginal life. The eastern portion of Hollywood was the domain of tattoo parlors and bail bondsmen, of cheap retail shops, several no-tell motels and fast-food joints.
The Tango sat on the border between the bright lights of old glamour and the slums of decay. As economic revival crept eastward, some of the neon spilled over, but not nearly enough to illuminate the hidden cracks and crevices. I didn’t have to walk too far before I found someone. She sat on the sidewalk, her back against the painted glass window advertising 50 percent off bargain-basement clothing. Her knees were pressed against her chest, and a thin blanket was thrown over her body and tucked under her chin. Her age was indeterminate-anywhere from twenty to fifty. Her hair was matted and dirty, her complexion so pancaked with grime that it could have held membership to any race. Black pupils peered out through vacant red-rimmed orbs, her mouth a slash mark with skin stretched tightly over a bony framework. By her side were a coin cup, several paper bags, and a tattered backpack.
I dropped a dollar in the cup. She nodded but didn’t make eye contact. I sat beside her and she stiffened. She stank of sweat and misery, but right now I didn’t smell too wonderful myself.
“What happened to you?” she pronounced in a raspy voice.
I raised my eyebrow. “What do you mean?”
“Your clothes need a cleanin’, Officer.”
“Oh… that. I went rooting through the garbage tonight.”
“Then we’s got somethin’ in common.”
I smiled. “I don’t think we’ve ever met.”
She looked down at her covered knees. “You’re Officer Cindy.”
I let out a laugh. “Beg your pardon. The mistake is mine.”
“It was raining. You gave me a ride… Brang me to a shelter.”
I squinted, taking in her face.“Alice Anne?”
A hint of a smile appeared on her lips.
I made a face. “You promised me you’d stop hitting the sauce.”
“I kept my promise.”
“For how long? Twenty-four hours?”
“A little longer.”
“Tsk, tsk, girl.”
This time, she took in my face. “What happened to you?”
“Funny you should ask. I found a baby at the bottom of a Dumpster.”
“Ugh!” Alice Anne exclaimed. “That be terrible! Is it okay?”
“The baby is fine.”
“Hard enough bein’ an a-dult out here.” She spat. “Ain’t no place for a baby.”
“Any ideas, Alice Anne?”
“Me?” She sounded surprised. “It ain’t mine, sister.”
“I’m not pointing a finger. But do you have any clue who itmightbelong to?”
She was quiet.
“Come on, Alice Anne. We need to find her.”
“Don’t know nothin’.”
Maybe yes, maybe no. “Could be you’ve seen someone out here who was pregnant-”
“Maybe like a hunnerd out here is pregnant. That’s why they’s out here. ’Cause they’s pregnant and got nowhere else to go.”
“Where would I find these hundred girls?”
She threw me a disgusted look. “How long you work here?”
“Alice-”
“It ain’t that hard, sister. You just be looking on the wrong street.”
“Sunset?”
Alice Anne nodded.
Sunset was the next major street south. It was where the female prostitutes did their business. The boy toys were out on Santa Monica Boulevard, the next major street over from Sunset. Most of the men bartered in West Hollywood Sheriff area, but sometimes they strayed into LAPD territory-my territory. All these discarded lives. It could make a girl blue sometimes. Of course, Alice Anne was right. What else could an underage, pregnant runaway do to keep her stomach filled?