Bosch took a step toward him and lowered his voice. He said, “But we both know it didn’t end there, Frankie. And it’s not going to end there. So if you feel you gotta do it, go tell Irving I said it’s so.”

Sheehan stared at him for a few seconds and then Bosch saw the resolve fade away.

“Awright, Harry, c’mon in. I’m going to be kicking myself for this later.”

They walked to Sheehan’s desk and Bosch pulled a chair from another desk alongside it. Sheehan took off his coat and put it on a hanger on a rack next to the desk. After he sat down, adjusted his shoulder holster and folded his arms, he said:

“Know where I’ve been all morning? The ME’s, trying to work out a deal to keep a lid on this a few hours. Seems overnight we sprang a leak and already this morning Irving ’s getting calls that we are sitting on a homicide of one of our own officers. You wouldn’t know anything about this, would you?”

Harry said, “Only thing I know is I’ve been thinking about the scene out at the motel and the autopsy being inconclusive, like they say, and I’m not thinking suicide anymore.”

“You’re not thinking anything. You’re not on it. Remember? And what about this?”

He opened a drawer and brought a file up. It was the Zorrillo file Rickard had shown him the day before.

“Don’t bother telling me you haven’t seen this before. Because then I might take it over to SID and have ’em run prints on it. I’d bet my wife’s diaphragm I’d find yours.”

“You’d lose, Frankie.”

“Then I’d have more kids. But I wouldn’t lose, Harry.”

Bosch waited a beat for him to settle down.

“All this huffin’ and puffin’ at me tells me one thing: you don’t see a suicide, either. So quit with the bullshit.”

“You’re right. I don’t. But I got an assistant chief sitting on my ass and he’s gotten the bright idea of sticking me with an IAD suit on this. So it’s like I got both my feet in buckets of shit before I even start off.”

“You saying they don’t want this to go anywhere?”

“No, I am not saying that.”

“What are they going to tell theTimes?

“Press conference this afternoon. Irving ’s going to give it to everybody. He’ll say we are looking at the possibility-thepossibility -of homicide. Fuck giving it to theTimes. Who said it was theTimes making the noise anyway?”

“Lucky, I guess.”

“Yeah, be careful, Bosch. You slip like that with Irving and he’ll fry your ass. He’d love to, with your record and all the history going back with you. I already have to figure out about this file. You told Irving you didn’t know the guy and now we have a file that shows he was doing some digging for you.”

Bosch realized he had forgotten to remove the Post-it tag Moore had placed on the file.

“Tell Irving whatever you want. Think I care?” Bosch looked down at the file. “What do you think?”

“About this file? I think nothing out loud.”

“C’mon, Frankie, I ask Moore to look around on this dope killing and he ends up in a motel with his head in the tub in small pieces. It was a very smooth job, right down to not a single lift belonging to anybody else being found in that room.”

“So what if it was smooth and there’s no other prints? In my book some guys deserve what they got coming, you know?”

There was the break in Sheehan’s defense. Whether intentional or not, he was telling Bosch that Moore had crossed.

“I need more than that,” he said in a very low voice. “You got the weight on you but I don’t. I’m a free agent and I’m going to put it together. Moore might’ve crossed, yeah, but nobody should’ve put him down on the tiles like that. We both know that. Besides, there are other bodies.”

Harry could see this had grabbed Sheehan’s attention.

“We can trade,” Bosch said quietly.

Sheehan stood up and said, “Yeah, let’s go get that coffee.”

Five minutes later they were at a table in the second-floor cafeteria and Bosch was telling him about Jimmy Kapps and Juan Doe #67. He outlined the connections between Moore and Juan Doe, Juan Doe and Mexicali, Mexicali and Humberto Zorillo, Zorillo and black ice, black ice and Jimmy Kapps. On and on it went. Sheehan asked no questions and took no notes until Harry was done.

“So what do you think?” he asked then.

“I think what you think,” Bosch said. “That Moore had crossed. Maybe he was fronting up here for Zorillo, the ice man, and got so deep he couldn’t get out. I don’t know how it all ties up yet but I still have some ideas I am playing with. I’m thinking a number of things. Maybe he wanted out and the ice man whacked him. Maybe he was working that file, going to give me something, and they whacked him.”

“Possibilities.”

“There’s also the possibility that word of the IAD investigation your partner Chastain was conducting got around, and they saw Moore as a danger and whacked him.”

Sheehan hesitated. It was the moment of truth. If he discussed the IAD investigation he would be breaking enough departmental regs to get shipped permanently out of RHD. Like Harry.

“I could get busted for talking about that,” Sheehan said. “Could end up like you, out there in the cesspool.”

“It’s all a cesspool, man. Doesn’t matter if you’re on the bottom or the top. You’re still swimming in shit.”

Sheehan took a sip of his coffee.

“IAD had taken a report, this was about two months ago, that Moore was some way involved in the traffic on the Boulevard. Possibly offering protection, possibly a deeper involvement. The source was not clear on that.”

“Two months ago?” Bosch asked. “Didn’t they get anything? I mean, Moore was still working the street all this time. Wasn’t there enough to at least put him on a desk?”

“Look, you’ve got to remember that Irving put Chastain with me on this. But I’m not with Chastain. He doesn’t do much talking to me. All he would tell me was the investigation was in its infancy when Moore disappeared. He had no proof substantiating or discrediting the claim.”

“You know how hard he worked it?”

“I assume very hard. He’s IAD. He’s always looking for a badge to pull. And this looked like more than just departmental charges. This would have gone to the DA. So I assume he had a hard-on for it. He just didn’t get anything. Moore must’ve been very good.”

Not good enough, Bosch thought. Obviously.

“Who was the source?”

“You don’t need that.”

“You know I do. If I’m going to be a free agent on this I have to know what’s what.”

Sheehan hesitated but didn’t make a good show of it.

“It was anonymous-a letter. But Chastain said it was the wife. That’s what he figured. She turned him in.”

“How’s he so sure?”

“The details of the letter, whatever they were, Chastain said they would only be known by someone close to him. He told me it wasn’t unusual. It often comes from the spouse. But he said that a lot of times it’s bogus. A wife or husband will report something totally false, you know, if they are going through a divorce or something, just to fuck the other up with work. So, he spent a lot of time just seeing if that was the case here. ’Cause Moore and his wife were splitting up. He said she never admitted it but he was sure she sent it. He just never got very far with substantiating what was in it.”

Bosch thought of Sylvia. He was sure they were wrong.

“Did you talk to the wife, tell her the ID was confirmed?”

“No, Irving did that last night.”

“He tell her about the autopsy, ’bout it not being suicide?”

“I don’t know about that. See, I don’t get to sit down with Irving like you with me here and ask him everything that comes into my head.”

Bosch was wearing out his welcome.

“Just a few more, Frankie. Did Chastain focus on black ice?”

“No. When we got this file of yours yesterday, he about shit his pants. I got the feeling he was hearing about all that side of it for the first time. I kind of enjoyed that, Harry. If there was anything to enjoy about any of this.”


Перейти на страницу:
Изменить размер шрифта: