'Who are they?'
'Claude Eno and Jake McKittrick. Remember them?'
'Eno and McKittrick. No ... I mean, yeah, I think I remember McKittrick. He checked out ... it must've been ten, fifteen years ago. He went back to Florida, I think. Yeah, Florida. He was here in RHD for a year or so. At the end there. The other one, Eno, I don't remember any Eno.'
'Well, it was worth a try. I'll see what I can find in Florida. Thanks, Leroy.'
'Hey, Harry, what gives anyway?'
'It's just an old case I had in my desk. It's giving me something to do while I see what happens.'
'Any word?'
'Not yet. They got me talking to the shrink. If I can talk my way past her, I'll get back to the table. We'll see.'
'Okay, well, good luck. You know, me and some of the boys here, when we heard that story we laughed our asses off. We heard about that guy Pounds. He's an asshole. You done good, kid.'
'Well, let's hope I didn't do so good that I lost my job.'
'Ah, you'll be all right. They send you to Chinatown a few times, brush you off and send you back into the ring. You'll be okay.'
'Thanks, Leroy.'
After hanging up, Bosch got dressed for the day, putting on a fresh shirt and the same suit as the day before.
He headed downtown in his rented Mustang and spent the next two hours in a bureaucratic maze. He first went to the Personnel Office at Parker Center, told a clerk what he wanted and then waited half an hour for a supervisor to tell him all over again. The supervisor told him he had wasted his time and that the information he sought was at City Hall.
He walked across the street to the City Hall annex, took the stairs up and then crossed on the tramway over Main Street into the white obelisk of City Hall. He took the elevator up to the Finance Department, on nine, showed his ID card to another counter clerk and told her that, in the interest of streamlining the process, maybe he should talk to a supervisor first.
He waited on a plastic chair in a hallway for twenty minutes before he was ushered into a small office cramped with two desks, four file cabinets and several boxes on the floor. An obese woman with pale skin and black hair, sideburns and the slight hint of a mustache sat behind one of the desks. On her calendar blotter Bosch noticed a food stain from some prior mishap. There was also a reusable plastic quart soda container with a screw-on top and straw on her desk. A plastic name plate on the desk said Mona Tozzi.
'I'm Carla's supervisor. She said you are a police officer?'
'Detective.'
He pulled the chair away from the empty desk and sat down in front of the fat woman.
'Excuse me, but Cassidy is probably going to need her chair when she gets back. That's her desk.'
'When's she coming back?'
'Anytime. She went up for coffee.'
'Well, maybe if we hurry we'll be done by then and I'll be out of here.'
She gave a short who-do-you-think-you-are laugh that sounded more like a snort. She said nothing.
'I've spent the last hour and a half trying to get just a couple addresses from the city and all I get are a bunch of people who want to send me to someone else or make me wait out in the hall. And what's funny about that is that I work for the city myself and I'm trying to do a job for the city and the city isn't giving me the time of day. And, you know, my shrink tells me I've got this post-traumatic stress stuff and should take life easier. But, Mona, I gotta tell you, I'm getting pretty fucking frustrated with this.'
She stared at him a moment, probably wondering if she could possibly make it out the door if he decided to go nuts on her. She then pursed her lips, which served to change her mustache from a hint to an announcement, and took a hard pull on the straw of her soda container. Bosch saw a liquid the color of blood go up through the straw into her mouth. She cleared her throat before talking in a comforting tone.
'Tell you what, Detective, why don't you tell me what it is you are trying to find?' Bosch put on his hopeful face.
'Great. I knew there was somebody who cared. I need to get the addresses where pension checks for two different retired officers are sent each month.' Her eyebrows mated as she frowned. 'I'm sorry, but those addresses are strictly confidential. Even within the city. I couldn't give -'
'Mona, let me explain something. I'm a homicide
investigator. Like you, I work for the city, I have leads on an old unsolved murder that I am following up on. I need to confer with the original case detectives. We're talking about a case more than thirty years old. A woman was killed, Mona. I can't find the two detectives that originally worked the case and the police personnel people sent me over here. I need the pension addresses. Are you going to help me?'
'Detective — is it Borsch?'
'Bosch.'
'Detective Bosch, let me explain something to you. Just because you work for the city does not give you access to confidential files. I work for the city but I don't go over to Parker Center and say let me see this or let me see that. People have a right to privacy. Now, this is what I can do. And it is all I can do. If you give me the two names, I will send a letter to each person asking them to call you. That way, you get your information, I protect the files. Would that work for you? They'll go out in the mail today. I promise.'
She smiled but it was the phoniest smile Bosch had seen in days.
'No, that wouldn't work at all, Mona. You know, I'm really disappointed.'
'I can't help that.'
'But you can, don't you see?'
'I have work to do, Detective. If you want me to send the letter, give me the names. If not, that's your decision.'
He nodded that he understood and brought his briefcase up from the floor to his lap. He saw her jump when he angrily unsnapped the locks. He opened it and took out his phone. He flipped it open and dialed his home number, then waited for the machine to pick up.
Mona looked annoyed.
'What are you doing?'
He held his hand up for silence.
'Yes, can you transfer me to Whitey Springer?' he said to his tape.
He watched her reaction while acting like he wasn't. He could tell, she knew the name. Springer was the City Hall columnist for the Times. His specialty was writing about the small bureaucratic nightmares, the little guy against the system. Bureaucrats could largely create these nightmares with impunity, thanks to civil service protections, but politicians read Springer's column and they wielded tremendous power when it came to patronage jobs, transfers and demotions at City Hall. A bureaucrat vilified in print by Springer might be safe in his or her job but there likely would never be advancement, and there was nothing stopping a city council member from calling for an audit on an office or a council observer to sit in the comer. The word to the wise was to stay out of Springer's column. Everybody knew that, including Mona.
'Yeah, I can hold,' Bosch said into the phone. Then to Mona, he said, 'He's gonna love this one. He's got a guy trying to solve a murder, the victim's family waiting for thirty-three years to know who killed her, and some bureaucrat sitting in her office sucking on a quart of fruit punch isn't giving him the addresses he needs just to talk to the other cops who worked the case. I'm not a newspaper man but I think that's a column. He'll love it. What do you think?'
He smiled and watched her face flush almost as red as her fruit punch. He knew it was going to work.
'Okay, hang up the phone,' she said.
'What? Why?'
'HANG UP! Hang up and I'll get the information.'
Bosch flipped the phone closed.
'Give me the names.'
He gave her the names and she got up angrily and
silently to leave the room. She could barely fit around the desk but made the maneuver like a ballerina, the pattern instilled in her body's memory by repeated practice.