“Running late,” he’d explained. Twitching and tapping his foot. Not even noticing the nine-millimeter held down against her right flank.

She knew delivery services put their drivers under pressure but this guy looked ready to blow.

So it was possible. A bad guy calls Geraldo Solis with the cable story, shows up late, Solis opens his door. No cable truck in the neighborhood didn’t mean a thing. At that hour, in Solis’s quiet, residential neighborhood, who’d be looking?

Geraldo Solis’s daughter’s address and phone number were duly listed in the murder book. Maria Solis Murphy, age thirty-nine, Covina. A DMV check put her current residence in the city. Right here in Hollywood, Russell Street off Los Feliz.

Her work number matched an extension for Food Services at Kaiser Permanente Hospital. Also Hollywood, an easy stroll from Russell.

She was on shift, came to the phone, arranged to meet Petra in front of the hospital in twenty minutes. By the time Petra arrived, she was there.

Hard-body type, pretty, with very short dark hair tipped blond, wearing a pale blue dress, white socks, and tennies. Three filament hoops in one ear, a diamond chip and a gold stud in the other. Tattoo of a rose on her left ankle. Kind of punk for a woman of nearly forty- a woman with a gold wedding band on her ring finger- but Maria Murphy had an unlined face and an aerobic bounce in her step. Put her in the right duds and she could’ve passed for mid-twenties.

Her badge said M. Murphy, MS, Registered Dietician. Very hard body. Boyish hips. The benefits of vitamins?

She said, “Detective?” in a husky voice.

“Ms. Murphy.”

“If you don’t mind, I could use a little stretch. Been kind of cooped up.”

They walked west on Sunset, past the hospital, fast-food joints, the prosthetic outfitters, after-care specialists, and linen suppliers that attach themselves to hospitals. Western Peds, where Sandra Leon had been treated for leukemia, was a couple of blocks east. What was with that doctor, Katzman.

Maria Murphy said, “I’m very grateful you’re reopening my dad’s case.”

“It’s not exactly like that, Ms. Murphy. I’m a Hollywood detective and I picked up a case that could conceivably bear some similarities to your father’s. But it’s not a dramatic match- we’re talking small details, ma’am.”

“Like what?”

“I’m not at liberty to say, ma’am. Sorry.”

“I understand,” Maria Murphy said. “I discovered Dad’s body. I’ll never forget it.”

That fact had been in the file. Geraldo Solis had been found slumped over his food at one A.M. Petra asked Murphy why she’d dropped in so late.

“I didn’t drop in. I lived there. On and off. Temporarily.”

“Temporarily?”

“I was married at the time and my husband and I were having problems. I stayed with Dad, from time to time.”

Petra glanced at Murphy’s gold band.

Murphy smiled. “That’s from my partner. Her name is Bella.”

Petra sensed Murphy sizing her up, assessing her tolerance level. “So you and your husband were having marital problems.”

“I changed the rules, midstream,” said Murphy. “Dave, my husband, was a good guy. I was the one who initiated the breakup. Back then, I was pretty moody.”

“How’d Dave react to that?”

“He wasn’t happy,” said Murphy.

“He get mad?”

Without missing a step, Murphy turned sharply toward Petra. “It wasn’t like that, don’t even think that. Dave and Dad got along great. You want to know the truth, Dave and Dad had more in common with each other than with me. Any time we had a fight, Dad took Dave’s side. He couldn’t believe what I was doing and why I was doing it. My whole family was in pretty strong denial.”

“Big family?” said Petra.

“Two brothers, two sisters. Mom’s been gone for a while. When she was alive, I suppressed myself. Not wanting to hurt her. After I came out, they all ganged up on me, wanted me to see a shrink. Which was exactly what I’d been doing for two years, unbeknownst to them.”

“You didn’t want to hurt your mother, but your father…”

“You get to a point,” said Murphy. “And Dad and I were never close. He was always working, always too busy. I didn’t resent it, he did what he had to do, we just weren’t close. Even after I started living with him, we had very little to say to each other.”

She flinched, sucked in a breath, quickened her step.

“How long did you live with him?”

“On and off,” Murphy reiterated. “A month or so. I kept most of my stuff at my house, would bring a few changes to Dad’s. The story I gave him was I was working a double shift and didn’t want to drive home tired. Dad’s place was a lot closer to the hospital.”

Covina to Hollywood was an hour drive, minimum, a lot hairier with traffic. The trip from Solis’s house on Ogden near Olympic was a lark in comparison, so that much rang true.

“When did you tell your father the truth?” said Petra.

“I didn’t. My sibs did. A few days before the murder.”

“What about Dave?”

“Dave already knew. He wasn’t angry, he was sad. Depressed. Don’t go there. Really.”

Petra decided she’d be talking to Dave Murphy, sooner rather than later. She nodded at Murphy, tried to look reassuring. “So is there anything about your father’s murder that you’ve thought about since the first detectives spoke to you?”

“I only talked to one detective,” said Murphy. “Big, heavyset kind of Scandinavian guy.”

“Detective Hustaad.”

“Yes, that’s him. He seemed nice. Had a real bad cough. Later, he called me to tell me he had cancer, was going in for treatment. He promised to make sure Dad’s case got transferred to someone else. I felt terrible for him. That cough, it didn’t sound good.”

“The case was transferred to Detective Weber. He never talked to you?”

“Someone did call me,” said Murphy. “Once. But a long time… years after Hustaad got sick. I’d called the police station a few times- honestly, not a lot, I was dealing with my own stuff. When no one called me back, I let it go… I guess…”

“What did Detective Weber tell you?”

“He said he was taking over Dad’s case, but I never heard from him again. I guess I should’ve followed through. I guess I figured after no clues came up right away, it would be hard to solve. Being a stranger and all that.”

“A stranger?”

“A burglar,” said Murphy. “That’s what Hustaad figured.”

“Did Detective Weber ask you anything?”

“Not really- oh, yeah, he did ask about Dad expecting the cable guy. Which I’d already told Detective Hustaad. It was the only thing I did tell Detective Hustaad that I thought might be relevant. Mostly, I was a basketcase. At the time, I mean… finding Dad.”

Nothing hysterical about her now. Talkative woman, calm. Resigned to the fact that her father’s murder would probably never be solved.

Petra kept walking, waited for more.

Half a block later, Murphy said, “Detective Hustaad didn’t seem to have much energy.”

“You’re wondering if he worked the case as hard as it should’ve been worked.”

“I don’t know. Maybe. I guess I’m a pretty factual person.”

“What do you mean?”

“I can accept facts, even if they’re tough. If Dad had been killed by a burglar, the only way they’d solve it was if the same criminal did it again, right? That’s kind of what Detective Hustaad implied.” She turned to Petra. “Is your case a burglar, someone pretending to be a cable guy?”

“Everything’s preliminary, ma’am.”

“So I shouldn’t get my hopes up.”

“It’s a long process.”

“What was weird to me, if it was a burglar,” said Murphy, “was that the only thing taken was food. A fresh head of lettuce, some whole wheat bread, and two cartons of lemon yogurt. That’s a pretty strange burglar, no? But Detective Hustaad said they do that- eat food, mark their territory. He figured the guy got scared before he had time to steal anything.”


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