“And everybody should get the chance.”
Bosch moved on to the 1987 yearbook and found that the photos of Becky Verloren showed a young girl who appeared to be blossoming. Her smile was fuller, more confident. If the braces were still there they were no longer noticeable. In the group photos she had moved to front and center. In the student government photos she was not a class officer yet, but she had her arms folded in a take-charge pose. Her posture and her unflinching stare at the camera told Bosch she was going places. Only somebody had stopped her.
Bosch flipped through a few more pages and then closed the book. He was waiting for the bell to ring so they could go interview Bailey Koster Sable.
“Nothing?” Rider asked.
“Of any value,” he said. “It’s good to look at her back then, though. In place. In her element.”
“Yes. Look at this.”
They were sitting across from each other. She turned the 1988 book around on the table so he could see it. She had finally gotten to the sophomore class photos. The top half of the page on the right showed a boy and four girls posing on a wall Bosch recognized as the entrance to the student parking lot. One of the girls was Becky Verloren. The caption above the photo said STUDENT LEADERS. Below the photo the students were identified and their positions listed. Becky Verloren was listed as student council representative. Bailey Koster was class president.
Rider tried to spin the book back toward herself but Bosch held it for a moment, studying the photograph. He could tell by her pose and her style that Becky Verloren had left her teen awkwardness behind. He would not describe the student in the photograph as a girl. She was on her way to becoming an attractive and confident young woman. He let the book go and Rider took it back.
“She was going to be a heartbreaker,” he said.
“Maybe she already was. Maybe she picked the wrong one to break.”
“Anything else in there?”
“Take a look.”
She flipped the open book around again. The two pages were spread with photos from the Art Club’s trip to France the summer before. There were photos of about twenty students, boys and girls, and several parents or teachers in front of Notre Dame, in the courtyard of the Louvre and on a tourist boat on the Seine. Rider pointed out Rebecca Verloren in one of the photos.
“She went to France,” Bosch said. “What about it?”
“She could have met someone over there. Could be an international link to this thing. We might have to go over there and check it out.”
She was trying to hold back a smile.
“Yeah,” Bosch said. “You put the req in on that. Send it on up to six.”
“Boy, Harry, I guess your sense of humor stayed retired.”
“Yeah, I guess so.”
The school bell rang, ending the discussion as well as classes for the day. Bosch and Rider got up, leaving the yearbooks on the table, and left the library. They followed Stoddard’s directions to Bailey Sable’s classroom, along the way dodging students hurrying to leave the school. The girls wore plaid skirts and white blouses, the boys khakis and white polo shirts.
They looked into the open door of room B-6 and saw a woman sitting at a desk at the front center of the classroom. She did not look up from the papers she was apparently grading. Bailey Sable bore almost no resemblance to the sophomore class president whose photo Bosch and Rider had just studied in the yearbook. The hair was darker and shorter now, the body wider and heavier. Like Stoddard, she wore glasses. Bosch knew she was only thirty-two or thirty-three but she looked older.
There was one last student in the room. She was a pretty blonde girl who was shoving books into a backpack. When she was finished she zipped the pack closed and headed to the door.
“See you tomorrow, Mrs. Sable.”
“Good-bye, Kaitlyn.”
The student gave Bosch and Rider a curious look as she went by them. The detectives stepped into the classroom and Bosch pulled the door closed. That made Bailey Sable look up from her papers.
“Can I help you?” she asked.
Bosch took the lead.
“You might be able to,” he said. “Mr. Stoddard said it would be all right if we came to your classroom.”
He approached the desk. The teacher looked up at him warily.
“Are you parents?”
“No, we’re detectives, Mrs. Sable. My name is Harry Bosch and this is Kizmin Rider. We wanted to ask you a few questions about Becky Verloren.”
She reacted as if she had just been punched in the gut. All these years and it was still that close to the surface.
“Oh my God, oh my God,” she said.
“We’re sorry to hit you with this out of the blue,” Bosch said.
“Is something happening? Did you find who…?”
She didn’t finish.
“Well, we’re working on it again,” Bosch said. “And you might be able to help us.”
“How?”
Bosch reached into his pocket and pulled out the mug shot taken from Roland Mackey’s DOC probation file. It was a portrait of Mackey as an eighteen-year-old car thief. Bosch put it down on top of the paper she had been grading. She looked down at it.
“Do you recognize the person in that photo?” Bosch asked.
“It was taken seventeen years ago,” Rider added. “About the time of Becky’s death.”
The teacher looked down at Mackey’s defiant glare into the police camera. She didn’t say anything for a long time. Bosch looked at Rider and nodded, a signal that maybe she should take over.
“Does it look like anyone you or Becky or any of your friends may have encountered back then?” Rider asked.
“Did he go to school here?” Sable asked.
“No, we don’t think so. But we know he lived in this area.”
“Is he the killer?”
“We don’t know. We’re just trying to see if there is a connection between Becky and him.”
“What is his name?”
Rider looked at Bosch and he nodded again.
“His name is Roland Mackey. Does he look familiar?”
“Not really. It is hard for me to remember back then. Remember the faces of strangers, I mean.”
“So he definitely is not someone you knew, right?”
“Definitely.”
“Do you think Becky could have known him without you being aware of it?”
She thought for a long moment before answering.
“Well, it’s possible. You know, it came out that she’d gotten pregnant. I didn’t know about that, so I guess I might not have known about him. Was he the father?”
“We don’t know.”
Unbidden, she had jumped the interview forward to Bosch’s next line of questioning.
“Mrs. Sable, you know, it’s been a lot of years since then,” he said. “If you were sort of sticking up for a friend back then, we understand that. But if there is more you know, you can tell us now. This is probably the last shot that anybody is going to take at solving this thing.”
“You mean about her being pregnant? I really didn’t know about it. I’m sorry. I was just as shocked as everybody else when the police started asking about that.”
“If Becky were going to confide in someone about that, would it have been you?”
Again, she didn’t answer right away. She gave it some thought.
“I don’t know,” she said. “We were very close but she was that way with a few other girls, too. There were four of us who had been together since first grade here. In first grade we called ourselves the Kitty Cat Club because we all had pet cats. At different times and different years one of us would be closer to one of the others. It changed all the time. But as a group we always stuck together.”
Bosch nodded.
“That summer when Becky was taken, who would you say was closest to her?”
“It was probably Tara. She took it the hardest.”
Bosch looked at Rider, trying to remember the names of the girls Becky had been with two nights before her death.
“Tara Wood?” Rider asked.
“Yes, that’s Tara. They hung out together a lot that summer because Becky’s dad owned a restaurant in Malibu and they were both working there. They were splitting a schedule there. It seemed that summer that all they did was talk about it.”