The Wrong Side of Goodbye

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The Wrong Side of Goodbye Page 16

by Michael Connelly


  Bosch then wrote down the name and address as of 2010 of the original buyer of the knife. He was Jonathan Danbury and his address, at least back then, was in Santa Clarita, no more than a thirty-minute drive up the 5 freeway from San Fernando.

  Bosch thanked Johnny the knife maker for his cooperation and ended the phone call. He immediately went to the DMV database to see if he could locate Jonathan Danbury. He quickly learned that Danbury still lived in the same house as when he reported the knife stolen in 2010. Bosch also learned that Danbury was now thirty-six years old and had no criminal record.

  Bosch waited while he heard Lourdes finish a call in Spanish. The moment she hung up he got her attention.

  “Bella.”

  “What?”

  “Ready to take a ride? I’ve got a line on the knife. A guy up in Santa Clarita who reported it stolen six years ago.”

  She popped her head up over the privacy wall.

  “I’m ready to shoot myself is what I am,” she said. “These people, they’re just ratting out their old boyfriends, anybody they want to have the cops hassle. And a lot of date rapes, sad to say. Women who think the guy who forced himself on them is our guy.”

  “We’re going to keep getting those calls until we find the real guy,” Bosch said.

  “I know. I was just hoping to spend tomorrow with my son. But I’ll be stuck here if these calls keep coming.”

  “I’ll take tomorrow. You take off. I’ll leave all the Spanish-only calls for Monday.”

  “Really?”

  “Really.”

  “Thank you. Do we know how the knife was stolen back then?”

  “Not yet. You ready to go?”

  “Could this be our guy? Report the knife stolen as a cover?”

  Bosch shrugged and pointed at his computer.

  “His record’s clean,” he said. “The profiler said look for priors. Little stuff that builds up to the big stuff.”

  “Profilers don’t always get it right,” she said. “I’ll drive.”

  That last sentence was a joke between them. As a reserve officer Bosch was given no city vehicle. Lourdes had to drive if they were conducting official police business.

  On the way out of the bureau Lourdes stopped to note the time and their destination—SCV—on the board by the squad room door.

  Bosch didn’t.

  21

  The Santa Clarita Valley was a sprawling bedroom community built into the cleft of the San Gabriel and Santa Susana Mountains. It was north of the city of Los Angeles and buffered from it and its ills by those same mountain chains. It was a place that from its beginning drew families north from the city, families looking for cheaper homes, newer schools, greener parks, and less crime. Those same features were also the draw for hundreds of law officers who wanted to get away from the places they protected and served. It was said that over time Santa Clarita became the safest place in the county to live because there was a cop residing on almost every block.

  But even with that deterrent and the mountains as a wall, the ills of the city were inescapable and they eventually started to migrate through the mountain passes and into the neighborhoods and parks. Jonathan Danbury could attest to that. He told Bosch and Lourdes that his $300 TitaniumEdge knife had been stolen from the glove compartment of his car parked right in the driveway of his house on Featherstar Avenue. To add insult to injury, the theft occurred right across the street from the home of a Sheriff’s deputy.

  It was a nice neighborhood of middle- to upper-middle-class homes, with a natural drainage swale called the Haskell Canyon Wash running behind it. Danbury had answered the door in a T-shirt, board shorts, and flip-flops. He explained that he was an Internet-based travel agent who worked from home, while his wife sold real estate in the Saugus area of the Valley. He said he had forgotten all about his stolen knife until Bosch presented it in its evidence bag.

  “Never thought I’d see that again,” he said. “Wow.”

  “You reported it stolen to TitaniumEdge six years ago,” Bosch said. “Was there a report made with the Sheriff’s Department too?”

  Santa Clarita had no police department and had contracted since its inception with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

  “I called them,” Danbury said. “In fact, Tillman, the deputy who lived across the street back then, came over and took the report. But nothing ever came of it.”

  “You get a follow-up from a detective?” Bosch asked.

  “I think I remember getting a call but they weren’t too enthused about it. The detective thought it was probably just kids in the neighborhood. I thought that was pretty bold.”

  He pointed across the street to illustrate the story.

  “There was a sheriff’s car parked right there and my car is right here, twenty feet away, and these kids have the cojones to break into the car to steal my knife.”

  “They break the window, set off the car’s alarm?”

  “Nope. The detective concluded I left the car unlocked, made it sound like I was at fault. But I didn’t leave it unlocked. I never do. I think those kids had a Slim Jim or something and they got in without breaking the window.”

  “So no arrests came about as far as you know?”

  “If there were, they sure as shit didn’t tell me.”

  “Did you keep a copy of the report, sir?” Lourdes asked.

  “I did but that was a long time ago,” Danbury said. “I got three kids and run a business out of here. That’s why I’m not asking you in. The place is a perpetual mess and I would need some time to look for the report in all the debris that we call a house.”

  He laughed. Bosch didn’t. Lourdes just nodded.

  Danbury pointed at the evidence bag.

  “So I don’t see any blood on it,” Danbury said. “Please don’t tell me someone was stabbed or something.”

  “Nobody was stabbed,” Bosch said.

  “Seems like it would be something serious for you to come all the way up here.”

  “It was serious but we’re not at liberty to discuss it.”

  Bosch reached into the inside pocket of his jacket and acted like he didn’t find what he was looking for. He then patted his other pockets.

  “You don’t have a smoke I could borrow, do you, Mr. Danbury?” he asked.

  “No, don’t smoke,” Danbury said. “Sorry.”

  He pointed to the knife.

  “Well, will I get it back?” he asked. “It’s probably worth more than what I paid for it. People collect those.”

  “So I’ve heard,” Bosch said. “Detective Lourdes will give you her card. You can check with her in a few weeks about getting it back. Can I ask you something? Why’d you have the knife?”

  “Well, to be honest, I’ve got a brother-in-law who’s ex-military and he collects this sort of stuff. I thought maybe it would be good to have some protection but I think I mostly got it to impress him. I ordered it and at first I kept it in my night table. But then I realized that was stupid. It might end up hurting one of the kids. So I put it in the glove box. I actually forgot about it until I got in the car one day and saw the box was open. I checked and the knife was gone.”

  “Anything else taken?” Lourdes asked.

  “No, just the knife,” Danbury said. “That was the only thing of value in the whole car.”

  Bosch nodded, then turned and glanced back to the house across the street.

  “Where did the deputy move?” he asked.

  “I don’t know,” Danbury said. “We weren’t really friends. I think it might’ve been Simi Valley.”

  Bosch nodded. They had gleaned what they could about the knife from Danbury and he had seemingly passed the smoke test. He decided to ask a door slammer—a question that could result in the angry end of a voluntary conversation.

  “Do you mind telling us where you were yesterday around lunchtime?” he asked.

  Danbury looked at them uncomfortably for a moment and then broke into an awkward smile.
>
  “Hey, come on, what is this?” he asked. “Am I a suspect in something?”

  “It’s a routine question,” Bosch said. “The knife was recovered in a burglary yesterday about noon. It would just save us some time if you could tell us where you were. That way our boss doesn’t see it’s not in the report and send us back to bother you.”

  Danbury reached back and put his hand on the doorknob. He was close to ending things and slamming the door on them.

  “I was here all day long,” he said curtly. “Except when I took two of my kids home sick from school to the doctor around eleven. All that can be easily checked. Anything else?”

  “No, sir,” Bosch said. “Thanks for your time.”

  Lourdes handed Danbury a business card and followed Bosch off the front stoop. They heard the door close sharply behind them.

  They drove back toward the freeway and stopped at the drive-thru at a fast-food franchise so Bosch could eat something while they headed south. Lourdes said she had eaten earlier and passed. They did not speak about the interview at first. Bosch wanted to think about the conversation with Danbury before discussing it. Once they were on the 5 and Lourdes had opened the windows to blow out the smell of fast food, he brought it up.

  “So what do you think about Danbury?” he asked.

  Lourdes closed the windows.

  “I don’t know,” she said. “I was hoping he’d know who took the knife. We need to pull the Sheriff’s report, just to see if they did look at anybody.”

  “So you’re not thinking he reported it stolen as a cover?”

  “Reported it stolen and then two years later started raping people in San Fernando? I don’t think it hunts,” Lourdes said.

  “The reported rapes started two years later. As we know from last night’s callers, there are probably other rapes. They could have started earlier.”

  “True. But I don’t see Danbury. His record’s clean. He doesn’t fit the profile. Doesn’t smoke. Is married, has kids.”

  “You said profilers aren’t always right,” Bosch reminded her. “He has his lunchtimes free working from home and with the kids in school.”

  “But not yesterday. He gave us an alibi we could easily check with the doctor and the school. It’s not him, Harry.”

  Bosch nodded. He agreed but felt it was good to play devil’s advocate to avoid tunnel thinking.

  “It’s still weird when you think about it,” Lourdes said.

  “Think about what?” Bosch asked.

  “How a knife stolen up here in blue-eyed Santa Clarita ends up with a white guy wearing masks and going after Latinas in San Fernando.”

  “Yeah. We’ve talked about the racial side of this. Maybe we have to hit that harder now.”

  “Yeah, how?”

  “Go back to the LAPD. They probably keep files at Foothill and Mission on racist threats, arrests, that sort of thing. Maybe we come up with some names.”

  “Okay, I can do that.”

  “Monday. Take tomorrow off.”

  “Planning on it.”

  But he knew she had volunteered to make the contact with the LAPD divisions because of the animosity toward Bosch in some quarters of the department. She wanted to make sure she got access to LAPD files and didn’t get stiffed because somebody had a grudge against Bosch.

  “Where do you live, Bella?” he asked.

  “Chatsworth,” she said. “We have a house off Winnetka.”

  “Nice.”

  “We like it. But it’s the same everywhere. It’s all about the schools. We’ve got good schools.”

  Bosch guessed from the photos he saw pinned to the separation wall that Rodrigo was no more than three years old. Lourdes was already worried about his future.

  “I’ve got a nineteen-year-old,” he said. “A girl. She had some hard knocks in her life. Lost her mother young. But she made it through. Kids are amazing, as long as they have the push in the right direction at home.”

  Lourdes just nodded and Bosch felt like a fool for dispensing unwanted and obvious advice.

  “Rodrigo a Dodgers fan?” he asked.

  “He’s a little young but he will be,” she said.

  “Then it’s you. You said Beatriz swung the broomstick like Adrian Gonzales.”

  Gonzalez was a fan favorite, especially among the Latino fan base.

  “Yeah, we love going to Chavez Ravine and watching Gonzo.”

  Bosch nodded and changed the subject back to work.

  “So, nothing of value in the calls this morning?”

  “Nothing. You were right. I don’t think anything is going to pan out and now this guy knows we’ve connected the dots. Why stick around?”

  “I haven’t even gotten to my stack. Maybe we’ll get lucky.”

  Once back at the station Bosch finally dug into his stack of tips and phone messages. He spent the next six hours working his way through it, making calls and asking questions. As with Lourdes, he ended up with nothing to show for it except a reinforcement of his belief that humans will sink to the lowest depths if the right opportunity presents itself. They were trying to catch a serial rapist who was evolving, according to the profile, into a murderer, and people were out there using the situation to settle scores and fuck over their enemies.

  22

  Sunday was no different. He was greeted upon his arrival with a fresh batch of call-in tips. These he went through quickly in his cubicle, first separating out the Spanish-only calls and putting them on Lourdes’s desk for her to handle the following day. He then responded to the remaining tips with calls when necessary and the trash can when warranted. By noon he had completed the task and had only one potentially viable lead to show for the effort.

  The lead came from an anonymous female caller who reported seeing a man wearing a mask running down Seventh Street toward Maclay shortly after 12 p.m. Friday. She refused to give her name and had called in on a cell phone with a blocked number. She told the operator that she had been driving west on Seventh when she saw the man in the mask. He was running east on the opposite side of the street and stopped at one point to try the door handles on three cars parked along Seventh. When he was unable to open these cars he continued running toward Maclay. The caller said she lost sight of the man after she passed by him.

  Bosch was intrigued by the tip because the timing of the sighting coincided with the attempted assault on Beatriz Sahagun just a few blocks away. What pushed the tip even further toward legitimacy was that the caller described the mask worn by the runner as black with a green-and-red design. This matched Sahagun’s description of the mask worn by her would-be rapist, and these descriptors had not been released publicly through the media.

  What troubled Bosch about the tip was why the suspect would have kept the mask on while fleeing from Sahagun’s house. A man running while wearing a mask would draw far more attention than just a man running. Harry thought that maybe the man was still disoriented after being struck by Sahagun with the broomstick. Another reason could be that he was known to people in that neighborhood and wanted to shield his identity.

  The caller said nothing about whether the man was wearing gloves but Bosch assumed that if he kept the mask on, he had also kept his gloves on.

  Bosch got up from his desk chair and started pacing in the tiny detective bureau as he considered the tip and what it could mean. The scenario as reported by the anonymous caller suggested that the Screen Cutter was trying to find an unlocked car that he could steal in order to make his getaway. This suggested that he did not have a getaway vehicle or the one he did have had for some unknown reason become unavailable to him. This idea intrigued Bosch the most. The previous assaults credited to the Screen Cutter appeared to be carefully planned and choreographed. Escape is always a critical part of any plan. What happened to the getaway car? Was there an accomplice who panicked and took off? Or was there another reason for the escape on foot?

  The second issue was the mask. The caller said the suspect was running t
oward Maclay, a commercial street lined with small shops and mom-and-pop-style restaurants. At noon on Friday motorists and pedestrians would be on Maclay and the appearance of a man wearing a Mexican wrestling mask would be noticed by many. And yet this was the only tip so far that mentioned the running man. This told Bosch that the Screen Cutter pulled the mask off just as he got to the corner and either turned onto Maclay or crossed it.

  Bosch knew the answers to his questions wouldn’t be found while pacing in the detective bureau. He went back to his desk and grabbed his keys and sunglasses off the desk.

  As he exited the bureau, he almost ran into Captain Trevino, who was in the hallway.

  “Hey, Cap.”

  “Harry, where are you going?”

  “Going to grab lunch.”

  Bosch kept going. It might have been his intention to get lunch while he was out but he wasn’t interested in sharing his real destination with Trevino. If it went from anonymous tip to legitimate lead he would inform the boss. He picked up speed so he would be to the side door of the station before Trevino checked the attendance board in the bureau and saw that Bosch had once again failed to sign in or out.

  It took him three minutes to drive to the corner of Maclay and Seventh. Bosch parked his rented Cherokee and got out. He stood on the corner and looked around. It was an intersection of commercial and residential zones. Maclay was lined with small businesses, shops, and restaurants. Seventh was lined with small, gated properties that were supposed to be single-family homes. But Bosch knew that many of those homes were shared by multiple families, and even more people lived in illegally converted garages.

  He spotted a trash can near the corner and got an idea. If the Screen Cutter pulled off his mask and gloves when he got to Maclay, would he keep them? Would he carry them in his hands or stuff them into his pockets? Or would he dump them? It was known that he had access to and had used other masks in his crimes. Dumping the wrestling mask and gloves would have been the smart move once he was on the busy commercial street.

  Bosch went to the trash can and lifted the top off. It had been little more than forty-eight hours since the attempted assault on Beatriz Sahagun. Bosch doubted the city had emptied the can in that time and he was right. It had been a busy weekend on Maclay and the trash can was nearly full. Bosch took a pair of latex gloves out of his jacket pocket and then removed the jacket and hung it over the back of a nearby bus bench. He then put on the gloves, rolled up his sleeves, and went to work.

 

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