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The Murder Book Page 5


  "But if she was reported missing, getting the info tonight would give us a head start—"

  "On what? This is no race, boy-o. If our bad boy's out of town, he's long gone, anyway. If not, a few hours won't make a damn bit of difference."

  "Still, her parents have got to be worried—"

  "Fine, amigo," said Schwinn. "Be a social worker. I'm going home."

  No anger, just that know-it-all smugness.

  "Want me to head back to the station?" said Milo.

  "Yeah, yeah. No, forget that. Pull over— now, boy-o. Over there, yeah yeah yeah stop next to that bus bench."

  The bench was a few yards up, on the north side of Temple. Milo was in the left-hand lane and had to turn sharply not to overshoot. He edged to the curb, looked around to see what had changed Schwinn's mind.

  Dark, empty block, no one around— no, there was someone. A figure emerging from the shadows. Walking west. Walking quickly.

  "A source?" said Milo, as the shape took form. Female form.

  Schwinn tightened his tie knot. "Stay put and keep the engine going." He got out of the car, quickly, got to the sidewalk just in time to meet the woman. Her arrival was heralded by spike heels snapping on the pavement.

  A tall woman— black, Milo saw, as she shifted into the streetlight. Tall and busty. Maybe forty. Wearing a blue leather mini and a baby blue halter top. Jumbo pile of henna-colored waves atop her head, what looked to be ten pounds of hair.

  Schwinn, standing facing her, looking even skinnier than usual. Legs slightly spread. Smiling.

  The woman smiled back. Offered both cheeks to Schwinn. One of those Italian movie greetings.

  A few moments of conversation, too low for Milo to make out, then both of them got in the backseat of the unmarked.

  "This is Tonya," said Schwinn. "She's a good pal of the department. Tonya, meet my brand-new partner, Milo. He's got a master's degree."

  "Ooh," said Tonya. "Are you masterful, honey?"

  "Nice to meet you, ma'am."

  Tonya laughed.

  "Start driving," said Schwinn.

  "Master's degree," said Tonya, as they pulled away.

  At Fifth Street, Schwinn said, "Turn left. Drive into the alley behind those buildings."

  "Masturbator's degree?" said Tonya.

  "Speaking of which," said Schwinn. "My darling dear."

  "Ooh, I love when you talk that way, Mr. S."

  Milo reduced his speed.

  Schwinn said, "Don't do that, just drive regular— turn again and make a right— go east. Alameda, where the factories are."

  "Industrial revolution," said Tonya, and Milo heard something else: the rustle of clothing, the sprick of a zipper undone. He hazarded one look in the rearview, saw Schwinn's head, resting against the back of the seat. Eyes closed. Peaceful smile. Ten pounds of henna bobbing.

  A moment later: "Oh, yes, Miss T. I missed you, did you know that?"

  "Did you, baby? Aw, you're just saying that."

  "Oh, no, it's true."

  "Is it, baby?"

  "You bet. Miss me, too?"

  "You know I do, Mr. S."

  "Every day, Miss T?"

  "Every day, Mr. S.— c'mon, baby, move a little, help me with this."

  "Happy to help," said Schwinn. "Protect and serve."

  Milo forced his eyes straight ahead.

  No sound in the car but heavy breathing.

  "Yeah, yeah," Schwinn was saying now. His voice weak. Milo thought: This is what it takes to knock off the asshole's smugness.

  "Oh yeah, just like that, my darling . . . dear. Oh, yes, you're . . . a . . . specialist. A . . . scientist, yes, yes."

  CHAPTER 7

  Schwinn told Milo to drop Tonya off on Eighth near Witmer, down the block from the Ranch Depot Steak House.

  "Get yourself a hunk of beef, darling." Slipping her some bills. "Get yourself a lovely T-bone with one of those giant baked potatoes."

  "Mr. S.," came the protest. "I can't go in there dressed like this, they won't serve me."

  "With this they will." Another handful of paper pressed into her hand. "You show this to Calvin up front, tell him I sent you— you have any problem, you let me know."

  "You're sure?"

  "You know I am."

  The rear door opened, and Tonya got out. The smell of sex hung in the car. Now the night filtered in, cool, fossil-fuel bitter.

  "Thank you, Mr. S." She extended her hand. Schwinn held on to it.

  "One more thing, darling. Hear of any rough johns working the Temple-Beaudry area?"

  "How rough?"

  "Ropes, knives, cigarette burns."

  "Ooh," said the hooker, with pain in her voice. "No, Mr. S., there's always lowlife, but I heard nothing like that."

  Pecks on cheeks. Tonya clicked her way toward the restaurant, and Schwinn got back in front. "Back to the station, boy-o."

  Closing his eyes. Self-satisfied. At Olive Street, he said: "That's a very intelligent nigger, boy-o. Given the opportunity a free, white woman woulda had, she woulda made something of herself. What's that about?"

  "What do you mean?"

  "The way we treat niggers. Make sense to you?"

  "No," said Milo. Thinking: What the hell is this lunatic about?

  Then: Why hadn't Schwinn offered the hooker to him?

  Because Schwinn and Tonya had something special? Or because he knew?

  "What it says," offered Schwinn. "The way we treat niggers, is that sometimes smart doesn't count."

  Milo dropped him off at the Central Division parking lot, watched him get into his Ford Fairlane and drive off to Simi Valley, to the wife who liked books.

  Alone, at last.

  For the first time since the Beaudry call, he was breathing normally.

  He entered the station, climbed the stairs, hurried to the scarred metal desk they'd shoved into a corner of the Homicide room for him. The next three hours were spent phoning Missing Persons bureaus at every station and when that didn't pay off, he extended the search to various sheriff's substations and departments of neighboring cities. Every office kept its own files, no one coordinated, each folder had to be pulled by hand, and MP skeleton crews were reluctant to extend themselves, even on a 187. Even when he pressed, emphasized the whodunit aspect, the ugliness, he got resistance. Finally, he hit upon something that pried cooperation and curses on the other end: the likelihood of news coverage. Cops were afraid of bad press. By 3 A.M., he'd come up with seven white girls in the right age range.

  So what did he do, now? Get on the horn and wake up worried parents?

  Pardon me, Mrs. Jones, but did your daughter Amy ever show up? Because we've still got her listing as missing and are wondering if a sackful of tissue and viscera cooling off in a coroner's drawer just might be her?

  The only way to do it was preliminary phone contact followed by face-to-face interviews. Tomorrow, at a decent hour. Unless Schwinn had other ideas. Something else to correct him about.

  He transcribed all the data from his pad onto report sheets, filled out the right forms, redrew the outline of the girl's body, summarized the MP calls, created a neat little pile of effort. Striding across the room to a bank of file cabinets, he opened a top drawer and pulled out one of several blue binders stored in a loose heap. Recycled binders: When cases were closed, the pages were removed and stapled, placed in a manila folder, and shipped over to the evidence room at Parker Center.

  This particular blue book had seen better times: frayed around the edges with a brown stain on the front cover vaguely reminiscent of a wilting rose— some D's greasy lunch. Milo affixed a stickummed label to the cover.

  Wrote nothing. Nothing to write.

  He sat there thinking about the mutilated girl. Wondered what her name was and couldn't bring himself to substitute Jane Doe.

  First thing tomorrow, he'd check out those seven girls, maybe get lucky and end up with a name.

  A title for a brand-new murder book.

  Bad
dreams kept him up all night, and he was back at his desk by 6:45 A.M., the only detective in the room, which was just fine; he didn't even mind getting the coffee going.

  By 7:20, he was calling families. MP number one was Sarah Jane Causlett, female cauc, eighteen, five-six, 121, last seen in Hollywood, buying dinner at the Oki-burger at Hollywood and Selma.

  Ring, ring ring. "Mrs. Causlett? Good morning, hope I'm not calling too early . . ."

  By 9 A.M., he was finished. Three of the seven girls had returned home, and two others weren't missing at all, just players in divorce dramas who'd escaped to be with noncustodial parents. That left two sets of distraught parents, Mr. and Mrs. Estes in Mar Vista, Mr. and Mrs. Jacobs in Mid-City. Lots of anxiety, Milo withheld facts, steeled himself for the face-to-face.

  By 9:30 a few detectives had arrived, but not Schwinn, so Milo placed a scrawled note on Schwinn's desk, left the station.

  By 1 P.M., he was back where he started. A recent picture of Misty Estes showed her to be substantially obese with short curly hair. West L.A. Missing Persons had misrecorded her stats: 107 pounds instead of 187. Oops, sorry. Milo left the tearful mother and hypertensive father standing in the doorway of their GI Bill bungalow.

  Jessica Jacobs was approximately the right size, but definitely not the girl on Beaudry: She had the lightest of blue eyes, and the victim's had been deep brown. Another clerical screwup, no one bothering to note eye color in the Wilshire Division MP file.

  He left the Jacobs house sweating and tired, found a pay phone outside a liquor store at Third and Wilton, got Schwinn on the line, and gave a lack-of-progress report.

  "Morning boy-o," said Schwinn. "Haul yourself over here, there might be something."

  "What?"

  "Come on back."

  When he got to the Homicide room, half the desks were full, and Schwinn was balancing on two legs of his chair, wearing a nice-looking navy suit, shiny white-on-white shirt, gold tie, gold tie tack shaped like a tiny fist. Leaning back precariously as he chomped a burrito the size of a newborn baby.

  "Welcome home, prodigious son."

  "Yeah."

  "You look like shit."

  "Thanks."

  "Don't mention it." Schwinn gave one of his corkscrew smiles. "So you learned about our excellent record-keeping. Cops are the worst, boy-o. Hate to write and always make a mess out of it. We're talking barely literate."

  Milo wondered about the extent of Schwinn's own education. The topic had never come up. The whole time they'd worked together, Schwinn had parceled out very few personal details.

  "Clerical screwups are the fucking rule, boy-o. MP files are the worst, because MP knows it's a penny ante outfit, most of the time the kid comes home, no one bothers to let them know."

  "File it, forget it," said Milo, hoping agreement would shut him up.

  "File it, fuck it. That's why I was in no big hurry to chase MP."

  "You know best," said Milo.

  Schwinn's eyes got hard. Milo said, "So what's interesting?"

  "Maybe interesting," Schwinn corrected. "A source of mine picked up some rumors. Party on the Westside two days before the murder. Friday night, upper Stone Canyon— Bel Air."

  "Rich kids."

  "Filthy rich kids, probably using Daddy and Mommy's house. My source says there were kids from all over showing up, getting stoned, making noise. The source also knows a guy, has a daughter, went out with her friends, spent some time at the party, and never came home."

  Maybe interesting.

  Schwinn grinned and bit off a wad of burrito. Milo had figured the guy for a late-sleeping pension-sniffing goldbrick and turned out the sonofabitch had been working overtime, doing a solo act, and producing. The two of them were partners in name, only.

  He said, "The father didn't report it to MP?"

  Schwinn shrugged. "The father's a little bit . . . marginal."

  "Lowlife?"

  "Marginal," Schwinn repeated. Irritated, as if Milo was a poor student, kept getting it wrong. "Also, the girl's done this before— goes out partying, doesn't come home for a few days."

  "If the girl's done it before, why would this be different?"

  "Maybe it's not. But the girl fits stat-wise: sixteen, around five-seven, skinny, with dark hair, brown eyes, nice tight little body."

  An appreciative tone had crept into Schwinn's voice. Milo pictured him with the source— some street letch, the source laying it on lasciviously. Hookers, pimps, perverts, Schwinn probably had a whole stable of lowlifes he could count on for info. And Milo had a master's degree . . .

  "She's supposed to be cute," Schwinn went on. "No virgin, a wild kid. Also, at least one time before, she got herself in trouble. Hitchhiking on Sunset, got picked up by some scrote who raped her, tied her up, left her in an alley downtown. A juicehead found her, lucky for her he was just a bum, not a perve fixing to get himself some sloppy seconds. The girl never reported it officially, just told a friend, and the story made the rounds on the street."

  "Sixteen years old, tied and raped and she doesn't report it?"

  "Like I said, no virgin." Schwinn's hatchet jaw pulsed, and his Okie squint aimed at the ceiling. Milo knew he was holding back something.

  "Is the source reliable?"

  "Usually."

  "Who?"

  Schwinn's headshake was peevish. "Let's concentrate on the main thing: We got a girl who fits our vic's stats."

  "Sixteen," said Milo, bothered.

  Schwinn shrugged. "From what I've read— psychology articles— the human rope gets kinked up pretty early." He leaned back and took another big bite of burrito, wiped salsa verde from his mouth with the back of his hand, then gave the hand a lick. "You think that's true, boy-o? Think maybe she didn't report it cause she liked it?"

  Milo covered his anger with a shrug of his own. "So what's next? Talk to the father?"

  Schwinn righted his chair, swabbed his chin, this time with a paper napkin, stood abruptly, and walked out of the room, leaving Milo to follow.

  Partners.

  Outside, near the unmarked, Schwinn turned to him, smiling. "So tell me, how'd you sleep last night?"

  Schwinn recited the address on Edgemont, and Milo started up the car.

  "Hollywood, boy-o. A real-life Hollywood girl."

  Over the course of the twenty-minute ride, he laid out a few more details for Milo: The girl's name was Janie Ingalls. A sophomore at Hollywood High, living with her father in a third-floor walk-up in a long-faded neighborhood, just north of Santa Monica Boulevard. Bowie Ingalls was a drunk who might or might not be home. Society was going to hell in a handbasket; even white folk were living like pigs.

  The building was a clumsy pink thing with undersized windows and lumpy stucco. Twelve units was Milo's guess: four flats to a floor, probably divided by a narrow central corridor.

  He parked, but Schwinn made no attempt to get out, so the two of them just sat there, the engine running.

  "Turn it off," said Schwinn.

  Milo twisted the key and listened to street sounds. Distant traffic from Santa Monica, a few bird trills, someone unseen playing a power mower. The street was poorly kept, litter sludging the gutters. He said, "Besides being a juicehead, how's the father marginal?"

  "One of those walking-around guys," said Schwinn. "Name of Bowie Ingalls, does a little of this, little of that. Rumor has it he ran slips for a nigger bookie downtown— how's that for a white man's career? A few years ago, he was working as a messenger at Paramount Studios, telling people he was in the movie biz. He plays the horses, has a chicken-shit sheet, mostly drunk and disorderly, unpaid traffic tickets. Two years ago he got pulled in for receiving stolen property but never got charged. Small-time, all around."

  Details. Schwinn had found the time to pull Bowie Ingalls's record.

  "Guy like that, and he's raising a kid," said Milo.

  "Yeah, it's a cruel world, isn't it? Janie's mother was a stripper and a hype, ran off with some hippie musician
when the kid was a baby, overdosed in Frisco."

  "Sounds like you've learned a lot."

  "That what you think?" Schwinn's voice got flinty, and his eyes were hard, again. Figuring Milo was being sarcastic? Milo wasn't sure he hadn't meant to be sarcastic.