“He never was. Even gay issues didn’t mobilize him.” He stretched his neck and winced. “His parents are Holocaust survivors.”
After all these years I knew little about Rick. About Milo’s life when he closed the door of his little house in West Hollywood.
He said, “They were always getting after him about it.”
“The Holocaust?”
He nodded. “They wanted him to be more aware of being Jewish. There was always baggage, the gay thing complicated it. When his folks found out, they freaked out, the Holocaust got all mixed up in it. His mother crying like someone had died. His father yelling at him and telling him he was stupid because now the Nazis would have
He drank more Scotch, swirled it around like mouthwash. “He’s an only child, it hasn’t been easy. What made it better was the passage of time and his parents getting older. Eventually, he and his old man could talk about it.”
Something Milo had never experienced before his own father died.
“Then came September 11, and Rick changed,” he said. “He took it personally. The fact that Arabs were behind it, the revisionist theories blaming the Jews. All the anti-Semitic swill coming out of Saudi Arabia and Egypt. All of a sudden, Rick got more interested in being Jewish, started reading up on Jewish history, Israel. Started giving money to Zionist causes, subscribing to magazines.”
“That you happened to pick up.”
“The Issa Qumdis thing caught my eye because the basic point was that the guy was a scamster but that it hadn’t impeded his academic career. That always fascinates me. How little reality has to do with the way life plays out- he
“Lots of hatred in academia,” I said.
“You’ve seen that, personally?”
“It’s usually more subtle, but you’d be amazed at what goes on at faculty parties when the scholarly set thinks no one’s listening.”
“Wonder if Issa Qumdis spouts off that way at Harvard. Don’t colleges have hate speech regulations?”
“The rules are enforced selectively.”
“Whose ox is being gored… yeah, it’s a sweet world. Enough about that, time to focus on the evil Dr. Larsen. Learn anything about any local scam?”
“Not yet. I asked Olivia to look into it. Gave her the Sentries program as a lead because I came across it surfing.”
“Sentries for Justice… Olivia’s as good as it gets… By the way, Franco Gull finally broke routine and went to a health club. Pumped iron, ignored the ladies, went home. So maybe he knows about the scam and what the stakes are. The guy tends to get emotional. Maybe he can be wedged and cracked open. Make sense?”
“You’d be showing your hand.”
“Yeah, but if I don’t make any other progress soon, what choice do I have?” He rubbed his face. “Okay, I’ll wait till you hear from Olivia, but eventually I’m gonna have to make a decision-” His cell phone beeped, he slapped it against his ear. “Sturgis… when? Really. Okay, give me the number.”
His pad and pen were still out and he scrawled hastily, clicked the phone shut with a strange smile on his face. “Well, well, well.”
“Who was that?”
“Detective Binchy. Obedient lad that he is, he is at his desk wrapping up his paperwork before he sets out for another look-see on Gull. A call just came in for me, and he took it. Sonny Koppel, wanting to talk. He’s
“That include me?”
“Sure,” he said. “I’m including you.”
CHAPTER 35
The coffee shop was called Gene’s, and it was one of the few bright spots on a dark, quiet block. South side of Pico, just a few yards from the traffic on La Cienega. A short stroll from the eastern border of Milo’s district.
It was ten-forty when we got there, and the place was fully lit. Long, skinny room with grubby vinyl floors, a Formica counter, and seven matching tables bleached by high wattage. A sign in front said OPEN TO MIDNIGHT. Inside, two young guys in oversized eyeglasses whispered conspiratorially over coffee, pie, and the bound screenplay placed equidistant between them. An old woman gummed an egg salad sandwich. Behind her, a muscular man in gray work clothes read old news in the morning paper and worked on a hamburger.
Shrouded in a limp, gray raincoat, Sonny Koppel sat at the counter forking bacon and eggs into his mouth. The counterman ignored Koppel, as he scrubbed a deep fryer. When we approached, he turned briefly then returned to his chore.
Koppel wiped his mouth, got off his stool, and carried his plate, his napkin, and his utensils to a front table. Near the door but away from the other diners. Under his raincoat, he wore mocha brown sweats with white piping. Loosely laced tennis shoes covered smallish, wide feet. He’d shaved recently, had nicked himself several times.
His coffee cup remained behind, and Milo brought it over to the table. The counterman turned, and said, “Anything for you guys?”
“No, thanks.”
Koppel was still on his feet when Milo brought the coffee cup over.
“Thanks,” he said. “One sec.” Returning to the counter, he snagged ketchup and Tabasco sauce. Finally, he pulled out a chair, sat, wiped his lips. Bounced a fork tine against the rim of his plate and smiled at his plate. “Breakfast food. I like it for dinner.”
“To each his own,” said Milo. “What can we do for you?”
“That photograph- of that girl. Do you still have it with you?”
Milo reached into his jacket pocket, produced the death shot, and handed it to Koppel.
Koppel studied it and nodded. “When you first showed it to me, there was something about it. But I couldn’t place it, really had nothing I could tell you, so I said I’d never seen her. I really wasn’t sure I had.” He licked his lips. “But it stuck in my mind.”
“Now you think you know her,” said Milo.
“I can’t be certain,” said Koppel. “If it is her, I only saw her a couple of times- literally. Two times.” He glanced at the photo again. “The way she is here, it’s hard to say…”
“Death’ll do that to you.”
Koppel swallowed air. Forked a strip of bacon, lost it midair, and watched it land just shy of his plate. He picked it up between his fingers, set it back next to the mound of eggs, kissed the grease on his fingertips.
“Where do you think you might’ve seen her, Mr. Koppel?” said Milo.
“She might be a girl I saw at Jerry Quick’s office. Hanging around with Jerry’s secretary.”
“Jerry’s secretary…”
“Angie Paul.”
“You know Angie personally?”
“I know her from coming over to talk to Jerry about the rent.” Koppel scratched the side of his nose. “You’re interested in her, as well? She always made me wonder.”
“About what?”
“She didn’t seem to do much. She wasn’t who I’d pick as a secretary. Then again, she probably didn’t have to make much of an impression.”
“Why’s that?”
“Not much traffic at Jerry’s office. I’ve never seen anyone there but the two of them.”