“Catch them?”
“No. There's also a guy- cop named Decker- in the West Valley who's a religious Jew, actually uses them, himself. I know because someone saw him at a police retreat, getting up early to pray, all wrapped up. His wife got him into religion or something like that. They call him the Rabbi. I helped him on a case couple of years ago- Israeli connections, as a matter of fact. Maybe I should give him a call, see if he knows Carmeli, or this joker.”
“Another murder case?” I said.
“Missing family case that turned into murder. I churned some paper for him, no big deal. He was decent, but I don't trust him.”
“Why not?”
“He got promoted to lieutenant.”
I laughed.
He opened the closet. No clothes on the rod. On the shelf above it were several small, crisp-looking brown cardboard boxes and three oblong black canvas cases.
He hefted the first case, opened it, and slid out something black and metallic.
“Uzi barrel, the rest is in here.” Sticking his hand into the case, he drew out submachine-gun components, inspected them, put them back. The other two cases contained a rifle with a telescopic sight and a double-barreled shotgun, both polished to a gleam.
The crisp cardboard boxes- ten of them- held ammunition.
“Ready for the battle,” said Milo. “He left us here to show us he's got nothing to hide, but that's bullshit, he's got to have handguns and other stuff he's not showing us.”
Sharavi came back with a mug in his good hand.
“Where's the nine-millimeter?” said Milo. “And whatever other small stuff you're hiding.”
“I'm not hiding anything,” said Sharavi. “Everything in its proper place.”
“Where?”
“Where would you keep your small arms? In the kitchen and the bedroom. Go see for yourself.”
“That's okay.” Milo sauntered to the closet. “Looks like you're ready for the big PLO assault. Sure you're not thinking of doing some hunting?”
“No,” said Sharavi. “I don't hunt.” He smiled. “Though I've been known to fish.”
“What else is in your arsenal?”
“Meaning my grenades, rocket launcher, and nuclear bomb?”
“No, your heavy stuff.”
“Sorry to disappoint you,” said Sharavi. “This is it.” He sipped, lowered the cup. “Except for this.”
Removing a black disc the size of an M & M from his pocket, he handed it to Milo, who turned it over.
“This is what I attached to your couch and tables, Dr. Delaware.”
“Never seen one this small,” said Milo. “Cute. Japanese?”
“Israeli. The ones I installed at Dr. Delaware's are channeled to the phone on the left. The other phone's a conventional line and also connects to the fax. I taped your conversations, transcribed them, destroyed the tapes, gave the transcripts to Carmeli.”
“Covering your trail?”
“Obviously not well enough.” Sharavi shook his head. “Using the van twice in one day was stupid. Must be jet lag.”
“How long have you been here?”
“In L.A., five days. A month in New York.”
“Security work.”
“They called me over because of the Trade Center bombing verdicts. We knew there'd be a conviction, expected some sort of reprisals. I ended up watching some people in Brooklyn. People I knew from the West Bank.”
“They do anything?”
“Not yet. I educated our New York staff, was about to fly home, when Zev's call came.”
“Do you know him from Israel?” I said.
“I know his older brother. He's in the police. Deputy commander. The family's prominent.”
“Superintendent,” said Milo. “What's the equivalent, here?”
“Probably a captain, but there's no real equivalent. It's a small pond, we're all minnows.”
“How humble.”
“No,” said Sharavi. “Religious. It accomplishes the same thing.”
“So Carmeli calls you and you can't go back- how old are your kids?”
“My daughter's eighteen, just started the Army. I have two younger sons.” The golden eyes squeezed shut for a moment.
“Family man,” said Milo.
“Whatever that means.”
“Maybe that gives you insights I don't have.”
“Because you're gay? You don't believe that and neither do I. Policemen are like anyone else: a few genuine idiots at the bottom, equally few high achievers, the mediocre majority.”
“You a high achiever?”
“That's not for me to say.”
“Any more ideas about this case?”
“My instincts tell me the defective angle should be looked into, as well as the racial angle because all three victims were non-Anglo. But maybe that's because my case had racial aspects. I need to make sure my limited experience doesn't narrow my perspective.”
“Maybe it's your destiny to deal with racist killers,” said Milo. “Your karma, or whatever equivalent you've got in your religion.”
“This ain't Kansas, Superintendent.”
Sharavi smiled. “How about Daniel?”
“Okay. I know what mazal tov is, Daniel. Good luck.”
“Yes, but mazal's not really luck,” said Sharavi. “It's fate- like karma. Rooted in astrology. A zodiac sign is a mazal. Yemenite Jews have a strong astrological tradition. Not that I believe in any of that. To me it boils down to hard work and what God wants you to do.”
“God wants you on the case?”
Sharavi shrugged. “I'm here.”
“Must be nice to have faith,” said Milo.
Sharavi wheeled the chair away from the desk, raised his arm, and let the bad hand flop on the headrest. “One way or the other I have to work the Carmeli case, Milo. Will you let me do it with you rather than at cross- purposes?”
“Hey,” said Milo, “far be it from me to argue with God.”
26
Milo and I stayed at Sharavi's house until after three, wearily establishing a division of labor:
Milo would drive to Newton Division, photograph Raymond Ortiz's shoes, and record the evidence in the growing case file. Then, back on the phone, to search for additional DVLL crimes.
Sharavi would use his computers to scan every available data bank for the same.
“Something else,” he said. “I could contact experts on crime against the handicapped. All over the world.”