you to park your car in the Parker Center garage, then turn yourself in to the Homicide Division duty officer. Send her home in a cab. I want this all to happen in less than three hours. Are we straight on this, Sergeant?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Put the sheriff back on.'
Shane motioned to the sheriff, who took the phone, listened for a minute, then nodded. 'No problem,' he said, and hung up.
Fifteen minutes later Shane and Barbara were back in the parking lot behind the sheriff's station. Barbara rode in the front seat as one of the arresting deputies drove them back to the Acura and let them out.
'Good luck solving your John Doe murder,' Shane said pleasantly.
'Want some advice from a fellow badge carrier?' the deputy said.
'You bet.' Shane smiled, trying to be as nonconfrontational as possible.
'Don't ever come back up here.'
'Okay, sounds reasonable.' Shane put out his hand, but the cop just looked at it.
'All right, then. Good deal,' Shane said, pulling his hand back.
He and Barbara got into the Acura and drove away, staying five miles below the speed limit. Shane kept his eyes on the rear-view mirror. The squad car was going to follow him all the way out of Arrowhead. He drove slowly down the mountain, until the black-and-white finally turned off and headed back toward town.
Shane pulled over and parked. He looked at his watch.
'What're you doing?' she asked.
'Giving this guy fifteen minutes to forget about us.'
'Only fifteen minutes?'
'Small-town cops have short attention spans,' he answered, then added, 'I hope.' They sat and listened to the motor cool.
'What is it?' Barbara said, noticing a frown on Shane's face.
'Those guys in the speedboat? I was thinking, how did they know we were in the house?' Barbara shrugged. 'I think the place is bugged. They heard us searching, then they came back, maybe drifted back to the dock, then jumped us.'
Fifteen minutes later Shane started the Acura and turned around. This time he constructed a cover story.
'Here's the deal. We came back to get gas. We only have half a tank.' He pointed to the gauge, and she nodded.
He drove quickly through town, made remembered turns, then found himself back on Lake View Drive. He drove up to the bushy hedge, jumped out, and retrieved the videotape box, camera, and answering machine. He locked them in the trunk, then got back behind the wheel and drove quickly out of the mountains, returning to L. A.
Chapter 20
Susan and I can't come to the phone right now, but leave your name and number and, as soon as we can, we'll return your call.' BEEP. Ray's voice sounded happy and unthreatening. Then there was another beep. 'Ray, it's Calvin. Where the fuck are you, man? You gotta call me now.' BEEP. Then: 'Ray, it's Calvin again. The powers that be are asking questions. Don't fuck with love, man.' BEEP. 'Ray, it's Don and Lee. We're on for Saturday night. The Web after dark. Bring the jerseys.' BEEP. 'Ray, it's Burl. Call the special number.' Then there were two hang-ups without messages.
Shane and Barbara were listening to the tape in his kitchen. He turned it off after the last message played.
'Burl that's Chief Burleigh Brewer… He knows about the house in Arrowhead. Shit,' Shane growled. 'Ray was the mayor's driver; I guess it makes sense that Brewer would be close to what Ray was doing.' Shane was looking down at the answering-machine tape.
'Who are all these other people, and who the hell is Susan?' Barbara asked angrily.
'I don't know… Don, Lee, and Calvin. I never heard of them, either.' He thought for a minute. 'There were two cops who braced me in the Parker Center garage at six A. M. the morning I shot Ray. I think one of them was named D. Drucker maybe that's Don. The other was a Hawaiian guy named Kono. Maybe he's Lee or Calvin. I don't know. 'Don't fuck with love.' And 'the Web'… 'Bring the jerseys'… What's all that?' he said as they traded blank stares.
They stood over the kitchen counter, where the answering machine was plugged in. Finally, Shane changed the subject. 'Barbara, look… you gotta go home. I'll drive you down to where your car is parked.'
'I'm afraid to go home. I can't take any more of those calls.'
'There's a good hotel a few miles south of here, in Marina del Rey. I can't remember the name, but you can't miss it. It's on Admiralty Way. Why don't you go check in there?'
'I get the feeling you're throwing me out.'
'I'm not throwing you out. I've got Chooch in the guest room. Longboard is sawing z's on the sofa. It's like a men's dorm around here. Just check into the hotel. I'll talk to you in the morning.'
She turned her face up and kissed him on the mouth. When he didn't fully respond, she pulled back and looked at him carefully. 'Are you sending me a message, friend?' she asked with an edge in her voice.
'Barbara, let's not confuse this more than it is. We need to focus on what's going on who's behind this.'
'If you promise that you'll let us happen again, once it's over.'
'Of course I promise,' he said, forcing it. 'You know how much I want that.' His words hung in the kitchen, bright ancj empty, like a broken pinata.
'What're you going to do?' she finally asked.
'I'm gonna get this tape analyzed by the Electronics Section at SIS.'
'You don't need a voice print. It's Ray's voice, believe me. I recognize it.'
'I know it's Ray. I'm more interested in seeing what else is on here. Answering-machine tapes are used, erased, and rerecorded on. Sometimes there are old messages hiding there. I'm gonna see what the ESIS can pull off the erased portions,' Shane said, referring to the Electronics Scientific Investigation Section.
'Oh,' she said softly. Then she squeezed his hand for luck, and they headed out the back door of the house.
He drove her to her red Mustang, parked a block away. She got out of the Acura and unlocked her car door, then leaned down into his open passenger window and smiled at him sadly. 'Why do I get the feeling this is over?'
'It's your imagination, Barbara. It's not over. It's on hold.'
She kissed her fingertips and gently put them on his cheek. 'Night,' she said sadly, then got into the red Mustang and drove away.
???
Shane drove back to his house and locked up. He decided not to wake Longboard, who was snoring loudly on the sofa. He turned off the light and moved into his bedroom, stripped off his clothes, and wearing only his Jockey shorts, dropped heavily onto his bed. His head felt like a forty-pound medicine ball, worn, seamed, full of cotton and lead. He looked up at the ceiling, closed his eyes, and fought a wave of intense self-pity: Why can't I catch a fucking break?
'When did you get home?' Chooch's voice sounded suddenly, pulling him up from useless thoughts. He opened his eyes and saw the teenager standing in the doorway, wearing a Lakers shirt and baggy shorts.
'I thought you were asleep,' Shane said.
'I woke up.'
'Well, go back to sleep. You've got school tomorrow.'
Chooch didn't move; he had an expression that seemed both frightened and sad.