He was in the same cracked vinyl booth in the back, nursing a Coke grudgingly supplied by the same greasy-coated Mexican waiter. 'Das all chu gonna haf?' the man said.

'Yep,' Shane said. 'Working.' The waiter left. Shane kept a wary eye on the barricaded cockroach and while 'Malaguena' played through ruptured speakers, he was thinking about Chooch, whom he had left ten minutes earlier at the Spring Summer Apartments with the TV blaring. Shane had convinced Long-board to stop by the Venice house, get Chooch's book bag with his homework assignments, take it to the apartment on Third, and stay with the boy until Shane got back. In return for this service, Shane had given up his Lakers-Trailblazers tickets for the weekend. He made a mental note to call by six to make sure Longboard had gotten there okay.

Surprisingly, with trouble and chaos swirling around his own life, Shane found himself worrying about Chooch's back homework assignments as well as his emotional well-being. Something about this newly found concern for someone else's future seemed to settle his own emotions in a way he couldn't understand. Underneath the boy's grumbling and bitching about the extra supervision, Shane suspected that he appreciated the concern. Earlier in the hectic day, when Shane had turned around unexpectedly and caught Chooch staring at him, the expression on his face was one of wonder. It said more than any words could convey.

Perhaps Shane could work out something more permanent with Sandy. She had her hands full right now with the DEA, but after that, she'd change teams and be on to some other predicate felon. He, on the other hand, was in the checkout line. If he didn't end up in prison or the grave, he was certainly through being a cop. Once he was off the force, he could devote more time to Chooch, stop farming him out to Longboard. Chooch didn't know who his father was, and although Shane couldn't fill that role, he sure as hell could be a big brother. Then he looked up, and she was coming through the door.

Alexa stood backlit in the late-afternoon sunshine, holding her briefcase under her arm, the shoulder strap tucked inside. She let her eyes adjust to the cavelike darkness of the windowless bar-restaurant. Finally she spotted him and moved across the room, her hips swaying seductively with the motion.

She slid in and smiled wanly at him. 'Our spot,' she said dryly.

'If it is, we've gotta either train these cockroaches or start killing them.' She looked puzzled, so he lifted the sugar shaker, and the eight-legged German roach took off like a shot.

She let out an involuntary feminine squeal, then returned to form, slapping at it bare-handed and missing. The roach dodged, shooting across the table as Alexa slammed her palm down again the only thing she hurt was her hand. The roach went off the end of the table, hit the floor, and was gone.

'Sign him. Good broken-field run.' Shane smiled.

She checked around the perimeter of the booth, looking for relatives, then glanced at Shane. 'Strong survival instincts. We should take lessons.'

He took out the Arrowhead pictures he'd had developed and slid them across the table to her. 'Know any of these guys?'

She went through them while he waited.

'Yep. All of 'em. This one is Calvin Sheets.' She pushed a picture over and showed it to Shane. It was of the medium-built man with the ash-blond hair, setting a box down at the back door. Shane realized he'd been right, that Sheets had been the man standing with Tony Spivack at the limo.

'This is Coy Love,' she said, sliding another photograph over to Shane, who could see why you wouldn't want to 'fuck with Love.' He was large, over six feet, with a huge, jutting jaw and a cruel, angular face. He had a thin, lipless mouth, straight as a ruler.

'These other two guys were cops on Calvin's Coliseum detail. They both got terminated with him on his bullshit time-sheet hustle.' She pushed those shots over. 'Lon Sherwood and Carter something, I can't remember his last name.'

She looked up, and the waiter was back, hovering like a dragonfly over a lake, waiting for her order.

'I'll have what he's having.'

'Chu makin' my day.' He left, grumbling.

'Cummins is president of the Long Beach City Council, and I found out Spivack Development Corporation owns Cal-VIP Homes.' Shane filled her in on the Long Beach City Council meeting; the dispute over the transfer of the naval yard to L. A. for water; the chase through Long Beach trying to catch Sheets, Spivack, and Cummins; and their eventual helicopter escape. She was holding her briefcase on her lap in both hands, ready to strike in case another cockroach took off on an end run around the Mexican condiments.

'You had a busy day,' she said.

'I won't ask how your day went, for fear it'll severely depress me.'

'I hope DeMarco is staying busy, 'cause I'm getting good prima facie stuff,' she said, needling him.

'Don't worry about DeMarco. The Saint's all over this. He says with what he has, we'll probably want to to file a civil action.'

'Good. 'Cause I'd heard he'd become an alcoholic a blackout drunk and that's why he pulled the pin.'

'Don't worry about Dee. He's kicking ass.'

Blackout drunk? I'm fucked, Shane thought.

She looked at her watch as the waiter set down her Coke and left. 'I ran both Drucker and Kono through the Office of Administrative Services at the Personnel Group,' she said. 'Drucker just got reassigned from Southwest to Hollenbeck. He's working street patrol day shift. Kono has a worrisome nickname. They call him Bongo. I'm hoping that's because he's of Hawaiian ancestry, and not because he beats people like a drum.'

She picked up her Coke and drained it. 'Thirsty,' she apologized. 'Anyway, Kono's still in South Bureau, but now he's working day watch in University Division. That means we're going to have to split up if we want to follow both guys.' She glanced at her Timex. 'We better get moving. Day watch breaks in forty minutes. Which one a' these raisin cakes do you want?'

'Ladies first.'

'Chivalry always knocks me out,' she said drolly. 'Okay, since he's closer, I'll take Drucker.'

He put some money down on the table for the two Cokes, and they both stood.

'Let's communicate on a tactical frequency,' she said. 'One of the high ones nobody uses. Organized Crime is on tac ten, and that division doesn't have much going now. Let's use that.'

'I don't have a police radio; my car's in Venice. I'm using a rental.'

'You really bring it all to the table, don't you, Scully,' she said sarcastically.

He needed her help, so he let it go.

'We can pick up a handset at IAD. I saw a whole bunch of them in a box in the IO's section,' Shane suggested.

She nodded. 'We better move it, or they'll both be EOW before we get there.'

The University Division station was an old concrete four-story building located on South Adams Boulevard, near USC. Shane left the Taurus in the only available spot he could find, half a block up the street. He fed the meter, moved away from it, and sat on a bus bench across from the station. From there he had an unobstructed view of the station parking lot. He had on an L. A. Dodgers cap, pulled low over his eyes, and a dull green-and-brown camouflage windbreaker he had picked up that afternoon at a surplus shop downtown for fifteen bucks.

Shane felt invisible and ready for action: Mr. Brown-and-Green in his camo jacket and dirt-brown Taurus. He had the police handset in his lap and was watching as the day watch started streaming out in civilian clothes, on the way to their private vehicles. It was 5:45.

'Six to Five. Target D is in motion.' He heard Alexa's voice coming over the radio on tactical frequency 10. They had chosen their radio code numbers in the parking lot outside the Bradbury while doing a quick equipment check. He picked up his handset.

'Copy, Six. I'm still parked and waiting.'

'Roger that,' she said. 'Target D just left Hollenbeck, heading up onto 91. He's westbound.'

'Roger. Standing by on tac ten.' He laid the radio on his lap and sat on the bus bench waiting for Kris 'Bongo' Kono.

Officer Kono was one of the last ones out the station side door. He was dressed in jeans and a T-shirt and was carrying a duffel bag. He sprinted to his car, obviously late. He jumped into a blue '76 Camaro with racing stripes and a primered left front fender, then pulled quickly out of the lot, burning rubber.

Shane was caught leaning. He was half a block away from the Taurus and late getting back to it, fumbling to

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