Milo studied him.
Holman’s eyebrows rose. “You’re kidding.”
“About what, Professor?”
“You’re actually wondering if
Holman’s lips clamped tight. “No, I didn’t care for Backer. He was fluff. But I don’t care for most people. And whatever I felt about him did not rise to the level of violence.”
Milo said, “Professor, we really do appreciate your coming forward, most people would have taken the easy way out. Is there anything else you’d like to tell us?”
“No, sir,” said Holman. “Now you’re going to leave and I’m going to stay here and watch the ocean.”
Milo gunned the unmarked past the marsh, continued east on Culver. “What just happened? Helpful, self-demeaning citizen or smart guy playing with us?”
“Maybe neither,” I said.
“Then what?”
“Professor Holman found a way to unload a whole lot of pent-up misery while feeling momentarily heroic.”
“Free therapy? So who bills him, you or me?”
“You can have it,” I said.
“Poor bastard. But he did just admit to being a chronic stalker, which fits our jealousy scenario. A bunch of middle-aged lotharios with his wife is one thing, Backer’s youth and vitality pushed him over the edge, he kept churning it, over and over, the rage didn’t fade so he hired a hit man. Who he was able to tip off about Borodi being a nookie-spot for Backer.”
“Then why call for a meet where he gives himself a motive and admits he resented Backer?”
“He’s an intellectual, Alex, thinks he’s smarter than us. A linguist, to boot-what do those guys do? Manipulate language. But maybe he just screwed himself by giving me grounds for a warrant on his financials.”
He phoned John Nguyen, asked the deputy D.A. what he thought. Nguyen said, “Iffy at best but you can try. Who do you have in mind?”
Milo said, “Judge Ferencz turned me down, any suggestions?”
“Not really.”
“What about Judge Hawkins, John?”
“Hawkins died last month.”
“Damn.”
Nguyen said, “Your warmhearted sympathy toward his loved ones is overwhelming. If you want, I can ask around.”
“Thanks, John.”
“I’m talking a few calls, not worth a thanks.”
At Lincoln, Milo switched the police radio to felony Muzak. Too early for waves of after-dark violence but plenty of minor-league infractions to keep uniforms busy.
I said, “If Holman’s not the killer, he still gave you something useful: Backer and Brigid were at Borodi two months ago, lending support for a long-term relationship and suggesting it was a habitual spot for them. Maybe she’s using a false identity out of self-defense, not criminality. As in running from a rabidly jealous ex.”
“Meaning don’t lose sight of her as the prime victim, okay, time for Hal again.”
“Who exactly is he?”
“Homeland Security, owes me more than one favor.” Punch punch punch, voice mail. His second message was more detailed, click. “Holman doesn’t shake out dirty, there’s still the fact that Brigid was snooping in Masterson’s files and scoping out Borodi by herself.”
I said, “The elusive DSD Inc.”
“Whom everyone seems to think are Arabs and that worries me. All I need is some jealous emir as a prime suspect.”
Two traffic lights later: “Backing away from all that, I’ve got plenty of mundane local issues to deal with. Like finding out if any non-antique.22s are registered to Loony Charlie Rutger, scanning the moniker files for particularly nasty Montes, somehow getting lists of subs who worked Borodi, and checking for violent felony backgrounds.”
“Abundance of riches,” I said.
“I’d rather have cash.”
CHAPTER 15
Reed and Binchy listened to their instructions out in the hall because four people can’t fit in Milo’s office.
“Sean, I need you to pay a personal visit to an outfit downtown called Beaudry Construction. The object is to get their employment list going five years back. I’m talking names of every single yahoo who worked for them, not just at the Borodi site. In a perfect world, you’ll find our boy Monte. Beaudry’s going to jerk you around because everyone connected to the job signed confidentiality forms, but Nguyen tells me that doesn’t hold water in a criminal case.”
“So we can subpoena them,” said Binchy.
“Once we have a case, we can. Problem is, we need the list for that. But threaten them with whatever you think will work, they still don’t budge, contact the state compensation board and back-reference the job for tax paper. You up for all that?”
Someone else might’ve taken offense.
Sean flexed a Doc Marten. “You bet, Loot.”
“You can go now, Sean.”
“On my way, Loot.”
Reed had watched the exchange, expressionless. His blond crew cut was fresh, he had on the usual blue blazer, khakis, white shirt, and rep tie.
Milo turned to him. “Moses, any theories about how we might break through that confidentiality bullshit and find out who these DSD yokels are? The general feeling is they’re Arabs but no one can say why. I’ve already tried the Internet. Zippo.”
Reed said, “I could cold-call all the Middle East consulates, ask to speak to someone associated with DSD, see if anyone reacts. If that doesn’t work, I move on to the embassies in D.C.”
“Why don’t you start with D.C., in case some consulate type sets off an alarm. See if you can find some old directories for when DSD was there, maybe the number’s listing’s been forwarded.”
“Will do, Loo. In terms of your Internet search, did you check oil-business sites?”
“No. Do it. Your time situation okay?”
“Got plenty of time,” said Reed. “Only one case pending, that stupid-guy shooting on Pico.”
“Two fools in a bar? Thought you closed it.”
“So did I, Loo. Turns out, it’s more complicated because they ran the thread and the bullet angles don’t fit exactly. I’m not such a big thread fan, but if it looks like science, juries love it, right? I got my confession all nailed, there’s no doubt whodunit, but the D.A. won’t proceed until everything’s buttoned down. I’m waiting for the autopsy to verify the flesh-troughs. My vic was supposed to be on the table last week but he’s still in the fridge. I drive down there this morning, thinking I’m going to pick up the autopsy report, all I leave with is excuses.”