hair and puts on lederhosen and disappears into the land of cuckoos and chocolate.”
Milo stood.
Marjorie Holman said, “Exactly. Time to get a move on.”
Judah Cohen said, “Good luck.”
CHAPTER 26
Emanuel Forbush, Esq.’s, baritone boomed through the car speakers.
“I’ve been expecting your call. Guess you want the computers.”
“That would be helpful, sir.”
“No problem, Lieutenant, pick them up at your convenience. Of course, we will be keeping copies of every single word of data. Don’t imagine you’ll mind, without our coming forward you’d be in the dark.”
“Sitting on evidence in a criminal case could have caused problems, Mr. Forbush.”
“If you ever found out.”
“Thanks for the vote of confidence, Mr. Forbush.”
“No, no, I’m not-I just want to make sure our civil case is preserved.”
“You really think a civil suit’s worth the effort, sir?”
“Why wouldn’t it be?”
“It just doesn’t sound as if the stakes are that high for all the trouble.”
“Well, I suppose I’ll have to be the judge of that.”
“I suppose you will, sir.”
“Lieutenant,” said Forbush, “I don’t want to get off on a bad foot with you. Sorry if I came on too strong.”
“No problem, Mr. Forbush. I’ll send a detective for those computers today.”
“Great. So how’s Marjie doing?”
“I just watched her down two stiff drinks and my guess is they weren’t her first this morning.”
Forbush tsk-tsked. “That’s always been an issue for Marjie, poor kid.”
“You’re friends?”
“Ned and I go way back, we used to play squash. Hell of an athlete, damn tragedy. Marjie’s had a lot to deal with, a victory would be good for her.
“Friend in need,” said Milo.
“The only kind that counts,” said Forbush.
Milo hung up. Laughed. “One of Ned’s old squash buddies. Should’ve asked him about the current decor of Washington Boulevard no-tells. He took on the case to keep the sheets hot, Cohen’s along for the ride, they squeeze out a settlement, it’s found money for him. So now I’ve got dead ends in Sranil
I said, “Maybe you’re in luck and Helga’s still in L.A. Or was, this morning.”
“What do you mean?”
“She’s a good-looking, well-built woman in her thirties with Nordic features. Cover that bald dome with a platinum wig-something that flaps in the breeze-and all a witness would focus on would be blond, blond, blond.”
“Amy Thal’s jogger,” he said. “Yeah, she does have that Valkyrie thing going on.”
“Not Swedish,” I said. “Swiss. What if Reed’s source was almost there?”
“Seen one European, seen ’ em all. Including the girl Teddy supposedly offed.” He rubbed his face. “His vic was Helga’s sister, or a close friend. She comes to L.A. to get revenge, starts a shell firm for cover, looks for Teddy. Tries to find his local address by having Doreen-who she met through Backer, maybe on some anarchist chat line-comb through Masterson’s files.”
“Her primary goal was to kill Teddy, but she found out he was out of her reach in Sranil, either hiding in the palace or dead. So she settles for burning down his house. Pays Backer and Fredd fifty thousand to do the job.”
“Not much bang for all that buck, Alex.”
“If she banked on Teddy being dead, messing with his
“You fuck with my family, I fuck with yours? With Backer and Fredd gone, Helga cases out the place herself, decides on a do-it-yourself?”
“Maybe she arrived this morning with her own bolt cutters, saw the gate open, and walked right through.”
“Meanwhile, Rutger’s snarfing bubbly and liver, making himself easier to ignite… so who killed Backer and Doreen? The sultan’s hit squad or Helga herself because she learned how to go kaboom from hanging with them, decided they were expendable?”
“If Helga is involved, I don’t see her acting alone. Overpowering two people by herself, even with two guns, would be tough for a woman, even a strong one. And using a gun to rape Doreen doesn’t fit.”
“Everyone says she hates people, Alex.”
“Even so,” I said. “That scene reeked of
“Helga’s more social than she lets on, has a pal? Or this whole damn theory’s one big house- mansion of cards.”
He phoned Captain Don Boxmeister at the arson squad, left a message. Followed up with a call to Special Agent Gayle Lindstrom, connected, gave her a recap, asked her to research Helga Gemein.
She said, “Is she a Swiss citizen or Austrian? It makes a difference, tactically.”
“They both extradite, Gayle.”
“They do, but the Swiss make it a lot more difficult. Prying out a Swiss citizen is going to be hell.”
“I don’t know where her passport’s from.”
“Either way,” said Lindstrom, “she could be already gone.”
“Sitting in the International Terminal as we speak, Gayle. So how about dispensing some of your guys in dark glasses and walkie-talkies?”
“I’ll get an airport check going soon as I hang up. Including private charters, seeing as Daddy’s a money-mover. Give me the name of his bank.”
He flipped through his pad. “GGI-Alter Privatbank.”
Lindstrom said, “Sounds fancy. Soon as you snag those computers, make sure I get a full copy of the hard drives.”
“Done and you’re welcome, Gayle. Once you get hold of her passport info or anything else, get on the horn A-sap.”
“Done and
“He takes your calls, does he?”
“Must be my feminine mystique.”
Sean Binchy was dispatched to pick up the computers.
Moe Reed answered his page, alert and focused. “I’m right across the street, my source came to work this morning but she was with a bunch of other girls and I couldn’t isolate her. She’s due out soon for lunch.”
Milo said, “Don’t waste time on subtle, Moses, just pull her aside. What I