She said, “I’m not going to quit.”
Holman pulled away. He told himself not to look back. He had learned the hard way that looking back was when you got into trouble, so he told himself not to look, but he glanced in the mirror anyway and saw her in the street, watching him, this incredible woman who had almost been part of his life.
Holman wiped his eyes.
He stared ahead.
He drove.
They hadn’t been able to put the pieces together, but that no longer seemed to matter. Holman was not going to let them get away with Richie’s murder.
45
POLLARD WAS FURIOUS. Marki had used all the right terms in relating what Whitt told her about being an informant-the registration, the cap, the approval; civilians didn’t know these things unless they knew them firsthand, so Pollard still believed Whitt had been telling the truth.
Pollard one-handed a call back to Sanders as she blasted up the Hollywood Freeway. She hadn’t wanted to get into it in front of Holman, but now she wanted details.
“Hey, it’s me. Can you still talk?”
“What’s wrong?”
“This girl was an informant. I want you to check again.”
“Hey. Whoa. I’m doing you a favor, remember? Leeds would have my ass if he found out.”
“I’m sure this girl wasn’t lying. I believe her.”
“I know you believe her. I can hear your belief coming through the phone, but she wasn’t on the list. Look- maybe some cop was paying her out of his own pocket. That happens all the time.”
“If somebody was using her off the books she wouldn’t have known about payouts being capped and having to be approved. Think about it, April-she was the real thing and she had a cop backing her.”
“Listen to me: She was not on the list. I’m sorry.”
“Maybe she’s under an alias. Check her arrest record for-”
“Now you’re being stupid. Nobody gets paid under an alias.”
Pollard drove in silence for a while, embarrassed by her desperation.
“Yeah, I guess you’re right.”
“You know I’m right. What’s going on with you, girl?”
“I was sure.”
“She was a whore. Whores lie. That’s what they do-you’re my best lover, you made me come so good. C’mon, Kat. She made it sound good for her friend because she can make anything sound good. That’s what they do.”
Pollard felt ashamed of herself. Maybe it was Holman. Maybe she needed it to work out for him so badly she had lost her common sense.
“I’m sorry I freaked out on you.”
“Just bring me some more donuts. I’m starting to lose weight. You know I like to keep my weight up.”
Pollard couldn’t even bring herself to smile. She closed her phone and brooded about it as she drove home, her thoughts swinging between her disappointment that Alison Whitt had lied about being an informant and her surprise that Mrs. Marchenko had not identified Random as the fifth man.
It was as if she and Holman had uncovered two separate cases, with Random on both sides-Fowler’s search for the missing money and Warren Juarez’s alleged murder of the four officers. Random had been a principal in the Marchenko investigation and now he controlled the investigation into the murders. Random had immediately closed the murder investigation by naming Warren Juarez the assailant even though unanswered questions remained. He had denied that Fowler and the others were in any way connected to Marchenko and had actively suppressed further inquiry;
Only Fowler and his boys
But Pollard still had a problem with Maria Juarez. When she disappeared, Random had issued a warrant for her arrest, yet Chee claimed the police had taken her from her cousins’ home. Now, Holman had seen her in Random’s custody. If Random was covering the true murderer of the four officers, why would he hold Maria Juarez captive and not simply kill her? Since her visit to the murder scene, Pollard believed the four officers had knowingly let their killer approach. If the killer was Juarez and if the officers were at the bridge that night on their search for the money, then Juarez must have had a connection with Marchenko. Maybe Maria Juarez knew what her husband had known, and Random needed her help to find the money. This would explain why she was still alive, but Pollard wasn’t happy with the explanation. She was guessing, and guesses were a sucker’s game in any investigation.
Pollard was trying to reconcile why so much of what she had didn’t add up when she pulled into her drive. She hurried through the hellish heat and let herself into the house. She stepped through the front door, her irritation about Alison Whitt now being replaced by her dread at the inevitable phone call to her mother. She was lost in thought as she entered her house, thinking how absolutely nothing was going to work out, when a red-haired man waiting inside pushed the door out of her hands, slamming it shut.
“Welcome home.”
Pollard startled so badly she jerked backwards as another man stepped from the hall, this man holding a credential case with a badge.
“John Random. We’re the police.”
46
POLLARD SPUN into Vukovich, driving her elbow hard into his ribs. Vukovich grunted and jerked to the side.
“Hey-”
Pollard spun in the opposite direction, thinking she had to get to the kitchen and then out the back door, but Random was already blocking her path.
“Hold it! We’re not going to hurt you. Hold it!”
Random had stopped between Pollard and the kitchen and had come no closer. He was holding up both hands with his badge dangling over his head and Vukovich had made no further move. Pollard edged sideways to see both of them at the same time.
Random said, “Take it easy now. Just relax. If we wanted to hurt you would we be standing here like this?”
Random lowered his hands, but made no move forward. It was a good sign, but Pollard still edged to the side, eyes going between them, kicking herself for leaving her service pistol in the box in her closet, thinking, how stupid could you be? Thinking she might be able to get one of the kitchen knives, but she’d hate to fight these bastards with a knife.
“What do you want?”
Random studied her for a moment longer, then put away his badge.
“Your cooperation. You and Holman have been messing things up for us. Will you give me a chance to