“Had to be to deal with you, Grant.”

“It’s always worked before,” said Huggler, puzzled. “Oh, well.”

Camarillo EMTs strapped him onto a full-restraint gurney. The local detective was a white-haired man named Ramos who told the driver to wait as he approached Milo. He slid from distrust to professional curiosity to camaraderie as Milo explained the situation.

“Guess you did us a favor. How many victims we talking about?”

“At least six, probably more.”

“A situation,” said Ramos. “Been doing this thirty years, never had anything like it.”

“You don’t have to have it now,” said Milo. “Unless you’ve got some masochistic urge to complicate your life.”

“You want to handle all of it.”

“We started it, we’re ready to finish. Paperwork alone’s gonna be a full-time job.”

Ramos grinned and pulled out a hard-pack of Winstons. Milo accepted the offer of a cigarette and the two of them smoked.

“You’re making a point,” said Ramos. “So what, we patch him up and ship him back to you in a Brink’s truck?”

“A cage would be better.” Milo touched the right side of his face. We still hadn’t made eye contact and I’d stayed a few inches behind him so as not to push the issue.

Ramos said, “I’ll check with my boss but he’s a lazy type, can’t see there being any problem.”

“Whatever works,” said Milo. “The legal eagles are gonna be on this, our people will call your people.”

“We’ll do lunch,” said Ramos. “Half a dozen bodies, huh? I’m figuring I should send someone in the ambulance with the asshole. Just be careful.” He glanced at the ambulance. “First impression, he looks like a nerd. The kid who never got chose for baseball.”

“Part of his charm.”

“He’s charming, huh?”

“Not in the least.”

Ramos chuckled. “Now I got a new worst thing. Before this, it was a case I picked up thirty-nine months ago. Woman shot her kid in the head because he was mouthing off. Just picked up a gun and drilled him, I’m talking a twelve-year-old. She looked like a schoolteacher.” He glanced at the ambulance. “This is a whole different thing. You’re doing me a favor.”

He waved a paramedic over.

Ramos said, “I’m coming with you.” Beckoning a tall, husky cop. “Officer Baakeland, too.”

“Tight fit,” said the EMT.

“We’ll survive,” said Ramos. “That’s the point. Hey, who’s that?”

“Animal Control,” said Milo.

Ramos looked over at the still-sleeping dogs. “Oh, yeah, for them. Too bad they can’t talk.”

Gaining access to the tunnel proved tricky. With no evidence any crime had been committed on the premises, John Nguyen said a warrant was probably required.

Milo said, “Probably?”

“Gray area. With something like this you err on the side of caution.”

“John-”

“Your only alternative is to contact whoever owns the property and get consent.”

“That’s a development firm.”

“Then that’s who you contact.”

Sea Line Development was joint-headquartered in Newport Beach and Coral Gables, Florida. No one answered at either office, same for an 888 “emergency” number. Milo left a message, walked over to the mouth of the tunnel opening, squatted and stuck his head in, and got back on his feet. “Too dark, can’t see a thing.”

I said, “They removed the hatch but there’s got to be an inner door not too far down.”

He phoned Nguyen again. “Can’t reach the owners. Got a recommendation for a judge?”

“The usual suspects.”

No answers at four usually cooperative jurists. A fifth said, “Camarillo? Get someone local.”

“Anyone in particular?”

“What?” said the judge. “I look like a referral agency?”

Milo took out Rudy Borchard’s card, punched the number. Cursed viciously and clicked off. “No one answers their own damn phones anymore. Next week robots are scheduled to wipe our asses.”

Talking in my presence but not to me.

Petra said, “It’ll work out.”

“Easy for you to say, you’re cute and thin.”

He trudged to the car, got back in. When I slipped into the passenger seat he pretended to sleep. His phone rang and he waited a while to answer.

“Yes, Maria… yes, that’s true. Yes, I’ve talked to them and it’s all ours… why? Because it is… whatever, Maria.”

He ended the conversation. The phone rang again. He turned it off. Went back to fake-sleep.

I got out of the car.

Petra came over, stuck her head in, sniffed. “Smells like a kennel.”

Milo opened his eyes. “Next time I’ll use a better deodorant.”

She said, “Speaking of scent, that dirt clearing looks awfully clean. What do you think about bringing in a cadaver pooch?”

“Soon as we get the damn warrant.”

She turned to me. “This feels weird. A huge one gets closed and we end up sitting around.”

“Let’s do something, then-put up some tape.”

“Around the hole or the entire clearing?”

“How much tape do you have?”

“Not enough.”

Milo’s phone played Mendelssohn. He said, “Damn pencil-pushers,” and switched to conference. “What now?”

A deep male voice said, “Pardon?”

“Who’s this?”

“My name is Norm Pettigrew and I’m returning Lieutenant Sturgis’s call.”

“Sturgis here. You’re with Sea Line?”

“Vice president and coordinator of operations. What can I do for you?”

Milo told him.

Pettigrew said, “Incredible. We had no idea anyone was squatting. Or that there was even a tunnel. We thought we had all of those sealed.”

“Looks like the grass was cleared to gain access.”

“How would anyone know to do that, Lieutenant? And why?”

“Good question,” said Milo, lying easily.

Pettigrew said, “Well, by all means go down there, do whatever you need to do.”

“Thank you, sir.”

“Obviously, Lieutenant, we’d prefer if Sea Line wasn’t linked to any of this.”

“I’ll do my best, sir.”

“Let me be more specific,” said Pettigrew. “Any encumbrances that can be avoided would be highly appreciated. Have you ever been to Laguna Beach?”

“A while back, sir.”

“We’ve got a project there. High-end condos with ocean views. A couple of the demos are fully furnished and livable and suitable for short-term usage. In your case, being a devoted public servant capable of providing security, I’m sure we can reach an agreement. You and the missus for a weekend. If you enjoy yourselves, two weekends. We’ve got a great Italian restaurant about to open.”

“Sounds great.”

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