“Okay, let’s think this through. Rand hooks up with Malley around five p.m., Malley drives him into the city, drops him off at the mall, and Rand calls
First time using the victim’s first name. Some kind of transition had taken place.
I said, “Don’t know. Unless, Rand and Malley had made peace and Rand decided to keep the process going.”
He rubbed his face vigorously, as if washing without water. “Not much of a peace if Malley shot him. What, Malley dropped him off, then picked him up again?”
“Maybe Malley had more to talk about.”
“The two of them rode around together schmoozing about the bad old days, Malley decided to off him rather than let him eat pizza with you? Even if we can explain all that, the big question remains: If this is all about payback, why would Malley wait eight years?”
“Maybe he was willing to wait for both boys to get out but a C.Y.A. gangbanger beat him to Troy.”
“So he bides his time on Rand.” He drank coffee. “According to Daney, Malley was still heated up two years ago.”
“Malley wanted the death penalty,” I said. “Some wounds never heal.”
“Theory, theory, theory. So, now what? I intrude on a couple who lost their kid in the worst possible way because hubby gave Daney a dirty look two years ago and he drives a black pickup?”
“It could be touchy,” I said.
“It could require some serious psychological
I took a bite of Danish. A few minutes ago it had tasted great. Now it was deep-fried dust.
“Do I have to spell it out, Alex? I’d rather you do it and I’ll watch.”
“You’re not worried my presence will disrupt?”
“The defense saw you as pro-prosecution, so maybe the Malleys will remember you fondly for the same reason.”
“No reason for them to remember me at all,” I said. “Never met them.”
“Really?”
“There was no reason to.” Funny how defensive that sounded.
“Well,” he said, “now there’s a reason.”
CHAPTER 15
Milo phoned DMV for current licenses and registrations on Barnett and Lara Malley.
Nothing for her. Barnett Melton Malley had a Soledad Canyon address, out in Antelope Valley.
“The birth date fits,” he said. “One vehicle, a ten-year-old Ford pickup. Black at the time of registration.”
“Soledad’s forty, fifty miles from Van Nuys,” I said. “After what they went through, I can see them wanting to get out of the city. Rural area like that, Lara would need to drive, so why isn’t she licensed?”
“They’re not living together and she moved out of state?”
“A tragedy like that can drive people apart.”
“I can think of a giant wedge,” he said. “Kristal was snatched from under her nose. Maybe hubby blamed her.”
“Or,” I said, “she blamed herself.”
As we returned to the city, Sean Binchy called in. Van Nuys Division had no record of any call from the Daneys about Rand’s disappearance.
“No big surprise,” said Milo. “He wasn’t officially missing, so it wasn’t filed.”
“What’s the current status of your felonious friend theory?”
“Have I abandoned it completely because Barnett Malley owns a black truck? Like Daney said, plenty of pickups in the Valley. But Malley had good reason to hate Rand. I’d be an idiot to ignore him.”
“When were you planning on visiting him?”
“I was thinking tomorrow,” he said. “Late enough to avoid the morning rush but early enough not to get tied up coming back. First, I’m gonna try to find out where he works. If I get lucky and it’s somewhere closer, I’ll call you.”
He scribbled in his notepad, returned it to his pocket. “Or even luckier, some mitigating factor will emerge. Like an ironclad alibi for Malley.”
“You don’t want it to be him,” I said.
“Hey,” he said. “How about lunch? I’m thinking tandoori lamb.”
We stopped at the station first, where he cleared his messages and ran Barnett Malley through NCIC and the other criminal databases and came up empty. Same for Lara Malley.
I stayed on my feet, expecting we’d soon leave for Cafe Moghul. But he just sat there, eyes closed, passing the phone from one hand to the other until he called the Hall of Records downtown and asked for a clerk who owed him a favor. It took awhile to get through but once he connected, the conversation was brief. When he hung up, he looked weary.
“Lara Malley’s deceased. Seven years ago, suicide by firearm. Women are shooting themselves more, nowadays, but back then it was a little unusual, right? Pills were the ladies’ choice.”
“Not always, if the ladies were serious,” I said.
“Mommy cashes in a year after Kristal’s murder. Enough time to see life wasn’t getting any better. The Malleys ever get any therapy, Alex?”
“Don’t know.”
He began punching his computer keyboard as if it was a sparring partner, logged onto the state firearms registration file. Squinted and stared and copied something down and drew his lips back in a strange, hollow smile that made me glad I wasn’t his enemy.
“Mr. Barnett Melton Malley has amassed quite an arsenal. Thirteen shotguns, rifles, and handguns, including a couple of thirty-eights.”
“Maybe he lives alone in a secluded area. He’d have more reason than most to be vigilant.”
“Who says he lives alone?”
“Same answer,” I said. “If he started a new family, he’d want to protect it.”
“Angry, bitter guy,” he said. “Loses his entire family to violence, moves out to the boonies with a stash of firepower heavy enough to outfit a militia. Maybe he’s
“If he intended to murder someone, why would he register his weapons?”
“Who says he registered
“The way Rand was shot,” he said. “Contact wound, left side of the head, the killer at approximately the same height. Taken by surprise like you suggested. That conjure up an image?”
“The killer was sitting to his left,” I said. “Close to him. As in the driver’s seat of a vehicle.”
He pointed the cigar at me. “That’s the channel that switched on in
I said, “Malley had eight years for that, but perhaps Rand’s release triggered old memories.”
“Malley picks him up, drops him off, drives around and finds out he’s still got unfinished business with Rand. They drive up somewhere in the hills and something goes wrong.”
“Rand wasn’t articulate. He said the wrong thing to Malley and triggered big-time rage.”
“ ‘I’m a good person,’ ” he said.
“I can see that coming out wrong.”