“About Patty? How about this: Last year my brother ended up in the E.R. Auto accident, pretty nasty. He’s a dentist, was worried about a compression injury of one of his hands. Patty was on the night Gil came in and took care of him. Gil was sufficiently impressed enough to write a letter to Nursing Administration. He told me she was cool under pressure-absolutely unflappable, nothing got past her. When she was referred to me, I remembered her name, felt extremely sad. I wish I could’ve done more for her.”
“You gave her what she needed,” I said.
“That’s kind of you to say.” Small, edgy laugh. “Good luck with Tanya.”
Petra answered her cell phone. “Detective Connor.”
I filled her in.
She said, “Exactly where on Cherokee did this woman live?”
I gave her the address.
“I think I know it. Kind of raw sienna on the outside, not exactly posh?”
“That’s the one.”
“I’ve made busts pretty close to there but nothing in that building specifically. Back then, Cherokee was a tough hood. According to all the old-timers who delight in telling me The Way It Was. Not the best place to raise a daughter.”
“Having a daughter wasn’t in her plans.” I explained how Tanya had come to live with Patty.
“Good Samaritan,” she said. “A nurse, to boot. Doesn’t sound like one of the bad guys.”
“I doubt she is.”
“Deathbed confession, huh? We love those. Sorry, Alex, nothing I’ve seen in the cold files matches that. Mostly, what I’ve been doing is compensating for other people’s screwups. You read the murder books, everyone knows who the bad guy is but someone was too lazy or there just wasn’t enough to prove it. But I’ll have another look in the fridge.”
“Thanks.”
“A did-it-even-happen, huh? Milo came up with that all by his lonesome?”
“He’s applying for copyright as we speak.”
“He darn well should. Take all the credit and none of the blame-that’s one of his, too.”
“Words he doesn’t live by,” I said. “Is Isaac still working with you?”
“Isaac? Ah, the database. No, the boy wonder is no longer tagging along. Finished his Ph.D. in BioStatistics, starting med school in August.”
“Double doctor,” I said. “What is he, ten years old?”
“Just turned twenty-three, what a slacker. The obvious question is why I don’t have a copy of his CD-ROM. The answer is he offered it to me but with all the static the department’s been getting about privacy violations, he had to submit a formal application to Parker Center first.”
“They made him apply to donate his own data?”
“In triplicate. After which the brass showed its gratitude by ignoring him for months, kept passing the forms to various committees, then Community Relations, legal counsel, the janitors, the catering truck drivers. We still haven’t heard back. If the bosses don’t get off their collectively spreading duff, I may just find myself a personal copy by accident. It’s nuts. Here I am going through boxes and breaking fingernails and Isaac’s got years worth of mayhem on a disk. Not that you just heard any of that.”
“Heard what?” I said.
“Thank you, sir.”
“What kind of static is the department getting about privacy?”
“Mario Fortuno,” she said.
“Private eye to the stars,” I said. “That was what, three years ago?”
“Three and a half is when they got him on the explosives charge but the larger issue is his wiretapping and what I hear is the fallout from that is just beginning.”
“What do illegal taps have to do with Isaac’s crime stats?”
“Fortuno gained access to personal data, had people stalked and harassed and generated some not-so-subtle threats to citizens who’d offended his honcho clients. One way he got the info-and once again you never heard it from me-is by bribing sources at DMV, the phone company, various banks. And the department.”
“Oh,” I said.
“Oh, indeed. If Fortuno ever opens up, there are Hollywood honchos and big-time criminal defense lawyers who could find themselves in the defendant’s chair.”
“Code of silence, so far?”
“In the beginning he put out the
“Is there anything stopping me, as a concerned private citizen, from talking to Doctor-Doctor Gomez who is now a concerned private citizen?”
“Gee,” she said, “that’s an interesting question. Here’s his phone number.”
“Thanks, Petra. Good talking to you.”
“Same here,” she said. “I think I’ll cut out early and get file dust out of my hair.”
Isaac Gomez answered at his parents’ Union district apartment.
“Hey, Dr. Delaware.”
“Congratulations, Dr. Gomez.”
“Dr. Gomez is some guy with gray hair and bifocals,” he said. “Though if you ask my mother, I’ve already earned tenure and it’s only a matter of time before the Nobel committee knocks at our door.”
“Your mother’s cooking might clinch the award,” I said. “Getting ready for med school?”
“I’m not sure you can ever be ready. I sat in on a few classes last semester and after grad school it seemed regressive, everyone sitting in one room, no curriculum flexibility. One factor might make it more enjoyable. My girlfriend will be in the class.”
“Congrats again.”
“Yes, it’s great.”
Heather Salcido was a tiny, dark-haired beauty whom Isaac had saved from a killer. As good a foundation as any for romance.
“She’d already taken the premed courses studying for her RN. I convinced her to take the MCATS. She scored high, applied, got in. She’s still a little apprehensive but I’m certain she’ll excel. We’re hoping seeing each other daily will help ease the process. So why are you calling?”
I told him.
He said, “Making you a copy of the disks-there are two-is no problem. But they’re encrypted and fairly inaccessible unless you’ve had experience decoding.”
“Not since I worked with the Navajos and unlocked secret Nazi transmissions.”
“Ha. Why don’t you give me the specific addresses on your list and I’ll check for straightaway matches. If I don’t find any, I’ll program a search function that pulls up loci in a steadily widening concentric net where we can adjust for radius. Do you have any geographical criterion in mind?”
I said, “Not yet.”
“Okay, so we’ll adopt an empirical approach. Swing the net-like a seine-and analyze which patterns emerge. I could do it in, say in a couple of days?”
“That would be great, Isaac. I really appreciate it.”
“One complication, Dr. Delaware. Heather and I are taking a trip to Asia-last vacation before the grind. Once we’re there, I won’t be available because Myanmar-what used to be Burma-is part of our itinerary and the government there has been known to confiscate computers and refuse entry to anyone trying to bring one in.”
“Maybe that’ll be good for you,” I said.
“How so?”
“Pure vacation, no encumbrances.”