disappeared into the further recesses of his house.
Bosch finished his glass of champagne and started moving through the crowd under the tent toward the house. As he got near the French doprs, one of the black-and-white women asked if he needed help finding something. He said he was looking for the bathroom and she directed him to another door to the left. He went where he was told and found the door was locked. He waited for a few moments and the door finally opened, emitting a man and a woman. They giggled when they saw Bosch waiting and headed back to the tent.
Inside the bathroom Bosch opened his jacket and took a folded piece of paper from the inside pocket on the left. It was the photocopy of the Johnny Fox story that Keisha Russell had given him. He unfolded it and took out a pen. He circled the names Johnny Fox, Arno Conklin and Gordon Mittel, then, under the story, wrote, 'What prior work experience got Johnny the job?'
He refolded the page twice and ran his fingers tightly over the creases. Then, on the outside, he wrote, 'For Gordon Mittel Only!'
Back under the tent, Bosch found a black-and-white woman and gave her the folded paper.
'You have to find Mr Mittel right away,' he told her. 'Give him this note. He's waiting on it.'
He watched her go and then made his way back out through the crowd to the sign-in table at the entry area. He quickly bent over the guest registry and wrote his mother's name down. The table hostess protested that he had already signed in.
'This is for somebody else,' he said.
For an address, he wrote Hollywood and Vista. He left the line for a telephone number blank.
Bosch scanned the crowd again and saw neither Mittel nor the woman he had given the note to. Then he looked into the room beyond the French doors and Mittel appeared with the note in his hand. He walked slowly into the room, studying it. Bosch could tell by the direction of his eyes that he was studying the note scribbled on the bottom. Even with his phony tan, he seemed to Bosch to go pale.
Bosch took a step back into the entrance alcove and watched. He could feel his heart beating at a quicker pace. He felt like he was watching some secret play on a stage.
There was a look of perplexed anger on Mittel's face now. Bosch saw him hand the page to the rough man who still sat in the cushioned chair. Then Mittel turned to the glass panels and looked out at the people under the tent. He said something and Bosch thought he could read his lips.
'Son of a bitch.'
Then he started talking more quickly, barking orders. The man on the chair rose and Bosch knew instinctively that it was his cue to leave. He walked quickly back out to the driveway and trotted down to the group of men in red vests. He handed his valet ticket and a ten-dollar bill to
one of them and said in Spanish that he was in a great hurry.
Still, it seemed to take forever. As he waited nervously, Bosch kept his eyes on the house, waiting for the rough man to appear. He had watched which direction the valet had gone for his car and he was ready to bolt that way if necessary. He began to wish he had his gun. Whether he really needed it or not did not matter. In this moment he knew it gave him a sense of security that he felt naked without.
The surfer in a suit appeared at the top of the driveway and strode down toward Bosch. At the same time, Bosch saw his Mustang approaching. He walked out into the street, ready to take it. The surfer got to him first.
'Hey, buddy, hold on a sec -'
Bosch turned from his approaching car and hit him in the jaw, sending him backward onto the driveway. He moaned and rolled onto his side, both hands clutching his jaw. Bosch was sure the jaw was dislocated if not broken. He shook away the pain in his hand as the Mustang screeched to a stop.
The man in the red vest was slow in getting out. Bosch pulled him away from the open door and jumped in. As he settled in behind the wheel he looked up the driveway and saw the rough man was now coming. When he saw the surfer on the ground, he started running but his steps were unsteady on the downgrade of the driveway. Bosch saw his heavy thighs pressing the fabric of his pants and suddenly he slipped and fell. Two of the red vests went to help him up but he angrily shoved them away.
Bosch gunned the car and sped away. He worked his way up to Mulholland and turned east toward home. He could feel adrenaline surging through him. Not only had he gotten away, but it was clear he had struck a nerve with a hammer. Let Mittel think about that for a while, he
thought. Let him sweat. Then he yelled out loud in the car, though no one could hear except himself.
'Spooked ya, didn't I, you fuck!'
He banged his palm triumphantly on the steering wheel.
He dreamed of the coyote again. The animal was on a mountain path where there were no homes, no cars, no people. It was moving very quickly through the dark as if it was trying to get away. But the path and place were his. He knew the land and knew he would escape. What it was he fled from was never clear, never seen. But it was there, behind him in the dark. And the coyote knew by instinct it must get away.
The phone woke Bosch, breaking into the dream like a knife stabbed through paper. Bosch pulled the pillow off his head, rolled to his right and his eyes were immediately assaulted by the light of dawn. He had forgotten to close the blinds. He reached for the phone on the floor.
'Hold on,' he said.
He put the phone down on the bed, sat up and rubbed a hand across his face. He squinted at the clock. It was ten minutes after seven. He coughed and cleared his throat, then picked the phone back up.
'Yeah.'
'Detective Bosch?'
'Yeah.'
'It's Brad Hirsch. I'm sorry to call so early.'
Bosch had to think a moment. Brad Hirsch? He had no idea who it was.
'Yeah, it's okay,' he said while he continued to search his mind for the name.
A silence followed.
'I'm the one ... In Latents? Remember, you -' 'Hirsch? Yeah, Hirsch. I remember. What's up?' 'I wanted to tell you I made the AFIS run you wanted. I came in early and ran it with another search I'm doing for Devonshire Homicide. I don't think anybody will know.'
Bosch kicked his legs over the side of the bed, opened a drawer in the bed table and took out a pad and a pencil. He noticed that he had taken the pad from the Surf and Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach. He remembered he had spent a few days with Sylvia there the year before.
'Yeah, you made the run? What'd you get?'
'Well, that's the thing. I'm sorry but I got nothing.'
Bosch threw the pad back into the open drawer and threw himself backward on the bed.
'No hits?'
'Well, the computer came up with two candidates. I then did a visual comparison and it was no good. No matches. I'm sorry. I know this case means ...'
He didn't finish.
'You took it through all the data bases?'
'Every one on our network.'
'Let me ask you something. All those data bases, do they include DA's employees and LAPD personnel?'
There was silence as Hirsch must have been mulling over what the question might mean.
'You there, Hirsch?'
'Yes. The answer is yes.'
'How far back? You know what I mean? These bases have prints going how far back?'
'Well, each data base is different. The LAPD's is extensive. I'd say we have prints on everybody who's worked here since World War II.'
Well, that clears Irving and the rest of the cops, Bosch
thought. But that didn't bother him much. His sights were definitely somewhere else.
'What about people working for the DA?'
'The DA's office would be different,' Hirsch said. 'I don't think they started printing employees until the