the sofa for several minutes. Then he removed a gauze pad from the vacuum cleaner, thrust it beneath Ruby’s nose, and slipped it into a plastic Baggie. He patted Ruby on the ribs and murmured, “Do your thing, old girl.” The dog jumped up, sniffed the carpet, scampered out the front door, around to the back of the house, sniffing the ground by the broken window, and then to the front porch and onto the sidewalk, as Persky and I followed. The dog barked, nose down, and ambled off, straining against the long leather leash.
“Shit,” I shouted as Ruby urinated on my left shoe.
“You have been away a while,” Persky said. “Don’t you remember? She pisses when she picks up a trail.”
We followed Ruby down to the bottom of the hill. She paused and then veered left, speckling the sidewalk with urine. This spot was across the street and down the block from where the gangbanger with the spiderweb tattoo was selling drugs.
She ambled down the sidewalk, swung left, began to climb a hill and suddenly stopped, sniffed the sidewalk and the curb for a few minutes, occasionally lifting her head and yelping.
“Why’s she stopping here?” I asked.
“This is where the scent ends,” Persky said. “This indicates that, more than likely, your suspect got in a car and drove off. Does that fit with your suspect’s MO?”
“I wasn’t thinking that last night, but now it makes sense. That’s kind of a narrow street by Relovich’s house. Neighbors would have noticed the shooter’s car. He probably figured it would be safer to park here, walk over to Relovich’s street, climb the hill, take care of business, and then slip back to his car.”
I patted the dog, then clapped Persky on the shoulder and said, “I appreciate it, Ray.”
As we slowly traipsed back up the hill, the sun began to bleed through the fog and golden shafts of light slanted through the mist. While Ruby stopped to sniff a tree, I admired the view up the hill. May was my favorite time of year in Southern California-after the winter rains, before the June gloom, when shades of purple graced every neighborhood. A lush canopy of jacaranda trees led up to Relovich’s house, the lavender blossoms in full bloom. Pendulous clusters of lilac wisteria cascaded over eaves and violet stalks of Mexican sage sprouted from gardens. As I climbed the hill, the sidewalks stained from the jacaranda blossoms, I felt as if I were floating on a purple cloud.
When I reached the top, I scanned the harbor, which looked entirely different in the light of day than it had the previous night. Unlike much of the Southern California coastline, San Pedro has a working waterfront, an industrial jungle dotted with two hundred-foot-high cranes used to transport goods to and from the ships. Metal cargo containers as big as railroad cars were lined up on the docks and fishing boats traversed the channels.
I returned to Relovich’s house and slowly strolled through the rooms, not knowing exactly what I was looking for, just hoping something would catch my eye. I realized, again, how every room was a mess, except for the daughter’s. Walking out of the house toward my car, I was left with the impression that Relovich didn’t care much about his own life, but he loved his little girl and probably found her visits the only meaningful part of his week.
I cruised down to the Harbor Division station, a bland, blocky, orange brick structure hard by the freeway, facing the railroad tracks, where a freight train rumbled by. I walked through the station to the scuffed prefab trailer in the parking lot that housed the homicide unit: a makeshift squad room with frayed blue-gray carpeting. Eight battered metal desks were bordered by metal filing cabinets topped with brown cardboard boxes overflowing with case files. Fluorescent lights cast a pale green tint over Detectives Hank Savich and Victor Montez, who were waiting for me at their desks. Neither stood up when I introduced myself; neither extended a hand.
I sat down on the edge of a desk and said, “I really appreciate you coming in on Saturday morning to help-”
“First of all, I don’t like getting bigfooted,” said Savich, who had a pale, narrow face pockmarked with acne scars. “I don’t like outsiders taking my cases.”
I was well aware that divisional detectives often resented it when Felony Special-or one of the other specialized units from the Robbery-Homicide Division-took over an investigation. Some were able to put their resentment aside, act professionally, and provide the downtown detectives with a proper briefing. Others, like Savich and Montez, apparently could not overcome their wounded pride. I understood how they felt. Still, I wasn’t in the mood to take any shit from them.
“I didn’t take this case. It was assigned to me by my lieutenant.”
“I thought you’d quit, Detective Le- veen,” Savich said, intentionally mispronouncing my name.
“It’s Le- vine.”
“Whatever,” Savich said.
“I did quit. But now I’m back.”
Montez, pear-shaped and cocky, stood up beside his desk and looked down at me. “Witnesses like Latisha Patton might not get protected at Felony Special, but here in the Harbor, we make sure our wits don’t get capped.” He smiled malevolently. “So if we tell you what we’ve got, you’ve got to promise to be real careful, Detective Le- veen.”
I clenched my teeth, trying to control my anger. But almost against my will, I found myself jumping to my feet and, with a quick backhand, I swept everything off Montez’s desk, a half-filled coffee cup and pens, pencils, and paper clips scattering on the floor, the cup shattering on a desk leg and the coffee pooling on the carpeting. I kicked a coffee cup shard across the squad room and shouted, “I came here to be briefed! Not to listen to your sarcastic fucking comments!”
I took a few steps until I was just inches from Montez, forcing him to take a step back. “Hand over the murder book, and I’m outta here.”
Montez glanced nervously at me and whispered to Savich, “He’s a fucking psycho.”
I knew they couldn’t afford to let me grab the murder book and walk. If they refused to help me-a Felony Special detective on a case that the chief was personally interested in-they might be consigned next week to the purse snatching detail.
Savich flashed a forced smile at me. “We’re just messin’ with you. No offense meant. Let me tell you what I know.”
Feeling drained, I eased into a chair next to Savich’s desk. I’ve got to get a grip, I thought. I can’t be going off on people like that.
Savich opened a desk drawer and pulled out the murder book-a royal blue, plastic, three-ring binder-briefly leafed through it, and set it on the corner of his desk. He then updated me, describing the crime scene, how the body was found, and what trace evidence technicians from the department’s Scientific Investigation Division had gleaned from the house.
“Get anything from the canvas?” I asked.
“Nobody saw anything,” Savich said. “Nobody heard anything.”
“Any ideas why no one heard the shot?”
“Lots of ways to minimize the sound of a gunshot,” Savich said. “Not many of these clowns on the street can get ahold of a silencer. But you can make one out of a plastic soda bottle. Course, you know all that.”
He reached across his desk and handed me the murder book. I opened it and studied the photographs of Relovich’s body, the Preliminary Investigation Report, the crime scene diagram, the property report, statements from neighbors and patrol officers, and the chronology of the investigation, which ended at: “0900: Meeting with Felony Special Detective Ash Levine, who assumed responsibility for the case.”
“Talked to any family members?” I asked.
“The ex-wife,” Savich said. “But she didn’t give us much.”
“Anyone he was close to?”
“We heard the uncle. He’s a fisherman. He was out for halibut when we called. His phone number’s in the murder book.”
“Any thoughts on why Relovich pulled the pin after thirteen?”
Montez motioned as if he were tipping a bottle toward his mouth.
“That why he was living like a rookie cop?”
Montez nodded.
“What do you guys think happened up there?”
“Junkie hot prowl,” Savich said. “A shot, a grab, and a run for it.”
“I agree,” Montez said. “I used to work CRASH down here and I used to follow the homies from the projects