I rubbed her hand. Joe still had the other. 'You'll be fine. They're going to want to talk to you, and to Mark, but probably not until later. Joe and I will go now.'

She looked down at our hands, then up again. 'What will I say?'

'The truth.'

'Will they put him in jail?'

'I don't know. I don't think so, but I don't know. A lot of people out there are going to want his head.'

She nodded again, and this time smiled sort of sadly. 'He just wanted to be a police officer.'

'Yes. But now he'll have to move on, and so will you.'

'It's going to be such a big change. What will he do?'

'Something.'

'Well, we still have each other. We can make it.'

'Yes,' I said. 'If you want to make it, you can.'

She smiled again, and this time the smile didn't seem so sad. 'Thanks for sticking it out with me.'

'Jennifer, you're worth it.'

Twenty-two minutes later a couple of California Highway Patrol cops in khaki uniforms came into the waiting room. The shorter of the two said, 'Who's Cole?'

'Me.' I stood, and Pike stood with me. Jennifer got up with Pike and took my hand.

The same cop said, 'We're supposed to take you down to L.A. Is this guy Pike?'

Pike said, 'Yeah.'

'Okay. The both of you.'

The taller guy began to dig out his cuffs, but the shorter guy waved them away. 'We don't need that.'

Jennifer's grip on my hand tightened. I gave her the smile and squeezed her hand back and said, 'Everything's going to be fine.' Mr. Confidence.

The high desert sky was turning a nice purple when the state cops loaded us into a black-and-white highway cruiser and blasted off down the Antelope Valley Freeway. Less than an hour later, the sky was dark when we pulled into the parking lot of the Seventy-seventh Division in South Central Los Angeles. I thought they'd take us to Parker Center, but there you go. Criminals always return to the scene of the crime. Even if we have to be taken.

They were expecting us. The Seventy-seventh's halls and squad rooms were jammed with cops and reporters and lawyers and handcuffed young black men who looked like they were Eight-Deuce gangbangers. A couple of them I recognized. I didn't see Akeem D'Muere, but Harold Bellis was talking to the homicide lieutenant, Stilwell. Stilwell looked bored, but Bellis looked confident. He also looked like he had just been called away from dinner. L'Orangerie, no doubt. Des Oeufs de Poule au Beluga, no doubt. The appetizer alone would've cost more than Stilwell's take-home for the day.

Stilwell saw me, went to a closed door that said WATCH COMMANDER, then opened the door and stuck in his head. Lou Poitras came out with two women and four men. The squad room was so crowded that if any more people came out of the office, they'd have to kick out the bad guys to make room for the good guys. One of the women was a prosecutor in the DA's office named Murphy, and one of the men was a uniformed captain who was probably the watch commander. I didn't recognize the others.

A guy in a wrinkled pinstripe with no tie said, 'Is this Cole?' He said it like he was in charge.

Lou Poitras pointed at me, then Pike. 'Cole. Pike.'

The pinstripe said, 'Let's go through it. I want to wrap this up.'

The pinstripe was a guy named Garvey from the chief's office and the other woman was a muck-a-muck named Greenberg from the city council. Of the two other guys, one was named Fallen, also from the DA's, and the other was from the mayor's office. The guy from the mayor was named Haywood. Fallon and Haywood took Joe Pike into an office down the hall, and Greenberg went with them. Garvey and everybody else took me into the watch commander's office. When we were settled, Murphy said, 'You're not under arrest at this time, Mr. Cole, but we reserve the right to prosecute you for anything that you might admit to or say during this interview.'

Lou Poitras said, 'Jesus Christ, Murphy.'

Garvey made a take-it-easy gesture. 'At ease, Sergeant.'

Murphy said, 'Who's your attorney?'

'Charlie Bauman.'

She nodded. 'I know Charlie. I'd advise you to call him.'

I took her advice. An uncharacteristically smart move.

Everyone left for coffee while I called Charlie, told him where I was, and told him that I wouldn't say anything until he arrived. When I was done, I opened the door and saw Lou Poitras standing in the squad room with his boss from North Hollywood, a lieutenant named Baishe. Baishe has always looked shriveled and tight to me, sort of like a daddy longlegs, and he's never liked me much, but when I opened the door, he was jabbing the street cop Micelli in the chest and telling him that he'd acted like a goddamned bush-league asshole. Micelli said he didn't have to take this shit from some North Hollywood dick and jabbed back, and when he did Lou Poitras slapped his hand to the side and told him to step away. Poitras was maybe five inches taller than Micelli and eighty pounds heavier, and he looked like he was itching to use it. Micelli told Poitras to fuck himself, but he stepped away. Stilwell was over by a couple of uniforms, staying out of it. I said, 'Christ, Baishe, were you defending me?'

When Baishe saw me grinning, he scowled and said, 'Hell, no. I always knew you'd fuck up big time. I'm just

Вы читаете Free Fall
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×