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The First Rule of Ten tnm-1 Page 4
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“I think rehab really worked for him.”
“I’m glad to hear it,” she said. “I had to join a cult to get clean. And then the cult ended up being worse than the dope. I mean, it only took six weeks to get off coke, but ten years to escape that freaking place.”
“How long have you been out?”
She gave me a wide, full smile, and I saw the stunning young woman she must have been before drugs and disappointment had their way with her.
“Since yesterday.”
How bizarre was that? Today was my first real day of freedom, and hers, too. I was intrigued. Why had the universe arranged for us to meet on such a hopeful day for both of us? It seemed auspicious, and my heart perked up at the possibilities.
Barbara gestured at my house. “That’s why I came here. This house is the only place I thought I might find somebody I know. I have nowhere else to go. The group I was in, they didn’t allow any communication with anybody from our past. No phones, no letters, nothing.”
Nowhere to go. That feeling, I understood.
“What about your family?”
She shrugged. “No family. Just me.”
I understood that, too.
“Where did you get the car?” I asked.
She ducked her head. “Stole it,” she said. “It belonged to them.”
“The cult?”
She nodded sheepishly. “But I figured I had something coming to me, with all the crap I put up with from them.”
She scuffed at the dirt. She was wearing old work boots under her dress, an oddly attractive combination of masculine and feminine. It occurred to me she might like to come inside. Have a cup of tea.
“When’s the last time you talked to Zimmy?” she asked.
“Maybe a year and a half ago,” I said.
“Did he say anything about his royalties?”
A sour gorge of disappointment rose in my throat. She was angling for something after all. My heart snapped shut.
“Zimmy and I never talked about that kind of thing,” I said, my voice cool. I glanced at the house. “Listen, I need to get back to work. Is there anything else I can do for you?”
“I think something bad may be going on. I need to warn Zimmy. I want to make sure he stays safe. I still care about him.”
I didn’t believe a word of it.
“Tenzing, do you have a phone number for him?”
“I’m sorry, but I haven’t talked to Zimmy for almost two years. The last number I had is from rehab days. All I know is he lives on a pear farm, like I said. With his new family.”
She finally caught the change in tone. She looked at me curiously, but said nothing.
“Sorry. I can’t help you,” I said. “Have you tried his old record label?”
Her eyes flashed with anger. “That’s part of the problem,” she muttered, crossing her arms protectively. She didn’t elaborate.
I said nothing.
Then her whole body sagged, as if the past 24 hours had finally caught up to her. Forlorn, is how she looked. Forlorn, and far away. I tried to summon up some compassion for her, but I had nothing tangible to offer-I was feeling kind of forlorn myself. Empty, and not in the good Buddhist sense of open and spacious, but devoid of feeling. So I told myself she’d figure it out on her own.
She straightened up and met my eyes. “Thanks for your time. Listen, the starter on the car is shot. Can you help me give it a shove down the hill?”
I got Mike. With Barbara at the wheel, we leaned our shoulders into it and soon the Beetle was out the gravel driveway and rolling downhill. Barbara popped the clutch, and the engine clattered to life. Her hand fluttered one small wave out the window of the battered old car. Mike and I watched her chuff away, until she disappeared.
“What was that about?” he said.
“Nothing. She’s looking to get rich off her ex-my former landlord Zimmy Backus. I’d love to call Zimmy and warn him, but I have no idea where he is anymore.”
We walked inside.
“So here’s the deal,” Mike said. He pulled out his phone and his fingers started dancing. Postage-stamp-sized web pages swelled and shrank until he found the one he wanted. “Setting up a home office that actually functions will cost you at least three grand in new equipment. But you also have at least three cell-phone upgrades coming to you, so I’ll start working on that right away. Meanwhile, you’re going to have to do your gumshoe footwork the hard way. By foot.”
“Or I can call you.”
“Or you can call me.” Mike mounted his electronic pedal-bike, a flamingo perched on a two-wheeler. Got to love the guy.
“Mike?”
He turned.
“Thanks.”
“No problema. Hey, you want me to find this Backus dude’s whereabouts? I do love me a challenge.”
“Be my guest,” I said.
I walked back in the house and fixed myself a pot of green tea. I sat on the deck and sipped. The day darkened into night. Barbara Maxey, she of the blond braid, callused hands, and wide sunflower smile, floated up. I dismissed her. Nothing auspicious about it. Just another ship, passing in the night.
When I’m wrong, I am so wrong.
CHAPTER 5
“No way,” I said into the phone.
“Come on, Ten. Just a nice, relaxed dinner with the family.”
“I know Martha almost as well as you do, Bill. There is no such thing as relaxed where I’m involved. Who’s she got lined up this time?”
Bill said nothing. I returned the favor. When it comes to playing silent chicken, I have much more patience.
I didn’t have long to wait.
“Fine,” Bill snapped. “Her younger sister Julie’s in town. Half-sister, technically. She’s an amazing cook, Tenzing. The real deal. A professional chef. Good-looking, too.”
“I don’t care if she’s the radiant goddess Tara incarnate. I’m not interested.”
For the past six months, since she quit her job to have and raise the twins, Martha has been on a one-woman tear to fix me up with a new girlfriend. I finally caught on after the third “accidental” drop-in of an available female right around the first course of yet another supposedly relaxed family dinner.
Bill sighed.
“I’ll be sure Martha makes it clear you aren’t looking for a mate. Anyway, Julie’s almost as gun-shy as you. She’s coming off a disastrous breakup with a crazy sommelier. You don’t want to know.”
“No, I don’t.”
“Come for dinner, Ten. Martha misses you. Hell, another day or two, and I may even start to miss you. Anyway, you haven’t seen the girls in months.”
I heard the crunch of tires turning into my driveway. This hideaway home of mine was becoming a regular Greyhound bus station.
“I’ll call you back,” I said.
I crossed to the window. A black-and-white pulled up, followed by a dusty sedan so nondescript I immediately made it as an unmarked police vehicle.
I recognized the local cop the minute he clambered out of the car and hitched up his pants. He was middle-aged, built like a cement wall, with a permanent look of disappointment etched into his features. I’d seen him around. His main beat seemed to be traffic citations, handing out greenies to entitled yuppies making illegal U-turns around town.
Hey, I’d be disappointed, too. A traffic beat isn’t exactly the pinnacle of police work.
I didn’t recognize the plainclothes detective. He was bone-thin, with a hawk face. His suit was in serious need of a visit to the dry cleaners.
They ambled toward my back door.
I tucked my T-shirt into my jeans. Pulled it out again. Smoothed my hair. Noted the flicker of nerves in my chest.
Remarkable. I’d only been a civilian for a few days, but apparently that’s all it took to cross the invisible boundary separating the rest of the world from law enforcement. I was no longer a member of that exclusive club. I wasn’t sure I liked the feeling.
They clomped up the back steps and r
apped on the door. I opened it and extended my hand.
“Ten Norbu.”
Hawk Face gripped hard. “Detective Terry Tatum,” he said. “This is Officer Morris.”
Morris’s handshake was damp and halfhearted. I refrained from wiping my palm on my jeans.
“I’ve seen you around town,” I said to Morris. “What’s up?”
Tatum stepped in before Morris could reply. Interesting. Must be two jurisdictions.
“We’re hoping you can help us with an investigation,” Tatum said. “But first, I guess congratulations are in order. I hear you just put in your papers.”
“Word gets around fast. What division are you in?”
“Sheriff’s Department. Fifteen years on the job.”
“My sympathies,” I said, which elicited a tiny, tight smile from him. There’s no love lost between the LAPD and County.
I gestured toward the kitchen table. They sat.
“Want a cup of coffee?” Dumb question. They were cops. Of course they wanted coffee.
I busied myself setting out two mugs, filling them with the strong Arabian brew left over from breakfast and stored in a carafe. I tend to make a lot of coffee. I don’t always drink it all, but I like knowing it’s there. As I set down the mugs, I mentally ran through my cold cases, trying to work out what brought them to my house.
I came up blank.
“So, what’s the investigation?”
Tatum and Morris exchanged glances.
Tatum again spoke first. “There was a woman in a beat-up Volkswagen seen coming up your road yesterday. One of your neighbors thought she might have turned into your driveway.”
“Barbara Maxey,” I said. “She was looking for her ex-husband, Zimmy Backus.”
I gave them the quick sketch of my brief interaction with her, leaving out my little frisson of attraction.
Morris scribbled in a small notebook. His writing was spiky and crabbed. It looked disappointed, too.
“This about the car?” I asked. Stealing a rusted VW didn’t usually warrant a house call by two cops from two different departments, but you never know.
Detective Tatum’s face narrowed. “What about the car?”
“It’s hot. She stole it. From the cult, she said.”
“That explains the expired plates,” Morris put in, and made another note.
Tatum just shook his head. “No. We’re definitely not here about the car.”
“What did she do, then?” Car theft aside, she didn’t strike me as felon material.
“She didn’t do anything,” Tatum said. “She got it done to her.”
A thin spear of dread drilled downward from my heart to my belly. I swiveled in my chair to look out the window. I think something bad may be going on. I took a deep breath. Turned back to Tatum. He was eyeing me closely.
“What happened?” I asked.
Tatum opened his mouth. Then closed it. One more silent exchange with Morris. I knew this look too well-Bill and I had shared it many a time when questioned by a well-intentioned citizen. I was the civilian now. Kicked out of the tribe, maybe for good.
Well, I would have to create my own tribe, then.
“We’ve got her on a slab downtown,” Morris said. “We need somebody to I.D. the body. She’s got no next-of-kin as far as we can tell, so that leaves you.”
I have nowhere else to go.
I stood up.
“I’ll meet you there.”
I headed south down Topanga Canyon, pulling a left on Pacific Coast Highway. Usually I loved to take the Mustang through her paces, but I was too distracted to enjoy the drive. I hugged the coast, glancing once or twice at the ocean to my right. It was dark and choppy today, like my mood. I wondered about Barbara’s connection to Zimmy, her concern about his royalties. I had been so quick to dismiss her fears. Too quick by far.
I continued onto the 10. It was smooth sailing for about nine miles, until I ran into the inevitable clog of cars that meant downtown was close. I zigged onto the 110 toward Pasadena, zagged onto the 5 South, merged onto the 101, and took the Mission Road exit. Driving in L.A. was like negotiating a labyrinth. It took me years to learn my way around.
I entered Boyle Heights, land of the gang, home of the disenfranchised. Last count, it was over 90 percent Latino, and who could blame them? Their forefathers were victims of restrictive covenants that limited land ownership throughout L.A. to only the whitest of lily-whites. South Central and Boyle Heights were the exceptions. Now these two neighborhoods marked their territories with spray cans and bullets.
I pulled into the County Coroner’s entrance and parked in an open slot in front of the emphatic “Visitors Only!” sign. That was me, now. A visitor only.
Ahead of me loomed an ornate confection of brick and cement that seemed better suited to an art academy than its singular, grim purpose. Eight hundred bodies passed through the County Coroner’s building every month-anyone whose death was sudden, unnatural, or suspicious in any way. Anyone not under the care of a doctor. Anyone who had fallen off the map. I have nowhere else to go.
I slowly ascended the stone steps, dreading the job ahead. The last time I came here, it was to buy a beach towel-among other distinguishing features, this was the only Coroner’s office in the country with its own gift shop. Skeletons in the Closet stocked an array of morbid but amusing knickknacks, from skull business-card holders to numerous items decorated with the ominous traced outline of a fallen homicide victim. Some of the proceeds raised money to educate kids about drunk driving; though it seemed to me a tour of the morgue after a bad pile-up might serve just as well. Whatever. At the time, I’d been invited to a retirement party for a fellow cop who was taking his pension and hightailing it to Hawaii. The Body Outline Beach Towel seemed like just the thing.
I entered the lobby. Passed a small cluster of people surrounding a young woman racked with sobs. Passed an elderly man, sitting, staring blankly ahead, at nothing. Took a deep breath in, then out. Mortality is hard to face, but impossible to avoid. Me? I’d been trained to view the inevitability of death as a goad to living a more meaningful life-by showing compassion to others, for example. I only wish it were that easy.
I headed for the morgue.
CHAPTER 6
Death wears many masks, and I’ve seen more than my share: from the smiling visage of an esteemed lama who, after a lifetime of compassion for all sentient beings, passed peacefully while seated in an advanced state of meditative luminosity, to the gaping stare of a young gangbanger, cut down in his neighborhood war zone by a blunt act of violence. I was at that scene within moments, and his dark spirit still circled his place of death like an angry raven.
Then there’s my first. The death that marked me for life. When I found my mother, she was lying in a heap on the floor, her once-beautiful face mottled and puffy, misshapen from the toxic mix of prescription drugs washed down with a liter of Bordeaux. The stink of stale vomit and alcohol clung to her like a stain. I am still haunted by it. The cologne of death.
“Ready?” Tatum asked.
I nodded.
The attendant tugged the sheet to just below the chin. Barbara Maxey’s features were pale, yet somehow defiant as well. Death had robbed her of her ruddy complexion but not of her fine bone structure. I shivered in the chill, antiseptic air of the morgue as I scanned her face. No visible signs of trauma, at least that I could see. I wanted to ask the morgue attendant to pull the sheet lower, but something told me to wait.
I turned to Tatum and nodded again.
“That’s her, then? Barbara Maxey?”
“Yes. That’s the name she gave me, anyway.”
Morris passed over a long-expired California driver’s license. Barbara smiled back at me, many years younger, glowing with the bliss of the newly clean and converted. She must have just joined the cult.
“That’s the only I.D. she was carrying,” Morris said.
“What was the cause of death?”
They said nothi
ng. I waited.
“You want me to show him?” the attendant said, glancing at the cops.
They were silent.
“Guys,” I said, “I’ve only been a civilian for forty-eight hours. Give me a break.”
So Tatum did. He nodded to the attendant, who drew the sheet down below her collarbone.
The bruising was massive, and unmistakable; clear hand marks encircled Barbara’s slender throat. The larynx area was especially discolored, a violent contusion of purple and black. Whoever did this had been brutal about it. I took a few breaths to quell the surge of nausea in my gut.
“Finished?” the attendant asked. The cops nodded, and he draped the sheet over her face. He took a moment to smooth out the wrinkles. I appreciated that he did that.
I still held her license in my hand. I met Tatum’s eyes.
“Can I have this?”
He frowned. Government-issued identification of any decedents was usually returned to the issuing agency for disposal.
“I’ll destroy it within the day. I promise.”
Tatum glanced at Morris. Morris shrugged a halfhearted consent.
“Thanks.”
I pocketed the license.
Tatum walked me out. He was through with me, but I still had a few questions.
“Where did you find her?” I asked.
“Topanga State Park. A couple of early-morning joggers spotted her. She was in a sleeping bag, set back a ways, near the creek. Looked like she’d spent the night up there. Or I should say part of the night. The ME says time of death was probably around 3 A.M. this morning.”
We had reached my car. Tatum’s eyebrows arched. I could see him trying to figure out how the hell a guy like me had a car like that. It happens a lot-’65 Shelby Mustangs in mint condition are pretty rare. Then his cell phone beeped, pulling him back to reality. He’d have to leave this particular mystery unsolved. He turned to go.
“Detective Tatum.”
He glanced back.
“Did he say anything about the manner of death? Did you do a tox screening to see if any drugs were involved?”
“Let it go,” Tatum said. “You’re off the clock. You don’t need that kind of garbage floating around in your head.”