"Off the record, Lieutenant. I swear."
The tic of a smile Frank had given Sally earlier was a little wider this time and lasted a second longer. It almost reached her eyes.
"Promise?" Frank asked, and Sally agreed eagerly. The lieutenant lowered her head toward Sally and glanced around as she opened the car door. Then she bent closer to the perfectly coifed hair framing Sally Eisley's perfectly gorgeous little ear. Frank's lips moved against the starched blonde strands.
As Captains Foubarelle and Bedford stepped self-importantly from their car, Frank slipped into hers. Johnnie steered them quickly into the light traffic and Noah leaned over the seat.
"Hey. What'd you say to Sally?"
Frank was mulling over the peculiarities of the case and she answered laconically.
"Told her she'd stepped in dog shit."
Johnnie chuckled. Twice already, Frank had made his day.
2
The way he stormed into her office, Frank knew that if she had balls, Fubar would be busting them. Almost shouting, he demanded, "Why didn't you wait for us at the high school this morning?" Frank sighed and tipped her chair back, steepling two fingers against her lips. "What the hell was going on out there?" The captain wasn't a bad guy, just incompetent, and Franco resented incompetency. In her line of work it could get people killed. She'd admit he'd only been captain for six months, but she was sure if his learning curve was graphed it would show up as a horizontal line.
In a monotone Frank explained, "We'd been on that case for hours. Before that we were at another scene for three hours. The good citizens of L.A. pay us for an eight-hour day, John. We were already into the seventh hour of our day, with no paper generated on either case. We could have wasted more time standing around like idiots for the cameras, or we could have come back here to do some work."
Foubarelle opened his mouth to interrupt, but Frank dropped her chair and leaned toward him.
"If you want to pay my guys overtime, I'll have them jumping around in monkey suits for you, but until then, we've got murders to solve. We don't get that 74 percent clearance rate by dicking around with Tom Brokaw all day." Finished, Frank sat back.
The captain had read dozens of management books, replete with all the tricks about how to jockey oneself into a position of physical power, but even standing over Frank he felt smaller than her. Foubarelle hadn't come up through the ranks, and at times it cost him. In eleven short years he had jumped from patrol cop to patrol sergeant, served briefly as a vice detective before making vice lieutenant, then on to homicide captain. He was making strides in the political process but at the cost of respect among the people he supervised. They knew he fell asleep at night dreaming that chief was stenciled on his office door. But Foubarelle wasn't out to bust chops, he was merely being politically expedient. When his chain was yanked, he turned around to yank Frank's.
Now he took a softer tack with his contumacious lieutenant. She was right that he enjoyed supervising a homicide squad with such a large percentage of cleared cases, large at least for the Figueroa district. He knew Frank was responsible for that number and he knew it made him look very good.
"I'm sorry," he offered, turning up his hands in conciliation. "I know you've got a lot of work to do. Tell me about this girl."
Frank ignored the patronization, wondering just how much she could trust Foubarelle with. He had a tendency to leak valuable details, but then she realized they didn't have any valuable details. Yet.
"White girl, midteens. Noah may have ID'd her on an MP bulletin. I asked Crocetti to do her ASAP."
She paused for a moment knowing the captain's next step would be a call to the coroner. He never actually went to the morgue but he was the first to redball the old coroner when a hot case was pending. That was good for Frank; Foubarelle's phone calls usually got the autopsy done faster while keeping the heat off Frank and her squad.
"Valley girl coming to score a little coke in the 'hood?" he asked.
"I don't think so."
The girl didn't have any of the earmarks of a kick down. Frank explained how the victim had been brutally assaulted, how some of her bruises looked older than others. She told Foubarelle what the coroner's tech had told her, that the cause of death was possibly due to internal trauma. There were no obvious external causes. Usually someone in a jammed-up drug deal was capped or stabbed and just left for dead.
"But she was dumped?"
"Yeah. Nothing at the scene. I called SID in just in case—you might get a call about that." Frank shrugged again, then added, "I'm going to work this with Noah."
Foubarelle nodded, pleased.
"Keep me posted on this, Frank. I want to know everything you know, when you know it, okay?"
"Sure."
Foubarelle turned to go, saying, "And I want to see the protocol as soon as you have it." He knew it was important to leave with the upper hand.
"What an asshole," Frank thought, watching him leave with his imaginary dignity intact. She picked up a stack of messages and sifted through them, crumpling some and tossing them in the trash. She pulled the phone toward her but then sat back, rhythmically tapping the small slips of paper into a tidy pile.
Frank visualized the dead girl sprawled naked on the concrete. She'd been mauled, from her neck down to her knees. Some of the bruises looked older than others, indicating she'd been beaten over a period of time, not just in a sudden pique of anger. Frank remembered that her face was relatively unscathed.
And why was she dumped in plain view on a sidewalk in front of a school? Vacant lots, weedy road shoulders, empty buildings— those were common dump areas. Ike and Diego were working a possible connection to the school, either the girl's or the killer's.
She traded the messages in her hand for the MP bulletin. It looked like the same girl. Melissa Agoura. Sixteen years old. From Culver City. She'd disappeared from Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area three days ago. The bruises could be consistent with those dates.
She'd been attractive, Frank thought, sailing the bulletin back onto her desk, then dialing the phone. Returning her calls and waiting for a correct ID was more productive right now than speculating.
Noah was bent over one of the two typewriters in the office that actually worked. Slipping into her jacket, Frank informed him, "Coroner called. Handley matched our girl to the bulletin. And Crotchety's ready to cut. Let's go." She slapped him on the back and started walking away.
"Aww, man, Leslie's got a game at 3:30. If I left now I could just make it," he pleaded.
"Come on. It's good for you. Builds character."
"I've got character," he argued, rising nonetheless. He grumbled all the way to the morgue, and she let him. Noah was off hours ago, adored his kids, and hated autopsies. She'd have watched the autopsy alone on a less sensitive case but she wanted him in on this one.
Awkward, skinny, all flapping hands and feet, Noah looked more like a scarecrow than a crack homicide detective. He was consistently the worst shot in the department and the best cop Frank had. What he lacked in physical presence he compensated for with instinct, intelligence, and compassion. He was rarely more than a step behind Frank and often one or two ahead. She'd felt a twinge of guilt reassigning this case to Noah, knowing it could be messy. It was already distracting Noah from the little family life he had, but selfishly, Frank was glad to be working with him. The least she could do was let him carp. Besides, that was another of Noah's specialties.