“I'm just trying to get to Westwood. For an audition. A TV movie. I got off the highway before I was supposed to -”
He howled with laughter, turning away from the car to his group, and then back again.
His rnovements were casual and slow "She's trying to get to Westwood to be in a movie.
A film. Darnn, that's about exactly what I expected. 'Cause I know you ain't got no interest in anything or anybody 'round here."
“Nah, man,” said one of the other boys. “She do her killing in the rich neighborhoods.”
“I got no problem with that,” said another “Kill the rich, eat the rich, whatever”
“What are you saying?” She looked at each of them now, desperate for any kind of clarity, a clue about what she should say or do to get out of there. Her wild-eyed gaze fell on the rearview mirror. Could I back out of here? Fast? Really, really fast? Pedal-to-the- metal kind of thing?
The kid at her window lifted his jacket to show a pistol tucked into the waistband of his jeans. “You don't want to do that,” he said.
The idea that she could be murdered before she had her morning coffee came over Alicia with an ugly reck- oning. “Please, I just ... please. D-don't h-hurt me,” she stammered.
She could hear the helplessness in her own voice. It was like listening to someone else, someone pathetic. God, she was supposed to be an actress.
The man in blue nodded slowly, in a way she couldn't de cipher. Then he stepped back from the car and put out his hand to let her pass.
“Highway's that way,” he said. The other two moved off to the side, too.
Alicia felt as if she might faint from relief. She gave the men a watery smile. “Thank you. I'm so sorry” she said again.
Her hands were shaking on the steering wheel, but at least she was safe.
The Suburban had barely inched forward when, with a sickening crack, the front windshield shattered into a spider- web of about a million glass pieces.
An instant later, a heavy metal pipe smashed through the driver's-side window.
Paralysis overtook Alicia. Her arms and legs wouldn't function. She couldn't even scream.
The impulse to floor the accelerator got to her brain a mo ment too late - about a second after her car door flew open and large, powerful hands dragged her out onto the street. Alicia landed on her back, the air rushing out of her lungs in a gasp.
“What kind of stupid are you?” she heard someone say - and then she felt a shock of pain on the side of her head.
Then she saw a pipe rise up high and come down really fast, a blur aimed right at the center of her forehead.
Mary, Mary
Chapter 69
EVERYTHING HAD CHANGED suddenly and dramatically on Mary Smith. Jeanne Galletta was out; she was completely off the case. She'd been reassigned.
I tried going to bat for her, but within hours of Alicia Pitt's murder, she was history on Mary Smith. That evening, Police Chief Shrewsbury announced that he would be personally overseeing the Hollywood Stalker murders, and that Detective Galletta was on temporary leave pending an investigation into the unfortunate murder of a young Las Vegas woman driving a blue Suburban.
Jeanne was inconsolable, but she was getting the full spectrum of experiences on the case, including a turn as sacrificial lamb. “The mayor of Las Vegas telling the mayor of L.A. to tell the chief of police how to run an investigation?“ she ranted to me. ”When did this stop being about professionals doing good work?“ ”Somewhere around the dawn of time,” I said.
The two of us met for a drink around 8:00 that night. She picked the spot, and said she wanted to make sure I had everything I needed from her on the murder investigation. Of course, she also wanted to vent.
“I know Alicia Pitt's my fault, but -”
“Jeanne, stop right there. You aren't responsible for what happened to that woman. It might have come as a result of a decision you made, but that's not the same thing. You made the best call you could. The rest is politics. You shouldn't have been taken off the case, either.”
She didn't speak for several seconds. “I don't know” she finally said. “That poor girl is dead.”
“Do you have any vacation time?” I asked her. “Maybe you should use it.”
“Yeah, like I'm going to leave town now,” she said. “I may be off the case, but-”
She didn't finish her sentence, but she didn't need to. I had been in her position before.
It's best not to say out loud that you're going to break the rules. Just go ahead and break them.
“Alex, I'm going to need my space,” she said. “That's why I wanted to meet you here.”
“I understand completely You know where to reach me,” I told her.
Jeanne finally cracked a half smile. “You're a really good guy,” she said. “For FBI.”
“You're okay for a cop. For LAPD.”
Then she reached across the table and put her hand on mine. But she quickly took her hand away “Awkward,” she said, and smiled again. “Sorry; if I'm being goofy.”
“You're being human, Jeanne. That's different, right? I wouldn't apologize for it.”
“All right, I won't apologize anymore. I have to go, though, before I cry or something incredibly embarrassing like that. You know where to reach me, if you need to.”
Then Jeanne got up from the table. She turned back before she got to the door. “I'm not off this case, though. I'll be around.”
Chapter7O WEIRD.
When I got back to my room that night, an envelope was waiting for me at the front desk.
It was from James Iruscott.
I opened it on my way to my room, and I couldn't stop reading the contents all the way there.
SUBJECT: WOMEN ON DEATH ROW IN CALIF There were fifteen at the moment, and Truscott included a brief write-up on each of them.
The first woman was Cynthia Coffman. In 1986, she and her boyfriend robbed and strangled four women. She'd been sentenced in 1989 and was still waiting. Cynthia Coffman was forty-two years old now.
At the end of the long note, Truscott said that he planned to visit some of the women in prison. I was welcome to tag along if I thought it might be useful.
After I finished reading the pages, I leafed through them a second time.
What was with James Truscott? And why did he want to be my Boswell? I wished he would just leave me alone, but that wasn't going to happen, was it?
Chapter_71 THE PHONE IN MY HOTEL ROOM woke me at just past 2:30 in the morning. I was having a dream about Little Alex and Christine, but I forgot most of it as soon as I heard the first ring.
My first coherent thought: James Truscott.
But it wasn't him.
Around 3:00 A.M. I was driving through an unfamiliar Hollywood neighborhood looking for the Hillside condo complex. I might have found it sooner in daylight, and if my mind hadn't been racing the whole way there.
Mary Smith game had changed again, and I was struggling to understand it. Why this murder? Why now? Why these two victims?
The condo complex, when I finally found it, looked to have been built in the seventies. The units were flat-roofed three-story structures in dark cedar, with fat columns for legs and open parking underneath. There was also parking on the street, I noticed, and that would offer an intruder privacy “Agent Cross! Alex!” I heard from across the lot.
I recognized Karl Page's voice from somewhere in the dark. My watch read 3:05.
He caught up with me under a streetlight. “Over this way,” he said.
“How'd you hear about it?” I asked him. Page was the one who had called me in my hotel room.
“I was still in the office.”
“When the hell do you sleep?”
“I'll sleep when it's over.”
I followed the young agent through a series of right and left turns, to where a square of buildings faced a common garden and pool area. Several residents, many of them in nightclothes, were gathered around one of the front doors. They were craning their necks and whispering among themselves.