“He puts a hit on the kid. Does Lara, too.”
“Or she really was a suicide. She had an inkling of why Kristal had been killed, couldn’t come forward because it would have implicated her. Her depression deepened and she killed herself.”
“Head-shot in a car?” he said. “Same as Rand? To me that says they were both murdered by the same person.”
“Or whoever shot Rand imitated Lara’s suicide.”
He knuckled his temple, made an abrupt lane change, put on more speed. “Daney’s character notwithstanding, Malley’s the one with the guns and it was one of those that killed Lara. And he’s also got a thing for other guys’ wives.”
He slapped the dashboard. “How ‘bout this for a screenplay: The Malleys weren’t the only ones swinging. They met Drew and Cherish at a swap party. Drew and Lara parted ways but Malley and Cherish are still doing it.”
I considered that. “It might help explain Barnett accepting Lara’s pregnancy. If it was the product of a group scene, the threat would be depersonalized.”
“It takes a village,” he said. “Whatever the case, no way I’m scratching the cowboy off my list.”
We parked in the coroner’s lot and entered the north building. Milo talked to Dave O’Reilly, a thin, red-faced, white-haired man with a keen, searching intellect, and asked for Kristal Malley’s tissue samples and Valerie Quezada’s aborted fetus.
“You just dropped Quezada off,” said O’Reilly. “Something come up?”
“You don’t want to know.”
“I’m sure I don’t. Okay, I’ll call down and have them put it in a refrigerator bag and a Styrofoam biohazard box.”
“All official,” said Milo. “I like that.”
“I like tall, skinny brunettes with big natural boobs.”
We returned to the car. Milo put the box in the trunk, along with the attaché case, and started up the engine. A white coroner’s van pulled around from the back of the building and cruised through the lot before turning toward Mission.
He said, “Wonder what police work was like in the rubber hose days.”
“You and Daney alone in a room?”
“Me and anyone I damn well want alone in a room.” He bared his teeth. “Think Daney was telling the truth about knowing Weider before the murder?”
“Why would he lie?”
“Puffing up his chest, more hero-of-the-story crap,” he said. “Making like he’s got big-time contacts at the P.D., masterminded the whole defense.”
“Easy enough to check out,” I said. “And if he was telling the truth about working with inner-city teens, I’d be interested in one particular delinquent other than Troy.”
“Nestor Almedeira.”
“And the dedicated lawyer who stood up for his rights.”
Not that easy to check out.
We sat in the coroner’s lot and Milo phoned the Public Defender’s Office. Several transfers later, he ended up with a supervisor. I watched as amiability morphed to wheedling, then deteriorated to veiled threats. He hung up growling.
“All I want is what would be in a normal court record if Nestor wasn’t a juvenile and the file wasn’t sealed. I can get it eventually if I fool around long enough at the Hall of Records, but it’s gonna take time. Stonewalling bastards. They hate cops and everything else that’s good and true.”
“Try Lauritz Montez,” I said.
“He likes cops?”
“He’s vulnerable and weak-willed.”
The call to Montez’s Beverly Hills office was answered by a tape.
I took the phone, punched 411, and asked for the number of Dr. Chang’s dental office on Alvarado. There’s nothing more effective with a doctor’s staff than having a doctorate. I had Anita Moss on the line within seconds.
“How may I help you, Doctor?”
“Ms. Moss, I was with Detective Sturgis the other day- ”
“With him? You’re not a cop?”
“I’m a psychologist. I consult to the police- ”
“I’m sorry, I’m busy- ”
“Just one question and I’ll be out of your way: Which attorney represented Nestor on the manslaughter charge?”
“Why?”
“It could be important. We’ll find out anyway, but you could make things easier.”
“Okay, okay. A blond lady,” she said. “With a funny name- Sydney something.”
“Sydney Weider.”
“She put a lot of pressure on my mom to attend every hearing, even though my mom wasn’t in good health. She ordered her to sit where the judge could see her, and cry a lot. Told my mom she’d have to take the stand when it came time for Nestor to be sentenced and lie about what a good son Nestor was and then cry a whole bunch more. Coaching her as if Mom was stupid. As if Mom wasn’t crying all the time, anyway.”
“She put on an aggressive defense.”
“I guess,” she said. “I always felt she was doing it more for herself- to win, you know? If she cared about my mother, she wouldn’t have bossed her around like that. It didn’t matter anyway. Nestor was guilty, they did this plea-bargain thing. Which was okay with me. I didn’t want my mom to have to cry for strangers.”
“Was a man named Drew Daney involved with Nestor’s case?”
“It sounds familiar, but…”
“A divinity student and youth worker- ”
“Oh, yeah, him. The church guy,” she said. “A few months before Nestor killed that dealer he got sent to some drug rehab program and the church guy worked there. Did he do something wrong? ’Cause that would surprise me.”
“Why?”
“Him I liked. He seemed real sincere about wanting to help Nestor. Wrote a letter to the judge for Nestor.”
“Puts everything in place, doesn’t it?” said Milo, driving out of the lot.
“Daney visits Troy in Stockton,” I said. “Uses the opportunity to drop in on Nestor and set Troy up.”
“Meanwhile, Rand’s over in Chino. Think that’s the reason Daney left him alone? No juvey hit man planted there?”
“More likely Rand wasn’t a threat. Until he was.”
He got back on the freeway. “You in the mood to ply your trade?”
“With who?”
“A crazy woman.”
CHAPTER 38
Sydney Weider opened her front door wearing a soiled white T-shirt with a Surfside Country Club flying dolphin logo over her left breast, gray stretch athletic shorts, and bare feet. Up close, her face was pallid, scored vertically by wrinkles that began at the corners of her eyes and tugged her mouth down. Her legs were white, varicosed, her feet hangnailed and grubby around the ankles.
She opened her mouth in surprise.
Milo said, “Ma’am,” and showed her his badge.
She slapped him hard across the face.
As he hauled her out to the unmarked, cuffed her, hissing and twisting, a snick sounded from across the street and a woman ran out of a pretty, black-shuttered Colonial.
Same neighbor who’d watched Weider scream at me a few days ago.
“Here we go,” muttered Milo. “Where’s the damned video camera?”
Weider growled and slammed her head into his arm and tried to bite him. He held her at arm’s length. “Open the door, Alex.”
As I did the woman from across the street sped toward us.
Late thirties, blond ponytail, shapely in tight black pedal pushers and a sea-green tank top. Grace Kelly facial definition. Sydney Weider in a younger, happier time.
She looked furious; let’s hear it for Neighborhood Watch.
As she got closer, Milo said, “Ma’am- ”
“Good for you!” she said. “That bitch screams at all the children and terrifies them! She makes everyone’s lives miserable! What’d she do to finally get you to take some action?”