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Dinsmore’s small eyes widened slightly. Bosch winked at him to further confuse him. He wondered if Dinsmore was part of what was going on here or whether, like a mole, he was in the dark. He told him to go back to his burrito and then he and Aguila stepped back into the hall. Just at that moment the door at the end of the hall opened and through it stepped Ely. He pulled a breathing mask and goggles off his face and charged down the hall, coffee slopping over the sides of the Styrofoam cup.

“I want you two out of here unless you have a court order.”

He was right up to Bosch now and anger was etching red lines on his face. It was the act he might have used to intimidate others but Bosch was not impressed. He looked down into the shorter man’s coffee cup and smiled as a small piece of the puzzle slipped into place. The stomach contents of Juan Doe #67 had included coffee. That was how he had swallowed the medfly which had brought Bosch here. Ely followed his eyes down and saw the medfly floating on the surface of the hot liquid.

“Fuckin’ flies,” he said.

“You know,” Bosch said, “I’ll probably get that court order.”

He couldn’t think of anything else to say and didn’t want to leave Ely with the satisfaction of throwing him out. He and Aguila headed for the exit.

“Don’t count on it,” Ely said. “This is Mexico. You aren’t jackshit here.”

23

Bosch stood at the window of his third-floor room in the Hotel Colorado on Calzado Justo Sierra and looked out at what he could see of Mexicali. To his left the view was obscured by the other wing of the hotel. But looking out to the right he saw the streets were clogged with cars and the colorful buses he had seen earlier. He could hear a mariachi band playing somewhere. There was the smell of frying grease in the air from a nearby restaurant. And the sky above the ramshackle city was purple and red in the day’s dying light. In the distance he could see the buildings of the justice center and, near them to the right, the rounded shape of a stadium. Plaza de los Toros.

He had called Corvo in Los Angeles two hours earlier, left his number and location, and was waiting for a call back from his man in Mexicali, Ramos. He walked away from the window and looked at the phone. He knew it was time to make the rest of the calls but he hesitated. He grabbed a beer out of the tin ice bucket on the bureau and opened it. He drank a quarter of it and sat on the bed next to the phone.

There were three messages on the phone tape at his home, all of them from Pounds saying the same thing: “Call me.”

But he didn’t. Instead, he called the homicide table first. It was Saturday night but the chances were it would still be all hands on deck because of Porter. Jerry Edgar answered.

“What’s the situation?”

“Shit, man, you gotta come in.” He was speaking in a very low voice. “Everybody’s looking for you. RHD’s got the lead on this thing so I don’t know exactly what’s happening. I’m just one of the gofers. But, I think uh,… I don’t know, man.”

“What? Say it.”

“It’s like they think you either did Porter or you might be next. It’s hard to gauge what the fuck they’re doing or thinking.”

“Who’s there?”

“Everybody. This is the command post. Irving’s in there in the box with Ninety-eight now.”

Bosch knew he couldn’t let it go on much further. He had to call in. He might have already damaged himself beyond repair.

“Okay,” he said. “I’m going to call them. I have to make one other call first. Thanks.”

Bosch hung up and dialed another number, hoping he had remembered it correctly and that she would be home. It was near seven and he thought maybe she had gone out for dinner, but then she picked up on the sixth ring.

“It’s Bosch. A bad time?”

“What do you want?” Teresa said. “Where are you? Everybody’s looking for you, you know.”

“I heard. But I’m outta town. I was just calling ’cause I heard they found my friend Lucius Porter.”

“Yeah, they did. Sorry. I just got back from the cut.”

“Yeah, I figured you’d do it.”

And then silence before she said, “Harry, why do I get the feeling you want-that you aren’t calling just because he was your friend?”

“Well…”

“Oh, shit, here we go again, right?”

“No. I just wanted to know how he got it is all. He was a friend. I worked with him. Never mind.”

“I don’t know why I let you do this to me. Shit. Mexican necktie, Harry. There, you happy? Got all you need now?”

“Garrote?”

“Yes. Steel baling wire, wrapped at the ends around two wooden pegs. I’m sure you’ve seen it before. Do I get to read this in theTimes tomorrow, too?”

He was silent until he was sure she was done. He looked from the bed to the open window and saw the daylight was now completely gone. The sky was a deep red wine. He thought of the man at Poe’s. Three tears.

“Did you do a compar-”

“Comparison to the Jimmy Kapps case? Yes. We’re way ahead of you, but it won’t be done for a few days.”

“How come?”

“Because it takes that long to do wood-fiber testing between the dowel pegs and alloy-content analysis on the baling wire. We did do a cut analysis on the wire, though. It looks very good.”

“Meaning?”

“Meaning it looks like the wire on the garrote used to kill Porter was cut from the same length of wire used to kill Kapps. The ends match. It’s not one hundred percent because similar pliers will leave similar cut tracings. So we are doing the metal-alloy comparison. We’ll know in a few days.”

She seemed so matter-of-fact about it all. He was surprised she was still angry with him. The television reports of the night before seemed to be in her favor. He didn’t know what to say. He had gone from being at ease in bed with her to being nervous on the phone with her.

“Thanks, Teresa,” he finally said. “I’ll see you.”

“Harry?” she said before he could hang up.

“Yeah?”

“When you get back, I don’t think you should call me again. I think we should keep it professional. If we see each other in the suite, then that’s fine. But let’s leave it there.”

He didn’t say anything.

“Okay?”

“Sure.”

They hung up. Bosch sat without moving for several minutes. Finally, he picked the phone up again and dialed the direct line into the glass box. Pounds picked up immediately.

“It’s Bosch.”

“Where are you?”

“Mexicali. You left messages?”

“I called the hotel on your tape. They said you never checked in.”

“I decided to stay on the other side of the border.”

“Never mind the bullshit. Porter is dead.”

“What!” Bosch tried his best to make it seem real. “What happened? I just saw him yesterday. He-”

“Never mind the bullshit, Bosch. What are you doing down there?”

“You told me to go where the case followed. It led here.”

“I never told you to go to Mexico.” He was yelling. “I want you back here ten minutes ago. This does not look good for you. We have a bartender that so help me Christ is ready to put your dick in the dirt on this. He-hang on.”

“Bosch,” a new voice on the line said. “Assistant Chief Irving here. What is your location?”

“I’m in Mexicali.”

“I want you in my office at oh eight hundred tomorrow.”

Bosch didn’t hesitate. He knew he could not show any weakness.

“Can’t do that, Chief. I have some unfinished business here that’ll probably take me through tomorrow at least.”

“We are talking about a fellow officer’s murder here, Detective. I don’t know if you realize this, but you could be in danger yourself.”