“What the hell was that?” she said. “Get in the car.”
I heard the doors of their car open and close. Then the engine turned over and the tires shot gravel as they took off and drove down the hill.
“Who were they?” Kendall asked.
“FBI,” I said.
“What? What did they want?”
“To scare me. Let’s go in.”
The first thing I did when I got back inside was go to my Ring camera app and check whether the confrontation on the front deck could be seen and heard clearly. It was all there, but the sound was sketchy in places. I had no doubt that it could be teased out by a sound expert if I ever needed it. I sent the video to Cisco and Jennifer so they would have copies. I also wrote a short note to accompany the file transfer: Looks like we touched a nerve.
I returned to my spot on the couch next to Kendall but found it hard to get back into the grind of going through the case files.
“What exactly did they want?” Kendall asked.
“I rattled their cage today,” I said. “They wanted to rattle mine.”
“Did they?”
“Nope.”
“Good. You want to keep working?”
“Nah, I think I’m done for the night.”
“Then, let’s go to bed.”
“Good idea.”
But the move to the bedroom was interrupted by Cisco, who called after viewing the video I had sent. I told Kendall I’d be in in a few minutes.
“That looked a little testy,” Cisco said.
“They definitely aren’t happy with the subpoena we dropped on them,” I said. “Whatever they’ve got going at BioGreen, they don’t want us in the picture.”
“But we stay with it, right?”
“Right. You hear anything from the Indians after this morning?”
“I got a report on the sidepiece. Still no sign of Opparizio.”
“We have to find him. What about that other thing you were doing?”
“Yeah, I was going to fill you in tomorrow. There was nothing there tonight. No flags. After he left you at the house, he walked down the hill to Sunset, ordered food right there at Zankou Chicken, and waited for a ride. Then I see a car pull up and it’s his girlfriend.”
“How’d you know it was his girlfriend?”
“Because I’ve been dropping off cash to her every week since you got popped.”
“Right. Forgot.”
“She had the kid in the car too. They picked him up with dinner and went home to Inglewood. And that was it.”
“He didn’t make any calls?”
“A couple but I had eyes on him. They were social calls. He was smiling, animated — not like he was reporting in as a CI.”
“Still, if we get the chance, we should check the phone. Get the call log. I want to be sure.”
I realized that my tone indicated that I was disappointed Bambadjan Bishop didn’t appear to be snitching for the prosecution or the police. And I guess I was. If he was snitching, I could use that to my advantage, plus get the ultimate payoff when it came time to expose the wrongdoing in court.
“I think after the jail surveillance thing and now the missing wallet, they’d be crazy to try to submarine us,” Cisco said.
“You’re probably right,” I acknowledged. “But stay on him one more night. You never know.”
“Done.”
“Okay, Cisco, thanks. We’ll talk tomorrow.”
As soon as I disconnected, I thought about Bosch. I had not sent him the video of the confrontation with the two FBI agents.
I called him directly and he picked up after two rings.
“Hold on,” he said. “Let me get clear.”
I heard the distinctive sounds of a casino in the background: slot-machine bells, people shouting. Then it got quiet and Bosch said hello.
“It’s Mick. Where the hell are you?”
“Vegas. You couldn’t tell? I just checked in at the Mandalay.”
“What are you doing there? I thought you were working for me.”
I immediately regretted my choice of words.
“With me, I mean.”
“I am. That’s why I’m here. Following something.”
“Well, we struck a big nerve today with the bureau. Two agents just showed up here to tell me we’re barking up the wrong tree with BioGreen while confirming that we’re barking up the right tree.”
“They like to do that.”
“Well, I don’t know what you’ve got there, but I want to put everything we have into finding out about how Sam was mixed up with Opparizio and BioGreen. I still think it’s the magic bullet. It’ll win the case.”
“Got it. I should be back by tomorrow night.”
“Are you going to tell me what you’re doing?”
“Tracking Sam Scales. The last time he got caught was for a phony online fundraiser for the victims of the music festival shooting out here. Remember that? The shooter was actually here at the Mandalay.”
“Of course. Another senseless act of hyperviolence perpetuated by the easy access to high-powered weapons.”
“You’re not an NRA guy, are you?”
“No, I’m not.”
“Anyway, the state of Nevada was all over these scams related to the shooting and grabbed Scales in L.A. They extradited him back here for trial and he cut a deal and did fifteen months for fraud up at High Desert.”
“I remember he called me from the can out there. Wanted me to rep him but I said no. But couldn’t you have gotten all of this by phone? I need you back here.”
“Not what I’m doing tomorrow. High Desert State Prison is about an hour from here. Scales’s cellmate is still there and I’m going to go up and talk to him. Got it set up for eight a.m. I’ll head back to L.A. after that.”
“You think he has something?”
“He’s serving a five-year sentence for major fraud. He was selling phony casino chips, took in a couple million before they caught him. Anyway, these two spent fifteen months together in a cell. I’m thinking they may have traded a few stories about things they did and were planning to do.”
“Perfect, they put a fraud and a con artist together in the same cell. That’s some match,” I said.
“They usually try to keep white-collar guys together so they don’t get picked off by the heavies.”
“Thanks for schooling me.”
“Sorry, I guess you know more about jails than I do,” Bosch said.
“I don’t know if that’s a dig or a compliment. You fly over there or drive?”
“Drove.”
“Okay, call me when you’re heading back. And then I want to get everybody together Wednesday after court to figure out the next steps.”
“I’ll be there.”
After disconnecting the call, I thought about things for a few minutes. I felt that the team was getting close to the big secrets of the case. We had a momentum that could lead us to truth and triumph. It was just a question of whether we would get there in time.
Kendall called down the hall from the bedroom.
“Are you coming to bed or not?”
I stacked all the files I had spread around and got up from the couch. I dumped the files into my briefcase and clicked it closed.
“Coming.”
I headed into the hallway and she was standing there in her bathrobe. I stopped short.
“Scared me,” I said.
“You know, this is what happened before,” she said.
“What did?”
“You know. You let your work take over your life. Our lives. Night and day. And then what we had disappeared. And here we are, back together, and already you’re doing it again.”