“How about that, Jessup? He’s going for the Jesus juice.”
Jessup responded tiredly.
“Asshole’s posturing. Besides, they don’t execute anybody in this state anymore. You know what death row means? It means you get a cell all to yourself and you control what’s on the TV. It means better access to phone, food and visitors. Fuck it, I hope he does go for it, man. But it won’t matter. This is bullshit. This whole thing is bullshit. It’s all about the money.”
The last line floated out there for a long moment before Bosch finally bit.
“What money?”
“My money. You watch, man, they’ll come at me with a deal. My lawyer told me. They’ll want me to take a deal and plead to time served so they don’t have to pay me the money. That’s all this fucking is and you two are just the deliverymen. Fuckin’ FedEx.”
Bosch was silent. He wondered if it could be true. Jessup was suing the city and county for millions. Could it be that the retrial was simply a political move designed to save money? Both government entities were self-insured. Juries loved hitting faceless corporations and bureaucracies with obscenely large judgments. A jury believing prosecutors and police had corruptly imprisoned an innocent man for twenty-four years would be beyond generous. A hit from an eight-figure judgment could be devastating to both city and county coffers, even if they were splitting the bill.
But if they jammed Jessup and maneuvered him into a deal in which he acknowledged guilt to gain his freedom, then the lawsuit would go away. So would all the book and movie money he was counting on.
“Makes a lot of sense, doesn’t it?” Jessup said.
Bosch checked the mirror and realized that now Jessup was studying him. He turned his eyes back to the road. He felt his phone vibrate and pulled it out of his jacket.
“You want me to take it, Harry?” Chu asked.
A reminder that it was illegal to talk on a phone while driving an automobile. Bosch ignored him and took the call. It was Lieutenant Gandle.
“Harry, you close?”
“Getting off the one-oh-one.”
“Good. I just wanted to give you a heads-up. They’re lining up at intake. Comb your hair.”
“Got it, but maybe I’ll give my partner the airtime.”
Bosch glanced over at Chu but didn’t explain.
“Either way,” Gandle said. “What’s next?”
“He invoked so we just book him. Then I have to go back to the war room and meet with the prosecutors. I’ve got questions.”
“Harry, do they have this guy or not?”
Bosch checked Jessup in the mirror. He was back to looking out the window.
“I don’t know, Lieutenant. When I know, you’ll know.”
A few minutes later they pulled into the rear lot of the jail. There were several television cameras and their operators lined up on a ramp leading to the intake door. Chu sat up straight.
“Perp walk, Harry.”
“Yeah. You take him in.”
“Let’s both do it.”
“Nah, I’ll hang back.”
“You sure?”
“I’m sure. Just don’t forget my cuffs.”
“Okay, Harry.”
The lot was clogged with media vans with their transmitters cranked to full height. But they had left the space in front of the ramp open. Bosch pulled in and parked.
“Okay, you ready back there, Jessup?” Chu asked. “Time to sell tickets.”
Jessup didn’t respond. Chu opened the door and got out, then opened the rear door for Jessup.
Bosch watched the ensuing spectacle from the confines of the car.
Five
Tuesday, February 16, 4:14 P.M .
One of the very best things about having previously been married to Maggie McPherson was that I never had to face her in court. The marital split created a conflict of interest that saved me professional defeat and humiliation at her hands on more than one occasion. She was truly the best prosecutor I’d ever seen step into the well and they didn’t call her Maggie McFierce for no reason.
Now, for the first time, we would be on the same team in court, sitting side by side at the same table. But what had seemed like such a good idea-not to mention such a positive potential payoff for Maggie-was already manifesting itself as something jagged and rusty. Maggie was having issues with being second chair. And for good reason. She was a professional prosecutor. From drug dealers and petty thieves to rapists and murderers, she had put dozens of criminals behind bars. I had appeared in dozens of trials myself but never as a prosecutor. Maggie would have to play backup to a novice and that realization wasn’t sitting well with her.
We sat in conference room A with the case files spread out before us on the big table. Though Williams had said I could run the case from my own independent office, the truth was, that wasn’t practical at the moment. I didn’t have an office outside my home. I primarily used the backseat of my Lincoln Town Car as my office and that wouldn’t do for The People versus Jason Jessup. I had my case manager setting up a temporary office in downtown but we were at least a few days away from that. So temporarily there we sat, eyes down and tensions up.
“Maggie,” I said, “when it comes to prosecuting bad guys, I will readily admit that I couldn’t carry your lunch. But the thing is, when it comes to politics and prosecuting bad guys, the powers that be have put me in the first chair. That’s the way it is and we can either accept it or not. I took this job and asked for you. If you don’t think we-”
“I just don’t like the idea of carrying your briefcase through this whole thing,” Maggie said.
“You won’t be. Look, press conferences and outward appearances are one thing, but I fully assume that we’ll be working as a tag team. You’ll be conducting just as much of the investigation as I will be, probably more. The trial should be no different. We’ll come up with a strategy and choreograph it together. But you have to give me a little credit. I know my way around a courtroom. I’ll just be sitting at the other table this time.”
“That’s where you’re wrong, Mickey. On the defense side you have a responsibility to one person. Your client. When you are a prosecutor, you represent the people and that is a lot more responsibility. That’s why they call it the burden of proof.”
“Whatever. If you’re saying I shouldn’t be doing this, then I’m not the guy you should be complaining to. Go down the hall and talk to your boss. But if he kicks me off the case, you get kicked as well, and then you go back to Van Nuys for the rest of your career. Is that what you want?”
She didn’t answer and that was an answer in itself.
“Okay, then,” I said. “Let’s just try to get through this without pulling each other’s hair out, okay? Remember, I’m not here to count convictions and advance my career. For me, it’s one and done. So we both want the same thing. Yes, you will have to help me. But you will also be helping-”
My phone started vibrating. I had left it out on the table. I didn’t recognize the number on the screen but took the call, just to get away from the conversation with Maggie.
“Haller.”
“Hey, Mick, how’d I do?”
“Who is this?”
“Sticks.”
Sticks was a freelance videographer who fed footage to the local news channels and sometimes even the bigs. I had known him so long I didn’t even remember his real name.
“How’d you do at what, Sticks? I’m busy here.”
“At the press conference. I set you up, man.”
I realized that it had been Sticks behind the lights, throwing the questions to me.
“Oh, yeah, yeah, you did good. Thanks for that.”
“Now you’re going to take care of me on the case, right? Give me the heads-up if there’s something for me, right? Something exclusive.”