"Following her, sending letters, waiting outside her apartment. Finally she moved to a different address.
He tracked, her down. He was persistent. He kept saying she had to give him a chance."
"So she complained to the police…"
"And a couple of us-Todd Belvedere and me-were dispatched to have a talk with Hickle. Put a scare in him, make him back down."
He saw Abby shake her head slowly in disapproval.
"Not the way to handle it?" he asked.
"I'm afraid not."
"Yeah. Well, we found that out. You have to understand, we were treading on new territory here. The LAPD had established the Threat Management Unit only the previous year, and it was still limited to highprofile celebrity cases. And Jill, regardless of her movie-star ambitions, was definitely no celebrity, so we were pretty much on our own."
"I'm not blaming you. I'm just saying that a direct confrontation generally makes things worse. What Hickle wanted was some response from Jill. Your showing up qualified as a response-not the kind he was hoping for, but at least it showed he'd gotten through to her; he was on her mind. It cemented the connection between them."
Wyatt nodded.
"And it made him mad. Subsequently he became a lot more aggressive in his pursuit.
It was like his manhood was on the line."
"It was. Hickle was a loser with no career prospects and no social life, living in a run-down neighborhood.
His self-esteem was precarious at best. When you came along, trying to intimidate him, it threatened what was left of his dignity. His manhood, as you said."
"Now you tell me. Where were you when I needed you? Anyway, we went back a second time for a more serious conversation, but it was like pouring gasoline on a fire."
"What happened to Jill Dahlbeck?"
"We finally had to admit to her that there wasn't a lot we could do. We couldn't protect her twenty-four hours a day, and we couldn't charge Hickle with anything serious. He stayed just inside the law. All Jill could do was get away. She moved back to Wisconsin."
The waitress returned, bearing a tray laden with a cheeseburger and a beer for Wyatt, a large salad and bottled water for Abby.
"Was Jill attractive?" Abby asked, lifting her fork.
"Very"
"Blond? Blue eyes? Nordic?"
"What hat did you pull that rabbit out of?"
"It was an educated guess. So if this all happened when Hickle moved out of the La Brea complex, it must have been 1993. He was twenty-seven."
"That sounds right."
"I'm surprised you remember the case in that much detail after all this time."
"Well… there was one thing that happened. Jill was attacked."
Abby looked at him. It occurred to him that she had beautiful eyes.
They were calm and clear and the same shade of golden brown he had seen once on a trip to Nebraska, when the westering sun caught the wheat fields in a burnished haze.
"Attacked how?" Abby asked slowly.
"She was taking a class at some little hole-in the-wall actors' studio near Hollywood and Vine. The place has closed down since then. Anyway, one night when she was walking to her car, somebody jumped out from behind a hedge and splashed her with battery acid."
"In the face?"
"That might have been the idea, but she spun away in time, and the stuff only got her coat. Her skin wasn't burned at all. The assailant fled.
She never got a look at him. The street was dark, and it all happened in a second."
"But she thought it was Hickle."
"Obviously. And we did too. We went over to his new address and rousted him. Thing is, he had something close to an alibi. He was a stockboy in a supermarket, and he'd worked pretty late that night.
Plenty of people saw him. He left only a few minutes before the attack took place. He might have had time to get there and lie in wait for Jill, but the time frame was right."
"Search his apartment?"
"Yeah, he gave permission, but there was no acid, nothing that would tie him to the crime."
"Still, it had to be him."
"I don't know, Abby. This is Hollywood, remember.
Lots of random craziness. Hickle's not the only nutcase.
Anyway, Jill was rattled. That's why she left LA.
She was gone the next day." "Wise move," Abby said.
"And she's still okay?"
"Far as I know."
"And Hickle was never charged."
Wyatt shrugged.
"No way the DA could file with what we had. Nobody could prove a thing.
Even so, whether Hickle did it or not, he could have done it.
You know what I'm saying? He's capable of it. He's sick enough."
She was silent.
"Abby." He leaned forward, elbows on the table.
"If you're mixed up in any way with this son of a bitch, you're taking a hell of a risk."
"What makes you think I'm mixed up with him? I'm doing-"
"Research. I know. Just be careful, whatever you're up to."
"I always am. Vie. Don't worry about me."
Wyatt picked up the check. Abby wanted to split the tab, but for reasons of masculine pride he insisted on paying. Outside, he offered to walk her to her car, but she said it wasn't necessary.
"You sure?" he asked.
"Lots of bad guys out there."
"I can take care of myself."
"I got that impression. But you know, there's a reason why patrol cops work in pairs. Sometimes you need a person to cover your back."
"I haven't needed one so far."
"Maybe you've been lucky."
"Well, let's hope my luck holds.
"Night, Vie. Thanks for everything."
He watched her walk away. His car, an ancient Camaro with a rebuilt engine, was waiting for him around the corner, but he didn't go it to yet. He lingered in the shadow of the coffee shop's awning, screened from the glare of the neon sign. Abby's footsteps faded with distance, and then there was the faint pop of a car door opening and a louder thump as it closed. A motor revved.
She'd made it safely to her vehicle. It looked as if she really could take care of herself, not that he'd had any doubts.
Something made him wait a minute longer in the dark. He heard her car pull away from the curb. Headlights flared into view, and a white subcompact shot past. He glimpsed Abby at the wheel, illuminated by the dashboard glow. She was driving a Dodge Colt, square and boxy, far from new. It had a dent in one side panel. The motor sounded peppy enough, but the Colt had seen some serious use. It must have racked up a hundred thousand miles.
His Camaro wasn't any newer, but it had been kept in perfect condition.
It was a classic. There was nothing classic about Abby's rattletrap set of wheels.
Strange. Last night she'd told him she lived in the Wilshire Royal.
Luxury building, where the parking garage was lined with Porsches. If Abby could afford that lifestyle, why was she driving a junkyard clunker?
He shook his head slowly, walking away. Something didn't fit, or if it did, he couldn't see it.
Or maybe he didn't want to see.
Abby parked in her assigned space under a carport at the Gainford Arms.
When she killed the ignition, the little hatchback shuddered all over like a big wet dog.
The car, a Dodge Colt that she had bought from a used car dealer for two thousand dollars, was used strictly for undercover work. At home she kept her real car, a snazzy little Miata that let her negotiate the twists and curves of Mulholland Drive with the wind in her hair.
Whenever she took that drive, she imagined herself back in the foothills south of Phoenix, riding one of her father's Appaloosas on the high, steep trails.
But she couldn't drive the Miata in this neighborhood without calling attention to herself, so the Dodge was her vehicle of choice at the moment. She locked it up and crossed the parking lot.