One more block.
Dinner, dessert, espresso- he’d never had coffee like that. Even the Faculty Club, when Dr. Gompertz sometimes treated him to lunch, didn’t have coffee like that.
“Hey, you, puto, why you move you ass so fast?”
He began to jog and heard them shouting and whooping and running after him. He picked up speed, was drenched by a sudden, clammy, full-body sweat.
Thank God Petra wasn’t here to see this.
Something hit him from behind, low in his back. Hard boot to the kidneys. Pain shot through him, he buckled yet managed to stay on his feet, but his rhythm had been disrupted, and by the time his legs were ready to move someone was yanking at his briefcase.
His notes. His laptop. He held on but another hand clawed at his neck and as he stepped away from the blow, the case flew out of his hand.
The clasp opened, papers scattered. The computer, heavy, remained inside.
His handwritten calculations lay static, in the curb. Pages of multiple regression analyses of subethnic populations in high-crime regions. He hadn’t had time to enter any of it into his hard drive, stupid stupid! If he lost it, it meant hours down the-
A fist- hard, sharp knuckles- grazed the side of his head. He teetered and tripped backward.
Regained his balance and backed away and faced them.
Even younger than he’d thought. Fourteen, fifteen. Small, ghetto-stunted kids, two skinny, one a bit chunky. Same age as cousin Samuelito. But Sammy was a good, churchgoing boy and these three were shaved-head, baggy-pants scum.
The fact that they were kids was meager comfort. Adolescents could be the most dangerous sociopaths. Poor impulse control, insufficiently developed conscience. He’d read that if you didn’t change their behavior by twelve…
They were surrounding him, a trio of malignant dwarfs shuffling and cursing and giggling. He moved, trying to keep his back clear. The spot on his cheek where he’d been punched smarted and grew hot.
The heaviest of the three planted his feet and held up his fists. Small hands and knuckles. Like something out of Oliver Twist.
A night breeze coursed through the street and sheets of calculations billowed.
The heaviest one said, “Gimme your fuckin’ mawney, puto.” Nasal, barely pubescent voice.
Individually, he could pound each of them to oblivion. But together… as he weighed his alternatives, one of the others, the smallest, flicked his wrist and flashed something metallic.
Oh God, a gun?
No, a knife. Flat in an open palm. The kid rotated his hand in small arcs. “I cut you, puto.”
Isaac backed away some more. Another gust of breeze; one of his sheets blew a few feet up the block.
The heaviest one said, “Gimme the fuckin’ mawney you wanna fuckin’ get cut?” His voice squeaked and cracked.
Gutted by an idiot with no pubic hair… the little one with the blade danced closer. Stepped into the light and Isaac saw the weapon clearly. Pocketknife, cheap thing, dark plastic handle, maybe a two-inch fold-out blade. The kid’s wrist was thin, fragile. He smelled bad, all three of them did. Unwashed clothes and weed and jumbled hormones.
Jumpy little sociopaths. Not a good situation. The thought of that stupid little blade entering his flesh enraged him.
He drew out his LAPD authorized visitors badge and said, “Police, assholes. You walked right into a stakeout.”
Hoping they watched TV. Hoping they were that stupid.
A nanosecond of silence.
A hoarse “Huh?”
“Police, motherfuckers,” he repeated, louder, reaching down in his chest to produce his lowest baritone growl. Reaching into another pocket, he drew out his pen case because it was dark and around the right size. He pressed it to his mouth, said, “This is Officer Gomez calling for backup. I’ve got three juvenile two-eleven suspects. Probable narcotics violation as well. I’ll hold them here.”
“Fuck,” said the heavy one, sounding breathless.
Isaac realized he hadn’t even called in an address. Could they be that stupid?
Skinny looked at his knife. Grim little urchin face. Deliberating.
The second one, the one who hadn’t spoken or done anything, edged away.
Isaac said, “Where you going, shit-face?”
The kid took off and ran.
And then there were two. Better odds. Even with the blade he might be able to escape with just a flesh wound.
Chunky was bouncing on his feet. Skinny had edged back but made no move to leave. The dangerous one, not enough fear in his chemistry. And he had to be the one with the knife.
That was why he had the knife.
Isaac brought out his pen case again. Held it this time, in an outstretched arm. Walked toward Skinny pointing the stupid thing and ordered, “Drop that fucking nail-file, junior, and get the fuck down on the ground before I shoot your ass. Do it!”
Chunky turned heel and ran.
Skinny kept contemplating the odds. Threw the knife at Isaac.
The blade whizzed by his face, just short of his left eye.
He said, “You’re toast, motherfucker,” and the kid bolted.
He stood there in the silence. Putrid silence; they’d left behind their stink.
Waiting until he was sure they were gone before he began breathing normally. He went to retrieve his briefcase. Collected the errant paper, stuffed the rest of it back in. Then he sprinted the block to his building, ran around to the side, chest tight, stomach churning, chilled by the post-adrenaline shakes.
He leaned against the stucco, feet ankle-high in the weeds that grew there. Dry-heaving, he thought that would be it.
It wasn’t. He vomited until the bile burned his throat.
When all his dinner was gone, he spit and headed toward his building.
Tomorrow, before he took the bus to the Hollywood station, he’d visit Jaramillo.
Once upon a time, before the Burton Academy, before all the strange, wondrous, terrifying turns his life had taken, he and Jaramillo had been friends.
Maybe that would count for something.
CHAPTER 17
Kurt Doebbler’s weirdness stuck in Petra’s head and after a few more days of nothing on Paradiso, she found herself thinking about him.
It was just after noon; no sign of Isaac.
No word from Eric. And the mellow-voiced Dr. Robert Katzman hadn’t called her back.
Why hadn’t Doebbler complained about Ballou’s drunken incompetence?
The more she thought about how shoddily the case had been worked, the less confident she felt about the integrity of the original file.
Like the blood scraped from Marta Doebbler’s car- O negative. And Doebbler was O positive. According to Ballou.
How much was that worth?
She paged through the file, finally found a note of the sample in a small-print coroner’s addendum.
She decided to track it down.
The coroner’s clerk was sure he had it. Till he didn’t. He transferred her to a coroner’s investigator, a young-sounding guy named Ballard.
“Hmm,” he said. “I guess it could be in the bio division of your evidence room. Over at Parker.”
My evidence room.
Petra said, “You guess.”
“Well,” said Ballard, “it’s not marked as leaving here, but it’s not here, so it must’ve gone somewhere, right?”
“Unless it’s lost.”
“For your sake, I hope it isn’t. Parker had some evidence problems a while back, remember? Lost samples, spoilage.”
She hadn’t heard about that. Yet another snafu that had somehow evaded the evening news.
“Anywhere else it could be?” she said.
“Can’t think of any. Unless it was sent up to Cellmark for DNA analysis. But even then, we’d keep some here and mail them a sample. Unless there wasn’t enough to be divided up- yeah, that could be it… okay, here it is. Two centimeters by one and a half. That’s about three-quarters of an inch by half an inch. Says here it was attached to a square of vinyl auto upholstery. Meaning it was thin, all we probably got were a few flakes. I guess it’s possible Cellmark got the whole thing. Why do you want it?”