The Night Fire (Harry Bosch #22) - Michael Connelly Page 0,51
a streetlight. She parked her car across the street from them in front of a prop house and used the rover to call her location in to the watch office. It was a routine practice.
As she got out, she slipped off her suit jacket so the badge on her belt would be readily recognized when she approached the men. Crossing the street, she counted four men sitting together in a small clearing between two tents and a blue tarp lean-to attached to the park’s perimeter fence. One of the men spoke up in a raspy whiskey- and cigarette-cured voice before she got to them.
“Why, that’s the prettiest po-lice officer I think I ever seen.”
The other men laughed and Ballard could tell they weren’t feeling any pain at the moment.
“Evening, fellas,” she said. “Thanks for the compliment. What’s going on tonight?”
“Nothin’,” Raspy said.
“We’s just havin’ an Irish wake for Eddie,” said another, who was wearing a black beret.
A third man raised a short dog bottle of vodka to toast the fallen. “So, you guys knew Edison,” Ballard said. “Yup,” said the fourth man.
He appeared to Ballard to be barely twenty years old, his cheeks hardly holding a stubble.
“Were you guys here the other night?” she asked.
“Yeah, but we didn’t see nothing till it was all over,” said Beret.
“How about before?” Ballard asked. “Did you see Eddie earlier in the night? Was he around?”
“He was around,” Raspy said. “Had himself a fiver and he wouldn’t share none of it.”
“What’s a fiver?”
“A whole fifth of the good stuff.”
Ballard nodded. Judging by the one man’s short dog, she assumed scraping enough change on corners and from passersby to buy a fifth was a rare thing.
“How’d he get the fiver?” she asked.
“He, um, had a guardian angel,” said The Kid.
“Someone bought it for him? Did you see who?”
“Nah, just somebody. It’s what he said. Said somebody gave him the big boy for nothin’. Didn’t have to suck a cock or anything.”
“You remember what it was he was drinking?”
“Yeah, Tito’s.”
“That’s tequila?”
“No, vodka. The good stuff.”
Ballard pointed to the short dog in the other man’s hand.
“Where you guys buy your bottles?”
The man pointed with the bottle down toward Santa Monica Boulevard.
“Mostly over there at Mako’s.”
Ballard knew the place, an all-night market that primarily sold booze, smokes, rolling papers, pipes, and condoms. Ballard had responded to numerous calls there over her years on the late show. It was a place that drew rip-off artists and assaults like a magnet. Consequently, there were cameras inside and outside the business.
“You think that’s where Eddie got his fiver?” she asked.
“Yup,” said The Kid.
“Had to be,” said Short Dog. “Ain’t no other place round here open late.”
“You heard about Eddie having trouble with anybody?” she asked.
“Nah, ever’body like Eddie,” Short Dog said.
“A gentle soul,” Raspy added.
Ballard waited. Nobody volunteered anything about Eddie having trouble.
“Okay, guys, thanks,” Ballard said. “Be safe.”
“Yup,” said The Kid. “Don’t want to end up like Eddie.”
“Hey, Miss Detective,” said Beret. “Why you asking all these questions? Nobody give a shit ’bout Eddie before.”
“They do now. Good night, guys.”
Ballard got back in her car and drove down to Santa Monica Boulevard. She turned right and went down three blocks to a rundown strip shopping plaza, where Mako’s Market was located. The market anchored one end of the plaza and a twenty-four-hour donut shop held down the other end. In between there were two empty businesses, a Subway franchise, and a storefront business that offered one-stop shopping for notary needs, photocopying, and losing weight or quitting cigarettes through hypnosis.
The area patrol car was parked in front of the donut shop, confirming the cliché. Ballard got out of her car and waved her hand palm down, signaling smooth sailing. Behind the wheel of the patrol car, she could see Rollins, one of the officers who had responded to the fatal fire the other night. He flashed his lights in acknowledgment. Ballard assumed his partner was inside the donut shop.
Mako’s was a fortress. The front door had an electronic lock that had to be opened from inside. Once buzzed in, she saw the business was built like a bank in a high-crime neighborhood. The front door led to an anteroom that was ten feet wide and six feet deep. There was nothing in this space except an ATM machine against the wall to the left. Front and center was a stainless-steel counter with a large pass-through drawer and a wall of bulletproof glass rising above it. A steel door with triple locks