The Night Fire (Harry Bosch #22) - Michael Connelly Page 0,85
He wanted him hit, he paid the money, and with an OG like Kidd, I don’t ask no questions.”
“Then why was he mad at you at Dulan’s? He raised his voice.”
“He mad ’cause I gave out his number so D-squared could talk to him. I thought it was legit because D used to be his boy on the blocks, back in the day. I thought they maybe still have business together or something. I didn’t know. I fucked up and gave him the number. E-K was mad about that.”
“So what was the call in the car after Dulan’s?”
“I had to set it up, you know. Get the word to my boy Townes.”
Ballard knew that while there were pay phones that allowed inmates to call out from their modules at Men’s Central, no one could simply call in. But it was well documented that gangs used various methods of getting messages into the jail. Mothers, wives, girlfriends, and lawyers of incarcerated gangsters often carried gang business inside. But the call Dupree got from Townes seemed to have come too quickly for that method. Townes appeared to have gotten the message to call Dupree within thirty minutes of the meeting at Dulan’s. There had long been rumors of gangs using jail deputies to get messages inside—deputies motivated by threat or extortion or just plain greed.
“How’d you get the word inside?” Ballard asked.
“A guy I know. He take the message for me.”
“Come on, Marcel. What guy? Who did you call?”
“I thought this was about Dorsey.”
“It’s about everything. Who got the message to Townes?”
Ballard felt her phone buzz on her thigh and looked down to read the text from Bosch.
Don’t waste time on this. It’ll be on the phone. Move on.
Ballard was annoyed because she knew Bosch was right. A search warrant for the phone would produce the number or numbers Dupree had called after Dulan’s, and that would likely lead to the message carrier. She needed to move the story on to Elvin Kidd.
“Okay, never mind who you called,” she said. “Tell me about Townes. He’s the hitter inside?”
Dupree shrugged. He didn’t want to verbally acknowledge it.
“Yes or no, Marcel?” Ballard pressed.
“Yeah, he does a piece of work now and then,” Dupree said.
“Do you have to get approval from a higher-up to do something like this? You call somebody for approval to hit Dorsey?”
“I tell some people but it wasn’t like ‘approval.’ Just to let them know we had a piece of business and Kidd was paying. Look, you going to take care of me on this, right? Like you said.”
“I’ll tell the D.A. you’ve given ‘substantial assistance to the investigation.’”
“That ain’t shit. We had a deal.”
“If we get Kidd, ‘substantial assistance’ will mean a lot.”
“I’m going to need witness protection after this.”
“That will be on the table.”
Ballard felt another vibration on her thigh and looked down at her phone.
Tell him we want him to call Kidd, say the job is done.
Ballard nodded. It was a good idea. They had the wire up on Kidd for another two days and they could legitimately record the call. It might or might not draw an admission about the Hilton case, but it could sew up the conspiracy-to-commit-murder case. Ballard understood that sometimes you know a suspect is good for one crime but you settle for getting him for another.
“There’s one more thing we’re going to need you to do, Marcel,” she said. “We’re going to set up a phone call between you and Kidd. You’re going to tell him that Dorsey is dead, and we’re going to see what he says. And you’re going to ask him why he wanted him hit in the first place.”
“Nah, I’m not doin’ that,” Dupree said. “Not till I got something in writing on ‘substantial assistance.’”
“You’re making a mistake, Marcel. You bring in the D.A. now to write that up and they’re going to bring in a lawyer for you and the whole thing will blow up bigger than we can handle on this level. We miss our chance to do this with Kidd and it’s ‘Fuck you, Marcel Dupree.’ That’s the opposite of ‘substantial assistance.’ I’ll charge you with conspiracy to commit murder for hire and go home happy with just that.”
Dupree said nothing.
“This room stinks,” Ballard said. “I’m going to go out and get some fresh air. When I come back, you tell me whether you want us to make a case against you or Elvin Kidd.”
Ballard got up, pocketed her phone and picked up the envelopes,