19th Christmas (Women's Murder Club #19) - James Patterson Page 0,6
up to his cell and move on.”
Lambert said to Conklin, “A little patience, please, Officer. I’m getting to it. It’s dangerous for me to talk to you, understand?”
Conklin shrugged, stood up, pushed his chair in, and said, “Sergeant Boxer is the boss. She says we’re done, we’re done.”
“Okay. Listen,” said Lambert. “I’ve got the crew chief’s name. Loman. You’ll have something on him in your database.”
I asked, “Like the off-price clothing chain? L-o-e-hm-a-n-n?”
“No idea. I’ve never seen his name in writing.”
“Mr. Loman’s first name?”
“Mister. Look, he just calls himself Mr. Loman. That’s all I know.”
“Wait here. I’ll be right back,” I said.
I went to my desk, said hey to a couple of colleagues, then brought my computer to life.
I ran the names Loehmann, Lowman, and Loman through all available databases. Too many hits came up, dozens in San Francisco. I’d need more information about who we were looking for to do anything with this tip, and the first name “Mister” wasn’t cutting it. My fingers were warmed up, so I ran Julian Lambert’s name again. As he’d said, he’d served short time and was currently on probation for shoplifting. But now that he’d claimed knowledge of a huge heist, I punched his name into the FBI database. I found zip, zero, nada. And Lambert had no known associates named Loman on record.
Our runner looked to be a liar, a nobody, and an utter waste of time.
CHAPTER 8
I RETURNED TO Interview 2 with two guards from our jail on the seventh floor.
I said, “Stand up, Mr. Lambert. Your escorts will take you to your cell. You should consider using your phone call to get a lawyer.”
“Wait. Wait a minute, will you?”
“I don’t have time for bull, Mr. Lambert. Tell your story to the judge.”
Lambert asked, “What? You found nothing on Loman?”
“I found a lot of names like that with many different spellings, dozens in Northern California, dozens in town. Without a first name and a location, your hot tip isn’t worth jack.”
“I have more information,” he said.
Our petty-thief runner was sounding desperate and no longer looked as happy to see me as he was when we arrested him.
Conklin said, “I’ve worked with Sergeant Boxer for a long time, Mr. Lambert. I know when she’s ready to lock up for the night.”
“Okay, I hear you,” he said. “Just—I need to tell you about this heist. Alone.”
I asked the guards to step outside, but I didn’t sit down.
“Speak,” I said to Lambert.
“I know one of the crew. I’ve got his name and address and I know that he’s the kind of guy who is always heavily armed.”
I sat down.
“His name is Chris Dietz. I know there will be a lot of people by that name. But that’s his real name.”
“What does he have to do with this heist?”
“He’s a hitter. Psycho variety. Loman hired him for this job. I met Dietz here, in the seventh-floor jail, about three years ago. It was memorable.”
I said, “I’ll pull Dietz’s sheet, but save me some time. What was he in for?”
“He was charged with holding up an armored car. Witness disappeared and the charges didn’t stick.”
“Okay, Mr. Lambert. Let’s have his address.”
After Lambert gave me the name of a cheap hotel located squarely in the pit of hell, I stood up, opened the door, and asked the guards to come in again.
“Please take Mr. Lambert up to seven.”
“Hey, I cooperated,” Lambert protested.
“If your information pans out, I’ll speak to the DA. The DA will speak to Mr. King. Your lawyer will tell you to be remorseful when you’re in front of the judge. Make it real.”
When Lambert was gone, Conklin and I walked back to our desks in the squad room. Shifts were changing. Day turning to night.
I did a search for Christopher Dietz. I found him.
I said to Rich, “There’s an arrest warrant out for Christopher Alan Dietz, whose last known address was Seattle. He was charged with armed robbery. Someone put up two hundred thousand for bail and he skipped. He’s got priors for shootings that didn’t stand up due to lack of evidence. We should get the Feds into this.”
Conklin picked up the phone, punched in a number, and said, “Cin. I’m working tonight. I know. I know. I’ll try not to wake you up.”
Cappy McNeil stopped by our desks. Cappy was a friend, a fellow cop who’d been working homicide longer than me, which made him an old-timer.
“I overheard the name Chris Dietz,” he said. “I know of him. A CI of