Bosch,” Belk said. “We could have settled this six months ago for fifty grand. Way things are going, that would have been nothing.”
Bosch turned and looked at him. They were at the railing behind the defense table.
“You believe it, don’t you? The whole thing. I killed him, then we planted everything that connected him to it.”
“Doesn’t matter what I believe, Bosch.”
“Fuck you, Belk.”
“Like I said, you better start thinking of something.”
He pushed his wide girth through the gate and headed out of the courtroom. Bremmer and another reporter approached him but he waved them away. Bosch followed him out a few moments later and also brushed the reporters off. But Bremmer kept stride with him as he took the hallway to the escalator.
“Listen, man, my ass is on the line here, too. I wrote a book about the guy and if it was the wrong guy, I want to know.”
Bosch stopped and Bremmer almost bumped into him. He looked closely at the reporter. He was about thirty-five, overweight, with brown, thinning hair. Like many men, he made up for this by growing a thick beard, which only served to make him look older. Bosch noticed that the reporter’s sweat had stained the underarms of his shirt. But body odor wasn’t his problem; cigarette breath was.
“Look, you think it’s the wrong guy, then write another book and get another hundred thousand advance. What do you care if it’s the wrong guy or not?”
“I have a reputation in this town, Harry.”
“So did I. What are you going to write tomorrow?”
“I have to write what’s going down in there.”
“And you’re also testifying? Is that ethical, Bremmer?”
“I’m not testifying. She released me from the subpoena yesterday. I just had to sign a stipulation.”
“To what?”
“That said that to the best of my knowledge the book I wrote contained true and accurate information. The source of that information was almost wholly from police sources and police and other public records.”
“Speaking of sources, who told you about the note for yesterday’s story?”
“Harry, I can’t reveal that. Look at how many times I’ve kept you confidential as a source. You know I can never reveal sources.”
“Yeah, I know that. I also know somebody is setting me up.”
Bosch stepped onto the escalator and went down.
Chapter 10
Administrative Vice is located on the third floor of the Central Division station in downtown. Bosch got there in ten minutes and found Ray Mora behind his desk in the squad room, with the telephone held to his ear. Open on his desk was a magazine with color photographs of a couple engaged in sex. The girl in the photos looked very young. Mora was glancing at the photos and turning the pages while listening to the caller. He nodded to Bosch and pointed to a seat in front of his desk.
“Well, that was all I was checking,” Mora said into the phone. “Just trying to put a line in the water. Ask around and let me know what you come up with.”
Then there was more listening. Bosch looked at the vice cop. He was about Harry’s size, with deep bronze skin and brown eyes. His straight brown hair was trimmed short and he had no facial hair. Like most vice cops, he affected a casual appearance. Blue jeans and black polo shirt, open at the neck. If Bosch could see under the desk he knew he’d find cowboy boots. Bosch could see a gold medallion hanging high on his chest. Imprinted on it was a dove, its wings open, the symbol of the Holy Spirit.
“You think you can get me the shoot location?”
Silence. Mora finished with the magazine, wrote something on the front cover and picked up another and began paging through it.
Bosch noticed the Adult Film Performers Guild calendar taped to the side of a vertical file on his desk. There was a photo of a porn star named Delta Bush lounging nude above the days of the week. She had become well known in recent years because she was linked romantically in the gossip tabs to a mainline movie star. On the desk below the calendar was a religious statue Bosch identified as the Infant of Prague.
He knew this because one of his foster mothers had given him a similar statue when he was a boy and was being sent back to McClaren. He hadn’t been what the fosters had in mind. Giving him the statue and saying good-bye, the woman had explained to him that the infant was known as