people who found the bodies, the coroner's staff, passersby at the crime scenes, reporters, lot of people.”
“Shit,” Opelt said. “We're going to need more people.”
“Don't worry about that,” Irving said. “I'll get more. How do we narrow it down?”
Bosch said, “When we look at the victims we learn things about the killer. The victims and the survivor generally fall into the same archetype. Blonde, well built, worked in porno and did outcall work on the side. Locke thinks that is how the follower picked his victims. He saw them in videos, then found the means of contacting them in the outcall ads in the local adult newspapers.”
“It's like he went shopping for victims,” Sheehan said.
“Yeah.”
“What else?” Irving said.
“Not a lot. Locke said the follower is very smart, much more so than Church was. But that he could be disassembling, as he calls it. Coming apart. That's why he sent the note. Nobody would've ever known but then he sent the note. He's moved into a phase where he wants the attention that the Dollmaker had. He got jealous that this trial threw attention on Church.”
“What about other victims?” Sheehan asked. “Ones we don't know about yet? It's been four years.”
“Yeah, I'm working on that. Locke says there's gotta be others.”
“Shit,” Opelt said. “We need more people.”
Everyone was quiet while they thought about this.
“What about the FBI, shouldn't we contact their behavioral science people?” Rollenberger asked.
Everyone looked at Hans Off as if he were the kid who came to the sandlot football game wearing white pants.
“Fuck them,” Sheehan said.
“We seem to have a handle on this—initially, at least,” Irving said.
“What else do we know about the follower?” Rollenberger said, hoping to immediately deflect attention from his miscue. “Do we have any physical evidence that can give us any insight into him?”
“Well, we need to track down the survivor,” Bosch said. “She gave a composite drawing that everyone dismissed after I nailed Church. But now we know her drawing was probably of the follower. We need to find her and see if there is anything else that she has, that she can still remember, that will help.”
As he said this Sheehan dug through the stack of files on the table and found the composite. It was very generic and didn't look like anyone Bosch recognized, least of all Mora.
“We have to assume he wore disguises, same as Church, so the composite might not help. But she might remember something else, something about the suspect's manners that might let us know if it was a cop.
“Also, I'm having Amado at the coroner's office compare the rape kits between the two victims we now attribute to the follower. There's a good chance the follower may have made a mistake here.”
“Explain,” Irving said.
“The follower did everything the Dollmaker did, right?”
“Right,” Rollenberger said.
“Wrong. He only did what was known at the time about the Dollmaker. What we knew. What we didn't know was that Church had been smart. He had shaved his body so he would not leave trace hair evidence behind. We didn't know that until after he was dead, so neither did the follower. And by then he had already done two of the victims.”
“So there is a chance those two rape kits hold physical evidence to our guy,” Irving said.
“Right. I'm having Amado cross-check between the two kits. He should know something by Monday.”
“That's very good, Detective Bosch.”
Irving looked at Bosch and their eyes met. It was as if the assistant chief was sending him a message and taking one at the same time.
“We'll see,” Bosch said.
“Other than that, that's all we've got, right?” Rollenberger said.
“Right.”
“No.”
It was Edgar, who up until now had been silent. Everyone looked at him.
“In the concrete we found—actually, Harry found it—a cigarette pack. It went in when the concrete was wet. So there's a good chance they were the follower's. Marlboro regulars. Soft pack.”
“They also could have been the vic's, right?” Rollenberger asked.
“No,” Bosch said. “I talked to her manager last night. He said she didn't smoke. The smokes were in all likelihood the follower's.”
Sheehan smiled at Bosch and Bosch smiled back. Sheehan held his hands together as if waiting for handcuffs.
“Here I am boys,” he said. “That's my brand.”
“Mine, too,” Bosch said. “But I've got you beat. I'm left-handed, too. I better get an alibi working.”
The men at the table smiled. Bosch dropped his smile when he suddenly thought of something but knew he could not say anything yet. He looked at the files stacked at the