Bosch checked his watch. It was already noon.
“Today?”
“Today’s your birthday, isn’t it? I would’ve called earlier but my group session went long. Come on, what do you say? You know we have the best taco trucks in the city up here.”
Bosch knew he needed to talk to her about San Quentin.
“I don’t know about that claim, but if I get good traffic, I can be there in twenty minutes.”
“Perfect.”
“See you.”
He disconnected and looked at the black box on his desk. He’d get to it after lunch.
They decided on a sit-down restaurant instead of a taco truck. Upscale wasn’t really a choice in Panorama City, so they drove down to Van Nuys and ate in the basement cafeteria of the courthouse. It wasn’t exactly upscale either but there was an old jazzman who played a baby grand in the corner most days. It was one of the secrets of the city that Bosch knew. Hannah was impressed. They took a table close to the music.
They split a turkey sandwich and each had a bowl of soup. The music smoothed over the quiet spots in the conversation. Bosch was learning to get comfortable with Hannah. He had met her while working a case the year before. She was a therapist who worked with sexual offenders after their release from prison. It was tough work and it gave her some of the same dark knowledge of the world that Bosch carried.
“I haven’t heard from you in a few days,” Hannah said. “What have you been up to?”
“Oh, just a case. Walking a gun.”
“What does that mean?”
“Connecting or walking a gun from case to case to case. We don’t have the weapon itself but ballistics matches link cases. You know, across the years, across geography, victims, like that. A case like this is called a gun walk.”
He offered nothing further and she nodded. She knew he never answered questions about his work in detail.
Bosch listened to the piano man finish “Mood Indigo” and then cleared his throat.
“I met your son yesterday, Hannah,” he said.
He hadn’t been sure how to broach the subject. And so he ended up doing it without finesse. Hannah put her soupspoon down on her plate with a sharpness that made the piano man raise his hands off the keys.
“What do you mean?” she asked.
“I was up at San Quentin on the case,” he said. “You know, walking the gun, and I had to see someone up there. When I was finished, I had a little bit of time, so I asked to see your son. I only spent ten or fifteen minutes with him. I told him who I was and he said he’d heard of me, that you told him about me.”
Hannah stared into space. Bosch realized he had played it wrong. Her son was not a secret. They had talked about him at length. Bosch knew that he was a sexual offender in prison after pleading guilty to rape. His crime had nearly destroyed his mother but she had found a way to carry on by changing the focus of her work. She moved from family therapy to treating offenders like her own son. And it was that work that had brought her to Bosch. Bosch was thankful that she was in his life and understood the dark serendipity of it. If the son had not committed such a horrendous crime, Bosch would never have met the mother.
“I guess I should’ve told you,” he said. “I’m sorry. It’s just that I wasn’t even sure I was going to get the time to try to see him. With the budget cutbacks, they don’t allow overnights up there. You gotta go up and back the same day and so I wasn’t sure.”
“How did he look?”
Spoken with a mother’s fear in her voice.
“I guess he looked all right. I asked him if he was okay and he said he was fine. I didn’t see anything that concerned me, Hannah.”
Her son lived in a place where you were either predator or prey. He wasn’t a big man. His crime had involved drugging his victim, not overpowering her. The tables were turned on him in prison and he was often preyed upon. Hannah had told Bosch all of this.
“Look, we don’t have to talk about it,” Bosch said. “I just wanted you to know. It wasn’t really planned. I had the extra time and I just asked to see him and they set it up for me.”
She didn’t respond at first, but then her words came out with a tone of urgency.
“No, we do have to talk about it. I want to know everything he said, everything you saw. He’s my son, Harry. No matter what he did, he’s my son.”
Bosch nodded.
“He said to tell you he loves you.”
5
The OU squad room was in full form when Bosch returned after lunch. The black box was where he had left it, and his partner was at his desk in the cubicle, working the keyboard on his computer. He spoke without looking up from his screen.
“Harry, how goes it?”
“It goes.”
Bosch sat down, waiting for Chu to mention his birthday, but he didn’t. The cubicle was set up with their desks on either side so they worked back-to-back. In the old Parker Center, where Bosch had spent most of his career, partners faced each other across desks pushed up against each other. Bosch liked the back-to-back setup better. It gave him more privacy.
“What’s with the black box?” Chu said from behind him.
“Shake cards on the Rolling Sixties. I’m grasping at straws on this thing, hoping something might pop.”
“Yeah, good luck with that.”
As partners they were assigned the same cases but then split them up and worked them solo until it was time for field work such as surveillance or serving search warrants. Arrests were always a team job as well. This practice gave each an understanding of the other’s workload. Usually, they had coffee on Monday mornings to go over the cases and where each active investigation stood. Bosch had already briefed Chu about the trip to San Quentin when he checked in from SFO the afternoon before.
Bosch opened the box and contemplated the thick stack of FI cards. Thoroughly going through them would probably take the rest of the afternoon and part of the evening. He was fine with that but he was also an impatient man. He removed the brick of 3 × 5 cards, and a quick survey of them told him they were stacked chronologically, covering the four years on the box’s label. He decided that he would center his initial work on the year of the Anneke Jespersen murder. He culled the cards from 1992 and started reading.
Each card took only a few seconds to digest. Names, aliases, addresses, driver’s license numbers, and assorted other details. Often the officer who conducted the interview wrote down the names of other gang members who were with the individual at the time of the field interview. Bosch saw several names repeated in the cards as either the subjects of interviews or known associates.
Bosch took every address noted on the cards—location of interview and subject’s DL address—and charted it on the Thomas Bros. map that already had the Beretta model 92 murders charted on it. He was looking for close connections to the six murders on his time chart. There were several and most of them were obvious. Two of the murders occurred on street corners where hand-to-hand drug transactions were routinely carried out. It stood to reason that patrol officers and CRASH units would roust gang members congregating at such locations.
It wasn’t until he was two hours into the project, his back and neck getting stiff with the physically repetitive work of charting the cards, that Bosch found something that put a live wire into his blood. A teenager identified on the shake card as a Rolling 60s “BG,” or baby gangster, was stopped for loitering at Florence and Crenshaw on February 9, 1992. The name on his driver’s license was Charles William Washburn. His street name, according to the card, was “2 Small.” At sixteen years old and five foot three, he had already managed to get the signature Rolling 60s tattoo—the number sixty on a gravestone signifying gang loyalty until death on his left biceps. What drew Bosch’s attention was the address on his driver’s license. Charles “2 Small” Washburn lived on West 66th Place, and when Bosch charted the address on the map, he pinpointed it to a property backing up to the alley where Anneke Jespersen had been mur
dered. Looking at it on the map, Bosch estimated that Washburn lived no more than fifty feet from the spot where Jespersen’s body was found.
Bosch had never worked in a gang-specific unit but he had investigated several gang-related murders over the years. He knew that a baby gangster was a kid who was primed for membership but hadn’t officially been jumped in. There was a cost of admission, and that was usually a show of neighborhood or gang pride, a piece of work, a showing of dedication. Routinely this meant an act of violence, sometimes even a murder. Anybody with a 187 on their record was elevated to full gangster status forthwith.
Bosch leaned back in his chair and tried to stretch the muscles of his shoulders. He thought about Charles Washburn. In early 1992 he was a gangster wannabe, probably looking for his chance to break in. Less than three months after the cops stopped and interviewed him at Florence and Crenshaw, a riot breaks out in his neighborhood and a photojournalist is shot point blank in the alley behind his house.
It was too close a confluence of things to be ignored. He reached for the murder book put together twenty years earlier by the Riot Crimes Task Force.
“Chu, can you run a name for me?” he asked without turning to look at his partner.
“Just a sec.”
Chu was lightning quick on the computer. Bosch’s computer skills were poor. It was routine for Chu to run names on the National Crime Information Center database.
Bosch started flipping through the pages of the murder book. It had hardly been a full field investigation but there had been a canvas of the homes along the alley’s fence line. He found the thin sheaf of reports and started reading names.
“Okay, give it to me,” Chu said.
“Charles William Washburn. DOB seven-four-seventy-five.”
“Born on the fourth of you-lie.”
Bosch heard his partner’s fingers start flying across the keyboard. Meantime, Harry found a canvas report for the Washburn address on West 66th Place. On June 20, 1992, a full fifty days after the murder, two detectives knocked on the door and talked to a Marion Washburn, age fifty-four, and a Rita Washburn, thirty-four, mother and daughter residents of the home. They offered no information about the shooting in the alley on May 1. The interview was short and sweet and took only a paragraph in the report. There was no mention of a third generation of the family being in the house. No mention of sixteen-year-old Charles Washburn. Bosch slapped the murder book closed.
“Got something,” Chu said.
Bosch rotated in his chair to look at his partner’s back.
“Give it to me. I need something.”
“Charles William Washburn, AKA Two Small—but with the number two—has a long arrest record. Drugs mostly, assaults. . . . He’s got a child endangerment on there, too. Let’s see, two installments in the penitentiary and right now out free but wanted since July on a child-support warrant. Whereabouts unknown.”
Chu turned and looked at him.
“Who is he, Harry?”
“Somebody I gotta look at. Can you print that?”
“On the way.”
Chu sent the NCIC report to the unit’s community printer. Bosch keyed the password into his phone and called Jordy Gant.
“Charles ‘Two Small’ Washburn, the two like the number two. You know him?”
“‘Two Small’ . . . uh, that sounds—hold on a second.”
The line went silent and Bosch waited almost a minute before Gant came back on.
“He’s in the current intel. He’s a Sixties guy. First row of the pyramid type of guy. He’s not your shot caller. Where’d you get his name?”
“The black box. In ’ninety-two he lived on the other side of the fence from the Jespersen crime scene. He was sixteen at the time and probably looking to get in with the Sixties.”
Bosch heard typing over the phone as he talked. Gant was doing a further search.
“We have a bench warrant issued from department one-twenty downtown,” he said. “Charles wasn’t paying his baby mama like he was supposed to. Last known address is the house on Sixty-sixth Place. But that’s four years old.”
Bosch knew a bench warrant for a deadbeat dad in South L.A. was almost meaningless. It would hardly draw the attention of a Sheriff’s Department pickup team unless there was some sort of media attention attached. Instead, it was a warrant that would sit in the data banks waiting to rise up the next time Washburn intersected with law enforcement and his name was run through the computer. But as long as he stayed low, he stayed free.
“I’m going to swing by the old homestead and see if I get lucky,” Bosch said.
“You want some backup?” Gant asked.
“No, I’ve got it covered. But what you can do is bump up the heat on the street.”
“You got it. I’ll put the word out on Two Small. Meantime, happy hunting, Harry. Let me know if you get him or you need me out there.”
“Yeah, will do.”
Bosch hung up and turned to Chu.
“Ready to take a ride?”
Chu nodded but with a reluctant frown.
“You coming back by four?”
“You never know. If my guy’s there, it might take some time. You want me to get somebody else?”
“No, Harry. I just have something to do tonight.”
Bosch was reminded that he was under explicit orders from his daughter not to be late for dinner.
“What, hot date?” he asked Chu.
“Never mind, let’s go.”
Chu stood up, ready to go rather than answer questions about his private life.
The Washburn house was a small ranch with a threadbare lawn and a Ford junker on blocks in the driveway. Bosch and Chu had circled the block before stopping in front and determined that the west corner of the house’s rear yard was no more than twenty feet from the spot in the alley where Anneke Jespersen was put up against a wall and shot.
Bosch knocked firmly on the door and then stepped to the side of the stoop. Chu took the other side. The door had an iron security gate across it. It was locked.
Eventually the door opened and a woman in her midtwenties stood looking at them through the grate. There was a small boy at her side, an arm wrapped around her leg at the thigh.
“What do you want?” she asked indignantly after correctly sizing them up as cops. “I didn’t call no po-lice.”
“Ma’am,” Bosch said. “We’re just looking for Charles Washburn. We have this address as his home address. Is he here?”
The woman shrieked and it took Bosch a few seconds to realize she was laughing.
“Ma’am?”
“You talking about Two Small? That Charles Washburn?”
“That’s right. Is he here?”
“Now, why would he be here? You people are so stupid. That man owes me money. Why would he be here? He step foot ’round here, he better have that money.”
Bosch now understood. He looked down at the boy in the doorway and then back up at the woman.
“What is your name, please?”
“Latitia Settles.”
“And your son?”
“Charles Junior.”
“Do you have any idea where Charles Senior would be? We have the warrant for him for not making his payments to you. We’re looking for him.”
“’Bout damn time. Every time I see his ass driving by I call you people but nobody comes, nobody does a damn thing. Now you here and I haven’t seen that little man in two months.”
“What do you hear, Latitia? Do people tell you they’ve seen him around?”
She shook her head emphatically.
“He’s gone.”
“What about his mother and his grandmother? They used to live in this house.”
“His grandmother’s dead and his moms moved up to Lancaster a long time ago. She got outta this place.”
“Does Charles go up there?”
“I don’t know. He used to go up and see her for birthdays and such. I don’t know anymore if he’s dead or a
live. All I know is my son ain’t seen a dentist or a doctor and he’s got no new clothes his whole life.”
Bosch nodded. And he doesn’t have a father, he thought. He also didn’t say that if they apprehended Charles Washburn, it wasn’t because they were going to make him pay his child support.
“Latitia, do you mind if we come in?”
“What for?”
“To just look around, make sure the place is safe.”
She banged the grate.
“We safe, don’t worry about that.” “So, we can’t come in?”
“No, I don’t want nobody in here seeing this mess. I’m not ready for that.”
“Okay, what about the backyard? Can we step back there?”
She seemed confused by the question but then shrugged.
“Knock yourself out but he ain’t out there.” “Is the gate at the back unlocked?”
“It’s broke.”
“Okay, we’ll go around.”
Bosch and Chu left the front step and walked over to the driveway, which went down the side of the house and ended at a wooden fence. Chu had to lift the gate and hold it up on one rusted hinge to open it. They then moved into a backyard strewn with old and broken toys and household furniture. There was a dishwasher lying on its side, and it reminded Bosch of being in the alley twenty years before, when appliances beyond saving were stacked there.
The left side of the property was the rear wall of the former tire rims store on Crenshaw. Bosch went to the rear fence line that separated the yard from the alley. It was too tall for him to see over, so he pulled over a tricycle that was missing a rear wheel.
“Careful, Harry,” Chu said.
Bosch put one foot on the seat of the trike and pulled himself up on the fence. He looked across the alley to the spot where Anneke Jespersen had been murdered twenty years before.
Bosch dropped down to the ground and started walking the fence line, pressing his hand on each plank, looking for a loose one or maybe even a trapdoor that would give someone quick access to and from the alley. Two-thirds of the way down, a plank that he pressed on popped back. He stopped and looked closer and then pulled the board toward himself. It was not attached to the upper or lower cross-braces. He easily pulled the plank out of the fence, creating a ten-inch-wide opening.
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