Read Kill the Messenger Online
Authors: Tami Hoag
Tags: #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Lawyers, #Brothers, #California, #Crimes against, #Fiction, #Bicycle messengers, #Suspense, #Los Angeles, #Thrillers, #Police
“I don’t know who killed the guy!”
“No? You seem to know things the rest of us don’t. How is that? Maybe you killed him.”
“You’re fucking crazy! Why would I kill him? I never met the guy in my life!”
“For money, for a story, for him having pictures of you doing bad things with little boys—”
“This is shit,” Caldrovics declared. He tried to sidestep Parker. Parker shoved him back against the Dumpster.
“Hey!” Caldrovics snapped. “That’s assault!”
“That’s resisting arrest.” Parker put both hands on him, turned him around, and slammed him face-first against the steel container. “Danny Caldrovics, you’re under arrest.”
“For what?” Caldrovics demanded as Parker pulled one arm and then the other behind him and slapped on cuffs.
“I’ll think of something in the car.”
“I’m not getting in a car with you, Parker.”
Parker jerked him away from the Dumpster. “What’s the matter, Danny? I’m a police officer. Didn’t your mother tell you that the policeman is your friend?”
“What the hell is going on back here?” Andi Kelly rushed around the side of the Dumpster and skidded to a halt at the sight of Caldrovics in cuffs and Parker pushing him toward the alley.
“Kelly?” Caldrovics looked at her, astonished.
“I saw you go out the back way with him,” she said. “It didn’t look right.”
“Butt out, Kelly,” Parker snapped. “What the hell are you doing out here? Looking for a headline?”
“What are
you
doing, Parker? What’s this about?”
“Your little pal here is under arrest. He’s withholding information on a felony murder. That makes him an accessory after the fact, if not before.”
Caldrovics twisted around toward him. “I told you: I didn’t have anything to do with any murder!”
“And I’m supposed to believe you? You’re a proven liar, Caldrovics, and I know for a fact you’re withholding information.”
“You never heard of the Constitution, Parker?” Kelly said sarcastically. “The First Amendment?”
“You people make me sick,” Parker said. “You put the First Amendment on like a fashion accessory. You don’t give a shit what happens to anyone as long as you get what you want. In fact, the worse the better. An unsolved murder makes more headlines than a closed case.”
“You’ll never make those charges stick,” Kelly said.
“Maybe not, but maybe Danny here will think twice about cooperating after he’s spent a night in a cell with a bunch of crackheads and dope dealers.”
Caldrovics sneered at him. “You can’t do that—”
“I can and I will, you little weasel.” Parker started pushing him toward the alley again.
Caldrovics looked at Kelly. “Jesus Christ, go call someone!”
Kelly’s wide eyes darted back and forth from Caldrovics to Parker and back. “Wait. Wait. Wait,” she said, holding up her hands to forestall them leaving.
“I don’t have time for this, Kelly,” Parker barked. “We’re talking about a murderer who isn’t finished killing people. He attacked the victim’s daughter today, thanks to your asshole buddy here, who obligingly put her name in the newspaper this morning!”
Caldrovics started to defend himself again. “He could have known her any—”
Parker yanked on the handcuffs. “Shut up, Danny! I don’t want to hear one more excuse come out of your mouth. You did what you did. Be a man and own it.”
“What do you need to know from him, Parker?” Kelly asked.
“Where did he get his information? Who told him the daughter found the body?”
Kelly turned to Caldrovics. “You didn’t get it from him? If he’s the lead on the case, why didn’t you get it from him?”
“I don’t have to explain myself to you, Kelly.”
Kelly stomped up to him and kicked him in the shin. “Are you stupid? I’m standing here trying to save your sorry, raggedy ass, and you’re giving me lip?”
“He’s a fucking moron,” Parker declared.
“I guess.” She shook her head and turned to walk away. “Do whatever you want with him, Parker. He’s too stupid to live. And I was never here.”
“Kelly! Jesus! For God’s sake!” Caldrovics called after her.
She turned around and spread her hands. “You have information on a murder, Caldrovics. All he wants to know is who gave it to you. If you’re so fucking stupid you didn’t go through channels on a routine murder . . . You’re going to last about three minutes working the crime beat. Why didn’t you talk to Parker at the scene? He would have given you details. Why didn’t you just ask him?”
Caldrovics didn’t answer right away. Weighing his options, Parker thought. Searching for the lesser of evils.
Finally, he sighed heavily and said, “I didn’t go to the scene, all right? I caught it on the scanner. Fuck, it was raining, man. Why should I go out in the rain and stand around just to have somebody tell me the guy on the floor with his head smashed open is dead?”
“And how did you know his head was smashed open?” Parker asked. “That wasn’t on the scanner. And why did you say the daughter found the body?”
Caldrovics looked away.
“Did you just make that up, Danny? Is that what you like to do? Write fiction? You’re just pulling this newspaper gig until you can sell the big screenplay? It was a slow night, so you decided to embellish just for fun?”
“Why would I do that?”
“Because you can.”
“You didn’t go to the scene?” Kelly said, astounded. “What’s that about? That’s your job—you go to the scene, report on what happened. What’s next? You wait to write a story until you see it on television?”
Caldrovics sulked. “I talked to a cop. What’s the big deal?”
“It’s a big deal,” Parker said, “because you didn’t talk to me. It’s a big deal because, as far as I know, you didn’t talk to anybody I know who was at the scene. It’s a big deal because you put a piece of information in there that’s news to me, and I want to know where it came from. What cop?”
Again with the big internal debate. Parker hadn’t wanted to smack anybody in the head this badly in a long, long time. “He’s with Robbery-Homicide. Why wouldn’t I believe what he told me?”
Parker felt like he’d been struck hard over the top of his head. An enormous pressure ballooned behind his eyes and in his neck. “Kyle. That son of a bitch.”
“Kyle who?” Caldrovics asked. “The guy I talked to is Davis.”
“Who’s Davis?” Parker asked. He turned to Kelly, who spent most of her time on high-profile cases, and probably knew the personnel at Parker Center much better than he did.
Kelly shrugged. “I don’t know any Davis.”
Parker looked at Caldrovics. “How do you know this guy?”
“From around. I met him at a bar down the street maybe a week ago. Can you take these cuffs off? I can’t feel my hands.”
“He showed you ID?” Parker asked, unlocking the cuffs.
“Yeah. I asked him what’s it like on the big team. He told me about a couple of cases he’d worked in the past.”
“You have a phone number for him?”
“Not on me.”
Parker’s cell phone rang. He checked the caller ID. Ruiz.
“Ruiz, I’ve told you a hundred times: No, I won’t sleep with you.”
She didn’t laugh because she didn’t have a sense of humor, he thought. But she didn’t react at all, and instantly Parker felt a sense of dread prickle his skin.
“I just got called,” she said. “I’m up, you know.”
“I’ll meet you at the scene. What’s the address?”
“Speed Couriers.”
26
Goddammit,” Parker said on a long sigh. He felt the strength and energy drain from him with his breath. “Goddammit,” he whispered.
A spotlight from Chewalski’s radio car illuminated the scene in harsh white light, like the stage of some avant-garde performance artist.
Eta Fitzgerald lay in a heap on the wet, cracked pavement behind the Speed office. Or rather, her body lay there. There was no sense of the big personality Parker had met that morning. The force she had been was gone. What he was staring at now was just a shell, a carcass. Parker squatted down beside the body. Her throat had been slashed from ear to ear.
“That’s a whole lotta woman,” Jimmy Chew said.
“Don’t,” Parker said quietly. “Don’t. Not this time.”
“You know her, Kev?”
“Yeah, Jimmy, I knew her.”
Which was a problem now. One of the first things he drilled into his trainees was not to attach emotionally to victims. Therein lay the road to madness. They couldn’t make every case personal. It was too hard, too destructive. Easier said than done when you’d met the victim before the crime.
“Geez, I’m sorry,” Chew said. “She a friend?”
“No,” Parker said. “But she could have been, in another time, another place.”
“She’s got no ID on her. No pocketbook. I’m sure her cash is running all over town by now, buying rock cocaine and fifty-buck blowjobs. We found keys on the ground near the body. They fit the minivan. The van is registered to Evangeline Fitzgerald.”
“Eta,” Parker said. “She called herself Eta. She was the dispatcher here. Ruiz and I spoke with her this morning.”
“That bike messenger, the one from last night, he worked here?”
“Yeah.”
“Guess he’s our guy, huh? The lawyer. The dispatcher. What they got in common is him.”
Parker didn’t say anything, but he didn’t buy it. Why would Damon wait until the end of the day to kill her? He had to know the cops would have been on the messenger services first thing. The damage would have been done before the end of the workday—if Eta had chosen to give them any information. If Damon wanted to silence her, he would have killed her before she got to work, not as she was leaving.
Maybe he could have come back to rob her, but Parker doubted that too. Why would the kid risk coming back here at all? For all he knew, the place could have been under surveillance. And he supposedly had a large amount of cash from Lenny Lowell’s safe. What would he want with the contents of the woman’s wallet?
“She’s got a family, kids,” he said.
“The only people who deserve it are usually on the other end of the knife, I’ve found,” Jimmy Chew said.
Parker stood and looked around. “Where’s Ruiz? This is her call.”
“She’s not here yet. Probably taking extra time to sharpen her claws. You’ve got a real peach there, Kev.”
“I don’t have to like them, Jimmy,” Parker said, walking away. “I just have to teach them something.”
“Yeah, good luck with that.”
“Anything for the press, Detective?” Kelly asked from behind the yellow tape.
Parker jammed his hands in his coat pockets and walked over. “It’s not my case.”
“And the detective in charge?”
“Isn’t here yet.” Parker glanced around to make sure Jimmy Chew wasn’t in earshot. “Where’s Caldrovics?”
Kelly shrugged. “Took a pass. Maybe he’s busy reporting you to the authorities.”
“He doesn’t have a mark on him, except where you kicked him,” Parker said. “And, by the way, thanks for the help.”
“He deserved that, and you’re welcome. Glad to do my civic duty by helping a policeman.”
“I tried to impress that idea on Caldrovics, but he wasn’t receptive.”
Kelly made a face. “Kids these days. It’s all me, me, me.” She barely paused for a breath. “So what have you got for me, Parker? Big scoop?”
“The vic was a dispatcher for Speed Couriers. Apparent robbery. Her purse is gone.”
Kelly scribbled in a notebook. “Does she have a name?”
“Pending notification of relatives.” Parker took a breath of damp air that smelled of garbage, and let it out again, thinking of Eta’s family, how they would take the news, how they would get along without her. He couldn’t let Ruiz deliver the bad news. He could hear her now: “So, she’s dead. Get over it.”
“Kev?” Kelly was looking at him with concern.
“Lenny Lowell was waiting for a messenger last night. The messenger came from Speed Couriers. No one has seen him since.”
That wasn’t exactly true, but Kelly didn’t need to hear every detail, and Parker still wasn’t sure about Abby Lowell and her alleged encounter with Damon.
“Ruiz and I were here this morning trying to get information,” he said. “None was forthcoming. His name is probably an alias. The address they had on file wasn’t a residence.”
“This messenger is your suspect? For both murders?”
“He’s a person of interest.”
A car roared down the alley, skidded to a halt behind Chewalski’s radio car, stopping short of the rear bumper by three inches. The driver’s door opened and Ruiz climbed out in head-to-toe skintight black leather.
“Where have you been?” Parker snapped. “Moonlighting as a dominatrix? You called me half an hour ago.”
“Well, excuse me. I don’t live in some trendy downtown loft. I live in the Valley.”
“Why does that not surprise me?” Kelly muttered just loud enough for Parker to hear.
“Traffic on the 101 sucks,” Ruiz went on. “Some moron dropped a dining room table off his truck. And then—”
Parker held up a hand. “Enough. You’re here now. You don’t need to torment us any more than that.
“Ruiz, this is Andi Kelly,” he said, tipping his head toward the reporter. “She writes for the
Times.
”
Ruiz looked offended. “What’s she doing here?”
Kelly pumped up the attitude and gave her the Valley Girl sneer. “Reporter, crime, story. Duh.”
“Ladies, no catfights at the murder scene,” Parker said. “It’s your case, Ruiz. It’s up to you to decide what you want the press to know. Try to remember they have their uses. In this case, I want you to run everything past me first. This murder could be related to my murder last night. We need to be on the same page. Do you know who the vic is?”
“The dispatcher.”
The coroner’s investigator had arrived and was walking slowly around Eta Fitzgerald’s body, as if he couldn’t decide where to start.
“It’s your crime scene,” Parker said. “Take it. Don’t screw up, and try not to alienate more than three or four people. And remember, I’m watching you like a hawk. One wrong move and you’re a meter maid.”
Ruiz flipped him off and walked away.
“Yikes,” Kelly said. “Someone at Parker Center
really
hates you.”
“Honey,
everybody
at Parker Center really hates me.” He flipped up the collar of his coat and resettled his hat. “I’ll call you.”
He started toward the scene.
“Hey, Parker,” Kelly called before he’d gone ten feet. He looked at her over his shoulder. “Do you really live in a trendy downtown loft?”
“Good night, Andi,” he said, and kept walking.
The coroner’s investigator was going about his business of robbing the victim of the last of her dignity, cutting away her clothing to examine her body for wounds, marks, bruises, lividity.
“How long has she been dead, Stan?” Parker asked.
“Two or three hours.”
The man groaned and strained to turn Eta Fitzgerald’s body over. Two-hundred-plus pounds of literally dead weight. When she toppled, she knocked the investigator on his ass. Her throat had been severed nearly to her spine, and when she was rolled onto her back, her head almost didn’t come with her.
Ruiz cringed and muttered,
“Madre de Dios.”
She turned milk white and came backward a step. Parker put a hand on her shoulder to steady her. “Your first cut throat?”
Ruiz nodded.
“You getting sick, doll?”
She nodded again, and Parker turned her and pointed her away from the immediate scene. “Don’t puke on any evidence.”
This was death at its most brutal. Parker knew plenty of seasoned veterans who tossed their dinner over a slit throat or a mutilation. There was nothing shameful in that. It was a horrific thing to see. That he had hardened himself to such sights sometimes made Parker wonder what it said about him. That he had learned to take his own advice and not make it personal, he supposed. That over time he’d developed the invaluable skill to disconnect the victim as a living person from the victim’s corpse.
Even so, this one rocked him more than average. Hours ago he had heard one wisecrack after another come out of this big, vibrant woman. Now there was no voice, only an anatomy lesson on the inner workings of the human throat.
The edges of the gaping wound had peeled back like delicate layers of lace trim, revealing a lot of bright yellow adipose tissue, the connective tissue where fat is stored. It looked like fluorescent chicken fat under the harsh white light.
There wasn’t much blood on or around the wound itself. A lot of it would have gone directly down the now partially exposed trachea into her lungs, drowning her. The carotid artery would have been spraying like a geyser. If it hadn’t been washed away by the intermittent showers, the crime-scene people would find spatter maybe six to eight feet from the body. A lot of blood had pooled under her as she lay on the broken pavement exsanguinating. Her chest was stained with it where it had soaked through her clothes, partially obscuring the small tattoo of a flame-haloed red heart just above her left breast.
All that blood, and depending on where the killer had been standing, he might have walked away with not a drop on him.
Ruiz came back with an expression daring Parker to make a joke.
“Have you got uniforms checking these other buildings?” he asked. “Someone might have seen something.”
She nodded.
“Who called it in?”
“I don’t know.”
Parker turned to Chewalski. “Jimmy?”
“One of our fine citizens,” the officer said, nodding for them to follow him across the alley.
As they approached the loading area of a furniture store called Fiorenza, a dark, huddled figure emerged from inside a large discarded cardboard box. As the figure unfolded, he became a tall, thin black man with long, matted gray hair and layers of ragged clothes. His aroma preceded him. He smelled like he’d been in a sewer for a very long time.
“Detectives, this is Obidia Jones. Obi, Detectives Parker and Ruiz.”
“I founded that poor woman!” Jones said, pointing across the alley. “I woulda tried to recirculate her, but I couldn’t turn her over. As you can see, she’s pacidermical in size. Poor creature, I axed her and axed her not to be dead, but she be dead anyway.”
“And you called the police?” Ruiz said, dubious.
“It don’t cost nothing to call 911. I do it every once in a while. There’s a phone on the corner.”
“Did you see what happened, Mr. Jones?” Ruiz asked, her face pinched against the smell of him.
“No, ma’am, I did not. I was indisposed of at the time of the hyenious act. I believe I’m consumptionating too much fiber in my diet.”
“I didn’t need to know that,” Ruiz said.
The old man squinted at her, leaning down into her face. “I believe perhaps you might be lacking in fiber. This could account for your expression.”
He looked at Parker for a second opinion.
“If it were only that simple,” Parker said. “How did you come across the dead woman, Mr. Jones?”
“I came back to my habitat, and I seen her laying right there after that car pulled away.”
“What car?”
“Big black car.”
“And did you happen to see who was driving that car?” Parker asked.
“Not this time.”
Ruiz rubbed her forehead. “What does that mean?”
“Oh, I seen him before,” Jones said matter-of-factly. “He came by earlier.”
“Would you know this guy if you saw him again?” Parker asked.
“He look like a pit bull dog,” Jones said. “Square head, beady-eyed. Undoubtedly of white trash hermitage.”
“We’ll want you to take a look at some pictures,” Parker said.
Jones arched a thick gray eyebrow. “At your station house?”
“Yeah.”
“Tonight,” he specified. “Whilst it’s cold and wet out here?”
“If you don’t mind.”
“I don’t mind much,” he said. “Do you all get pizza in there?”
“Sure.”
“Can I bring my bags along with me? All my accoutrementionables are in my bags.”
“Absolutely,” Parker said. “Detective Ruiz here will bring them for you in her car.”
Jones looked at her. “There might be some fiberous foodstuffs in there for you. You’re welcome to help yourself.”
“Yeah, great,” Ruiz said, glaring at Parker. “And Detective Parker can give you a ride.”
“No,” Parker said. “Mr. Jones would prefer to be chauffeured in the official police vehicle, I’m sure. Officer Chewalski might even run the lights for you,” he said to Jones.
“That would be very classy,” Jones said. “Indeed.”
“Let’s get your bags, Obi,” Chewalski said. “We’ll put them in the detective’s trunk.”
Ruiz looked up at Parker and mouthed, “I hate you.”
Parker ignored her. “One last thing, Mr. Jones. Around the time of the murder, did you see anyone back here on a bicycle?”
“No, sir. All them bicycle boys was long gone before that.”
“What about a small, boxy black car?”
“No, sir. Big car. Long and black as the grim reaper himself.”
“Thank you.”
“You are such an asshole,” Ruiz said as they walked back toward the scene.
“Consider it your penance,” Parker said.
“For being late?”
“For being you.”