Добавить в цитаты Настройки чтения

Страница 36 из 75



Aaron rolled a little closer, trying to spot the truck's taillights. The angle of the dip into the lot and the surrounding brush hid the Ram. To Aaron's left, the poorly limned ocean was more sound than sight.

Steady whoosh of tide. In and out, like lazy sex.

Aaron had driven by this spot tons of times, on trips to Oxnard, Ventura, Ojai, Santa Barbara. But the last time he'd actually stopped at Carrillo was… his sophomore year in college, he'd taken a girl there to explore the tide pools, stretch out on clean white sand. Pretending to care about starfish and sea anemones in order to get some romance going. Hoping to catch a glimpse of dolphins, because chicks loved dolphins.

Toward sunset, he and… what was her name… had spotted a pod of Flippers and that had done the trick. Great session in the back of his car, what was her name… brunette, half black, half white like him, said she wanted to be a psychologist… Ronette … Ronelle DeFreeze, long, lithe body, green eyes, pretty head turned to one side as she…

Concentrate, Detective Fox.

He edged the Opel closer, got twenty feet from the entrance to the park where a sliver of the lot was visible. The truck was parked fairly close to the highway, blocked by yellow gates that closed off the park after dark.

Impossible to see if it was occupied or not. Gee thanks, starless night.

That day with Ronelle, Aaron had parked just past the yellow gates. Concentrating, he dredged up memories. Ranger booth, list of regulations. Entry road shaded by trees.

Ax and Book were either sitting in the truck or had exited to proceed on foot. Either scenario was risky: a darkened vehicle illegally parked could easily attract attention from a patrolling park ranger. So would the marijuana reek sure to cling to the truck's interior.

But this was a guy who sped through B.H. toking up.

Maybe the boys had been here before, knew it was safe because ranger patrols were infrequent.

If budget cuts stuck a handful of Smokeys with covering miles of wilderness, that made sense.

What did that say about the safety of camping-something Aaron had always considered a pathetic grab at phony machismo.

And this was Carrillo, he'd heard rumors about the place, the good old days of the Manson Family, other assorted whacks ru

C'mon, Jimmy and Judy! Mom and Dad have found a super-neat place to set up our little Sterno stove and cook our wienies and our marsh-mallows…

Even if the rumors were tall tales, what was the pleasure in waking up at sunrise with achy muscles and a mouthful of dirt, some rabid raccoon or weasel or whatever farting on your head…

What were Mason Book and Ax Dement doing here at close to two a.m.?

One way to find out.

Nope, too risky.

Encountering the two of them would blow his cover and render him useless.

Moe would love that…

First Commandment of the job: Thou Shalt Not Fuck Up.

He settled down for another bout of inactivity.

Twenty-four minutes later, he saw two figures return to the truck- so they had taken a walk.

The Ram backed away from the yellow gates, swung onto PCH, hooked an illegally acute left turn that took it across the double-double. Starting up the Opel, Aaron checked for ongoing traffic, completed his own iffy turn, pushed the car up to seventy.

Moments later, with the Ram just starting to come into view, red lights flashed in his rearview.

Wonderful.

Before Aaron could respond, the CHP cruiser flashed its brights.

Patience, man, what's it been, a nanosecond?

Next the idiot would be bellowing over his loudspeaker. Aaron pulled over at the first hint of turnoff.

The cruiser glided to a stop twenty feet behind.

It took a long time-way longer than usual-for the Chippie to approach. Careful to keep his hands on the wheel, Aaron watched the patrolman head his way through the side mirror.

Young, just a kid. Big and pouty-mouthed and heavy.

Slow, deliberate John Wayne waddle, one hand resting near his gun.

Black man at the beach.



The CHP officer stopped five feet behind the Opel, just stood there.

No reason to be worried, Kiddie-cop. You've already taken your sweet time ru

Following proper procedure.

Hefting his flashlight high, the way they teach you in every police academy, the Chippie advanced some more. Stopped again. Hand on his gun.

Aaron sat there.

Finally: “Step out of the car, sir.”

Pasting his best guileless/harmless/aw-shucks look on his face, Aaron complied at exactly the pace he would've appreciated back in his uniform days.

Smiling, as the officer blinded him with his flashlight.

Keeping his mouth shut because anything he said would be wrong.

CHAPTER 24

The Reverend Arnold Wohr had business in the city, insisted meeting at the station would be no trouble at all.

Moe would've preferred to get a look at the La Puente house, maybe catch some sign Ramone W still bunked out there occasionally. But given the rev's easy cooperation, he was in no position to argue.

Ramone's respectable sib showed up ten minutes early. The senior brother by two years, Arnold looked a decade younger, a trim, balding man in an unstylish, spotless gray suit, white shirt, blue tie, brown shoes.

Moe searched for some family resemblance to Raymond Wohr, found it in skimpy chin endowment.

Arnold's gaze was steady and clear, his handshake cool and dry.

Moe thanked him for coming, asked what kind of business he had in L.A.

“This business, Detective. I didn't want my family involved.”

“In what?”

“Anything to do with Ray. What's he done?”

“Sounds like you're used to being called by the police.”

“The police, the parole office when Ray was still on parole, the liquor store in my neighborhood when there's a sudden cigarette shortfall just after Ray's been there to purchase a stick of chewing gum. Luckily, the owner's a member of my congregation.”

“You've been cleaning up after him for a while.”

“You can't pick your relatives, Detective, but you can try to help them.”

Moe said, “Would you consider Ray incorrigible?”

Arnold Wohr frowned. “If I didn't believe in change, I couldn't stand up every Sunday and preach it.”

“I guess you hear all the time how different you and Ray are.”

“Not really,” said Arnold. “Few people see us together.”

“Ray doesn't come by much.”

“Ray was arrested when he was fourteen, Detective. For stealing peach brandy from a supermarket, then shoplifting sneakers from a Wal-Mart. He spent a few months at a youth camp. The day he was released, Mom and Dad threw him a welcome-back party. He repaid them by emptying Mom's purse in the middle of the night and sneaking out. We didn't hear from him until his next arrest, a year later, also for theft. That time he got sent to adult jail and never bothered to let us know he was out. Mom and Dad were solid working people, we had plenty of discussions trying to figure out what Ray was escaping from. My parents died wondering. After I got out of the military, my search for answers led me to the ministry.”

“Wanting to understand Ray.”

“Ray, people like him. You turn all the facts over-the psychology, the sociology-but they don't explain it. So you look to a higher power.”

“The devil made Ray do it.”

The reverend's frown caused Moe to regret his flippancy.

He said, “Sir, I don't mean to make light of the situation-”

“It's all right, Detective. I know that faith-based notions of good and evil don't wash in today's society. But no one's given me a better explanation for my brother's behavior.”