The Night Fire (Renée Ballard, #3)(16)
Ballard decided to add the notebook to the items she checked out of Property. The drawings reminded her of a case that was cracked by the cold case unit a few years earlier, when Ballard had been assigned to the Robbery-Homicide Division. Detective Mitzi Roberts had connected three murders of prostitutes to a drifter named Sam Little. Little was caught and convicted, then from prison started confessing to dozens of murders committed over four decades and all over the country. They were all “throwaway” victims—drug addicts and prostitutes—whom society, and police departments, had marginalized and given little notice to. Little was an artist and he sketched pictures of his victims to help visiting investigators identify the women and the cases. He held their images in his head, but not so often their names. He was given a full set of artist supplies and his drawings were in color and very realistic, eventually matching up to victims in multiple states and helping to clear cases. But they didn’t serve to humanize Sam Little, only his victims. Little was seen as a psychopath who showed no mercy to his victims and deserved no mercy in return.
Ballard signed out the bullet evidence and the notebook and left the Property Division. She called Bosch when she got outside.
“What’s up?”
“I just came out of Property. I pulled the bullet and casing. Tomorrow is Walk-In Wednesday at ballistics. I’ll go right after my shift.”
“Sounds good. Anything else in the box?”
“Hilton was a sketch artist. He had a notebook in his car that had drawings from prison. I checked it out.”
“How come?”
“Because I thought he was good at it. There are a few other things from my review that I want to go over. You want to meet?”
“I’m sort of in the middle of something today but I could meet for a few minutes. I’m close by.”
“Really? Where?”
“The Nickel Diner, you know it?”
“Of course. I’ll be there in ten.”
9
Ballard found Bosch in the back with his laptop open and several documents spread on a four-top table. It was apparently late enough in the day for the management to allow him to monopolize the spot. A plate with half a chocolate-frosted donut was on the table, assuring Ballard that Bosch was a paying customer rather than a freeloader who bought nothing but coffee and monopolized a table for hours.
She noticed the cane hooked over one of the empty chairs as she sat down. Assessing the documents that Bosch had started stacking when he noticed her approach, Ballard raised her hands palms up in a What gives? gesture.
“You’re the busiest retired guy I think I’ve ever seen.”
“Not really. I just said I’d take a quick look at this and then that would be it.”
Putting her backpack on the empty chair to her right, she caught a glimpse of the letterhead on one of the documents Bosch was clearing. It said “Michael Haller, Attorney-At-Law.”
“Oh, shit, you’re working for that guy?”
“What guy?”
“Haller. You work for him, you work for the devil.”
“Really? Why do you say that?”
“He’s a defense attorney. Not only that, but a good one. He gets people off that shouldn’t get off. Undoes what we do. How do you even know him?”
“Last thirty years, I’ve spent a lot of time in courthouses. So has he.”
“Is that the Judge Montgomery case?”
“How do you know about that?”
“Who doesn’t? Judge murdered in front of the courthouse—that’ll get some attention. Besides, I liked Judge Montgomery. When he was on a criminal bench I hit him up for warrants every now and then. He was a real stickler for the law. I remember this one time, the clerk let me go back to chambers to get a warrant signed and I go in there and look around and there’s no judge. Then I hear him say, ‘Out here.’ He had opened his window and climbed out onto the ledge to smoke a cigarette. Fourteen floors up. He said he didn’t want to break the rule about smoking in the building.”
Bosch put his stack of files on the empty chair to his right. But that wasn’t the end of it.
“I don’t know,” Ballard said. “I may have to reassess our … thing. I mean, if you’re going to be working for the other side.”
“I don’t work for the other side or the dark side or whatever you want to call it,” Bosch said. “This is a one-day thing and I actually volunteered for it. I was in court today and something didn’t add up right. I asked to look at the files and, as a matter of fact, did just find something before you walked in.”
“Something that helps the defense?”
“Something that I think the jury should know. Doesn’t matter who it helps.”
“Whoa, that’s the dark side talking right there. You’ve crossed over.”
“Look, did you come here to talk about the Montgomery case or the Hilton case?”
“Take it easy, Harry. I’m just busting your balls.”
She pulled her backpack over, unzipped it, and pulled out the Hilton murder book.
“Now, you went through this, right?” she asked.
“Yes, before giving it to you,” Bosch said.
“Well, a couple things.”
She reached into the backpack for the envelopes containing the ballistic evidence.