The interrogation room was warmer than the rest of the air-conditioned station. Detective Petroff took off his suit jacket and fitted it over the back of a straight chair. He stared hard at the young black girl sitting across the empty table.
“Your name is Nancy, right?”
“Sure. I know ten girls named Nancy in a big town like this.” She was about twenty, maybe less, Petroff figured. The word on the street was that she had been a good friend of Joisette Brown, the little black hooker who’d gone down with an OD of heroin.
“Your best friend in the whole world was Joisette, right?”
“Yeah, I knew her.”
“You know where she stayed.”
“Right. We met there sometimes to goof off and sober up.”
“She stayed with a man named Shortchops Jackson. Isn’t that right?”
“Never knew no last name. She called him Shortchops. He was a bass man. Played a wicked lick.”
“How many times you been booked for hooking?”
“Two or three maybe.”
“Wrong, Nancy. You’ve been picked up nine times now. Ten and you get six months in the slammer.”
“Maybe I been in here four times.”
“Nine, Nancy. All you have to do to walk is tell me where Joisette lived. That’s all. You give us an address and we drive out there and you show me which door to knock on. Hell of a lot better than doing six months hard time.”
“Oh, shit. I wasn’t even there when she died.”
“We know. Now where did she live?”
“I can walk? No strings?”
“No strings.”
The unmarked detective’s car pulled up in front of a rundown four-unit apartment house on 27th Street off Imperial Avenue. It was the edge of Logan Heights, an intensely black and poor neighborhood. The building didn’t look like it had been painted for ten years.
“Which apartment?” Petroff asked
“Upstairs on the left, number four. Can I go now?”
Petroff looked at the hooker where she sat in the secure rear seat of the police car.
Detective Lasiter had come along as backup for Petroff. He shook his head. “Missy, you stay put back there. We’ll be back directly.”
“You damn well better be here, Shortchops,” Petroff said as he and Lasiter climbed to the second floor and looked at the apartment door. Petroff knocked three times, then three more. “Open up, police,” he called. No response. Lasiter stepped back and slammed his foot and his 180 pounds against the door right beside the door lock. The old-fashioned lock popped loose and the door swung open.
With guns out, the detectives surged into the room. They found it scattered with garbage: take-out food containers, opened cans, dirty dishes, and unwashed clothes.
The detectives spent an hour in the apartment, searching everywhere including the spots where people often hid things. They came up with nothing. Not even the phone book helped. Lasiter dropped it, and it opened to a different page three times in a row. It didn’t look like Shortchops Jackson had been home for a week, maybe not since the day Joisette had died.
“Another nail in the old bass player’s coffin,” Lasiter said. “If he didn’t do it, why disappear?” They left, closing the door behind them even though it didn’t quite latch.
At the unmarked car, Petroff opened the back door and motioned the girl out. “He wasn’t there. Anyplace else he might be? He ever say any friends he had he might be staying with?”
“He never talked much. Not while I was around. I don’t know where he went off to.”
“He’s got to be somewhere. You know who Joisette was, who her father was?”
“No, she never said.”
“You ever hear of Billy Ben Brown?”
“You kidding? Every cat knows about Billy Ben. He was the greatest jazz musician of all time. They had a big TV special about him when he died three or four months ago.”
“Joisette was a late-life daughter of Billy Ben Brown.”
“No shit? She never once said a word. Man, he was loaded. I mean he had more money than sense, somebody said. But jeez, could he wail with a jazz band.”
Back at headquarters, Petroff had three phone messages. He put two of them down and called the last one, a good contact at the courthouse.
“Petroff, you owe me one,” the clerk said. “The will of Joisette Brown has just been filed in probate. The girl finally came into her dad’s money. Her estate is something like three-point-five million smackeroos.”
“Good haul for a hooker.”
“A damned rich hooker. I can’t get you a copy of it, but I remember the beneficiary. One Shortchops William Jackson is the main heir. Then there are four others mentioned. Each to get fifty thousand. They are described as being the other members of the Gaslamp Quarter Jazz Band. Be in probate for about four months. Shortchops is also named executor of the will.”
“When does he show up in court?”
“He doesn’t. He hired a lawyer.”
“Who is his lawyer?”
“Am I getting in trouble here?”
“Not a bit. Court filings are public records, open to the public and the cops. Give.”
“Harlan J. Emmersome. Yeah. Around town he’s also known as Loophole. If there’s a loophole in the law he can find it.”
“Thanks. He’s my next courtesy call.”
It took Petroff twenty minutes to look up the lawyer’s address and find his building. It was a one-man law office in an uptown location not known for high rent. Emmersome was on the third floor, and the elevator worked. Petroff walked through the door and found a small outer office with a pert blonde, about twenty-five, working on her nails.
“Yes, sir, may I help you?”
After the preliminaries, she opened the door to the big man’s office. He was a big man, just over seven feet, and yes, he had played basketball, and no, not in the pros.
“So, what can I do for the city’s finest today?”
“One of your clients is in a sticky situation over the death of a girl and we need to clean it up. Problem is, we can’t find him.”
“Is there a name? That would help.”
“You know the name, Shortchops Jackson.”
“Yes, I know Mr. Jackson. But with the client-lawyer privilege, that’s all I can tell you.”
“One small item to consider. If I can prove that Shortchops had anything to do with Joisette Brown’s death, he won’t get a dime out of her estate, which means you won’t collect your big fat fee for handling the probate. Let’s see. My lawyer friends say that would come to something like a hundred and twenty-five thousand for your fee. More cash than you’ve seen in a whole good number of years.”
“Sorry to disappoint you, Sergeant, but my fee is guaranteed, even if the client is found guilty and he gets nothing. Nice try, but it won’t work this time. I know probate law.”
“So, what if I tie you into the murder, make you an accessory to the crime, show that you helped in the OD? Then we’ve got you and you don’t get a cent.”
“You can’t do that.”
“You want to bet your future on it? I can manufacture witnesses who will say almost anything to stay out of the slammer. It would only take two.”
The lawyer slumped in his chair. “Shit, you’d probably do it just to spite me. Okay, but I don’t have an address on Mr. Jackson. He calls in once a week to find out if he’s needed. He won’t be. It’s all fairly routine.”
“Unless I charge him and you with murder. Then I make one phone call to the probate judge and everything comes to a ridiculously fast and screeching stop.”
“You wouldn’t do that.”
“Not if I can talk to him and he can clear himself. He was seen with the girl a half hour before she died. He was a heroin user. He was high on something when he was with her. It’s entirely possible that he gave her the last shot of her life, and she went OD.”
“What about the other four men in the will? Aren’t they suspects too?”
“Could be, but I always go after the best one first, your client, Mr. Shortchops Jackson.”
“Let me think about it.”
“Think all you want. I’ve got enough now to bring charges and get a warrant. I’ll be doing that tomorrow at noon. Give me a call before then, and I can put off the warrant a day or two.”
Petroff walked to the door leading out of the office. “Now then, Mr. Emmersome, you have a nice day.” He paused. “Emmersome, you have anything to do with the over-the-line tournament on Fiesta Island every summer?”
“No. Why?”
“Just wondered. The name sounds familiar.”
Alpha Squad slept in until 1000 the next morning after the river trip. Murdock talked with Don Stroh over a late breakfast the kitchen fixed for the SEALs.
“The end result of our little trip was that the two villages we stopped at were fully behind Mojombo. The men were afraid of the Navy commander, and at first didn’t want to talk in front of him. My guess is that villages farther upstream and more distant from Sierra City are also just as enthusiastic about Mojombo.”
“So, where the hell does that leave us?”
“We need to contact Mr. Washington and have a sit-down,” Murdock said. “We have to find him without getting our heads shot off. That’s the first big job.”
“Choppers. Do they have any helicopters in this runty little Army?”
“I didn’t think to ask,” Murdock said. He sent Jaybird to find out by phone or a visit to the Army headquarters.
“Say they do have a bird, even a small one that will fly,” Murdock went on. “I can take a run upstream and try to find the location of the camp. The military says they think it’s about twenty-five miles upstream. In the boat we weren’t more than twelve.”
“It’s a government chopper, so why won’t they shoot it out of the sky?”
“They will if it gets close enough. I ID the place and then we go in another way.”
“How?”
“The road goes up ten miles, then there are horse trails. If horses can get through, a dirt motorcycle can too. I take another biker and we see how close we can get to their camp on the trails.”
Jaybird came back to the conference room table. “They have two choppers and both are four-passenger types. Civilian models and with no weapons. I didn’t ask if we could use one, but I’d bet the word would have to come from the general himself.”
“Thanks, Jaybird,” Stroh said. “I’ll call the general and make the pitch. Maybe the CIA will have some clout with him.”
He went across the room to the telephone, found a number, and called.
“Who’s going?” Jaybird asked Murdock.
“You, Lam, and me. They’ll want their own pilot. That’s if we get a bird. Don’t get your jockstrap on just yet.”
Stroh came back looking as if somebody just stole his all-day sucker.
“Who ate your canary?” Jaybird asked.
“Fucking General Assaba. Says we have to talk. He hinted at the idea of our renting the damned chopper. I’m on my way over there right now.”
“Going rate for that size bird is a hundred dollars an hour,” Jaybird said. “At least in civilized countries. Don’t let him bleed you dry.”
“We’re doing this bastard a favor and he’s trying to wheedle some cash out of us? Ridiculous. How bad do you want the bird?”
“I’d say up to a-hundred-fifty-an-hour bad,” Murdock said.
“Only if that’s the only way I can get it.”
Stroh stormed out of the embassy, yelled for a car, and rode to the general’s office thinking up all sorts of arguments for the general to be more than glad to lend them the chopper. The big man made him wait for ten minutes. Then a lieutenant let Stroh into the inner office.
It was huge, with game trophies on the wall along with large-caliber rifles, fishing rods, and pictures of the kills.
General Assaba remained seated when Stroh came in.
“Yes?”
“We just spoke on the phone about our making a recon trip for your Army, up the Amunbo River to tie down the exact location of your major enemy, Mojombo Washington.”
“Yes. I’m not convinced that it would be helpful.”
“Right now do you know exactly where his camp is?”
“No.”
“Then how could it not be valuable information? With this intelligence we also plan on using the SEALs to make some kind of a move against the camp, but we need the data first.”
“Our Army pilots argue against the flight.”
“Your Army is democratic where the soldiers tell the officers what to do?”
“No. We command.”
“Then it’s your decision. We brought the SEALs here to help you with your permission. Our Vice President is in jeopardy every minute he’s in that camp. We think it’s in your best interests to help us get him out of there.”
General Assaba turned and looked at the wall. When he turned back, he nodded. “Very well, we’ll rent the helicopter to you, and our pilot will fly it and determine if he is in any danger of ground fire. You can use the chopper for one hundred twenty-five U.S. dollars an hour.”
“That’s not a diplomatic offer, General. We are here to help you and you want to charge us for using your equipment?”
“I’m not a diplomat, Mr. Stroh. I’m an Army officer. That’s my first and final offer. Take it or stop blabbering.”
“I’ll take it, but our ambassador will also send a stern note to your President.”
“Do what you wish. I’ll need cash in advance for four hours. None is refundable.”
Stroh felt his face turning red. He shot an angry glance at the small general, then turned quickly and hurried out of the room before he exploded.
An hour later the money had been delivered and the route chosen. They would move out from the river five miles and go upstream. Then when they were thirty miles away, they would start moving downstream and watching for an encampment.
Murdock inspected the craft before they took off. It looked as if it had been serviced and maintained properly. The last problem he needed was to crash the bird into the jungle.
They whipped north along the river for five miles. Then the pilot moved to the right of the river for five miles before turning north again, which would take them upstream.
“Sir,” the pilot, a second lieutenant, said. “We’re upstream about twenty-five miles.”
“Good, do another five miles, then let’s go find the river,” Murdock said. He had been watching the jungle below, and was amazed how thick it was and what few clearings and signs of smoke he saw that could indicate habitation.
A few minutes later they swung to the left and back to the river. It was only a stream here, maybe ten to fifteen feet wide, and there were several stretches of rapids where the water raced downhill. There were no villages on this part of the river. But after three miles they began to find small settlements along both sides of the stream.
“Keep a sharp lookout,” Murdock told his men. “Anything that moves, give us a yell.”
“On the left,” Jaybird chirped. “Looks like six men. Yes. A small puff of smoke, had to be a rifle shot.”
At once the pilot wheeled away from the river and dove to get out of the line of fire.
“Stay close enough so we can see the river,” Murdock shouted. “Go up another five thousand feet. Then get back to the river.”
“Too dangerous,” the pilot said.
Murdock put his KA-BAR blade against the young pilot’s throat. “For now, I’ll tell you when it’s too dangerous. Now take us up to five thousand feet and get us back so we can see the fucking river.”
The pilot’s forehead beaded with sweat and he swallowed twice. “Yes, sir. Will do.”
Higher in the sky gave them a wider view, but even so, they almost missed it. The pilot said they were twenty-five miles from the airport. In the distance, about a half mile from the river, they spotted a large clearing, and could see tents, many fires, and as they came closer, dozens of men.
“Get out of here,” Murdock told the pilot when he saw some riflemen on the ground and figured they were about to fire. The bird pivoted to the left and dove a thousand feet, then leveled off.
“Take us back to town,” Murdock said. “Make it the safest route you know. We’ve found out what we need to know.”
Jaybird heard the shouted exchange with the pilot over the roar and clatter of the chopper.
“So, Commander, sir. Are we going to take a hike up to the rebel camp?”
“Not a hike, Jaybird. But some of us are going to pay them a visit.”