Chapter Twenty

Kevin Driscoll was forty-two years old. His marriage to May was going through the readjustment of having two children, ages one and two. He hadn’t been laid in three weeks, resented it strongly and this morning had been awakened at 4:45 by Jason’s apparently random screaming. Kevin Driscoll had a sore throat. Perpetually, but this morning particularly.

As branch manager, he was out on the floor at Wells Fargo Bank and wondered, taking in the customers and tellers and various assistant vice-presidents (everybody above a teller was an a.v.p.), if the world had always been like this or whether he was only seeing it clearly for the first time. The conventional wisdom was that hardship showed you your true colors-maybe it was true of everything else. When you were having a hard time, you saw everything else in its true colors.

And what he saw depressed him further.

There were seven people waiting in the service line. He would never have thought of it before, but now he wondered how many of them were parents. At least three, maybe four. Had any of them slept in months? No wonder people were crabby at the windows all the time.

And at the windows-only two open. Four more tellers congregated conspicuously at chief teller Marianne’s desk catching up on the gossip.

Another man came in. Eight people in the service line now. Tuesday-morning rush and not one teller even considering heading to a window. Let ’em wait, right. The teller mentality.

Kevin coughed and cleared his throat, hoping Marianne or someone would catch the hint. He hated to have to step into this most basic operations procedure, but getting these people to move sometimes took direct action. The problem was, in his mood he’d likely appear as angry as he was, and that was to be avoided. Bank managers didn’t have personalities. They were unflappable.

But he stood up. He’d caught the looks of the customers-rolled eyes or helpless gestures. Shuffling back and forth. Cattle in the pen.

“Hey! Somebody want to open another window? What are you people doing back there?”

Kevin swore to himself. He held a restraining hand up to the security guard who was moving in. He didn’t blame the customer who yelled. He felt like yelling himself.

He walked to the bullpen. “Marianne,” he said quietly.

She looked up, forever sedentary, endlessly serene, a chief teller for seven years. A hundred and eighty pounds of essence of bovine. But sweet. So fucking sweet he wanted to kill her. She smiled. “Yes, Kevin?”

He gestured to the line, forcing a patient smile that he thought threatened to cramp every muscle in his face.

Sighing, Marianne dispatched one of her minions. One. And the girl didn’t hurry. She was carefully counting her drawer when the customer who’d yelled said, “Fuck this!” and turned out of the line.

Another satisfied customer.

“Marianne,” he repeated.

She gave him a little wave and mouthed, “They’ll wait,” then sent another soldier moseying off to the front.

“Are you the manager?”

It was only 10:15. Kevin turned, steeling himself. No matter what, he told himself, don’t swing at the customer.

“Yes?” Definitely the smile muscles were cramping up. “How can I help you?”

The man had not bothered waiting in the line. Maybe he wanted to open an account and Kevin could deal him off to one of his employees currently having coffee around the a.v.p. gossip desk. He did not feel like he could trust himself talking to anyone. Perhaps he should say he was sick, check into a motel and sleep about sixteen hours.

The customer was clearly trying to cut a certain type of figure, but Kevin wasn’t sure he pulled it off. Was he trying to look like a businessman? Or a pastiche of one with perhaps some artistic statement-mismatched pants and coat, a green tie that was too wide over a pale blue shirt, hiking boots. His longish hair was either heavily moussed or simply greasy. In any event, he was upset, saying something about eighty-five thousand dollars.

The number drove off a little of Kevin’s fatigue. He stopped the man in mid-sentence. “Yes, sir. Would you like to sit down, please? Come in where we can talk quietly? Perhaps, some coffee?”

The floor had already seen enough vocal disturbance for one day. The thing to do was to get him into one of the conference rooms.

Kevin was walking and the customer had no other option if he wanted to keep talking with him. It also gave Kevin another minute to get himself under control again, to put his own thoughts together.

Of course he remembered Maxine Weir. Who wouldn’t remember her? Ignoring even the eighty-five thousand dollars (which, of course, he wasn’t likely to do), a man who had not been laid in three weeks did not forget those black tights and high heels. If you’d gotten it in the last five minutes, you’d still perk up at the sight of those nipples peeking out through the holes of the loosely knit skin-colored sweater.

Kevin held the door for the man. It shushed closed behind them. He showed no inclination to sit.

“Now, how can I help you?” he asked.

The privacy of the conference room worked some on the man. He was still upset, but the raving tone was gone. “My name is Ray Weir and my wife and I have-had-an account here…”

“You used to have an account here?”

“No. We still do. I mean, I do. My wife”-he paused-“my wife, uh, died last week. Was killed.”

Kevin let out a breath. “I’m very sorry, Mr Weir. And you’re settling…?”

“I’m not settling anything. I’m here to find out what happened to a check for eighty-five thousand dollars. An insurance check. The insurance company said my wife signed for it last week, but I called your customer service and there’s no record it was deposited. I called the police and asked if they’d found it among her stuff but so far it hasn’t turned up.”

“No,” Kevin said. “I’m afraid it won’t. She cashed it.”

“What do you mean, she cashed it?”

Kevin coughed again, stalling for time. His throat was killing him. It was probably turning into strep again.

“She, your wife, came in last week with the check. She brought her attorney with her.”

“And you cashed it? Just like that?”

Kevin backed away a step or two. “Not exactly just like that. I suggested she deposit the money and we put a hold on your account until the money cleared, but her attorney made me call the carrier and verify the funds, which wasn’t really necessary since it was a cashier’s check, after which I couldn’t very well refuse, could I?”

“So you cashed it?”

There was no denying it. “Yes. We cashed it.”

“Right there?”

“Right here. She took a third of it, then, and gave it to her attorney. He had evidently negotiated the settlement, and those are typical fees, I believe. One-third of the recovered amount.”

“But in cash?”

Ray Weir had to sit down. All the fight was out of him.

“I recommended to her, privately, that this aspect was very unusual. I had to report the transaction to the police -anything over ten thousand dollars in cash. Drugs, you know. But she’d made up her mind. She wanted the money that day. It was hers. The funds were there to cover it. She was a customer. What could I do?”

“But it was half mine, that money. It was half mine.”

“I’m sorry, but the check was made out to her, not to both of you.”

“I mean, we were married. Separated but married. Married when she got into the accident.”

What could he say? The man kept talking. “It was amicable, the separation. We agreed to split everything. And we hadn’t even filed for divorce yet. Maybe we would’ve worked it out.”

Kevin remembered the way this man’s wife had clung to her attorney, had almost gleefully handed over nearly $30,000 in cash to her attorney. Except for the moment during which Kevin had spoken with her privately, she’d never lost physical contact with her attorney. Ray Weir and his wife weren’t ever going to have worked anything out. She had a new man, her attorney, and she was clinging on.

Kevin felt a wave of nausea and then the fatigue kicked in again. He sat down two chairs away from where Ray Weir slumped.

The customer looked at him. “So what can I do now?” he asked.

The sun, morning bright, reflected into Kevin’s eyes off the shiny mahogany conference table. He closed his eyes against the glare, then forced them open to answer Ray Weir. “I can’t help you on that,” he said.

Hardy had been out jogging and missed Glitsky’s call, which first chided him for moving around so much and being so difficult to get hold of, then telling him about Baker’s attempted suicide.

He stood in his office, still sweating, in his shorts and sweatshirt. The weather had warmed up again.

Why had Baker tried to kill himself?

Hardy’s first take was that it was an admission of guilt, another nail in his coffin. Like Abe, he kept having these ambivalent feelings about old Louis. Since he’d talked to Baker the other day and gotten to know Ray Weir, now that Hector Medina was killing dogs, Hardy had pretty much convinced himself that, whatever else Louis Baker had done, and no doubt it was plenty, he hadn’t killed Maxine Weir.

And it wasn’t so much that Baker had denied anything. That would have been easy enough to discount. No. What had been compelling was Baker’s seemingly genuine ignorance of Maxine’s presence on the barge. Even if you were pretty inured to killing people, the least you’d do is notice.

Of course, the fact that he hadn’t killed Maxine didn’t absolutely necessarily mean he hadn’t killed Rusty, but that stretch, in the real world, was too long for Hardy’s reach.

And that left the question of why Baker had been at Rusty’s in the first place. It was pretty thin. Hardy tried to picture Rusty taking Baker back to the barge. Gun in hand. Not very likely…

But why not? After all, how well had he known Rusty? Rusty had seemed much like himself. An ex-D.A., a guy from Hardy’s own club-someone who’d been through some shit and now just wanted to be left alone. That’s why he’d come to see Hardy in the first place, wasn’t it? He’d been afraid. Or he’d sure seemed afraid, enough to convince Hardy, who had no reason to be skeptical about it. Matter of fact, he’d infected Hardy with the fear bug. So…?

But had Rusty really been so much like him? Okay, there were the externals, which were similar, but there was also the description he’d gotten from Karen Moore of a pretty twisted, driven guy-the compulsive gambler, the user of women.

So it came down to who he believed-Louis Baker or Rusty. Not easy. Not anymore. He didn’t believe that Rusty had had a gun-else why would he have stopped at the gun shop and ordered another one that he couldn’t pick up for three days? Except Louis’s story about the day’s events had some kind of ring to it. In a way it was too farfetched to have been made up. At least completely. Rusty meeting Baker at the bus station to drive him-

Whoa.

What did he drive him in? Rusty had taken the bus to the Shamrock. His own car had been stolen, remember?

Hardy sat on the corner of his desk. The car was a question. The car was maybe key.

How about if Hardy asked Louis and got told that they’d driven in an old model blue Volkswagen Jetta? Well, that would be interesting.

Somehow his darts had found their way into his hands and he was throwing them into the board. One, two, three. Walk in and pull them, go back to the tape line on the floor and do it again. Not aiming, not working on form. Zen and darts.

What if he only knew the color? Or the make?

Okay, Hardy would ask Baker what kind of car they’d driven in. Color, anything. He’d see where that led.

He picked up the phone, got the number to County Hospital and started to push buttons, then stopped himself. Last time, he’d needed Glitsky to get to Baker.

But Abe wasn’t in at the Hall. Hadn’t been in, no sign he would be in. Hardy wondered where he’d called him from and what he might be doing, then talked to Flo and found that he was not working but avoiding the shop. They were at least still talking about Los Angeles and Abe wanted to keep some distance-more than usual-between himself and the rest of Homicide. Flo said if she heard from him, she’d ask him to call.

He couldn’t get the car out of his mind. After a shower and a can of sardines he was back in his office, going over the notes he’d taken at the computer terminal. It wasn’t very fertile ground for either analysis or imagination.

He picked up a pen and started writing down everything he could remember about last Wednesday, when Rusty had come into the Shamrock. He’d gotten off the bus. Hardy had remembered his drink-Wild Turkey. He’d told Hardy about Louis Baker getting out, that he’d called the warden at San Quentin to find out the time of release. Then he’d made his proposal that he and Hardy call each other. Finally bringing it around to maybe looking into buying a gun, and what type would be suitable.

Was that it?

Hardy got up, walked around his desk and opened the window in his office. It was after one o’clock and a light warm breeze freshened the room. He stuck his head out to smell the roses, only there weren’t any roses around.

Sitting again, he studied what he’d written. Okay, then, impressions. Rusty down and out. Using public transport. Saying he’d called the warden and was told that Louis Baker had cleaned up his act and not buying that. Saying that guns were for ‘cop types’ like Hardy. Then saying he wanted to buy a gun.

Had the idea just occurred to him? The switch in attitude from guns being for cop types to wanting one for himself?

It slowed Hardy down. Rusty had taken a bus out from downtown. Hardy could imagine him devising his phonecall protection idea, finding where Hardy worked from any number of old mutual acquaintances. But none of that was acting scared-it was more like caution. Rusty hadn’t really been frightened. He had been planning to go home. Hell, he had gone home.

But calling San Quentin to find out exactly when Baker was getting released? That, to Hardy, was more than caution. That appeared to be fear. Didn’t it?

He stared out the window, back down to his notes. There were two mentions of things he’d found out from the warden at San Quentin-the circumstances surrounding Louis’s release and the fact that Louis had been a model prisoner. If Rusty had called out of fear, to find out exactly when he had to start worrying harder, would he have gotten into a discussion at the same time about what kind of guy Louis had become? If you’re tied to the tracks and a train is on the way, do you think about whether it’s a passenger or a freight?

He must have, or probably might have, called San Quentin two times. So what?

Hardy looked at his silent phone. He wasn’t doing anything else. He spoke to four functionaries, perhaps prisoners, before he got to the warden, Jack Hazenkamp.

Hardy had met Hazenkamp a couple of times in his prosecutor days, seen him speak on prison conditions, recidivism rates, the usual. He was a guy who seemed to have spent a lot of time in the military, but during his talks Hardy had found him surprisingly-well, not exactly a liberal, but fairly sympathetic. The cons were his charges, he didn’t mollycoddle them, but they were by and large people, not statistics.

Hardy, had gotten through to him by telling the various intermediaries that he was an attorney (true enough), and it was about Louis Baker. He sat at his desk, his yellow notepad pulled in front of him.

The warden came on brusquely, hurried. “Hazenkamp.”

“Warden, I’d like to ask you a question or two about Louis Baker-”

“Already? What’s he done?”

Hardy was planning on explaining it all briefly, up to the suicide attempt, but the warden stopped him as soon as he heard Rusty Ingraham’s name.

“Ingraham is dead?”

Hardy went over it a little.

“My God,” the warden said. “Talk about a mistake.”

“How’s that?”

“Ingraham called a couple of times in the past month or so.”

“A couple of times?” Hardy repeated.

“Yes, twice I think. He seemed very frightened. It now appears he was justified. I told him he didn’t need to worry. Baker wasn’t a threat.” Hazenkamp swore softly. “I have to tell you that this surprises me, and I don’t entertain many illusions in these matters.”

“What’s that?”

“Well, you know, most of them come back or get killed trying.”

Hardy waited.

“But Louis Baker-well, you put your hopes on a few of them, I guess. Have to or go crazy.”

“And Baker was one of those?”

“Well, you either believe in rehabilitation or you don’t.”

“And you do?”

“Not too much. But you get an occasional good feeling. We don’t let guys out on minimum time unless we have some confidence they’re gonna try to go straight.”

“So you knew Baker personally?”

“I know most of them personally. It’s not like you don’t have time to meet them. I sort of make it a point.”

“And Baker…?”

Hardy could hear the man breathing on the other end of the line.

“Baker was tough. Very tough. Had most of the wrong tapes playing in his brain when he got here. But as I said, you like to think you get a feeling for these things when you’ve been in it as long as I have, and he was one case where I really believed the man had changed. He wasn’t a psycho. In his case, and I don’t say this too often, I think he grew up tough and mean because he had to survive.”

“I knew him back then, warden. He was a very serious felon.” Hardy knew a lot of the things Louis Baker had done. He didn’t exactly buy the environmental theory.

“Oh, I’m not denying that. He’ll never be, let’s say, a Republican. But,” his voice went up in pitch, hope resurfacing, “he wasn’t a drug user, his brain wasn’t fried out, he got along with other guys, was on the basketball squad, gave boxing lessons-maybe a loner, but the kind who could affect other people. Not a killer. At least I didn’t think so…”

“Maybe not.”

“But I thought you said…”

Hardy went on with the story-Maxine Weir, the man in Holly Park, the shootout with the cops, the attempted suicide… “So my question,” he finished, “is does it make any sense to you? Didn’t the parole board give him tests, interviews, that kind of thing?”

“Of course. And recommended on informed opinion-”

“-That he get out?”

“That’s why he did.”

“How often are you wrong?”

As soon as he asked, Hardy regretted it. All the slack -weary or otherwise-left the voice, and he was talking to a drill sergeant again, and a defensive one at that. “Recidivism is, I’m sure you realize, a major problem. But if you’re going to let these people out, if you’re going to believe anybody can be rehabilitated, then you do it when the evidence-”

“I understand all that. It just seemed, in Baker’s case, you might have felt something more. Personally.”

There was a longish pause. Hardy looked out his window. Maybe, he thought, Hazenkamp was doing the same thing up in Marin.

“You know, Mr Hardy, I knew a hell of a lot of guys like Baker in the corps. They come in tough, mean and young and all they want in life is to kick ass, be on top, never show they’ve got a weakness in them because where they come from, weakness is what you get stomped on for. Black or white, it doesn’t matter. Poor seems to be the big thing. No options. So for a while we-both in prison and in the corps-we authority figures get their attention. Bust them all the way down so we can build them up.”

“I was a Marine myself, sir,” Hardy said.

Another pause, shorter. “Then you remember. The junkyard dogs. Then something happens. At least once in a while. They get on a team, somebody saves their ass or maybe they save somebody’s.”

Hardy remembered how he had been after his parents’ death, joining the Marines, getting his bad self reamed a few times, then getting to Nam and pulling Moses McGuire, still his closest friend, out from under enemy fire at Chi Leng. Hazenkamp was right-it could change you.

“And that happened to Baker?”

“I think so… thought so. You know, Mr Hardy, there are model prisoners, as they call ’em, and then there are the guys that, you’d swear to God, the attitude just seems to go away. They’re not just model prisoners-you forget they’re prisoners period. That was Baker. Not that he wasn’t still tough-you didn’t push him-but he didn’t need to be anymore. You get what I’m saying? Anyway, it’s the same thing I told Ingraham. Just leave it alone and you won’t have any trouble.”

“Yeah, but Ingraham didn’t leave it alone.”

“Well, I still feel that Louis Baker could have taken quite a lot of abuse before he felt his options were gone.”

“But if there were that much? Abuse, I mean. Pressure.”

“Well, then he’d revert. You get cornered, you go back to what you know.”

Hardy could understand that. Being tagged for three murders you didn’t commit in the first couple of days after a long term in San Quentin would make anyone feel cornered. So then you decide to break out, go after somebody, someone who represents the people who are doing this to you-in Baker’s case, Hardy. And then because you’re out of practice, you fuck up, and all the good done in nine years is wiped out, all the hope of ever having a life is over, and you try to kill yourself. It could have gone that way…

Hardy glanced at his notepad while he still had Hazenkamp on the line. At the top of the page he’d written the number 2 with an exclamation point and circled it.

“One more thing if you’ve got a second, sir. The two times Ingraham called, were they about the same thing?”

“Yeah. The first time was more general-if he ought to be worried, how Baker was doing, he’d heard about him getting paroled, like that.”

“And the other time?”

“Well, that was the one last week, where he wanted to know the specifics-what time he got released, where he was going. I figured it couldn’t hurt. He seemed pretty strung out. I tried to calm him down. Told him again -really I didn’t think Baker was going to bother him.” He sighed. “But he did.”

“Warden, by any chance do you keep a phone log? Do you have the date of Ingraham’s first call?”

“Why?”

Over the line Hardy heard paper turning. “Just filling in the blanks.”

“Okay, here it is. August twenty-sixth. Does that fill one in?”

Hardy moved things around on his desk. Blowfish, paperweight, legal pad. Slips of paper with other notes from other days. A couple of blue jays squawked on a wire outside his window. He looked at the page he’d been studying earlier and put it next to the one he was now writing on.

Ingraham’s car had been reported stolen three days after his first call to San Quentin. “It’s a possibility,” he said.

He thanked Hazenkamp and hung up. So Rusty hears from a parole-officer friend that Louis Baker is getting out of prison. About the same time, he knows he’s getting a third of an $85,000 settlement from Maxine Weir. Three days later, his car is stolen. He doesn’t rent a car against the settlement from the insurance.

Baker said Rusty picked him up and drove him to his barge the same day Rusty had so clearly for all to see taken a bus out to the Shamrock.

Hardy wondered how many cars got reported stolen that weren’t really stolen-that were ditched, hidden, trashed for any number of reasons, the most obvious of which, but certainly not the only one, being insurance. (The other reasons provided some food-hell, a whole Sunday dinner -for thought.)

The telephone, that mute uncooperative toy that had stared silently at Hardy the whole time he’d been home, now jangled shrilly, demanding attention. Hardy, a slave to it, picked it up.

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