Guilt By Degrees - страница 13
I thought, you try walking downhill in a skirt and heels in this wind, smart-ass.
My call was put through.
“Keller.”
“Knight here. Want to walk a crime scene?”
“John Doe stabbing?”
How the hell…?
“It’s all over the station, Knight. But how’d you wind up with this case? It’s not exactly Special Trials material.”
“The guy who had the case was a useless sack-”
“Who was gonna dump it, so you got pissed off and grabbed it. And, now that you’re in this thing up to your ears, it turns out the case is a dog.” Bailey sighed. “You know, I get your whole ‘justice for all’ thing. What I don’t get is why it means I have to be roped in.”
As if Bailey-or Toni, for that matter-was all that different from me. This wasn’t just a nine-to-five job for any of us. But given Bailey’s current attitude, not to mention the fact that she was right about the case being a dog, I decided now was not the best time to point that out. “Because you’ll get to give me hell about my lack of impulse control?”
“I can do that anyway, and besides, I’m in the middle of a report…”
I saw that I’d have to up the ante. “I’ll give you the blow-by-blow on what happened in-and out of-court.”
Bailey exhaled. “Where’s the scene?”
The lure of gossip. It seldom fails. I told her.
“Meet you in ten,” she said, and hung up.
It gets tiresome the way Bailey goes on and on.
8
I called Melia, the unit secretary, and told her I’d be going out to a crime scene. Then I pulled on my coat, reached into the pocket for my.22 Beretta, flipped off the safety, and headed out.
I found Bailey standing at the corner of Hope and Fourth Street, her short sandy-blond hair barely ruffled by the heavy wind. Only the tall and lean Bailey could pull off a midcalf-length camel-hair coat. The day was cold enough to make even the weatherproof detective wrap a scarf around her neck, and its jewel-toned colors brought out the green in her eyes. If she weren’t one of my besties, I’d hate her guts.
“According to the report,” I said by way of greeting, “our John Doe was slightly more than halfway between Fourth and Fifth when they found him.”
We headed toward the spot.
“I didn’t leave my cozy cubby just to walk a scene with you. What the hell happened in court?”
I filled her in.
“Jeez,” she said with a sigh when I’d finished. “Poor Stoner. He’s had it rough lately.”
“So you know him?”
“We worked together in Hollywood Division a while back. Really good guy, and a great cop.”
“So I should believe him when he says he won’t give me grief if the case goes south?” I asked.
Bailey hesitated. This did not reassure me.
“What?” I asked impatiently.
“Yeah, he’ll probably be okay,” she said, then stopped and looked off down the street. “It’s just that he’s going through a real bitch of a divorce. It’s got him a little…unhinged. Otherwise he never would’ve gone off on some dumb-punk DA, no matter what he said.” Bailey put her hands into her pockets and looked at the ground for a moment. “But you did him a solid-pulled his case out of the Dumpster. I’d think you’d be bulletproof where he’s concerned.”
I didn’t care for the choice of words, reminding me as it did that if Stoner lost it, I might literally need to be bulletproof.
A group of men in business suits who were trying to navigate the sidewalk and talk at the same time created a moving roadblock, so I stepped to the curb to avoid a collision. They never even broke stride or seemed to notice that they’d commandeered the sidewalk. They’d probably walked around my John Doe with equal oblivion.
“Anyway, it may all be moot,” Bailey continued. “If that DDA beefs Stoner, they’ll make him ride a desk until it all gets sorted out.”
“So who’ll I get?”
“Depends on who’s up.” Bailey shrugged, then gave me a little smile. “But I’d take the hit and work with you for Stoner’s sake.”
Bailey and I had met and bonded over a serial-killer case we’d worked together six years ago. We’d wound up becoming best friends and had finagled our way into working more than our fair share of cases together. But then Bailey got transferred into the elite Robbery-Homicide Division, and we didn’t need to finagle anymore. It was common practice for Robbery-Homicide to funnel nearly all of their cases to the Special Trials Unit.