L.A. CONFIDENTIAL by James Ellroy

Karen Vincennes stood by weeping: she couldn’t listen, she had to listen. Ed tried to shoo her out–she wouldn’t let him. He called the Bureau from outside Arrowhead; Fisk gave him the word: Pierce Patchett shot and killed last night, his mansion torched, burned to the ground. Fireman had discovered Vincennes in the backyard–smoke inhalation, rips in his bulletproof vest. They got him to Central Receiving, a doctor took a blood sample. The results: Trashcan on a test flight, a heroin/antipsychotic drug compound. He’d live, he’d be fine–when the OD in his system flushed out.

A nurse swabbed Vincennes’ face; Karen fretted Kleenex. Ed checked Fisk’s memo: “Inez Soto called. No info on R.D. $ dealings. R.D. suspicious of queries?? ?–she was cryptic–D.W.”

Ed crumpled it, tossed it. Vincennes went in barefoot–while he was shacked with Lynn. Somebody killed Patchett, left them both to burn.

Burned like Exley father and son–Bud White holding the torch.

He couldn’t look at Karen.

“Captain, I’ve got something.”

Fisk in the hallway. Ed walked over, led him away from the door. “What is it?”

“Nort Layman completed the autopsy. Patchett’s cause of death was five .30-30 slugs fired from two different rifles. Ray Pinker ran ballistics tests and came up with a match to an old Riverside County bulletin. May of ’55, unsolved with no leads, I checked. Two men gunned down outside a tavern. It looked like a gangland job.”

All coming down to the heroin. “That’s all you’ve got?”

“No. Bud White tore up a dope den in Chinatown and beat three Chinamen half to death. He came in asking questions, badged them and went crazy. One of them ID’d his personnel photo. Thad Green called l.A. on it, and I caught the squeal. Pickup order, sir? I know you want him and Chief Green said it’s your call.”

Ed almost laughed. “No, no pickup order.”

“Sir?”

“I said no, so cut it off there. And you and Kleckner do this for me. Contact Miller Stanton, Max Pelts, Timmy Valburn and Billy Dieterling. Have them come to my office tonight at 8:00 for questioning. Tell them I’m the investigating officer, and if they want no publicity, then bring no lawyers. And get me Homicide’s file on the old Loren Atherton case. Seal it, Sergeant. I don’t want you to look at it.”

“Sir…”

Ed turned away. Karen in the doorway, dry-eyed. “Do you think Jack did those things?”

“Yes.”

“He musm’t know that I know. Will you promise not to tell him?”

Ed nodded, looked in the room. The Big V begged for communion.

CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT

A file room at the main DMV– boxes stacked shoulder-high. A confirmation search–a riff on Johnny and Kikey’s last hink. Riff in, out, back, around–he was so high he could think it through and prowl registration records at the same time.

Make Stomp, Teitlebaum and Lee Vachss for the Nite Owl triggers; make them the shooter gang bumping upstart mobsters and Cohen franchise holders. Deuce Perkins was part of the gang–the others didn’t know he beat hookers to death–they’d consider it amateur shit, wouldn’t tolerate it. Dudley was the leader–he couldn’t be anything else. All his job offer stuff was a try at recruiting him; the Lamar Hinton roust was Dud frosting out loose ends on the Patchett side of things–make Patchett and Smith some kind of K.A.’s, make Hinton dead, Breuning and Carlisle part of the gang. “Contain,” “Contained,” “Containment,” “Profit Dispensation.” Call it Dudley trying to control the L.A. rackets–and pin the Nite Owl on a new bunch of jigs.

Bud tore through boxes: auto registrations, early April ’53. Schoolboy thinkm he figured the car by the Nite Owl was a plant; the shotguns in Coates’ car, the shells in Griffith Park, both plants–the killers followed the case, got lucky on the Merc, found some boogies to take the heat. Wrong–LAPD conspirators were in on the job. They read crime reports, got hipped to some joyriding spooks firing shotguns–lay the onus on them– they figured the arresting officers would kill them, case closed.

So they got themselves a car that matched the crime report description. They made sure it was spotted near the Nite Owl. They wouldn’t steal a car–cops wouldn’t risk a late night roust. They didn’t buy a purple car–they bought a different colored one and painted it.

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