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Echo Park Part 34

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There was only silence. Bosch tried again.

"They used you. O'Shea used you and he's going to just walk away from it. Is that what you want? You die here in this hole and he just walks away?"

Bosch put the flashlight down so he could wipe the sweat out of his eyes. He then had to feel around on the floor of the tunnel to find it again.

"I can't give you O'Shea or Olivas," Waits said in the darkness.

Bosch didn't get it. Was he wrong? He doubled back in his head and started at the beginning.



"Did you kill Marie Gesto?"

There was a long silence.

"No, I didn't," Waits finally said.

"Then how was this set up? How could you know where-"

"Think about it, Bosch. They're not stupid. They would not directly communicate with me."

Bosch nodded. He understood.

"Maury Swann," he said. "He brokered the deal. Tell me about it."

"What's to tell? It was a setup, man. He said the whole thing was to make you a believer. He said you were bothering the wrong people and had to be convinced."

"What people?"

"He didn't tell me that."

"This is Maury Swann saying this?"

"Yes, but it doesn't matter. You can't get to him either. This is communication between a lawyer and his client. You can't touch it. It's privileged. Besides, it would be my word against his. That won't go anywhere and you know it."

Bosch did know it. Maury Swann was a tough lawyer and a respected member of the bar. He was also a media darling. There was no way to go after him with just the words of a criminal client-and a serial killer at that. It had been a masterstroke by O'Shea and Olivas to use him as the go-between.

"I don't care," Bosch said. "I want to know how it all went down. Tell me."

A long silence went by before Waits responded.

"Swann went to them with the idea of making a deal. My clearing the books in exchange for my life. He did this without my knowledge. If he had asked me I would have said, don't bother. I'd rather take the needle than forty years in a cell. You understand that, Bosch. You're an eye-for-an-eye guy. I like that about you, believe it or not."

He ended it there and Bosch had to prompt him again.

"So then what happened?"

"One night in the jail, I was taken to the attorney room and there was Maury. He told me there was a deal on the table. But he said it would only work if I threw in a freebie. Admit to one I didn't do. He told me that there would be a field trip and I would have to lead a certain detective to the body. This detective had to be convinced, and leading him to the body would be the only way to do it. That detective was you, Bosch."

"And you said yes."

"When he said there would be a field trip, I said yes. That was the only reason. It meant daylight. I saw a chance at daylight."

"And you were led to believe that this offer, this deal-that it came directly from Olivas and O'Shea?"

"Who else would it come from?"

"Did Maury Swann ever use their names in connection with the deal?"

"He said this is what they wanted me to do. He said it came directly from them. They would not make a deal if I didn't throw in the freebie. I had to throw in Gesto and take you to her or there was no f.u.c.king deal. You get it?"

Bosch nodded.

"Yeah, I got it."

He felt his face getting hot with anger. He tried to channel it, put it aside so that it was ready to be used, but not at this moment.

"How did you get the details you gave me during the confession?"

"Swann. He got them from them. He said they had the records from the original investigation."

"And he told you how to find the body up there in the woods?"

"Swann told me there were markers in the woods. He showed me pictures and told me how to lead everybody there. It was easy. The night before my confession I studied up on everything."

Bosch was silent as he thought about how easily he had been led down the path. He had wanted something so badly and for so long that it had made him blind.

"And what were you supposed to get out of all of this, Raynard?"

"You mean, what was in it for me from their point of view? My life, man. They were offering me my life. Take it or leave it. But the truth is, I didn't care about that. I told you, man, when Maury said there'd be a field trip, I knew that I might have a chance to get away ... and to visit my ... my foxhole one last time. That was enough for me. I didn't care about anything else. I didn't care if I died trying, either."

Bosch tried to think of what he should do or ask next. He thought about using his cell to call the district attorney or a judge and have Waits confess over the phone. He put the flashlight down again and reached into his pocket but then he remembered he had dropped his phone when he had jumped onto Rachel as the shooting broke out in the garage.

"Are you still there, Detective?"

"I'm here. What about Marie Gesto? Did Swann tell you why you had to confess to the Marie Gesto killing?"

Waits laughed.

"He didn't have to. It was pretty obvious that the fix was in. Whoever did Gesto was trying to get you off his back."

"No name was mentioned?"

"No, no name."

Bosch shook his head. He had nothing. Nothing on O'Shea or Anthony Garland or anybody else. He looked down the tunnel in the direction of the garage. He could see nothing but he knew that there would be people there. They had blacked out that end to prevent backlighting. He knew they would be coming at any moment.

"What about your escape?" he asked in order to keep the dialogue going. "Was that planned or were you just improvising?"

"A little of both. I met with Swann the night before the field trip. He told me how I would lead you to the body. He showed me the photos and told me about the markings in the trees and how they would begin after we came to where there had been a mud slide and we would have to climb down. That's when I knew. I knew I might have a chance then. So I told him to make them uncuff me if I had to do any climbing. I told him that I wouldn't follow through on the deal if I had to do any climbing with my hands cuffed to my sides."

Bosch remembered O'Shea overruling Olivas and telling him to take the cuffs off. Olivas's reluctance had all been a play for Bosch's benefit. Everything had been a play for his benefit. Everything was phony and he had been played perfectly.

Bosch heard the sound of men crawling behind him in the tunnel. He turned the flashlight on and saw them. It was the SWAT team. Black Kevlar, automatic rifles, night-vision goggles. They were coming. Any moment they would launch a flash-bang grenade into the tunnel and start coming. He turned the light out. He thought about the woman. He knew Waits would kill her the moment they made the move.

"Were you really at McLaren?" Waits asked.

"I was there. It was before your time but I was there. I was in B dorm. It was closest to the baseball fields so we always got there first at rec time and got the best equipment."

It was a you-had-to-be-there story, the best Bosch could think of in the moment. He had spent most of his life trying to forget about McLaren.

"Maybe you were there, Bosch."

"I was."

"And look at us now. You went your way and I went mine. I guess I fed the wrong dog."

"What do you mean? What dog?"

"You don't remember. At McLaren they used to pa.s.s around that saying about every man having two dogs inside. One good and one bad. They fight all the time because only one can be the alpha dog, the one in charge."

"And?"

"And the one that wins is always the dog you chose to feed. I fed the wrong one. You fed the right one."

Bosch didn't know what to say. He heard a click from behind him in the tunnel. They were going to launch the grenade. He quickly stood up, hopeful that they would not shoot him in the back.

"Waits, I'm coming in."

"No, Bosch."

"I'll give you my gun. Watch the light. I'll give you my gun."

He switched on the flashlight and played its beam on the turn in the tunnel ahead. He moved forward and when he got to the turn extended his left hand into the cone of light. He held his gun by the barrel so Waits could see it was no threat.

"I'm coming in now."

Bosch took the turn and entered the final chamber of the tunnel. The s.p.a.ce was at least twelve feet wide but still not tall enough for him to stand in. He dropped to his knees and swept the chamber with his light. The dim amber beam revealed a ghastly sight of bones and skulls and decaying flesh and hair. The stench was overpowering and Bosch had to hold himself from gagging.

The beam came to the face of the man Bosch had known as Raynard Waits. He was propped against the far wall of his foxhole, sitting on what looked like a throne carved into the rock and clay. To his left the woman he had abducted lay naked and unconscious on a blanket. Waits held the barrel of Freddy Olivas's gun to her temple.

"Easy now," Bosch said. "I'll give you my gun. Just don't hurt her anymore."

Waits smiled, knowing he was in complete control of the situation.

"Bosch, you are a fool to the end."

Bosch lowered his arm and tossed the gun to the right side of the throne. As Waits reached down to grab it he lifted the muzzle of the other gun off the woman. Bosch dropped the flashlight and reached behind him at the same time, his hand finding the grip of the revolver he had taken from the blind woman.

The long barrel made his aim true. He fired twice, hitting Waits in the center of the chest with both rounds.

Waits was knocked back against the wall. Bosch saw his eyes go wide, then they lost that light that separates life from death. His chin dropped and his head tilted forward.

Bosch crawled to the woman and checked her for a pulse. She was still alive. He covered her with the blanket she was lying on. He then called out to the others in the tunnel.

"This is Bosch-RHD! It's clear! We are clear! Raynard Waits is dead!"

A bright light flashed on around the corner in the entrance tunnel. It was a blinding light and he knew the men with guns would be waiting on the other side of it.

No matter, he felt safe now. He slowly moved toward the light.

CHAPTER 30

AFTER EMERGING FROM THE TUNNEL Bosch was led out of the garage by two SWAT officers wearing gas masks. He was delivered into the hands of the waiting members of the Fugitive Task Force and others a.s.sociated with the case. Randolph and Osani from OIS were on hand as well as Abel Pratt from the Open-Unsolved Unit. Bosch looked around for Rachel Walling but didn't see her anywhere on the scene. Bosch was led out of the garage by two SWAT officers wearing gas masks. He was delivered into the hands of the waiting members of the Fugitive Task Force and others a.s.sociated with the case. Randolph and Osani from OIS were on hand as well as Abel Pratt from the Open-Unsolved Unit. Bosch looked around for Rachel Walling but didn't see her anywhere on the scene.

Next out of the tunnel was Waits's last victim. The young woman was carried to a waiting ambulance and immediately transported to County-USC Medical Center for a.s.sessment and treatment. Bosch was pretty sure his own imagination couldn't top the real horrors she had lived through. But he knew the important thing was that she was alive.

The task force leader wanted Bosch to sit in a van and tell his story but Bosch said he didn't want to be in a closed s.p.a.ce. Even out in the open air on Figueroa Lane he couldn't get the smell of the tunnel out of his nose and he noticed that the task force members who had crowded around him at first had now all taken a step or two back. He saw a garden hose attached to a faucet alongside the stairway of the house next to 710. He went over, turned it on and then bent over as he ran the water through his hair, on his face and down his neck. It pretty much soaked his clothes but he didn't care. It washed away a good deal of the dirt and sweat and stench and he knew the clothes were trash now anyway.

The task force top was a sergeant named Bob McDonald who had been pulled in from Hollywood Division. Luckily, Bosch knew him from past days in the division and that set the stage for a cordial debriefing. Bosch realized it was just a warmup. He would have to submit to a formal interview with Randolph and the OIS before the end of the day.

"Where's the FBI agent?" Bosch asked. "Where's Rachel Walling?"

"She's being interviewed," McDonald said. "We're using a neighbor's house for her."

"And the old lady upstairs in the house?"

McDonald nodded.

"She's fine," McDonald said. "She's blind and in a wheelchair. They're still talking to her but it turns out Waits lived here when he was a kid. It was a foster home and his real name is Robert Foxworth. She can't get around by herself anymore, so she pretty much stays up there. County a.s.sistance brings in her food. Foxworth helped her out financially by renting the garage. He kept supplies for window was.h.i.+ng in there. And an old van. It's got a wheelchair lift in it."

Bosch nodded. He guessed that Janet Saxon had no idea what else her former foster son used her garage for.

McDonald told Bosch it was time to tell his story, and so he did, giving the step-by-step playback of the moves he had made after discovering the connection between Waits and the p.a.w.nbroker Fitzpatrick.

There were no questions. Not yet. n.o.body asked why he never called the task force or Randolph or Pratt or anybody else. They listened and simply locked in his story. Bosch was not too concerned. He and Rachel had saved the girl and he had killed the bad guy. He was sure that these two accomplishments would allow him to rise above all transgressions upon protocol and regulations and save his job.

It took him twenty minutes to tell the story, and then McDonald said they should take a break. As the group around him splintered, Bosch saw his boss waiting to get to him. Bosch knew this conversation would not be easy.

Pratt finally saw an opening and walked up. He looked anxious.

"Well, Harry, what did he tell you in there?"

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Echo Park Part 34 summary

You're reading Echo Park. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Michael Connelly. Already has 604 views.

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