Robert Crais - The Watchman

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Larkin Conner Barkley lives like the City of Angels is hers for the taking. Young and staggeringly rich, she speeds through the city during its loneliest hours, blowing through red after red in her Aston Martin as if running for her life. Until out of nowhere a car appears, and with it the metal-on-metal explosion of a terrible accident. Dazed, Larkin attempts to help the other victims. And finds herself the sole witness in a secret federal investigation.
For maybe the first time in her life, Larkin wants to do the right thing. But by agreeing to cooperate with the authorities, she becomes the target for a relentless team of killers. And when the U.S. Marshals and the finest security money can buy can’t protect her, Larkin’s wealthy family turns to the one man money can’t buy – Joe Pike.
Pike lives a world away from the palaces of Beverly Hills. He’s an ex-cop, ex-marine, ex-mercenary who owes a bad man a favor, and that favor is to keep Larkin alive. The one upside of the job is reuniting with Bud Flynn, Pike’s LAPD training officer, and a man Pike reveres as a father. The downside is Larkin Barkley, who is the uncontrollable cover girl for self-destruction – and as deeply alone as Pike.
Pike commits himself to protecting the girl, but when they immediately come under fire, he realizes someone is selling them out. In defiance of Bud and the authorities, Pike drops off the grid with the girl and follows his own rules of survival: strike fast, hit hard, hunt down the hunters. With the help of private investigator Elvis Cole, Pike uncovers a web of lies and betrayals, and the stunning revelation that even the cops are not who they seem. As the body count rises, Pike’s biggest threat might come from the girl herself, a lost soul in the City of Angels, determined to destroy herself unless Joe Pike can teach her the value of life… and love.

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Cole kept an office on the western edge of Hollywood, four flights up. He had gone in only a couple of times since he got out of the hospital, but now he climbed to his office again. He brought his notes, his maps, and the list of phone numbers and other information. Neither Pitman nor Meesh nor the hitters from Ecuador were waiting for him, which was disappointing and predictably normal. Bad guys rarely waited for you. You had to go find them.

Cole said, “Hey, blockhead. How’s it going?”

Pinocchio grinned at him from the wall. Cole had found the clock at a yard sale. It had a big Pinocchio grin and eyes that moved back and forth as it tocked. Prospective clients were usually less than impressed, but thugs, bad guys, and police officers were fascinated. Cole had stopped trying to figure out why.

Cole liked his office, liked how he felt when he was in it. He had an adjoining room for Joe Pike, though Pike’s office had never been used. Two director’s chairs faced his desk for those rare occasions when more than one client vied for his attention. Beyond the chairs, French doors opened onto a small balcony. On a clear day, he could step out onto his balcony and see all the way down Santa Monica Boulevard to the Channel Islands. On even better days, the woman who occupied the office next to his would sun herself wearing a bikini top the size of a postage stamp.

Cole opened the French doors for the air, then went to his desk. First thing he did was get to work on the building. He laid out his maps, then phoned a woman in Florida named Marla Hendricks who could-and would-track down the building’s ownership history, along with all liens, litigations, settlements, and evictions pertaining to the property. Cole had used her services for years, as did other licensed investigators around the country. She was a three-hundred-pound wheelchair-bound grandmother in Jupiter, Florida, who made her nut by subscribing to and searching online databases. She did not have access to military, medical, or law enforcement sources that were sealed by law, but she could pretty much access anything else.

When Cole finished with Marla, he studied the list of phone numbers, then called his friend at the phone company.

First thing she said was, “I was beginning to think you didn’t love me anymore.”

“You just love me ’cause I get good Dodgers tickets.”

“No, my husband loves you because you get good Dodgers tickets. I love you ’cause your tickets make him happy.”

“I think all three of us are about to feel the love.”

Cole had helped a best-selling novelist convince an Internet stalker that his time was better spent in more positive ways. The novelist had killer seats in the exclusive Dodgers Dugout Club, and shared them with Cole several times each year. Gratis.

Cole said, “I have a list of phone numbers I need to identify.”

“No problemo.”

“Before you say that, let me warn you. Most of these numbers are probably registered to disposable phones, and four of the numbers are international.”

“I might have a problem with the international numbers if they’re unlisted.”

“They’re likely in Ecuador.”

“They could be in Siberia, it wouldn’t matter: Foreign providers are reluctant to cooperate unless we go through official channels, which I can’t, considering I’m doing this for Dodger tickets.”

“I gotcha.”

“The disposables-well, I’m just letting you know-if the phones were cash buys, I can’t find out who owns them. That information won’t exist.”

“If you can’t ID an owner for a particular number, could you get the call records for that number?”

“It’s possible.”

“Sooner or later these phones called real phones, and those phones have names. Maybe we can come at it backwards.”

She didn’t say anything for several seconds. Cole let her think.

Finally she said, “I’ll try. It depends on the provider. Some of these little companies, well-give me the numbers. I’ll see what I can do.”

“It’s a long list. Can I fax them?”

Cole copied her fax number, sent the list, then put on a pot of coffee. When it started dripping, he returned to his desk and reread the NCIC brief on Alexander Meesh. He wanted to see if he had missed anything that would explain the accent Pike reported, or connect Meesh to Esteban Barone or someone named Carlos. He hadn’t. Only a single line connected Meesh to South America: “ …fled the country and currently believed to be residing in Bogota, Colombia .”

Cole decided the investigating agents must have developed evidence or statements that placed Meesh in Bogota, else they would not have entered the statement into the record. Cole paged to the end of the report and noted the investigator’s name-Special Agent Daryl Willis with the Colorado State Justice Department, a state agency. The FBI had probably come in later, but Willis was the point man because murder was a state crime. A phone number was listed under Willis’s name. It was six years old, but Cole dialed it anyway.

A woman answered.

“Investigations.”

“Daryl Willis, please.”

She put him on hold for almost five minutes. Cole passed the time watching Pinocchio’s eyes until a man’s voice came on the line.

“This is Willis.”

“Sir, this is Hugh Farnham. I’m a D-2 here at Devonshire Homicide with the Los Angeles Police Department. I’m calling about a homicide you worked a few years ago, a fugitive named Alexander Meesh.”

Cole made up a badge number and rattled it off. He doubted Willis would actually copy it, but he knew it was the thing to do.

“Oh, yeah, sure. What do you need?”

Willis sounded no more interested than if Cole had asked what color car he drove.

“We pulled his brief off NCIC, and you have this alert here saying he fled to Colombia -”

“That’s right. He was tied in with a boy down there about the time of the murders. Wasn’t enough money up here for him in hijacking; he wanted to bring in drugs, so he worked out something with a-lemme think a minute-a boy named Gonzalo Lehder. Made a few trips down there working out the deal, and I guess they hit it off. When we put the indictments on him, that’s where he went.”

Cole wrote down the name. Lehder.

“Lehder was a supplier?”

“One of the fellas who popped up when the Cali and Medellin cartels fell. Little operations popped up all over down there, maybe thirty or forty of’m. Some of’m aren’t so little anymore.”

“Was Meesh hooked up with someone named Esteban Barone?”

“Sorry. I couldn’t tell you.”

“Barone is out of Ecuador.”

“All I knew was Lehder.”

Six years was a long time. Meesh probably started with Lehder, then branched out to Barone and the other cartels. One hundred twenty million dollars was a lot of investment capital.

Cole said, “All right, then. Let’s get back to Meesh. Did he have any dealings here in L.A.?”

“Can’t say that rings a bell. Sorry.”

“How about Lehder? L.A. ring a bell when you think about Lehder?”

“Farnham, listen, I haven’t paid much attention to this in, what is it, five or six years? Can I ask what this is regarding?”

“Meesh is in Los Angeles. We believe he’s involved in a multiple homicide.”

Willis didn’t say anything, so Cole watched Pinocchio’s eyes. Waiting.

Willis said, “This is Alexander Meesh you’re talking about?”

“That’s right.”

“Alexander Liman Meesh?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Meesh isn’t in Los Angeles, partner. Alex Meesh is dead.”

Cole stopped looking at Pinocchio and dropped his feet to the floor. He wasn’t sure what to say. A room filled with federal agents had interviewed Larkin over the course of a week, and were confident with her identification. Cole suspected they had also identified Meesh’s fingerprints in George King’s car, but Willis sounded absolutely certain, and now all traces of boredom were gone from his voice.

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