Echo Park
explain him cursing and slamming doors, I guess.”
She nodded.
Bosch yawned and all at once he realized how tired he was. He had been running all day just to get to this name and the uncertainties that accompanied it. The case was crowding his brain. Rachel seemed to read him.
“Harry, I say we quit while we’re ahead and have another beer.”
“I don’t know how far ahead we are but I could use another beer,” Bosch said. “There’s only one problem with that.”
“What?”
“No more beer.”
“Harry, you invited a girl over to do your dirty work and help you crack the case and all you give her is one beer? What’s wrong with you? What about wine? You have some wine?”
Bosch shook his head sadly.
“But I’m on my way to the store.”
“That’s good. I’m on my way to the bedroom. I’ll be waiting for you there.”
“Then, I won’t delay.”
“Make mine a red wine, will you?”
“I’m on it.”
Bosch hurried from the house. He had parked earlier at the front curb so that Rachel could use the carport if she came over. As he walked out the front door he noticed a vehicle sitting at the opposite curb two houses down. The vehicle, a silver SUV , caught his eye because it was parked in a red zone. There was no parking allowed along that curb, since it was too close to the next curve in the road. A car could come around the bend and easily collide with any car parked there.
As Bosch looked up the street the SUV suddenly took off without its lights on. It sped north around the bend and disappeared.
Bosch ran to his car, jumped in and headed north after the SUV . He drove as fast as he could safely go. Within two minutes he had followed the curving street around to the four-way stop at Mulholland Drive. There was no sign of the SUV and it could have gone in any of three directions from the stop.
“Shit!”
Bosch sat at the intersection for a long moment, thinking about what he had just seen and what it might mean. He decided that it either meant nothing or it meant someone was watching his house and therefore watching him. But at the moment there was nothing he could do. He let it go. He turned left and drove Mulholland at a safe speed all the way down to Cahuenga. He knew there was a liquor store near Lankershim. He headed there, checking the rearview mirror for a trailer the whole way.
26
HOME DUTY OR NOT , Bosch dressed in a suit the next morning before heading out. He knew it would give him an aura of authority and confidence while dealing with government bureaucrats. And by twenty minutes after nine it had paid off. He had a solid lead. The Department of Motor Vehicles’ archives had produced a driver’s license issued to a Robert Foxworth on November 3, 1987, the day he turned sixteen and was eligible to drive. The license was never renewed in California but there was no DMV record of the holder being deceased. This meant Foxworth had either moved to another state and was licensed there, decided he no longer wanted to drive or changed identities. Bosch was betting on the third option.
The address on the license was the lead. It listed Foxworth’s residence as the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services, 3075 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. In 1987 he had been a juvenile ward of the county. He either had no parents or they had been declared unfit to raise him and he was removed from them. The designation of DCFS as his address meant that he was either housed in one of the department’s youth halls or had been placed in its foster care program. Bosch knew all of this because he, too, had had such a designation on his first driver’s license. He, too, had been a ward of the county.
As Bosch stepped out of the DMV offices on Spring Street he felt a renewed surge of energy. He had broken through what had seemed to be a dead end the night before and had turned it into a solid lead. As he headed to his car his cell phone vibrated and he answered it without breaking stride or looking at the screen, hoping that it would be Rachel and that he’d be able to share the good news.
“Harry, where are you? No one answered the home line.”
It was Abel Pratt. Bosch was getting tired of his constant checking up on him.
“I’m on my way in to visit Kiz. Is that all right with you?”
“Sure, Harry, except you’re supposed to check in with me.”
“Once a day. It’s not even ten o’clock!”
“I want to hear from you every morning.”
“Whatever.
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