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"You know what happened to him?"
"Naw."
He had smoked himself past good feeling and was starting down the hill to depression.
"You know who Bunny's father is?" I said.
He started to cry.
"Naw, man. s.h.i.+t, I don't know nothing. I never knew nothing. I never been nothing."
"Well, I guess you were Daryl's father," I said. "Sort of."
53.
I was having breakfast with Captain Samuelson at Nate and Al's deli in Beverly Hills, just two booths away from Larry King. In the booth with us was a thin-faced, sandy-haired FBI agent named Dennis Clark. Samuelson said he had no reason to bring Leon downtown, and that Leon was known to be heavily lawyered, and in the current climate, Samuelson didn't want a black man's lawyer screaming publicly about police hara.s.sment.
"On the other hand," he said, "it would seem no more than courteous for us to go with you when you stop by for a chat."
"Reduces the chance that he'll shoot me, too," I said.
"I suppose it does," Samuelson said.
I had ordered scrambled eggs with onions. Samuelson had shredded wheat. Clark was drinking black coffee.
"I'm here because Epstein called me," Clark said. "We went through the academy together. He's a good agent and a good guy."
"We appreciate it," I said.
"Just remember, my presence is completely unofficial."
I nodded. Samuelson ate some of his cereal.
"We just need you to be there, Dennis," Samuelson said. "You don't have to say a word."
"Just so you know," Clark said.
"We know," Samuelson said.
"And if I swear I wasn't present, you both back me."
"We do," I said.
Clark looked at Samuelson.
"Of course, Dennis," Samuelson said. "Absolutely."
Clark nodded and drank his coffee. Samuelson sprinkled some Equal on his cereal and ate a spoonful.
"Why'd you decide to talk with him again?" Samuelson said to me. "You learned bubkes last time."
"I got the tacit admission that he knew Emily Gordon," I said.
"The broad that got killed."
"Yes."
"You knew that anyway."
"Well, yes."
"You learn anything else?"
"No."
"So why do you think you'll do better this time?"
"Ever hopeful," I said.
"Ever a pain in the a.s.s," Samuelson said.
"I value consistency," I said.
"Okay," Samuelson said. "We'll drive up and see him." An L.A. police captain and an FBI agent got more respect at Leon's house than Hawk and I had gotten. We were ushered in without even a patdown by the same greeting team that Hawk and I had met. We went into the same ridiculous room, where Leon was waiting for us in the same chair. Today he was wearing a black-and-gold das.h.i.+ki. He gave us the same preprogrammed stare.
Samuelson introduced himself and said, "I believe you've met Spenser."
Leon made one small nod to indicate that he had. It also indicated somehow that he hadn't been impressed.
"And this other gentleman," Samuelson said, "is Special Agent Dennis Clark of the Federal Bureau of Investigation." Samuelson gave "Federal Bureau of Investigation" a nice dramatic overtone.
"Spenser and I are working in cooperation with the Bureau," Samuelson said solemnly. "Yeah?"
"Old case," Samuelson said. "1974."
"Yeah."
"And, well, let's not beat around the bush," Samuelson said. "We know you're involved."
"Involved in what?" Leon said.
"The FBI has informed us that you were involved in a Back Story-bank holdup in Boston in 1974 in which a young woman you were with was killed."
"Boston?"
"Uh-huh. The woman was Emily Gold, and we know she was your girlfriend. We're not sure you killed her," Samuelson said, "but the Bureau thinks you did, and they've asked us to talk with you."
"The Bureau thinks I killed some broad in Boston?" Leon said.
He was staring at Clark.
"Yep."
"Show me something, says you're FBI," Leon said.
Clark showed him a badge. Leon studied it. "You the one thinks I killed somebody in Boston?" he said to Clark.
Clark shook his head.
"So," Leon said to Samuelson, "who the f.u.c.k you talking to thinks I killed some broad."
"From the Boston office," Samuelson said. "Special Agent Malone."
"Malone?"
"Yeah. Evan Malone."
"You're lying."
"Cops don't lie, Leon," Samuelson said. "You know that."
"He knows I didn't kill her."
"We can prove you knew her," I said.
"Malone knows I didn't do it, the lying motherf.u.c.ker."
"How's he know that?" Samuelson said.
"I wasn't even in the f.u.c.king bank, man."
"Where were you?"
"I was just the driver, man. Malone knows that."
"How," Samuelson said.
"Man, I told him. He knows I didn't shoot that broad." We were quiet for a moment. We had been right. It was as if we all knew it at the same time. The other two let me say it.
"You were the mole," I said.
"Huh?"
"You were the undercover guy. The informant. You were working for the Feds and Malone was your handler."
"Yeah."
Leon seemed calm about it. He still a.s.sumed the Bureau would take care of him.
"And when the bank job went down, they didn't want you compromised."
"Right." I nodded.
"So who killed Emily Gold?" Samuelson said.
"I don't know, man. I tole you. I was in the car. They come busting out of the bank and said Emily got shot and to roll it."
"Who was in the bank?" I said.
"Shaka, Bunny, white hippie a.s.shole I don't even remember his name, and Emily."
"Shaka was Abner Fancy?"
"Yeah. Sure."
"Emily go in with them?"
"No, I tole all this to Malone, for crissake. Emily was the scout. She go in ahead of time, case the place, and if she don't come out in three minutes, we go in. They go in. I just the driver."
"And no one ever said who shot her?"
"No, man. I figure it's some f.u.c.king cowboy bank guard, until I read the papers and they say it ain't known who shot her, and then Malone get me and s.h.i.+ps me out of town."
Clark forgot his vow of silence.
"And set you up here?" Clark said.
"Yeah," he said.
Clark's face showed nothing.
"Where's Shaka?" Samuelson said.
"I don't know."
"How about the white hippie a.s.shole?"
"He's dead."
"How."
"I heard Shaka shot him."