The Closers (26 page)

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Authors: Michael Connelly

BOOK: The Closers
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"The ooen all your mail. You don't like to deal with it. Remember?

I

it so I can tell you what is important and what isn't. If you don't want me to do it that way anymore, just tell me. I won't mind,

just less work."

Pierce calmed. She was right.

"No, that's all right. Did you read this stuff?"

"Not really. I saw the picture of the girl who had your phone number and decided I did not want to look at that stuff. Remember what we agreed to on Saturday?"

Pierce nodded.

"Yes, that's good. Thanks." He turned to go back to his office.

"Do you want me to tell Charlie you are here?"

"No, I'm only staying a few minutes."

When he got to the door he looked back at Monica and saw her staring at him with that look of hers. Like she was judging him guilty of something, some crime he knew nothing about.

He closed the door and went behind the desk. He opened the envelope and pulled out the sheaf of printouts from Zeller.

The photo Monica mentioned was not the same photo of Lilly Quinlan from her web page. It was a mug shot taken in Las Vegas three years before, when she had been arrested in a prostitution sting. In the photo she did not look nearly as breathtaking as she did in the website photo. She looked tired and angry and a bit scared all at once.

Zeller's report on Lilly Quinlan was short. He had traced her from Tampa to Dallas to Vegas and then L.A. She was actually twenty-eight years old, not the twenty-three she promised in her web page ad copy. She had a record of two arrests for solicitation in Dallas and the one arrest in Vegas. After each arrest she had spent a few days in jail and was then released for time served. She had come to L.A. three years earlier, according to utilities records. She

had avoided arrest and notice of the police until now.

TK

i That was it. Pierce looked at the photo again and felt depressed.

Hie mug shot was the reality. The photo he had downloaded from e website and looked at so often over the weekend was the fan- SY- Her trail from Tampa to Dallas to Las Vegas to Los Angeles

had ended on that bed in the Venice townhouse. There was a killer' out there somewhere. And meantime, the cops were focusing on him. I

He put the sheaf of printouts down on the desk and picked up [ the phone. After digging her card out of his wallet, he called Janisl Langwiser to check in. He was on hold a good five minutes before? she picked up.

"Sorry, I was on the phone with another client. What is happening with you?"

"Me? Nothing. I'm at work. I just wanted to check in and see if you've heard anything new from anybody."

Meaning, Is Renner still after me?

"No, nothing really new. I think we're playing a waiting game here. Renner knows he is on notice and that he's not going to be abldf to bully you. We have to just see what turns up and go from there."

Pierce looked at the mug shot on his desk. It could just as well have been a morgue shot for all the harsh lighting and shadows o!S her face.

"You mean like a body turning up?"

"Not necessarily."

"Well, I got a call from Lucy LaPorte today."

"Really? What did she say?"

"It was a message, actually. She said she'd been hurt and she didn't want me to ever contact her again."

"Well, at least we know she's around. We may need her."

"Why?"

"If this goes further we could possibly use her as a witness. T*| your motives and actions."

"Yeah, well, Renner thinks everything I did with her was parti my plan. You know, being the Good Samaritan and all."

"That's just his view of it. In a court of law there are always sides."

"A court of law? This can't go to-"

"Relax, Henry. I'm just saying that Renner knows that for every piece of supposed evidence that he puts forward, we will have the same opportunity to put forward our side and our view of that evidence. The DA will know that, too."

"All right. Did you find out from anybody over there what Luc told him?"

"The know a supervisor in the squad. He told me they haven't f nd her. They've talked by phone but she hasn't come in. She

won't come in."

Pierce was about to tell her that he had Cody Zeller looking for The ucv when there was a sharp knock on his door and it opened before he could react. Charlie Condon stuck his head in. He was smiling, until he saw Pierce's face.

"Jesus Christ!"

"Who is that?" Langwiser asked.

"My partner. I have to go. Let me know what you hear."

"When I hear it. Good-bye, Henry."

Pierce hung up and looked up at Condon's stricken face. He smiled.

"Actually, Jesus Christ is down the hall and to the left. I'm Henry Pierce."

Condon smiled uneasily and Pierce casually turned over the printouts from the Zeller package. Condon came in and closed the door.

"Man, how do you feel? Are you all right?"

"I'll live."

"You want to talk about it?"

"No."

"Henry, I am really sorry I didn't get over to the hospital. But it's been crazy around here getting ready for Maurice."

"Don't worry about it. So I take it we're still presenting tomorrow."

Condon nodded.

He's already in town and waiting on us. No delays. We go tomorrow or he goes- and takes his money with him. I talked to

Larraby and Grooms and they said we're-" " j

ready to go. I know. I called them from the hospital. It's not

Proteus that's the problem. That's not why I wanted to delay. It's my race. I look like I'm Frankenstein's cousin. And I'm not going to look much better tomorrow."

1 told him you had a car accident. It's not going to matter what you look like. What matters is Proteus. He wants to see the project we promised him a first look. Before we send in the patents.

k, Goddard's the type of guy who can write the check on the spot. We need to do this, Henry. Let's get it over with."

Pierce raised his hands in surrender. Money was always the trump card.

"He's still going to ask a lot of questions when he sees my face."

"Look," Condon said. "It's a dog and pony show. No big deal. You'll be done with him by lunch. If he asks questions, just tell him you went through the windshield and leave it at that. I mean, you haven't even told me what happened. Why should he be any different?"

Pierce saw the momentary look of hurt in his partner's eyes.

"Charlie, I'll tell you when the time is right. I just can't right now."

"Yes, that's what partners are for, to tell things at the right time."

"Look, I know I can't win this argument with you, all right? I admit I'm wrong. So let's just leave it alone for now."

"Sure, Henry, whatever you want. What are you working on now?"

"Nothing. Just some bullshit paperwork."

"Then you're ready for tomorrow?"

"I'm ready."

Condon nodded.

"Either way we win," he said. "Either we take his money or we put in the patents, go to the press with Proteus and come January there will be a line like fucking Star Wars at ETS to talk to us."

Pierce nodded. But he hated going to Las Vegas for the annual emerging-technologies symposium. It was the most crass clash between science and finance in the world. Full of charlatans and DARPA spies. But a necessary evil just the same. It was where they had first courted one of Maurice Goddard's front men ten months before.

"If we last until January," Pierce said. "We need money now."

"Don't worry about that. My job's finding the money. I think I can come up with a few intermediary fish to hold us until we land another whale."

Pierce nodded, feeling reassured by his partner. With the situation he was in, thinking forward even a month seemed ridiculous.

"Okay, Charlie."

"But hey, it's not going to matter. We're going to land Maurice,

right?"

"Right."

"Good. Then I'll let you get back to work. Tomorrow at nine?"

Pierce leaned back in his chair and groaned. His last protest on the timing.

"I'll be here."

"Our fearless leader."

"Yeah, right."

Charlie knocked sharply on the inside of the door, perhaps some sort of signal of solidarity, and left. Pierce waited a moment and then got up and locked the door. He wanted no more interruptions.

He went back to the printouts. After the short report on Lilly Quinlan came a voluminous report on William Wentz, owner operator of Entrepreneurial Concepts Unlimited. The report stated that Wentz sat at the top of a burgeoning empire of Internet sleaze, from escort services to porno sites. These sites, though directed from Los Angeles, were operating in twenty cities in fourteen states, and of course reachable by the Internet from around the world.

While the Internet companies Wentz operated might be viewed as sleazy by most, they were still legal. The Internet was a world of largely regulation-free commerce. As long as Wentz did not provide photos of underage models engaged in sex and slapped the proper disclaimers on his escort sites, he operated largely in the clear. If one of his escorts happened to be taken down in a prostitution sting, he could easily distance himself. His site clearly said in a prominent disclaimer that it did not promote prostitution or any sort of trade of sex for money or property. If an escort agreed to take money for sex, then that was her decision and her web page would immediately be eliminated from the site.

I icrce had already gotten a general rundown on Wentz's operations from Philip Glass, the private detective. But Zeller's report was rar more detailed and a testimonial to the power and reach of the internet. Zeller had uncovered Wentz's criminal past in the states of

Pi rlonda and New York. Contained in the printout package were several more mug shots, these depicting Wentz and another man named Grady Allison, who was listed in California corporate

records as the comptroller of ECU. Pierce remembered that Lucy LaPorte had mentioned him. He skipped past the photos and read Zeller's opening summary.

Wentz and Allison appear to be a team. They arrived from Florida within a month of each other six years ago. This after multiple arrests in Orlando probably made things tough for them there. According to intelligence files with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE), these men operated a chain of strip joints on the Orange Blossom Trail in Orlando. This was before the Internet made selling sex, real or imagined, so much easier than putting naked chicks on a stage and selling blow jobs on the side. Allison was known as Grade A Allison in Florida because of his skill in recruiting top talent to the stages of the Orange Blossom Trail. Wentz and Allison's clubs were called "No Strings Attached," as in full nudity.

IMPORTANT NOTE: The FDLE box connects these guys to one Dominic Silva, 71, Winter Park, FL, who in turn is connected to traditional organized crime in New York and northern New Jersey. BE CAREFUL!

Their pedigree as mobsters didn't surprise Pierce. Not with the way Wentz had been so calculatingly cold and violent when he encountered him in person. What he did find to be an odd fit was the idea that Wentz, the man who could calmly wield a phone as a weapon and wore pointed boots for better bone crunching, could be the man behind a sophisticated Internet empire.

Pierce had seen Wentz in action. His first and lasting impression was that Wentz was muscle first and brains second. He seemed more the caretaker of the operation than the brains behind it.

Pierce thought of the aging mobster mentioned in Zellers report. Dominic Silva of Winter Park, Florida. Was he the man? The intellect behind the muscle? Pierce intended to find out. ;

He went to the next page and found a summary listing Wentz s criminal record. Over a five-year period in Florida he had a variety of arrests for pandering and two arrests for something listed as felony GBI. There was also an arrest for manslaughter.

The summaries did not include final disposition of these cases. But reading them- arrest after arrest in five years- Pierce was nuzzled as to why Wentz was not in prison.

More of the same questions came up when he went to the next naee and reviewed the arrest summaries of Grady "Grade A" Allison. He, too, seemed to have a recurring pandering pattern. He also topped Wentz in the GBI category with four arrests. He also had an arrest labeled sex bat-minor," which Pierce interpreted to be a charge of having sex with a minor.

Pierce looked at the mug shots of Allison. According to the attendant information, he was forty-six years old, though the photos showed a man who might be older. He had gray-black hair greased back on his head. His ghostly pale face was accented by a nose that looked like it had been broken more than once.

He picked up the phone and called Janis Langwiser again. This time he did not have to wait as long for her to take the call.

"Couple quick questions," he said. "Do you know what pandering is, in the legal sense of the word?"

"It's a pimp charge. It means providing a woman for sex in exchange for money or goods. Why?"

"Wait a minute. What about felony GBI? What is GBI?"

"That doesn't sound like anything from the California penal code but usually GBI means 'great bodily injury." It would be part of an assault charge."

Pierce considered this. GBI, as in hitting someone in the face with a phone and then hanging him off a twelfth-story balcony.

"Why, Henry? Have you been talking to Renner?"

He hesitated. He realized he shouldn't have called her, because it might reveal that he was still pursuing the very thing she had told him to stay away from.

No, nothing like that. I'm just looking at a background check n an employment application. Hard to figure out what all of this means sometimes."

Well, it doesn't sound like anybody you would want to have working for you."

I think you're right about that. Okay, thanks. Just go ahead and Put this on my bill."

Don't worry about it."

After hanging up, he looked at the last page in the report from Zeller. It listed all of the websites that he had been able to link Wentz and ECU to. The single-space listing took up the entire page. The sexual permutations and double entendres contained in the site names and addresses were almost laughable but somehow the sheer volume of it all made it more sickening. This was just one man's operations. It was staggering.

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