The Last Coyote - Part 38
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Part 38

Conklin nodded sadly.

"So what are you saying, Mittel killed her? You didn't know?"

"I didn't know."

He looked down at his feeble hands and balled them into tiny fists on the blanket. They looked completely powerless. Bosch only watched.

"I did not realize it for many years. It was beyond the pale to consider that he had done it. And then, of course, I must admit I was thinking of myself at the time. I was a coward, thinking only of my escape."

Bosch was not tracking what he was saying. But it didn't seem that Conklin was talking to him, anyway. The old man was really telling himself the story. He suddenly looked up from his reverie at Bosch.

"You know, I knew someday you would come."

"How?"

"Because I knew you would care. Maybe no one else. But I knew you would. You had to care. You were her son."

"Tell me about what happened that night. Everything."

"I need you to get me some water. For my throat. There's a gla.s.s there on the bureau, a fountain in the hallway. Don't let it run too long. It gets too cold and hurts my teeth."

Bosch looked at the gla.s.s on the bureau and then back at Conklin. He was seized with a fear that if he left the room for even a minute the old man might die and take the story with him. Bosch would never hear it.

"Go. I'll be fine. I certainly can't go anywhere."

Bosch glanced at the call b.u.t.ton. Again, Conklin knew his thoughts.

"I am closer to h.e.l.l than heaven for what I've done. For my silence. I need to tell my story. I think you'd be a better confessor than any priest could be."

As Bosch stepped into the hallway with the gla.s.s, he saw a figure of a man turn the corner at the end of the hall and disappear. He thought the man was wearing a suit. It wasn't the guard. He saw the fountain and filled the gla.s.s. Conklin smiled weakly as he took the gla.s.s and murmured a thanks before drinking. Bosch then took the gla.s.s back and put it on the night table.

"Okay," Bosch said. "You said she left that night and never came back. How did you find out what happened?"

"By the next day, I was afraid something had happened. I finally called my office and made a routine check to see what had come in on the overnight reports. Among the things they told me was that there had been a homicide in Hollywood. They had the victim's name. It was her. It was the most horrible day of my life."

"What happened next?"

Conklin rubbed a hand on his forehead and continued.

"I learned that she had been found that morning. She-I was in shock. I couldn't believe this could have happened. I had Mittel make some inquiries but there was nothing useful coming out. Then the man who had...introduced me to Marjorie called."

"Johnny Fox."

"Yes. He called and he said he had heard the police were looking for him. He said he was innocent. He threatened me. He said if I did not protect him, he would reveal to the police that Marjorie was with me that last night. It would be the end of my career."

"So you protected him."

"I turned it over to Gordon. He investigated Fox's claim and confirmed his alibi. I cannot remember it now but it was confirmed. He had been in a card game or somewhere where there had been many witnesses. Since I was confident that Fox was not involved, I called the detectives a.s.signed to the case and arranged for him to be interviewed. In order to protect Fox and thereby protect myself, Gordon and I concocted a story in which we told the detectives that Fox was a key witness in a grand jury investigation. The plan was successful. The detectives turned their attention elsewhere. At one point I spoke to one of them and he told me he believed that Marjorie was the victim of some sort of a s.e.x killer. You see, they were quite rare back then. The detective said the outlook on the case was not good. I'm afraid that I never suspected...Gordon. Such a horrible thing to do to an innocent person. It was right there in front of my face but I didn't see it for so long. I was a fool. A puppet."

"You're saying that it wasn't you and that it wasn't Fox. You're saying that Mittel killed her to eliminate a threat to your political career. But that he didn't tell you. It was all his idea and he just went out and did it."

"Yes, I say that. I told him, I told him that night when I called, I said that she meant more to me than all of the plans he had for me, that I had for myself. He said it would mean the end of my career and I accepted it. I accepted it as long as I started the next part of my life with her. I believe those minutes were the most peaceful of my life. I was in love and I had made a stand."

He softly pounded a fist onto the bed, an impotent gesture.

"I told Mittel I didn't care what he thought the damage to my career would be. I told him we were going to move away. I didn't know where. La Jolla, San Diego, I threw a few places out. I didn't know where we were going to go but I was defiant. I was mad at him for not sharing the joy of our decision. And in doing so I provoked him, I know now, and I hastened your mother's death."

Bosch studied him a long moment. His agony seemed sincere. Conklin's eyes looked as haunted as the portholes on a sunken ship. There was only blackness behind them.

"Did Mittel ever admit this to you?"

"No, but I knew. I guess it was a subconscious knowledge but then something he said years later brought it out. It confirmed it in my mind. And that was the end of our relationship."

"What did he say? When?"

"Many years later. It was at the time I was preparing for a run for attorney general. Do you believe such a charade occurred? Me the liar, the coward, the conspirator being groomed for the office of the state's top law enforcement officer. Mittel came to me one day and said that I needed to take a wife before the election year. He was that blunt about it. He said there were rumors about me that could cost me votes. I said that was preposterous and that I wouldn't take a wife just to a.s.suage some rednecks out in Palmdale or the desert somewhere. Then he made a comment, just a flippant, offhand comment as he was leaving my office."

He broke off to reach for the gla.s.s of water. Bosch helped him and he slowly drank. Bosch noticed the medicinal smell about him. It was horrible. It reminded him of dead people and the morgue. Bosch took the gla.s.s when Conklin was done and put it back.

"What was the comment?"

"As he was leaving my office, he said, and I remember it word for word, he said, 'Sometimes I wish I hadn't saved you from that wh.o.r.e scandal. Maybe if I hadn't, we wouldn't have this problem now. People would know you aren't queer.' Those were his words."

Bosch just stared at him for a moment.

"It might've been just a figure of speech. He could have just meant that he had saved you from the scandal of knowing her by taking the steps to keep you out of it. It's not evidence that he killed her or had her killed. You were a prosecutor, you know that's not enough. It wasn't direct evidence of anything. Didn't you ever directly confront him?"

"No. Never. I was too intimidated by him. Gordon was becoming a powerful man. More powerful than I. So I said nothing to him. I simply dismantled my campaign and folded my tent. I left the public life and haven't spoken to Gordon Mittel since that time. More than twenty-five years."

"You went into private practice."

"Yes. I took up pro bono work as my self-imposed penance for what I was responsible for. I wish I could say it helped suture the wounds of my soul but it did not. I'm a helpless man, Hieronymus. So tell me, did you come here to kill me? Don't let my story dissuade you from believing I deserve it."

The question at first startled Bosch into silence. Finally, he shook his head and spoke.

"What about Johnny Fox? He had his hooks into you after that night."

"Yes, he did. He was very capable as extortionists go."

"What happened with him?"

"I was forced to hire him as a campaign employee, paying him five hundred dollars a week for practically nothing. You see what a farce my life had become? He was killed in a hit and run before picking up his first paycheck."

"Mittel?"

"I would a.s.sume that he was responsible, though I must admit he's a rather convenient scapegoat for all the bad deeds I've been involved in."

"You didn't think that it was just a little too coincidental that he got killed?"

"Things are so much clearer in hindsight." He shook his head sadly. "At the time I remember being thrilled with my luck. The one thorn in my side had been removed by serendipity. You have to remember, at the time I had no inkling that Marjorie's death was in any way connected to me. I simply saw Fox as being a man on the make. When he was removed through the luck of an automobile mishap, I was pleased. A deal was made with a reporter to keep Fox's background on the QT and everything was fine...But, of course, it wasn't. It never was. Gordon, genius that he was, didn't plan on me not being able to get over Marjorie. And I'm still not."

"What about McCage?"

"Who?"

"McCage Incorporated. Your payoffs to the cop. Claude Eno."

Conklin was quiet a moment while he composed an answer.

"Of course, I knew Claude Eno. I didn't care for him. And I never paid him a dime."

"McCage was incorporated in Nevada. It was Eno's company. You and Mittel are both listed as corporate officers. It was a payoff scam. Eno was getting a grand a month from somewhere. You and Mittel."

"No!" Conklin said as forcefully as he could. The word came out as little more than a cough. "I don't know about McCage. Gordon could have set it up, even signed for me or made me sign unwittingly. As district attorney he took care of things for me. I signed when he told me to sign."

He said it while looking directly at Bosch and Harry believed him. Conklin had admitted to far worse deeds. Why would he lie about paying off Eno?

"What did Mittel do when you folded your tent, when you told him you were through?"

"By then he was already quite powerful. Politically. His law firm represented the city's upper tier and his political work was branching out, growing. Still, I was the centerpiece. The plan was to take the attorney general's office and then the governor's mansion. Who knows what after that. So Gordon...he was unhappy. I refused to see him but we talked on the phone. When he could not convince me to change my mind, he threatened me."

"How?"

"He told me that if I ever attempted to a.s.sault his reputation, he would see to it that I was indicted for Marjorie's death. And I had no doubt that he could have done it."

"From best man to greatest enemy. How'd you ever get hooked up with him?"

"I guess he slipped in the door while I wasn't looking. I never saw the real face until it was too late...I don't think in my life I've come across any one as cunningly focused as Gordon. He was-is-a dangerous man. I'm sorry I ever brought your mother into his path."

Bosch nodded. He had no more questions and didn't know what else to say. After a few moments during which Conklin seemed to be lost in thought, the old man spoke up.

"I think, young man, that you only run into a person that is a perfect fit once in your life. When you find the one that you think fits, then grab on for dear life. And it's no matter what she's done in the past. None of that matters. Only the holding on matters."

Bosch nodded again. It was all he could think of to do.

"Where did you meet her?"

"Oh...I met her at a dance. She was introduced and, of course, she was younger than me so I didn't think there would be any interest from her. But I was wrong...We danced. We dated. And I fell in love."

"You didn't know about her past?"

"At the time, no. But she told me eventually. By then I didn't care."

"What about Fox?"

"Yes, he was the liaison. He introduced us. I didn't know who he was, either. He said he was a business man. You see, for him, it was a business move. Introduce the girl to the prosecutor, sit back and see what happens. I never paid her and she never asked me for money. All the while we fell in love, Fox must have been weighing his options."

Bosch wondered if he should take the photo from Monte Kim out of his case and show it to Conklin, but he decided not to tempt the old man's memory with the reality of a photo. Conklin spoke while Bosch was still thinking about it.

"I'm very tired now and you never answered my question."

"What question?"

"Did you come here to kill me?"

Bosch looked at his face and his useless hands and realized he felt the stirring of sympathy.

"I didn't know what I was going to do. I just knew I was coming."

"You want to know about her?"

"My mother?"

"Yes."

Bosch thought about the question. His own memories of his mother were dim and fading farther all the time. And he had few recollections about her that came from others.

"What was she like?" he said.

Conklin thought for a moment.

"She is hard for me to describe. I felt a great attraction to her... that crooked smile...I knew she had secrets. I suppose all people do. But hers ran deep. And despite all of that, she was full of life. And, you see, I didn't think I was at the time we met. That's what she gave to me."

He drank from the gla.s.s of water again, emptying it. Bosch offered to get more but Conklin waved off the offer.

"I had been with other women and they wanted to show me off like a trophy," he said. "Your mother wasn't like that. She'd rather stay at home or take a picnic basket to Griffith Park than go to the clubs on the Sunset Strip."

"How did you find out about...what she did?"

"She told me. The night she told me about you. She said she needed to tell me the truth because she needed my help. I have to admit...the shock was...I initially thought of myself. You know, protecting myself. But I admired her courage in telling me and I was in love by then. I couldn't turn away."

"How did Mittel know?"

"I told him. I regret it to this day."

"If she...If she was as you described her, why did she do what she did? I've never...understood."

"I haven't, either. As I told you, she had her secrets. She didn't tell me them all."

Bosch looked away from him and out the window. The view was to the north. He could see the lights of the Hollywood Hills glimmering in the mist from the canyons.

"She used to tell me that you were a tough little egg," Conklin said from behind him. His voice was almost hoa.r.s.e now. It was probably more talking than he had done in months. "She once told me that she knew it didn't matter what happened to her because you were tough enough to make it through."

Bosch said nothing. He just looked through the window.

"Was she right?" the old man asked.

Bosch's eyes followed the crestline of the hills directly north. Somewhere up there the lights glowed from Mittel's s.p.a.ceship. He was up there somewhere waiting for Bosch. He looked back at Conklin, who was still waiting for an answer.