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  “What the hell?” Cronin said, pulling back the edges of the bag to reveal a department store dummy. Two other cops tugged the mannequin out of the bag.

  Cronin turned over the female form and inspected it. There was no writing on the dummy, no note inside the black bag.

  “So what’s the big message?” Cronin asked the air. “You’re the shrink, right?”

  “The medium is the message,” Justine said. “It’s a dummy, get it? The implication is that we’re being played.”

  Cronin said, “Why, thank you, Justine. That’s very astute. It’s a frickin’ waste of time, that’s what it is. And it definitely isn’t Serena Moses.”

  Justine reeled from a wave of relief that was immediately followed by sadness. Serena Moses was still missing, wasn’t she? They still didn’t know where she was, or whether she was alive or dead.

  She glared back at Cronin. “So where is Serena, Lieutenant? I guess you’re going to have to keep looking. I hope you’re as good as you think you are.”

  Chapter 27

  JUSTINE THANKED PRINCIPAL Barbara Hatfield for her introduction and then she took the stage of the auditorium.

  The newly refurbished Roybal High School had five thousand students, but only the junior and senior girls were permitted to attend her talk that afternoon. The principal had told Justine that her presentation was just too graphic and scary for the younger girls.

  Justine thought she understood, but frightening the girls was a necessary by-product of informing them. And most of the girls who’d been killed were in the lower grades. The principal hadn’t budged, though.

  “I’m a psychologist,” Justine told the students in the auditorium. “But I’m also investigating the murders of the high school girls that you’ve all read about on the Internet and seen on TV.”

  Someone sneezed up front. There was nervous laughter, and Justine waited it out.

  “First, I want you to know that Serena Moses is safe. She was hit by a car and taken to a hospital. When she woke up this morning, she told the doctors her name. Serena has a broken arm, but she’s fine and she’ll be back at school soon.”

  The kids broke out into applause. Justine smiled. But Serena’s being safe had raised a question for her: How did the killer know to fake an e-mail about her? Had he been watching the girl? Had they been watching her?

  “It’s a big relief,” she said, feeling her eyes get moist. “But we have to talk about the girls in this area who weren’t so lucky.”

  Justine nodded to the teacher’s assistant who was running her PowerPoint presentation.

  The lights went down, and the sweet, smiling face of a teenage girl came onto the screen.

  “This is Kayla Brooks. She was a junior at John Marshall. She wanted to be a doctor, but before she even graduated from high school, she was shot four times for no reason at all.

  “Her life, her future, the children she might have had, the doctor she might have become—all of that is over.”

  The pictures of Kayla’s body came up on the screen, and the sound of girls crying out almost tore Justine apart. She had to keep going. Bethany’s picture was next, then Jenny, a student at this school, and then the rest of the names and pictures and stories, including that of Connie Yu, who had died only five days ago.

  “We know that whoever killed these girls had information about them that he used to gain their trust.”

  Justine explained about Connie’s recovered cell phone and the text message from an unlisted phone.

  “Girls, Connie’s friend did not text her. This was a fake message, a trick—and it worked. So how can you know if someone is trying to fake you out?

  “If anyone, anyone at all, asks you to go somewhere alone, don’t go. Tell the girls in the lower grades, don’t go anywhere alone. Do you understand?”

  There was a sibilant chorus of girls’ voices saying yes.

  “I want everyone to stand up,” Justine said. “And I want you to repeat something after me.”

  There was the shuffling sound of a thousand kids getting to their feet, seats slapping against the chair backs, books ringing as they hit the floor.

  The voices sang out in ragged unison, following Justine’s words. “I promise. I won’t go anywhere. Alone.”

  Justine hoped that she’d reached the girls. But she was still afraid. That one of these girls was thinking she was special, that she knew better than Justine, that she was the one who would never die.

  Chapter 28

  JUSTINE STEPPED OUT of the high school and onto West Second Street. She had just opened her phone when a black car swept up to the curb. The window buzzed down.

  “Need a lift, lady?”

  “Bobby. What are you doing here?”

  “Just looking after my girl. Get in, Justine. I’ll drive you to your office.”

  “I was just calling a Town Car. What timing. Thanks.”

  She went around to the passenger side of his Beemer and got inside. She leaned over for Bobby’s kiss.

  “How did it go with the kids?” he asked, pulling the car into the stream of traffic.

  “Pretty good, I think. If they ever listen to anyone over thirty.”

  “You don’t look over thirty, sweetie. Not a day, not a minute.”

  “What do you want, Bobby? What else do you want?”

  “Yeah. There is something. Uh, Justine, I wanted to tell you before this gets out. I’m thinking of running for governor. I’ve been approached by the DNC. Financial backing is there for me if I want it. It would be a hard race but worth it if I won. The powers that be think I have a good chance. Bill Clinton called me.”

  “This is kind of sudden, isn’t it?”

  “I’ve been thinking about it for a while. I didn’t want to say anything until I’d made up my mind to take the idea seriously.”

  She didn’t show it, but Justine was stunned by the announcement. She told Bobby he’d make a great governor, and she believed he would—but her heart was sinking. She had feelings for Bobby. He was the first man she’d been able to trust since she and Jack had broken up. If Bobby became governor, he’d move to Sacramento. Then what would happen? Where would she be?

  “It would be great if we could find the dirtbag who’s killing the schoolgirls,” Bobby was saying. “In fact, it’s got to be done. A conviction would really help me right now.”

  “Sure,” Justine said. She felt a chill coming off the air-conditioning and dialed it down. Bobby seemed to be telling her something with a lot of subtext. So what was the real message?

  If he was elected governor, did he want her to go with him to Sacramento? If so, as Diane Keaton had famously asked Warren Beatty in Reds, “As what?” Justine remembered that Bobby had taken a lot of heat from the police commissioner when he’d hired Private to work the Schoolgirl case. She hadn’t questioned his motive for a second. If anything, she thought Bobby had brought in Private because the case was so important to her.

  But now it seemed like maybe he was intensely involved in this case because it was important to him.

  Bobby braked at a light and said, “You’re quiet, Justine.”

  “I’m thinking about you as Governor Petino. You’d be good. That’s all it is.”

  Bobby reached for her and kissed her. “You’re wonderful, you know that? You’re a wonderful woman, and I’m a lucky guy.”

  “I can’t argue with any of that,” said Justine.

  Chapter 29

  WE WERE WORKING late, Colleen and I, sorting though Andy Cushman’s files and financial statements, many of them red-flagged for further investigation.

  Colleen was wearing a blue silk cardigan over a lacy camisole and man-tailored pants. Her black hair swung around her face when she bent to put another stack of papers on the coffee table.

  “Why don’t you go home?” I said. “It’s almost nine. I can do this.”

  “Let’s get it done, Jack. It’ll just be worse tomorrow.”

  “Sit down,” I said, patting the
cushion next to me on the couch.

  She dropped onto the couch, threw herself against the back of it, and yawned. “Another hour should do it,” she said.

  I put my arm around her and drew her close to me.

  “Don’t be messing about, Jack. There’ll be caps on the green and no one to fetch them.”

  “What the hell does that mean?”

  “Trouble.”

  She was telling me “hands off,” but without much conviction. Finally, she rested her head on my chest. She smelled like rosewater, her favorite. I put my hand in her hair, and she lifted her face.

  I kissed her and she kissed me back. “Okay, Jack. Have your way with me. Please.”

  “Hang on,” I said. I got up and locked my office door, turned off the overhead lights, went back to the sofa. I said, “Stand up, Molloy. Please.”

  “I can do that.”

  I unbuttoned her sweater, unzipped her pants, and when she was in her underwear, I returned her to the sofa and undressed myself.

  She watched me take off my clothes, then covered her face with her arm as I touched her and made her moan. Colleen cried out as I made love to her… but then she cried tears when we were done.

  I wrapped her in my arms, held her between my body and the back of the couch so that she wouldn’t get chilled. “What is it, sweetie? What’s wrong?”

  “I’m twenty-five,” she said in a whisper.

  “You don’t mean—today?”

  She nodded, sang, “Happy birthday to me.”

  “Why didn’t you tell me it was your birthday?”

  “I did,” she said.

  “No. I forgot.”

  “It doesn’t mean anything, really. I’m not a birthday person.”

  “It does,” I said. I tilted up her chin. “It does. I’ll make it up to you.”

  She shrugged, then pushed me aside, swung her bare legs over the side of the couch, and picked her clothes up off the floor.

  “I shouldn’t say this, Jack, so I won’t.”

  I already knew. No birthday present, no flowers, no dinner. Sex on the couch. I said, “Go ahead and say it. You deserve better than this.”

  “Anyone would,” said Colleen.

  Chapter 30

  NOT ONE, but two celebrity couples were waiting for me in reception as I came through on the way to my office that morning. Their money manager had called ahead for them.

  The most visually arresting of the four was Jane Hawke, the rock idol who was pierced, tattooed, and dressed in five shades of purple. Her husband, action movie star Ethan Tau, sat to her right. He was wearing cowboy garb down to his Lucchese boots.

  Sitting across from them were tennis stars Jeanette Colton and Lars Lundstrom: fair-haired, tanned and toned, Euro-LA all the way.

  When I got settled, Colleen showed the couples into my office, asked if they’d like coffee or tea. Then she gave me a tepid smile and said, “Is there anything else, Jack?”

  “We’re good,” I said. But were we?

  She closed the door behind her. It made an almost imperceptible click.

  “How can I help you?” I said. Then I sat back to listen.

  Jeanette Colton spoke first. “It’s a little difficult to talk about,” she said. Her stolid-looking husband, the Swedish tennis champ, folded his hands in his lap.

  Jane Hawke sugared her coffee and said, “Go ahead, Jeanette. Of all of us, you’re the one who’ll get the story straight the first time out.”

  A look of pain flashed across Jeanette Colton’s face. For the life of me, I couldn’t imagine what she was going to say. What were the four of them doing at Private?

  “Ethan and I are in love,” she said of Jane Hawke’s husband.

  I looked at the rock star, who was sipping her coffee with a steady hand. I tried to avoid divorce cases. There were plenty of private investigators who liked them and were much better at snooping than I was.

  Lars Lundstrom spoke next. “That’s only part of the story, Mr. Morgan. Here’s where it gets interesting. Jane and I want to be together as well.” His accent was strong, but I was pretty sure I’d gotten it right.

  Jane Hawke’s eyes sparkled under purple shadow. “We’ve been neighbors for years. Now we want to switch.”

  Ethan Tau hadn’t spoken yet. He smiled broadly, then said, “You don’t shock easily, Mr. Morgan. I like that.”

  “Not often, anyway.”

  Tau continued. “We’re all on board with changing partners,” he said. “Jane will go live with Lars, and Jeanette will come live with me. But we’re not as stupid as this might sound to you. We want you to investigate all four of us. We want everything out in the open. No surprises. Kids are involved.”

  “I see,” I said. “I’m sorry to have to say this, but our caseload is so full we wouldn’t be able to help you for weeks, if then. I’m sorry.”

  I was sorry. I would’ve loved to take on a plum job like this: no blood, no guts, no gunfire, just background checks and surveillance. A lot of surveillance. Could keep four operatives busy and on the meter 24/7.

  I gave the interesting foursome Haywood Prentiss’s phone number and told them that I’d not only worked for Prentiss, he’d taught me everything I knew. Then I showed them out.

  I had another appointment, and I didn’t want to be late.

  Chapter 31

  I WALKED SIX blocks to an address in downtown LA that Uncle Fred had given me. The building was three stories high, pink paint flaking off the stucco and a sun-bleached green awning over the front door.

  To the left was a bike shop and to the right was a bodega. There was a locked metal gate barring the stairs to the second floor.

  I spoke into an intercom, said my name, a code number, and that Fred Kreutzer had sent me. A voice told me to hang on, he’d be right down.

  A minute later, a wiry man with dark skin and a face shaped like a weasel’s opened the gate and said, “Barney Sapok. Pleased to meet you, Mr. Morgan.”

  I followed Sapok up the stairs to the third floor, where he opened a freshly painted door and showed me into a space filled with cubicles, about twenty of them, each occupied by a man or woman with a telephone headset, a scratch pad, and a computer.

  They were taking bets.

  The place looked like a police command center or a telemarketing office, but in fact it was a bookmaking operation that brought in tens of millions a year. Just this branch.

  Sports wagering is illegal in every state but Nevada. As a result, it’s become a cash cow for organized crime. Barney Sapok was either a family associate or he was forking over a substantial amount of money to the Mob for collection and enforcement and writing it off as a cost of doing business.

  Sapok’s office was in a corner, overlooking the street. He said, “Mr. Kreutzer told me to trust you. He told me to show you some things. But nothing can leave this office.”

  “I understand,” I said.

  He opened a drawer, removed a spreadsheet from a file, and put it on his desk.

  “I pulled this data off the encrypted network. Bettors have code names and numbers, so I spent last night decoding it for you.”

  “I’m sure that will help, Barney. Thank you.”

  I dragged a chair up to the desk and began to scan the list. Familiar names jumped out at me immediately, players on a dozen teams in both leagues.

  “These are their bets over the past year,” Sapok said, running his finger down the columns under the names. “Notice something?” he asked.

  “I see some fifty-grand bets on a single game.”

  “Anything else?”

  “None of the players are betting on their games.”

  Sapok nodded. “If the players are putting in a fix, I don’t know about it.” He dropped the spreadsheet into a bucket of water he kept next to his desk.

  The spreadsheet and all other documents in the bookie’s office were printed on rice paper. I watched the pages and the ink that was printed on them dissolve in the water.

&nb
sp; Sapok asked, “Mr. Kreutzer is your uncle? Is that right?”

  I nodded. “More like a father, actually.”

  “There’s something else he thought you should see. We’ve got a certain client who’s into us for over six hundred thousand dollars. He’s in big trouble. Could have a fatal outcome.”

  “A football player?” I asked.

  Sapok wrote block letters on a pad of paper, turned the pad so I could read it, then ripped off the top page, which followed the spreadsheet into the bucket of water.

  The rice paper dissolved, but the afterimage of those block letters hung in front of my eyes.

  Sapok had written down my brother’s name.

  Tom Morgan Jr.

  Tommy owed over $600,000 to the Mob.

  Chapter 32

  I THANKED BARNEY Sapok and left his place of business in a fury. I wasn’t mad at Sapok. That guy was trying to help by telling me about Tommy’s $600,000 debt. Clearly, Uncle Fred wanted me to know that Tommy was in trouble, and that he couldn’t help Tommy himself.

  Fred and Tommy hadn’t spoken in a dozen years. I’d never known what their fight was about, but Tommy held grudges and he had a big one against Uncle Fred. I guessed that Fred had tried to stop Tom from getting into a jam like the one he was in now, and of course my brother had resented it.

  I was enraged at Tommy and I was disgusted with him. And I didn’t know what to do next.

  Through Tommy, I’d become familiar with the cycle of the sickness. Gamblers gamble for the rush. It goes from compulsion to addiction. They win and place another bet. They lose, which is far more likely, and the elation turns to deflation, and they bet again to cover the loss. Either way, they keep betting.

  Small losses go onto their tab with their bookie. If the debt isn’t paid, the Mob’s loan sharks sometimes move in. The interest on the loan, the vigorish, is obscenely high and it’s due weekly. Too often, the bettor can’t gather enough money to pay back the principal, and when he falls behind on the vig, the threats start, and then the beatings. The next thing he knows, a Mob guy owns his business.