Cruel. Jacob Stone
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“Not yet. But that’s sort of what I wanted to talk to you about. Back in 2001 you were working on the organized crime task force, right?”
Bogle picked up his beer, peered at what was left in the glass, and drained it. “Morris, you’ve got a good memory. But yeah, after I was promoted to detective in 2000, I was assigned to Vice and worked on the OC task force until I joined you at Homicide and Robbery in 2005. Why?”
Morris dug into the briefcase he had brought with him and pulled out the two police sketches he had of the Nightmare Man. He showed Bogle the first drawing and explained that it was how a witness had described the suspect back in 1984.
“I was fifteen back then,” Bogle said.
“I know. I was fourteen. But here’s a drawing of the same perp showing how he might’ve looked in 2001. Any thoughts?”
Morris handed him the second drawing. Bogle studied it for a solid minute before handing it back.
“In 2001 I was trying to crack a smuggling ring at the docks, and this joker could be any one of a dozen low-level mob guys I encountered. The first drawing you showed me—the one where your perp’s in his forties—that one looked more familiar, but I can’t think of why.”
“They’re both of the Nightmare Man.”
Bogle made a face, as if he couldn’t believe he didn’t recognize the drawings. “I remember them now. Both when I was a teenager and later when I was on the force. You think that psycho was working for the mob?”
“It was a theory my dad had. He worked the 1984 killings.”
Bogle lazily scratched his neck. “I never knew that. Small world, huh, what with you working the 2001 murders. Did you find a mob connection then?”
The waitress returned with the beers and wings. Morris waited patiently as she deposited them on the table. After she left, he took a long drink of his Guinness.
“I was blocked,” he said. “I was new to Homicide, and the senior detective they partnered me with was none other than Martin Hadley. He didn’t see any merit in that line of investigation.”
“Good old Hadley was always a political animal. Since the idea was yours, he wouldn’t want to give it a chance of paying off and seeing you outshine him.”
“That might’ve been part of it, but I think it was more vindictiveness on his part. Martin knew it was my dad’s idea, and he was still harboring a grudge against my dad for back in the day royally reaming him out in front of the precinct over one of his stupider blunders.”
Bogle snorted out an angry laugh. “I’d pay a month’s rent to be able to go back in time and have a front row seat for that.” He picked up a wing and chewed it slowly, an eyebrow raised as he studied Morris. “Why worry about this Nightmare Man business now?”
Morris took another long drink. He lowered the half-filled glass back to the table, fixed his eyes on it, and began rolling it between his hands, somehow keeping the stout from sloshing out. Keeping his voice low, he explained why the number seventeen meant something significant to the killer. He further explained that Tuesday would be the seventeen-year anniversary of the start of the Nightmare Man’s 2001 killing spree, just as the first spree back in 1984 had also started on October second.
“And you think this guy is waiting to start killing again? Even if this psycho is still alive, he’s got to be in his eighties by now.”
“People are running marathons in their eighties these days.”
“Yeah, but this is different. Has there ever been an active serial killer that old?”
“I don’t know. But this guy is a special kind of sickness, and he well earned the name he was given. I wouldn’t put it past him to keep killing as long as he can draw breath into his body.”
“This is all based on a gut feeling and nothing else?”
“That’s all,” he admitted.
Bogle sat back in the booth and tugged on his lower lip as he mulled this over. He had known Morris long enough to know that a person could go broke betting against his friend’s gut feelings.
“So what are you going to do?” he asked.
“I tried calling Hadley, and it went as well as you could probably guess. Namely, he threatened to pull MBI’s license if I went public with my concerns, or even if he found out I was doing anything private with them. But the hell with him. I’m going to do what I should’ve done seventeen years ago, which is dig into the mob angle.” He placed both police sketches flat on the table so they faced Bogle. “Can you think of someone connected back in 2001 who’d know if this guy was a mob hitman?”
“That’s an easy one. It would be the same guy you’d search out today.”
“Big Joe Penza?”
“He’d be the guy. He took over for his old man around the time I joined the OC task force, and he would’ve been intimate with all the players. He would’ve known them all back in 1984 also.”
Morris’s lips twisted into a grim smile. “I guess I’ll be looking to have a chat with Big Joe Penza.”
Chapter 10
“Dapper Vince” Scalise sucked on his Cohiba Esplendidos, blew a smoke ring from his mouth, and watched absently as the bluish-gray smoke dissipated into the air-conditioned room. The actor Ben Chandler was also smoking a Cohiba, both men lighting up after their steak dinners. Chandler was holding his cigar between the index and middle fingers on his left hand so he could use his right to pick up the twenty-five-year-old single malt scotch that went for eighty dollars a glass.
The city of Los Angeles prohibited smoking inside a restaurant, so even though Scalise and Chandler were in a private room at Palace 21 they were still violating the no-smoking ordinance. But that didn’t matter. No employee wanting to keep his teeth was going to tell Scalise to put out a cigar, and even if the waitstaff serving them hadn’t recognized the danger Scalise represented, they were too starstruck by Chandler to complain about what the two men were doing.
“Cigar’s not bad,” Scalise noted, hamming it up as if he were actually a connoisseur of expensive cigars. Every blue moon Joe Penza would hand some out from his private stash, and occasionally Scalise would take one off a mark, but usually he smoked more moderately priced cigars. “Nice flavor. Good burn. Not the best I ever had, though. That would be an Opus X. Ever try one of those?”
“I haven’t, but next time we get together I’ll make sure I have a box of them.” Chandler’s face was lit up brighter than any kid who ever raced down the stairs to open Christmas presents. “Vincent, I can’t thank you enough for seeing me. It’s going to be a huge help.”
Scalise raised an eyebrow. “Just because you buy me dinner, a few drinks, and a cigar you think we’re on a first-name basis?”
Chandler stiffened. “My mistake. I meant Mr. Scalise.”
A smile cracked the gangster’s face. “You should see the way you look right now, like you’re about to keel over. Benny, you need to learn how to take a joke. Damn right we’re