Read Hollywood Hills Online

Authors: Joseph Wambaugh

Hollywood Hills (40 page)

He usually had some of his wife's stuffed grape leaves in his tow truck, and on a couple of occasions he shared them with the surfer cops. And one night he was rewarded for his generosity. On that occasion, 6-X-32 had stopped Sarkis while he was in his private car, driving home from a bar in Little Armenia, absolutely hammered.

As soon as Flotsam and Jetsam saw whom they'd stopped, Flotsam said to Sarkis, "Dude, when you get your swill on, try to remember, it's not a sprint, it's a marathon."

They locked up Sarkis's five-year-old Lincoln and drove him home in their black-and-white. Sarkis tried to invite them into his house for some leftover shish kebab, but Jetsam said to him, "We gotta get back to our beat, bro, but we got your marker. Someday we may need to collect on it."

And now was the time. Sarkis was working late at his tow garage and was happy to see his LAPD friends. He was good at bodywork and had been reassembling a damaged Ford pickup with junkyard parts. After hugs and greetings, he listened intently to what Flotsam and Jetsam had to say about a major problem at Hollywood Station.

Thirty minutes before Lieutenant O'Reilly left his office to join the captain at El Cholo, 6-X-32 received a confidential cell phon
e m
essage from one of the desk officers at Hollywood Station. It concerned the approximate arrival time for the watch commander's code 7 rendezvous with the station captain.

Lieutenant O'Reilly had a marvelous time at El Cholo that evening, going well over the allotted time for his code 7 meal break. He told the captain of the many things wrong with the personnel at Hollywood Station. He was especially critical of the midwatch troops, who worked from 5:15 P
. M
. until 4 A
. M
. four days a week. He admitted that the officers liked the four-ten shift, but he had many reasons for why the watch hours were inefficient. He said that he wished they could go back to the old eight-hour-and-fortyfive-minute work shift five days a week, because efficiency trumped morale. And he told the captain how he wished he had more authority when it came to overtime being granted. He had a strong belief that many officers were padding the books with phony "greenies," as they called the OT slips, and he was planning to put a stop to it. He said that he was working on ways to make supervisors--and he mentioned Sergeant Murillo by name--more responsive to orders and roll call training from the bureau level and less attuned to all of the petty gripes and special requests from the officers on his watch, especially certain officers who flouted good discipline.

All in all, he was wrecking the captain's dinner of green corn tamales, and his boss wished it were possible to get drunk on virgin margaritas so this eager beaver could pass out on the table or something.

After their meal break, Lieutenant O'Reilly thanked the captain excessively for buying him the tamales and they said their goodbyes outside El Cholo's front entrance. And then Lieutenant O'Reilly walked to his car, which he'd had to park on Eleventh Street just east of Western Avenue because of the crowded restaurant parking lot. He had his keys in his hand, preparing to unlock the door, when he saw that he couldn't.

The front door on the driver's side was gone. He stopped an
d s
tared at the inside of his car in disbelief, only to discover that the door on the passenger side was also missing. The bolts and hinges on each side had been attacked and the doors ... were ... gone.

Lieutenant O'Reilly put in a code 2 call for a patrol unit to assist, and the first to arrive was 6-X-32. The surfer cops bailed out and ran to their watch commander with gusto.

"Your doors ain't here, Lieutenant!" Flotsam cried. "What happened ?"

"How the hell would I know what happened?" Lieutenant O'Reilly said. "I can't believe this!"

"Those car strippers stop at nothing!" Jetsam cried. "Musta been those rotten little Eighteenth Streeters."

Two other midwatch units arrived very fast, and Snuffy Salcedo got out of the car and started snapping photos of the watch commander's car with his camera phone.

"Stop that!" Lieutenant O'Reilly yelled at him. "Broadcast a code four. We've got enough people here. I don't want anyone else seeing this goddamn travesty."

While Hollywood Nate was broadcasting a code 4, indicating that there was sufficient help at the scene, Lieutenant O'Reilly began searching the street and sidewalk with his flashlight, looking for evidence of the vandals' identity. He knew that this was no ordinary crime of malicious mischief, and he suspected that slackers from Hollywood Station had done this to humilate him. The mid-watch cops at the scene were fascinated, watching the way Lieutenant O'Reilly circled the wounded police vehicle like a predator wary of dangerous prey. His eyes were bulging and his face looked like a tomato about to explode.

Flotsam said sotto to Snuffy Salcedo, "Dude, I think the lieutenant's gone to dizzyland. This here outrage should not go unpunished."

Jetsam said sotto to Snuffy Salcedo, "Bro, these are perilous times we live in. Nobody's safe no more."

Snuffy Salcedo listened to the surfer cops and whispered something to Hollywood Nate, something he'd asked before. "Are you telling me these two don't rehearse this shit?"

"Maybe some of it," Nate conceded in a whisper of his own. "They're sort of the Gilbert and Sullivan of Hollywood Station. They write and sometimes star in their little asphalt operettas."

"This looks to me like somebody's idea of a prank!" Lieutenant O'Reilly said after his search for evidence turned up nothing. "I want this unit taken to the parking lot and dusted for prints. I'm going to get to the bottom of this."

"Let's glove up, partner," Flotsam said, taking latex gloves from his pocket.

"You won't need to," Lieutenant O'Reilly said to Jetsam. "I want you to drive me to the station right this minute."

"Roger that, sir," Jetsam said.

"And you drive my unit in," Lieutenant O'Reilly said to Flotsam, handing him the keys. "Book anything you find in my car that even remotely might be evidence. A matchstick, a chewing gum wrapper, anything. I want the bastards that did this, and I'm going to get them."

"I'm on it, sir," Flotsam said. "I'll do a diligent search for clues. We sure wouldn't want the doors to turn up at a swap meet or maybe in an L
. A
. Times story."

Jetsam opened the passenger door on 6-X-32's shop for the watch commander to get in, but Lieutenant O'Reilly paused and showed all present a grimace of a smile. He probably thought it showed self-confidence and was intimidating, but Hollywood Nate thought it looked like the other contenders' smiles on the night they lost the Oscar to Kate Winslet.

When Jetsam got behind the wheel, he said, "If this does happen to get in the news, don't let it embarrass you, Lieutenant. It's not your fault. This is fucking Hollywood."

Flotsam enjoyed driving a car with no front doors, and h
e d
ecided to take Hollywood Boulevard so that he could cruise past Grauman's Chinese Theatre and give the tourists a show. When he was stopped for traffic directly in front of Grauman's forecourt, a clutch of tourists with cameras ran to the curb and started snapping photos of the doorless police car.

Flotsam waved and yelled, "Tough town! Last week somebody stole my front fenders!"

Chapter
Twenty-Four.

THIS WAS THE day of reckoning as far as Raleigh Dibble was concerned. He did everything he could to make time pass faster. He dusted and vacuumed the master suite for Leona Brueger's return and even washed her windows. That involved some precarious labor on a tall stepladder. He drove his own car to the markets where his employer had charge accounts and made sure that there was enough fresh produce, chicken, and fish to provide meals for several days in case she was too tired to dine out.

When he was finished with chores, he called Cedars-Sinai and received a report on Marty Brueger. His condition was not as serious as had been thought, and it was hoped that the old man could soon be moved to a managed-care facility. Raleigh was living in such a state of fear for his own plight that he hadn't had time to pity Marty Brueger. But now Raleigh thought that if Marty Brueger was moved to a less-structured facility, he would take the poor old geezer some of his favorite Irish whiskey. It pleased him to be concerned with someone else for a change.

When Raleigh was finished with everything he could think of to do, he found himself wondering if he would even be there to prepare a homecoming meal for her or if he would be in jail. Or would he be dead? He sat in his bedroom and stared at Leona Brueger's nickel-plated revolver. One thing he knew for sure, for the first tim
e h
e was capable of violence, at least as far as Nigel Wickland was concerned. Nobody in his life had ever harmed him so grievously. Regardless of the consequences, he was not going to let that arrogant son of a bitch get away with it. He knew exactly what he was going to do.

Raleigh planned on going to the Wickland Gallery at 4 P
. M
., but not to enter. He could watch the gallery entrance from the coffee shop across the street to know if Nigel left. Just before the gallery's closing time of 5 P
. M
., Raleigh was going to enter, demand to see Nigel, and strongly suggest to him that he send Ruth home because a private talk was essential and unavoidable. And of course Nigel would be angry that Raleigh had come, but when they were alone, the anger would turn into something else. Mr. Nigel Wickland, the master schemer and manipulator, was going to experience a bit of what Raleigh Dibble had been living with ever since he'd been insane enough to join the gallery owner's plot. Nigel Wickland was going to experience fear! Every time Raleigh looked at the nickel-plated revolver lying on his bed, it made his palms sweat.

At 1 P
. M
., Megan Burke made the call to Arjan, the Sikh taxi driver to whom she had promised the $100 tip. She had packed her bag, leaving space for a thousand hundred-dollar bills. She had no idea how big a package that would be, but there was plenty of room in her suitcase, since she had so few clothes left after her year of riding the ox in Hollywood.

She was surprised that she did not feel worse than she did. The joint pain from her opioid withdrawal was still severe, but the diarrhea had abated and she wasn't vomiting as much. She looked in her pill container and saw that she had enough medication to get her home to Oregon, and from there it would be a few hours of hugs and kisses with her mother and brother and then she'd go directly into rehab.

She had spent the morning talking and crying with her mothe
r o
n the phone, after which her mother phoned several Oregon rehab facilities until she found one close to home that would permit Megan to bring Cuddles with her to the ninety-day treatment program. Megan's mother told her that she would go to the bank and see if she could take out a second mortgage to cover the $25,000 cost, but Megan told her not to worry about it, because she had won a big prize in the California lottery and she was paying for her own rehab.

The last thing Megan said to her astonished mother was that there would be $75,000 left from the prize money after taxes. She insisted that her mom take it all, along with profound apologies for having been such a miserable daughter.

Before they hung up, her mother said to Megan, "Honey, you could never be anything but a wonderful, loving daughter. I can't wait to have you home. The only mistake you ever made in your life was going to Hollywood, California."

Megan went to the bathroom to dry her tears and touch up her makeup and then called Nigel Wickland on his cell number. When he answered, she said, "I'll be there at two o'clock. Are you ready for me?"

"Yes," he said. "I've given my assistant the afternoon off. I'll be here alone."

"I won't be alone," she said.

"I don't doubt that," Nigel said, ending the conversation.

When Jonas Claymore arrived in court, he looked for Megan, but she wasn't there. He was growing very concerned for his money. Thinking about it made him uncontrollably jittery. When he'd had his fill of waiting, he jumped up and told a bailiff that he demanded to speak to a public defender. He also demanded an own-recognizance release. He said he'd never been arrested before except once for DUI, so he deserved to be OR'ed as soon as possible. He said he wanted immediate access to counsel, any counsel. He said he'd even settle for one that advertises on bus benches and takes his orders from sleazy bail bondsmen.

The bailiff told Jonas if he was smart, he'd zip his lips.

Jonas Claymore was still sitting with other in-custody defendants when court convened after lunch. He had been able to speak with a harried public defender, who had verified that Jonas had only one arrest on his rap sheet, for DUI, and he agreed to represent Jonas and ask for an own-recognizance release. The judge, who was just as harried as the public defender, and who was looking at a roomful of miscreants and their friends and families, granted the OR release. Jonas was set free and his property was returned, which included a cheap wristwatch and a wallet containing the only hundred-dollar bill he had left. He used that money to call a taxi to take him to his car in the parking lot at Pablo's Taco Shop, where he paid the driver and looked around in vain for someone he knew who might have some ox.

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