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Angels Flight

Titel: Angels Flight
Autoren: Michael Connelly
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window.
    “So what’s the weather like outside? I don’t have no windows in here.”
    “The weather? It’s partly cloudy with a chance of riots.”
    “I figured. Tuggins still got his crowd out front?”
    “They’re there.”
    “Yeah, the mutts. Wonder how’d they’d like it if there were no coppers around. See how they’d like life in the jungle then.”
    “That’s not their point. They want police. They just don’t want cops that are killers. Can you blame ’em for that?”
    “Yeah, well some people need killing.”
    Bosch had nothing to say to that. He didn’t even know why he was parrying with this old dog. He looked down at his nameplate. It said HOWDY. Bosch almost laughed. Something about seeing the unexpected name cracked through the tension and anger that had been twisting him all night.
    “Fuck you. It’s my name.”
    “Sorry. I’m not laughing at – it’s something else.”
    “Sure.”
    Howdy pointed over Bosch’s shoulder at a little counter with forms on it and pencils tied to strings.
    “You want something you gotta fill out the form with the case number.”
    “I don’t know the case number.”
    “Well, we must have a couple million in here. Why don’t you take a wild guess?”
    “I want to see the log.”
    The man nodded.
    “Right. You the one Garwood sent over?”
    “That’s right.”
    “Why didn’t you say so?”
    Bosch didn’t answer. Howdy reached below the window to someplace Bosch couldn’t see. Then he came up with a clipboard and put it into the pass-through slot beneath the wire mesh.
    “How far back you want to look?” he asked.
    “I’m not sure,” Bosch said. “I think just a couple days will do it.”
    “There’s a week on there. That’s all the sign outs. You want sign outs not sign ins, right?”
    “Right.”
    Bosch took the clipboard over to the forms counter so he could look at it without Howdy watching what he was doing. He found what he was looking for on the top page. Chastain had checked out an evidence box at seven that morning. Bosch grabbed one of the sign-out forms and a pencil and started filling it out. He noticed as he wrote that the pencil was a Black Warrior No. 2, the first choice of the LAPD.
    He took the clipboard and form back to the window and slid them through the slot.
    “That box might still be on the go-back cart,” he said. “It was just checked out this morning.”
    “No, it will be back in place. We run a tight ship” – he looked down at the form and the name Bosch had filled out – “Detective Friendly.”
    Bosch nodded and smiled.
    “I know you do.”
    Howdy walked over and got on a golf cart and then drove away into the bowels of the huge storage room. He was gone less than three minutes before the cart came back into view and he parked it. He carried a pink box with tape on it over to the window, unlocked the mesh window gate and passed the box over to Bosch.
    “Detective Friendly, huh? They send you around to the schools to talk to the kids, tell ’em to say no to drugs, stay out of the gang, shit like that?”
    “Something like that.”
    Howdy winked at Bosch and closed the window gate. Bosch took the box over to one of the partitioned cubicles so he could look through its contents privately.
    The box contained evidence from a closed case, the investigation of the shooting of Wilbert Dobbs five years earlier by Detective Francis Sheehan. It had fresh tape sealing it, having just been signed out that morning. Bosch used a little knife he kept on his key chain to cut the tape and open the box. The process of unsealing the box actually took longer than it did for him to find what he was looking for inside it.

    • • •

    Bosch opened his briefcase after getting to his car and looked through all the paperwork until he found the call-out sheet he’d had put together on Saturday morning. He called Chastain’s pager and punched in the number of his cell phone. He then sat in the car for five minutes, waiting for the callback and watching the protest march. As he watched, several of the television crews broke away from their positions and hurried with their equipment toward their vans and he realized that the helicopters were already gone. He sat up straight in his seat. His watch said ten minutes to eleven. He knew that if the media were leaving all at once, and before making their broadcasts, then something must have happened – something big. He flipped on the radio, which was already tuned to
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