Part 37 (1/2)
”No, he never mentioned a thing, either.”
”What was your relations.h.i.+p like? Didn't he treat you as a chiseler?”
”No, because I wasn't a chiseler,” Kim protested but the indignation in his voice was hollow. ”I did a job for him and I did it well. He was always very nice to me.”
”He was in your story on Fox. I don't have it here but in it he said he had never met Fox.”
”Yeah, that was a lie. I made that up.”
Bosch was confused.
”What do you mean? You mean, you made up the lie?”
”In case they went back on the deal. I put Conklin in the story saying he didn't know the guy because I had evidence he did. They knew I had it. That way, if after the election they reneged on the deal, I could dredge up the story again and show Conklin said he didn't know Fox but he did. I could then make the inference that he also knew Fox's background when he hired him. It wouldn't have done much good because he'd have already been elected, but it would do some PR damage. It was my little insurance policy. Understand?”
Bosch nodded.
”What was the evidence you had that Conklin knew Fox?”
”I had photos.”
”What photos?”
”They were taken by the society photographer for the Times Times at the Hollywood Masonic Lodge's St. Patrick's Day dance a couple of years before the election. There's two of them. Conklin and Fox are at a table. They were scratches but one day I was-” at the Hollywood Masonic Lodge's St. Patrick's Day dance a couple of years before the election. There's two of them. Conklin and Fox are at a table. They were scratches but one day I was-”
”What do you mean, scratches?”
”Photos never published. Outtakes. But, see, I used to look at the society stuff in the photo lab, so I could learn who the big shots in the city were and who they were out with and so on. It was useful information. One day I saw these photos of Conklin and some guy that I recognized but wasn't sure from where. It was because of the social background. This wasn't Fox's turf so at the time I didn't recognize him. Then, when Fox got killed and I was told he worked for Conklin, I remembered the photos and who the other man was. Fox. I went back to the scratch files and pulled them out.”
”They were just sitting there together at this dance?”
”In the photos? Yeah. And they were smiling. You could tell they knew each other. These weren't posed shots. In fact, that's why each was a scratch. They weren't good photos, not for the society page.”
”Anybody else with them?”
”A couple women, that was it.”
”Go get the photos.”
”Oh, I don't have them anymore. I tossed them after I didn't need them anymore.”
”Kim, don't bulls.h.i.+t me, okay? There was never a time you didn't need them. Those photos are probably why you are alive today. Now go get them or I'll take you downtown for withholding evidence, then I'll come back with a warrant and tear this place apart.”
”All right! Jesus! Wait here. I have one of them.”
He got up and went up the stairs. Bosch just stared at the dog. It was wearing a sweater that matched Kim's. He heard a closet door being moved on rollers, then a heavy thud. He guessed a box had been taken off the shelf and dropped to the floor. In a few more moments, Kim's heavy steps were coming down the stairs. As he pa.s.sed the couch, he handed Bosch a black-and-white eight-by-ten that was yellowed around the edges. Bosch stared at it for a long time.
”I have the other in a safe deposit box,” Kim said. ”It's a clearer shot of the two of them. You can tell it's Fox.”
Bosch didn't say anything. He was still looking at the photo. It was a flashbulb shot. Everybody's face was lit up white as snow. Conklin sat across a table from the man Bosch a.s.sumed was Fox. There were a half dozen drink gla.s.ses on the table. Conklin was smiling and heavy-lidded-that was probably why the photo was a scratch-and Fox was turned slightly away from the camera, his features indistinguishable. Bosch guessed you would have had to know him to recognize him. Neither of them seemed aware of the photographer's presence. Flashbulbs were probably going off all over the place.
But more so than the men, Bosch studied the two women in the photo. Standing next to Fox and bending over to whisper in his ear was a woman in a dark one-piece dress that was tight around the middle. Her hair was swirled on top of her head. It was Meredith Roman. And sitting across the table and next to Conklin, mostly obscured by him, was Marjorie Lowe. Bosch guessed that if you didn't already know her, she wouldn't have been recognizable. Conklin was smoking and had his hand up to his face. His arm blocked off half of Bosch's mother's face. It almost looked as if she was peeking around a corner at the camera.
Bosch turned the photo over and there was a stamp on the back that said TIMES PHOTO BY BORIS LUGAVERE. It was dated March 17, 1961, seven months before his mother's death.
”Did you ever show this to Conklin or Mittel?” Bosch finally asked.
”Yeah. When I made my case for head spokesman. I gave Gordon a copy. He saw that it was proof the candidate knew Fox.”
Mittel must also have seen that it was proof that the candidate knew a murder victim, Bosch realized. Kim didn't know what he had. But no wonder he got the head spokesman's job. You're lucky you're alive, he thought but didn't say.
”Did Mittel know it was only a copy?”
”Oh yeah, I made that clear. I wasn't stupid.”
”Did Conklin ever mention it to you?”
”Not to me. But I a.s.sume Mittel told him about it. Remember, I said he had to get back to me about the job I wanted. Who would he have to clear it with, he was campaign manager? So he must've talked to Conklin.”
”I'm going to keep this.”
Bosch held up the photo.
”I've got the other.”
”Have you stayed in touch with Arno Conklin over the years?”
”No. I haven't spoken to him in, I don't know, twenty years.”
”I want you to call him now and I-”
”I don't even know where he is.”
”I do. I want you to call him and tell him you want to see him tonight. Tell him it has to be tonight. Tell him it's about Johnny Fox and Marjorie Lowe. Tell him not to tell anyone you are coming.”
”I can't do that.”
”Sure you can. Where's your phone? I'll help you.” ”No, I mean, I can't go see him tonight. You can't make-” ”You're not going to see him tonight, Monte. I'm going to be you. Now where's your phone?”
Chapter Thirty-nine.
AT PARK LA BREA LIFECARE, Bosch parked in a visitor's s.p.a.ce in the front lot and got out of the Mustang. The place looked dark; few windows in the upper stories had lights on behind them. He checked his watch-it was only nine-fifty-and moved toward the gla.s.s doors of the lobby.
He felt a slight pull in his throat as he made the walk. Deep down he had known as soon as he finished reading the murder book that his sights were set on Conklin and that it would come to this. He was about to confront the man he believed had killed his mother and then used his position and the people he surrounded himself with to walk away from it. To Bosch, Conklin was the symbol of all that he never had in his life. Power, home, contentment. It didn't matter how many people had told him on the trail that Conklin was a good man. Bosch knew the secret behind the good man. His rage grew with each step he took.
Inside the door a uniformed guard sat behind a desk working on a crossword puzzle torn from the Times Sunday Magazine Times Sunday Magazine. Maybe he had been working on it since then. He looked up at Bosch as if he was expecting him.