Chapter 16 The Morning After
The next morning they were quiet with each other. When Lauren was ready she zipped up her overnight bag and went out into the hallway, closing the door to her hotel room behind her. She turned and saw Carmen sitting on an upholstered bench by the elevator bank, with her overnight bag, ready to go. "Been waiting long?"
"No, just got here."
"Want breakfast?" Lauren pushed the elevator down button as Carmen stood up.
"That's your call, whatever you want. But I DO need my morning coffee."
"Me, too."
"They have that coffee shop on the ground floor," Carmen said as they got into the elevator. "We can get coffee and something to go."
"That's fine with me," Lauren said. "It's called the Farmacy CafΓ©."
But when they went in and looked at the menu, Carmen changed her mind. "Let's eat here," she said. "I gotta try that steak-and-egg burrito. It's not something I want to eat in your car."
"The egg white frittata has my name all over it," Lauren said.
They ate at one of the tiny tables out by the sidewalk in front of the cafΓ© and the hotel.
"Anxious to get home, or just anxious to get out of Bakersfield?" Lauren asked.
"Both. I have no great feelings for the city one way or the other, but I can tell you this, I sure don't like Highway 99 heading up to the Central Valley."
"The crime scene."
"Yeah."
"I guess there's cops who will tell you that you get used to it. Scene of the crime, evidence, gory crime scene photos, stomach-turning autopsy reports. I'm not one of those cops."
"No. But Collins is."
"Yes, I suppose."
"You seemed to get along with him well. I was worried he'd have an attitude because we're women and from LA. Among other things he probably might not approve of if he knew about them."
"The secret is he and I are both county sheriff's department detectives. I'm LASD, not LAPD, so he doesn't associate me with LA the city, or Hollywood, or LaLaLand, or whatever he might want to call it. He may not realize West Hollywood is a highly gay, tiny little municipality located smack dab in the middle of the city. He's Kern County, I'm LA County, that's all he knows, so I get a pass. And he thinks the same about you. You're a county cop trainee, as far as he knows. He approves of that."
"I don't think he approves of Max being trans. It threw him for a loop."
Lauren wiped her mouth with her napkin. "Max being trans threw your entire group for a loop. You maybe most of all."
Carmen sipped her coffee. "Maybe. I still think for me it was that I just plain didn't like Max even when he was Moira. I didn't care that he was hyper butch. I think it was cultural, and, well, personal. Max had this big chip on his shoulder because he was a small-town hick from the sticks, and he fell in with a bunch of mostly upscale lipstick lesbians, not only sophisticated big city girls, but LA and Hollywood types at that. Two or three of them full-fledged divas. It didn't matter he was surrounded by lesbians, and if he had any expectations that he'd find a warm, safe, welcoming reception in the bosom of a bunch of loving, supportive dykes, he was wrong about that. He got off on the wrong foot with me in the first ten minutes he was in town, and he got off on the wrong foot with everybody else the second night in town when we all took him and Jenny out to dinner. He insulted us and then left to go sulk and didn't come home all night."
"Then it just got worse. He was a slob around the house. It may have started out as Jenny and Tim's place, and then Jenny and Shane's place, but it became Shane's and MY place. It was Max who was making a mess of
my
home, Max was an uninvited guest, invading my space and fouling up MY nest that I'd worked hard to create. Max's gender crisis had nothing to do with any of it."
Lauren sipped her coffee and looked over the brim of her cup at her. "You've been waiting a long time to get that off your chest."
They were half an hour down the road before anyone said anything.
"I have a question," Carmen finally said.
Lauren looked over. Because it was an unmarked county police cruiser, there was no way Lauren would be allowed to let Carmen drive, although she had offered to take turns. "Shoot," Lauren said.
"Do most homicide investigations go like this? I had the idea, maybe from TV and movies, and so maybe it's bullshit. But I had the idea that you started off with a whole bunch of suspects, and narrowed them down to one, the person who actually did it. But our investigation seems to be going the opposite way. We started off with only one suspect, Alice, who confessed, and then Shane as the real primary suspect. And the more we look into it, the more we turn up new suspects. Niki, for sure, and/or one of her posse. Maybe the guys at the studio. Maybe Tina. Maybe Max. And there's always Rollo Thomassi, our unsub. It's getting more complicated, not less. Everything's bass ackwards."
"Yes, you're entirely correct. That's how it's going. Does that discourage you in some way?"
"No. It's just not what I expected."
"What did you expect?"
"Shit, I don't know. Not this."
They drove for twenty minutes in silence.
"Lauren?" Carmen asked.
Lauren looked over and could see the wheels turning inside Carmen's brain.
"Yes, Detective Morales?"
"Where is Max's laptop?"
Now the wheels were turning in Lauren's brain, too.
"You know, Detective Morales, that is one damn good question. Call Collins and ask him."
She did, talked to him, said thanks and hung up. "He says he doesn't know anything about any laptop. They never found one. But now he's thinking about it, too."
"Call Max's work. The name and phone number are in the folder."
Carmen searched through the manila folder until she found it. "Melvin K. Hildebrand, Fast Fix Golden State Computers." She dialed it on her cell.
"May I speak to Mr. Hildebrand, please? Thanks." When he came on the line, Carmen said, "Mr. Hildebrand, this is Detective Lauren Hancock, LA Sheriff's Office. Yes, we talked a few days ago, about Max Sweeney. I've got a question that I think I know the answer to, but I have to ask it anyway, just to make sure. Do you know if Max had a laptop of any kind, and if so, is there any chance he left it at your shop, or in some way you might know what may have become of it? Uh-huh... uh huh ... yes, that's pretty much what we suspected. Okay, thanks for your time." She hung up.
"Impersonating a police officer is a felony," Lauren said.
"So is claiming to be Detective Morales from the LASD. I figured I had a choice of which lie to tell."
"He doesn't know anything about any laptop."
"Nope. He said Max had no need of a personal one at work, since they had all the computer stuff anybody would ever need. He said he guessed Max had a computer of some sort at home, but he didn't know anything about it. He said after Max died the only personal items they found at work were a coffee cup that said Yellowstone Park and a few protein bars."
"Okay, humor me. Is there any chance in the world that Max didn't own a computer, and probably a laptop?"
"Somewhere around zero point zero zero zero chance," Carmen said. "Max was an IT guy. I know for a fact he owned a laptop back when he lived with Jenny and Shane and me. He e-mailed and surfed the Internet and did everything all the rest of us do. And being Max and being difficult, he didn't like Apple or Windows, he messed around with something called Ubuntu, one of those open source systems, and he was always messing with it. So where is it?"
"Exactly, my dear Watson," Lauren said. "Dead body by the side of the road, but no cellphone. Room at a boarding house, but no laptop or cellphone there."
"Theoretically they could be in his car, but there is no car. But I don't think that's the answer."