Chapter 26 Evidence
Carmen's cell phone jolted awake playing
A Mi Manera
by the Gypsy Kings, bringing her out of a sound sleep. Groggily she reached to the nightstand for it, saw that the call was from Lauren, and that it was 5:30 a.m.
"What is it? What's wrong?" she asked, panicked.
"Nothing, it's okay, I'm sorry to scare you. There's nothing wrong."
"Jesus, you scared the shit out of me. It's five thirty."
"I know, I'm sorry. I'm not going to ask something stupid like did I wake you."
"Uh huh. Good to know. Have you even been to bed? You been up all night writing parking tickets? Beating suspects with a rubber hose? Having hot lesbian sex under the Santa Monica pier?"
"Oh, I wish. Either of the last two. No. But I got home, poured myself a glass of wine, had another one, nodded off, and didn't wake up until 3 a.m. I putzed around for a while, then said fuck it and came in."
"You're in the office? In the conference room?"
"Yep. Something was bothering me, so I went looking for it. Well, I found it."
"I'm not going back to sleep, so don't fuck around. What did you find?"
"Remember how you said maybe Jenny lied about not hiring a private detective? The more I thought about it the more I liked the idea. So I started looking through her bank statements and withdrawals for a payment or retainer."
"And you found it?"
"Nope," Lauren said.
"Lauren!" Carmen said. "You're starting to piss me off."
She heard Lauren chuckle. "Jenny had a fair number of cash withdrawals beside the blackmail payments, some of them large enough to be a retainer, but the times weren't right. She didn't have an unexplained cash withdrawal in the right time slot, which was right after she and Niki made the last blackmail payment, and Jenny and Niki argued about hiring the detective."
"Cut to the chase."
"Jenny didn't pay cash. She put it on her American Express card. It was right there in front of us all along, on her credit card statements. We were just looking in the wrong stack of paper."
"I don't understand."
"I figured if Jenny went to talk to a detective or a detective agency, she wouldn't know ahead of time what the retainer would be, or even if she was going to hire them. Her decision was going to be based on a spur-of-the-moment decision, go or no go. We know she didn't write a check, because there's none in her bank statement, and she wouldn't say, okay, I'll be back tomorrow with the cash. So what she'd say was, 'Okay, you're hired, do you take American Express?'"
"Right. She'd want to hire them immediately, that day, that morning or afternoon, because she only had a few weeks before the next payoff was due. The one on March 6."
"Right."
"And you found the agency?"
"I did."
"And?"
"You need to be sitting down."
"I'm in bed."
"Excellent. Are you naked? Never mind. The name of the detective agency she hired was ... ta da! Drum rollβ"
"Laurenβ"
"Spade and Archer."
There was dead silence on the phone. Lauren gave it nearly a full minute. "Did you nod off?"
"No way. No way there's a detective agency called Spade and Archer. No fucking way."
"That was my first thought, too. But you know what? It's brilliant. If your name was Harold. F. Hooker and you risked people nicknaming you Happy whether you liked it or not, and you were a detective working in the movie industry, what would you call your detective agency?"
"That's his name, Harold Hooker?"
"Babe, this is LA, Hollywood. Movietown U.S.A. Maybe Niki and Justin Bieber never heard of Spade and Archer, but everyone over forty in this town has. So back in the day when they had phone books and you were going through the Yellow Pages looking for a private eye to see if your movie star wife or husband was cheating on you, and you see a quarter page ad for Spade and Archer, who you gonna call? Not Ghostbusters. And if you want to specialize in the movie industry, as opposed to, say, real estate or aerospace, or bikini sugar-waxing, how do you sell yourself? With a famous movie name the generation of his day would recognize and remember. It's marketing, and like they said in that movie, it's Chinatown, Jake. You don't need Lindsay Lohan to recognize the name Spade and Archer, you only need Lindsay Lohan's lawyer and agent and accountant to recognize it. But why am I telling you? You're the Hollywood expert and movie trivia buff."
"Have you ever heard of them? I never have, but that doesn't mean anything."
'No, I never did. But it's a big city and LA County's an even bigger county. Spade and Archer was only one guy, anyway. There was no Archer. And I'm not in the movie industry like he was. Or like you were."
"I was down near the bottom of the industry, though. I was just a field hand in the trenches. Okay, mixed metaphor, never mind. I haven't had my coffee yet. When can we go talk to him? This morning?"
"We can't talk to him."
There was another silence. "Don't tell me," Carmen finally said.
"Yep."
"When?"
"A week after Max was murdered."
"Oh, my god," Carmen whispered. "How do you know?"
"I Googled his name. There was a story in the LA Times that he was missing, and then a couple stories about the search effort, then the story just disappeared. He hasn't been declared legally dead or anything, but the wife is sure he is."
"Another accident? Does she suspect something? How did it happen?"
"Down in Ensenada. Apparently Hooker liked to go deep-sea fishing. Went down there on vacations with his wife. He went out one morning on a charter boat, just him and the boat captain he liked to go out with. They'd been out before maybe a dozen times. She went to a pottery class, she told reporters she didn't do well on small boats and going after swordfish was boring, and there was nothing to do but watch or read a book. She didn't start worrying until mid-afternoon, when the boat should have come back. They were supposed to go out to dinner, and he'd want to shower and change clothes, have a drink. When he didn't show up she called the harbor master and the Mexican Coast Guard. Neither had heard anything, no SOS messages or distress calls."
"No helicopters, anything like that?"
"There's dozens of boats out there, maybe, hundreds on a bright, sunny afternoon. So how do you tell which one is the boat Hooker is on? They fly around, nobody waves at them, no distress signals. Even if the radio's out they have flare guns, flags, lots of ways to attract attention, but nobody did. At least, nobody who was Hooker and the boat captain."
"So they just disappeared?"
"So it seems."
"And it was never a missing persons case? You and Marybeth never worked it?"
"Nope. Missing fishing boat in Mexico. Not our problem, not our jurisdiction. Nothing suspicious. Rickety Mexican fishing boat. Happens all the time."
"Do we believe it?"