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Authors: the Concrete Blonde the Black Ice The Harry Bosch Novels: The Black Echo

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Back in the car, he picked up the rover again.

“Edgar, you there?”

“Uh, not quite. You?”

“I gotta turn around. Got a verdict. Can you check this out?”

“No problem. What am I checking out?”

“It’s Chandler’s house. She’s blonde. She didn’t show up in court today.”

“I get the picture.”

• • •

Bosch had never thought he would hope to see Honey Chandler in court at the table opposite his but he did. She wasn’t there,
though. A man Harry didn’t recognize was sitting with the plaintiff.

As he walked to the defense table, Bosch saw that a couple of reporters, including Bremmer, were already in the courtroom.

“Who’s that?” he asked Belk about the man next to the widow.

“Dan Daly. Keyes grabbed him out of the hallway to sit with the woman during the verdict. Chandler is apparently incommunicado.
They can’t find her.”

“Anybody go to her house?”

“I don’t know. I assume they called. What do you care? You should be worried about this verdict.”

Judge Keyes came out then and took his place. He nodded to the clerk, who buzzed the jury. As the twelve filed in, none of
them looked at Bosch but almost all of them eyed the man sitting next to Deborah Church.

“Again, folks,” the judge began, “a scheduling conflict has prevented Ms. Chandler from being here. Mr. Daly, a fine lawyer,
has agreed to sit in her stead. I understand from the marshal that you have reached a verdict.”

Several of the twelve heads nodded. Bosch finally saw one man look at him. But then he looked away. Bosch could feel his heart
pounding and he was unsure if it was because of the impending verdict or the disappearance of Honey Chandler. Or both.

“Can I have the verdict forms, please?”

The jury foreman handed a thin stack of papers to the marshal who handed them to the clerk who handed them to the judge. It
was excruciating to watch. The judge had to put on a pair of reading glasses and then took his time studying the papers. Finally,
he handed the papers back to the clerk and said, “Publish the verdict.”

The clerk did a rehearsal reading in her head first and then began.

“In the above entitled matter on the question of whether defendant Hieronymus Bosch did deprive Norman Church of his civil
rights to protection against unlawful search and seizure, we find for the plaintiff.”

Bosch didn’t move. He looked across the room and saw that now all the jurors were looking at him. His eyes turned to Deborah
Church and he saw her grab the arm of the man next to her, even though she didn’t know him, and smile. She was turning that
smile triumphantly toward Bosch when Belk grabbed his arm.

“Don’t worry,” he whispered. “It’s the damages that count.”

The clerk continued.

“The jury hereby awards to the plaintiff in compensatory damages the amount of one dollar.”

Bosch heard Belk whisper a gleeful “Yes!” under his breath.

“In the matter of punitive damages, the jury awards the plaintiff the amount of one dollar.”

Belk whispered it again, only this time loud enough to be heard in the gallery. Bosch looked at Deborah Church just as the
triumph dropped out of her smile and her eyes turned dead. It all seemed surrealistic to Bosch, as if he were observing a
play but was actually on the stage with the actors. The verdict meant nothing to him. He just watched everybody.

Judge Keyes began his thank-you speech to the jury, telling them how they had performed their Constitutional duties and should
be proud to have served and to be Americans. Bosch tuned it out and just sat there. Sylvia came to mind and he wished he could
tell her.

The judge banged down the gavel and the jury filed out for the last time. Then he left the bench and Bosch thought he might
have had an annoyed look on his face.

“Harry,” Belk said. “It’s a damn good verdict.”

“Is it? I don’t know.”

“Well, it’s a mixed verdict. But essentially the jury found what we already admitted to. We said you made mistakes going in
like you did but you already had been reprimanded by your department for that. The jury found as a matter of law that you
should not have kicked down the door like that. But in awarding only two dollars they were saying they believed you. Church
made the furtive move. And Church was the Dollmaker.”

He patted Bosch’s back. He was probably waiting for Harry to thank him but it didn’t come.

“What about Chandler?”

“Well, there’s the rub, so to speak. The jury found for the plaintiff so we are going to have to pick up her tab. She’ll probably
ask for about one-eighty, maybe two hundred. We’ll probably settle it for ninety. It’s not bad, Harry. Not at all.”

“I gotta go.”

Bosch stood up and waded through a clot of people and reporters to get out of the courtroom. He moved quickly to the escalator
and once on started fumbling to get the last cigarette out of his pack. Bremmer jumped on the step behind him, his notebook
out and ready.

“Congrats, Harry,” he said.

Bosch looked at him. The reporter seemed sincere.

“For what? They said I’m some kind of a Constitutional goon.”

“Yeah, but you walk away two bucks light. That ain’t bad.”

“Yeah, well…”

“Well, any comment on the record? I take it ‘Constitutional goon’ was off, right?”

“Yeah, I’d appreciate that. Uh, tell you what, let me think for a while. I’ve gotta go but I’ll call you later. Why don’t
you go back up and talk to Belk. He needs to see his name in the paper.”

Outside he lit the cigarette and pulled the rover out of his pocket.

“Edgar, you up?”

“Here.”

“How is it?”

“Better come on out, Harry. Everybody’s rolling on it.”

Bosch threw the cigarette in the ash can.

• • •

They had done a bad job of keeping it contained. By the time Bosch got to the house on Carmelina, there was already one news
copter circling overhead and two other channels were there on the ground. It would not be long until it was a circus. The
case would have two big draws: the Follower and Honey Chandler.

Bosch had to park two houses away because of the glut of official cars and vans lining both sides of the street. Parking control
officers were just beginning to put down flares and close the street to traffic.

The property had been preserved by yellow plastic police lines. Bosch signed an attendance log held by a uniform officer at
the tape and slipped underneath. It was a two-story Bauhaus-style home set on a hillside. Standing outside, Bosch knew the
floor-to-ceiling windows of the upstairs rooms would offer sweeping views of the flats below. He counted two chimneys. It
was a nice house in a nice neighborhood filled with nice lawyers and UCLA professors. Not anymore, he thought. He wished he
had a cigarette as he headed in.

Edgar was standing just inside the door in a tiled entryway. He was talking on a mobile phone and it sounded as if he was
telling the media relations unit to send people out to handle this. He saw Bosch and pointed up the stairs.

The staircase was right off the entry and Bosch went up. There was a wide hallway that passed four doorways upstairs. A group
of detectives milled about outside the farthest door and occasionally they looked inside at something. Bosch walked over.

In a way, Bosch knew, he had trained his mind to be almost like that of a psychopath. He practiced the psychology of objectification
when at a death scene. Dead people weren’t people, they were objects. He had to look at bodies as corpses, as evidence. It
was the only way to deal with it and get the job done. It was the only way to survive. But this, of course, was always easier
said or thought about than done. Often Bosch stumbled.

As a member of the original Dollmaker task force, he had seen the last six of the victims attributed to the serial killer.
He saw them “in situ,” as it was called — in the situation in which they were found. None of them was easy. There was something
that seemed so helpless about these victims that it overwhelmed his best efforts at objectification. And knowing that they
came from street backgrounds had made it all the worse. It was as if the torture visited upon each one by her killer was only
the last in a life of indignities.

Now he looked down at the naked and tortured body of Honey Chandler and no manner of mental tricks or deception could prevent
the horror he saw from burning into his soul. For the first time in his years as a homicide investigator, he wanted to close
his eyes and just go away.

But he didn’t. Instead, he stood with the other men who looked down with dead eyes and nonchalant poses. Like a gathering
of serial killers. Something made him think of the bridge game at San Quentin that Locke had mentioned. A foursome of psychopaths
sitting around the table, more killings to their credit than cards on the table.

Chandler was faceup, her arms outstretched at her sides. Her face was garishly painted with makeup. It hid much of the purplish
discoloration which spread from her neck up. A leather strap, cut from a purse which lay spilled on the floor, was tied tightly
around her neck, knotted on the right side as if pulled closed with a left hand. In keeping with the prior cases, whatever
restraints and gag the killer used had been taken away with him.

But there was something outside of the program. Bosch saw that the Follower was improvising, now that he was no longer operating
under the camouflage of the Dollmaker. Chandler’s body was riddled with cigarette burns and bite marks. Some of them had bled
and some were purplish with bruising, meaning the torture had taken place while she was still alive.

Rollenberger was in the room and was giving orders, even telling the photographer what angles he wanted. Nixon and Johnson
were also in the room. Bosch realized, as probably Chandler had, that the final indignity was that her uncovered body would
be left on display for hours in view of men who had despised her in life. Nixon looked up and saw Bosch in the hallway and
stepped out of the room.

“Harry, what made you tumble to her?”

“She didn’t show up for court today. Thought it was worth checking out. Guess she was the blonde. Too bad I didn’t see it
right away.”

“Yeah.”

“Got a TOD yet?”

“Yeah, an estimate. Coroner’s tech says time of death was at least forty-eight hours ago.”

Bosch nodded. It meant she was dead before he even found the note. It made it a little easier.

“Hear anything on Locke?”

“Nada.”

“You and Johnson on point on this one?”

“Yeah, Hans Off put us on it. Edgar discovered it but he’s primary on last week’s case. I know it was your tumble but I guess
Hans Off figured with court and —”

“Don’t worry about it. What do you need me to do?”

“You tell me. What do you want to do?”

“I want to stay out of there. I didn’t like her but I liked her, you know what I mean?”

“I think so. Yeah, this one’s bad. You notice he’s changing? He’s biting now. Burning.”

“Yeah, I noticed. Anything else new?”

“Not that we can tell.”

“I’m going to have a look around the rest of the house. Is it clean?”

“We haven’t had time to dust. Just a quick look through. Use gloves and let me know what you find.”

Bosch went to one of the equipment boxes lined along the wall in the hallway and pulled a pair of plastic gloves from a dispenser
that looked like a Kleenex box.

Irving passed by him wordlessly on the staircase, their eyes barely holding each other’s for a second. When he got down to
the entry, he saw two deputy chiefs standing out on the front steps. They weren’t doing anything, just standing where they
would be sure to be seen on the TV footage looking serious and concerned. Bosch could see that a growing number of reporters
and cameramen were gathering at the plastic line.

He looked around and found Chandler’s home office in a small room off the living room. Two of the walls contained built-in
shelves that were lined with books. The room had one window that looked out onto the commotion just beyond the front lawn.
He pulled on the gloves and began looking through the drawers of the desk. He didn’t find what he was looking for but he could
tell the desk had been rifled by someone else. Things were scattered in the drawers, papers from files were outside of files.
It wasn’t as neat as Chandler had kept her things on the plaintiff’s table.

He checked underneath the blotter. The note from the Follower wasn’t there. There were two books on the desk,
Black’s Law Dictionary
and the
California Penal Code
. He fanned the pages of both but there was no note. He leaned back in the leather desk chair and looked up at the two walls
of books.

He figured it would take two hours to go through all the books and he still might not find the note. Then he noticed the cracked
green spine of a book on the second-to-the-top shelf nearest the window. He recognized the book. It was the one Chandler had
read from during closing arguments.
The Marble Faun.
He got up and pulled the book out of its slot.

The note was there, folded into the center of the book. So was the envelope it came in. And Bosch quickly learned he had guessed
correctly about her. The note was a photocopy of the page dropped at the police station last Monday, the day of opening statements.
What was different about this one was the envelope. It hadn’t been dropped off. It had been mailed. The envelope was stamped
and then canceled in Van Nuys on the Saturday before opening statements.

Bosch looked at the postmark and knew it would be impossible to try any kind of trace on it. There would also be numerous
prints on it from the many postal employees who handled it. He decided the note would be of little evidentiary value.

He left the office, carrying the note and envelope by the corners with his gloved hands. He had to go upstairs to find a tech
with plastic evidence bags to place them in. He looked through the doorway into the bedroom and saw the coroner’s tech and
two body movers spreading open a plastic bag on a gurney. The public display of Honey Chandler was about to end. Bosch stepped
back so he did not have to watch. Edgar walked over after reading the note, which the tech was labeling.

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