Praise for Don Winslow’s
   CALIFORNIA FIRE AND LIFE
   “One fiery-fun read.… Only Don Winslow could make this bad boy snap, crackle and pop.”
   —The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
   “A successful thriller, raised above the ordinary by two things: Winslow’s prose style and the expertise he acquired in fifteen years of working at the same job as his hero.”
   —Los Angeles Times
   “Reads like a forties crime novel with prose so raw it makes you feel hard-boiled.… To the names of great literary detectives, add Jack Wade.”
   —U.S. News & World Report
   “Artfully captures the hot, often incendiary quality of life in Southern California.… I’ll never strike a match casually again.”
   —The News & Observer (Raleigh)
   “A premium read … [with] as many twists and turns as the Pacific Coast Highway.”
   —Fortune
   “A hot page-turner.”
   —San Antonio Express-News
   “Winslow’s arson thriller is a surefire beach-book winner.… Moves at a brisk pace.… Engaging and thought provoking. Good title. Good book.”
   —The Star Ledger (Newark, NJ)
   “From the very first pages, this book pulls us in with its haunting descriptions of fire, its complex and surprising plot, and its likable hero.… A burning tale that keeps its heat all the way to the end.”
   —Syracuse Herald-American
   Don Winslow
   CALIFORNIA
   FIRE AND LIFE
   Don Winslow is a former private investigator and consultant. He lives in California.
   www.donwinslow.com
   BOOKS BY DON WINSLOW
   The Winter of Frankie Machine
   The Power of the Dog
   California Fire and Life
   The Death and Life of Bobby Z
   While Drowning in the Desert
   A Long Walk Up the Water Slide
   Way Down on the High Lonely
   The Trail to Buddha’s Mirror
   A Cool Breeze on the Underground
   FIRST VINTAGE CRIME/BLACK LIZARD EDITION, SEPTEMBER 2007
   Copyright © 1999 by Don Winslow
   All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York, in 1999.
   Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage Crime/Black Lizard and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.
   This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
   The Library of Congress has cataloged the Knopf edition as follows:
   Winslow, Don.
   California fire and life / by Don Winslow.—1st ed.
   p. cm.
   I. Title.
   PS3573.I5326C35 1999
   813′.54—dc21
   98-50910
   eISBN: 978-0-307-82459-2
   www.vintagebooks.com
   v3.1
   To the claims guys and their defenders. It was an honor.
   Acknowledgments
   Many people—most of whom it would be imprudent to thank by name—helped me in the research of this book, and I thank them all. Among those I can name, my undying gratitude to the ever patient Dr. Edward Ledford, president of the Zoex Corporation in Lincoln, Nebraska, for his guidance and counsel in regard to gas chromatographs, mass spectrometers and countless other issues involving the testing of debris samples. My thanks as usual to David Schniepp for sharing his knowledge of arcane surfing matters and south coast lore and legend. My gratitude to my wife, Jean Winslow, for her patient and expert drafting of the floor plans of the Vale house and for countless kindnesses.
   Contents
   Cover
   About the Author
   Other Books by This Author
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Dedication
   Acknowledgments
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Chapter 13
   Chapter 14
   Chapter 15
   Chapter 16
   Chapter 17
   Chapter 18
   Chapter 19
   Chapter 20
   Chapter 21
   Chapter 22
   Chapter 23
   Chapter 24
   Chapter 25
   Chapter 26
   Chapter 27
   Chapter 28
   Chapter 29
   Chapter 30
   Chapter 31
   Chapter 32
   Chapter 33
   Chapter 34
   Chapter 35
   Chapter 36
   Chapter 37
   Chapter 38
   Chapter 39
   Chapter 40
   Chapter 41
   Chapter 42
   Chapter 43
   Chapter 44
   Chapter 45
   Chapter 46
   Chapter 47
   Chapter 48
   Chapter 49
   Chapter 50
   Chapter 51
   Chapter 52
   Chapter 53
   Chapter 54
   Chapter 55
   Chapter 56
   Chapter 57
   Chapter 58
   Chapter 59
   Chapter 60
   Chapter 61
   Chapter 62
   Chapter 63
   Chapter 64
   Chapter 65
   Chapter 66
   Chapter 67
   Chapter 68
   Chapter 69
   Chapter 70
   Chapter 71
   Chapter 72
   Chapter 73
   Chapter 74
   Chapter 75
   Chapter 76
   Chapter 77
   Chapter 78
   Chapter 79
   Chapter 80
   Chapter 81
   Chapter 82
   Chapter 83
   Chapter 84
   Chapter 85
   Chapter 86
   Chapter 87
   Chapter 88
   Chapter 89
   Chapter 90
   Chapter 91
   Chapter 92
   Chapter 93
   Chapter 94
   Chapter 95
   Chapter 96
   Chapter 97
   Chapter 98
   Chapter 99
   Chapter 100
   Chapter 101
   Chapter 102
   Chapter 103
   Chapter 104
   Chapter 105
   Chapter 106
   Chapter 107
   Chapter 108
   Chapter 109
   Chapter 110
   Chapter 111
   Chapter 112
   Chapter 113
   Chapter 114
   Chapter 115
   Chapter 116
   Chapter 117
   Chapter 118
   Chapter 119
   Chapter 120
   Chapter 121
   Chapter 122
   Chapter 123
   Chapter 124
   Chapter 125
   Chapter 126
   Chapter 127
   Chapter 128
   Chapter 129
   Chapter 130
   Chapter 131
   Chapter 132
   Chapter 133 
					     					 			
   Chapter 134
   Chapter 135
   Chapter 136
   Chapter 137
   Chapter 138
   1
   Woman’s lying in bed and the bed’s on fire.
   She doesn’t wake up.
   Flame licks at her thighs like a lover and she doesn’t wake up.
   Just down the hill the Pacific pounds on the rocks.
   California fire and life.
   2
   George Scollins doesn’t wake up, either.
   Reason for this is that he’s lying at the bottom of the stairs with a broken neck.
   It’s easy to see how this might have happened—Scollins’s little Laguna Canyon house is a freaking mess. Tools, wood, furniture lying all over the place, you can hardly walk across the floor without tripping on something.
   In addition to the tools, wood and furniture, you have paint cans, containers of stain, plastic bottles full of turpentine, cleaning rags …
   This is also the reason the house is a bonfire.
   Not surprising, really.
   Not surprising at all.
   California fire and life.
   3
   Two Vietnamese kids sit in the front of a delivery truck.
   The driver, Tommy Do, pulls it off into a parking lot.
   “Middle of freaking nowhere,” says Tommy’s buddy, Vince Tranh.
   Tommy doesn’t give a shit, he’s happy to be getting rid of the load, a truck full of hot stuff.
   Tommy pulls over by a Caddy.
   “They love their Caddies,” Tranh says to him in Vietnamese.
   “Let ’em,” Tommy says. Tommy’s saving for a Miata. A Miata is cool. Tommy can see himself cruising in a black Miata, wraparound shades on his face, a babe with long black hair beside him.
   Yeah, he can see that.
   Two guys get out of the Caddy.
   One of them’s tall. Looks like one of those Afghan hounds, Tommy thinks, except the guy’s wearing a dark blue suit that has got to be hot standing out there in the desert. The other guy is shorter, but broad. Guy wears a black Hawaiian print shirt with big flowers all over it, and Tommy thinks he looks like a jerk. Tommy has him tabbed as the leg breaker, and Tommy is going to be glad to get his money, unload and get the fuck back to Garden Grove.
   As a general rule, Tommy doesn’t like doing business with non-Vietnamese, especially these people.
   Except the money this time is too good.
   Two grand for a delivery job.
   The big guy in the flowered shirt opens a gate and Tommy drives through it. Guy closes the gate behind them.
   Tommy and Tranh hop out of the truck.
   Blue Suit says, “Unload the truck.”
   Tommy shakes his head.
   “Money first,” he says.
   Blue Suit says, “Sure.”
   “Business is business,” Tommy says, like he’s apologizing for the money-first request. He’s trying to be polite.
   “Business is business,” Blue Suit agrees.
   Tommy watches Blue Suit reach into the jacket pocket for his wallet, except Blue Suit takes out a silenced 9mm and puts three bullets in a tight pattern into Tommy’s face.
   Tranh stands there with this oh-fucking-no look on his face but he doesn’t run or anything. Just stands there like frozen, which makes it easy for Blue Suit to put the next three into him.
   The guy in the flowered shirt hefts first Tommy, then Tranh, and tosses their bodies into the Dumpster. Pours gasoline all over them then tosses a match in.
   “Vietnamese are Buddhists?” he asks Blue Suit.
   “I think so.”
   They’re speaking in Russian.
   “Don’t they cremate their dead?”
   Blue Suit shrugs.
   An hour later they have the truck unloaded and the contents stored in the cinder block building. Twelve minutes after that, Flower Shirt drives the truck out into the desert and makes it go boom.
   California fire and life.
   4
   Jack Wade sits on an old Hobie longboard.
   Riding swells that refuse to become waves, he’s watching a wisp of black smoke rise over the other side of the big rock at Dana Head. Smoke’s reaching up into the pale August sky like a Buddhist prayer.
   Jack’s so into the smoke that he doesn’t feel the wave come up behind him like a fat Dick Dale guitar riff. It’s a big humping reef break that slams him to the bottom then rolls him. Keeps rolling him and won’t let him up—it’s like, That’s what you get when you don’t pay attention, Jack. You get to eat sand and breathe water—and Jack’s about out of breath when the wave finally spits him out onto the shore.
   He’s on all fours, sucking for air, when he hears his beeper go off up on the beach where he left his towel. He scampers up the sand, grabs the beeper and checks the number, although he’s already pretty sure who it’s going to be.
   California Fire and Life.
   5
   The woman’s dead.
   Jack knows this even before he gets to the house because when he calls in it’s Goddamn Billy. Six-thirty in the morning and Goddamn Billy’s already in the office.
   Goddamn Billy tells him there’s a fire and a fatality.
   Jack hustles up the hundred and twenty steps from Dana Strand Beach to the parking lot, takes a quick shower at the bathhouse then changes into the work clothes he keeps in the backseat of his ’66 Mustang. His work clothes consist of a Lands’ End white button-down oxford, Lands’ End khaki trousers, Lands’ End moccasins and an Eddie Bauer tie that Jack keeps preknotted so he can just slip it on like a noose.
   Jack hasn’t been inside a clothing store in about twelve years.
   He owns three ties, five Lands’ End white button-down shirts, two pairs of Lands’ End khaki trousers, two Lands’ End guaranteed-not-to-wrinkle-even-if-you-run-it-through-your-car-engine blue blazers (a rotation deal: one in the dry cleaners, one on his back) and the one pair of Lands’ End moccasins.
   Sunday night he does laundry.
   Washes the five shirts and two pairs of trousers and hangs them out to unwrinkle. Preknots the three ties and he’s ready for the workweek, which means that he’s in the water a little before dawn, surfs until 6:30, showers at the beach, changes into his work clothes, loops the tie around his neck, gets into his car, pops in an old Challengers tape and races to the offices of California Fire and Life.
   He’s been doing this for coming up to twelve years.
   Not this morning, though.
   This morning, propelled by Billy’s call, he races to the loss site—37 Bluffside Drive, just down the road above Dana Strand Beach.
   It takes him maybe ten minutes. He’s pulling around on the circular driveway—his wheels on the gravel sound like the undertow in the trench at high tide—and hasn’t even fully stopped before Brian Bentley walks over and taps on the passenger-side window.
   Brian “Accidentally” Bentley is the Sheriff’s Department fire investigator. Which is another reason Jack knows there’s been a fatal fire, because the Sheriff’s Department is there. Otherwise it would be an inspector from the Fire Department, and Jack wouldn’t be looking at Bentley’s fat face.
   Or his wavy red hair turning freaking orange with age.
   Jack leans over and winds down the window.
   Bentley sticks his red face in and says, “You got here quick, Jack. What, you carrying the fire and the life?”
   “Yup.”
   “Good,” Bentley says. “The double whammy.”
   Jack and Bentley hate each other.
   That old thing about if, say, Jack was on fire, Bentley wouldn’t piss on him to put it out? If Jack was on fire, Bentley would drink gasoline so he could piss on Jack.
   “Croaker in the bedroom,” Bentley says. “They had to scrape her off the springs.”
   “The wife?” asks Jack.
   “We don’t have a positive yet,” Bentley says. “But it’s an adult female.”
   “Pamela Vale, age thirty-four,” Jack says. God 
					     					 			damn Billy gave him the specs over the phone.
   “Name rings a bell,” Bentley says.
   “Save the Strands,” Jack says.
   “What the what?”
   “Save the Strands,” Jack says. “She’s been in the papers. She and her husband are big fund-raisers for Save the Strands.”
   A community group fighting the Great Sunsets Ltd. corporation to prevent them from putting a condo complex on Dana Strands, the last undeveloped stretch of the south coast.
   Dana Strands, Jack’s beloved Dana Strands, a swatch of grass and trees that sits high on a bluff above Dana Strand Beach. Years ago, it was a trailer park, and then that failed, and then nature reclaimed it and grew over and around it, and is still holding on to it against all the forces of progress.
   Just holding on, Jack thinks.
   “Whatever,” Bentley says.
   Jack says, “There’s a husband and two kids.”
   “We’re looking for them.”
   “Shit.”
   “They ain’t in the house,” Bentley says. “I mean we’re looking for notification purposes. How’d you get here so soon?”
   “Billy picked it off the scanner, ran the address, had it waiting for me when I got in.”
   “You insurance bastards,” Bentley says. “You just can’t wait to get in there and start chiseling, can you?”
   Jack hears a little dog barking from somewhere behind the house.
   It bothers him.
   “You name a cause?” Jack asks.
   Bentley shakes his head and laughs this laugh he has, which sounds more like steam coming out of a radiator. He says, “Just get out your checkbook, Jack.”
   “You mind if I go in and have a look?” Jack asks.
   “Yeah, I do mind,” Bentley says. “Except I can’t stop you, right?”
   “Right.”
   It’s in the insurance contract. If you have a loss and you make a claim, the insurance company gets to inspect the loss.
   “So knock yourself out,” Bentley says. He leans way in, trying to get into Jack’s face. “Only—Jack? Don’t bust chops here. I pull the pin in two weeks. I plan to spend my retirement annoying bass on Lake Havasu, not giving depositions. What you got here is you got a woman drinking vodka and smoking, and she passes out, spills the booze, drops the cigarette and barbecues herself, and that’s what you got here.”
   “You’re retiring, Bentley?” Jack asks.
   “Thirty years.”