Page 39 of The Poet


  One of the roving two-car teams of FBI agents was on the 101 freeway in Sherman Oaks, about five minutes away from the pay phone with good traffic. They gassed it down to the Vineland Boulevard exit without use of sirens, exited to Ventura Boulevard and took positions within sight of the pay phone, which was on a wall outside the office of a $40-a-night motel, porno movies included. No one was at the phone by the time they got there but they waited. Meantime, another roving team was en route from Hollywood as backup and a helicopter was circling on standby over Van Nuys, ready to move over the scene when the ground agents moved in.

  The agents in place waited. And so did I, in a car with Backus and Carter a block from Data Imaging. Carter turned the car on, ready to roll if the word came over the radio that the others had Gladden in sight.

  Five minutes passed and then ten. It was all very intense, even sitting blind with Backus and Carter. The backup cars had enough time to take positions a few blocks behind the first team’s cars on Ventura. There were now eight agents within a block of the pay phone.

  But at 11:33, when the phone on Thorson’s desk at Data Imaging rang, the agents in place were still watching an unused pay phone. Backus picked up the two-way.

  “We’ve got a ring here. Anything?”

  “Nada. No one’s using this phone.”

  “Be ready to move.”

  Backus put the two-way down and picked up the mobile phone, hitting the preset key for calling the AT&T law enforcement desk. I was leaning over from the backseat, watching him and the video monitor on the transmission hump beneath the dashboard. It was a black-and-white fish-eye view of the whole Digital Imaging showroom. I saw Thorson pick the phone up on the seventh ring. Though both phone lines into the store were tapped, we could only hear Thorson’s side of the conversation in the car. Thorson gave the high sign on the video, raising his hand over his head and making a circling motion with his finger. It was the sign that Childs/Gladden was calling again. Backus began the same rundown with caller ID that he had done before.

  Not wanting to possibly spook Childs/Gladden, Thorson engaged in no delay tactics on the second call. He also had no way of knowing that the call was coming from a different phone this time. For all he knew, agents were moving in on Gladden as he spoke to him.

  But they weren’t. As Thorson was telling the caller that his digiShot 200 had arrived and was ready for pickup, Backus was learning from the AT&T operator that the new call was being placed from another pay phone at Hollywood Boulevard and Las Palmas Street.

  “Shit,” Backus said after hanging up. “He’s in Hollywood. I just pulled everyone out of there.”

  Was it by design or luck that Gladden had escaped? No one knew, of course, but it was eerie, sitting there in the car with Backus and Carter. The Poet had kept moving and so far had avoided the net. Backus went through the motions of sending the roving teams to the intersection in Hollywood but I could tell by his voice he knew there wasn’t much of a percentage in it. The caller would be gone. The only chance now would be to take him after he came for the camera. If he came.

  On the phone in the store, Thorson was delicately attempting to pin the caller down on what time he would be by to pick up his camera but trying to act uninterested about it. Thorson was a good actor, it seemed to me. After a few moments he hung up.

  He immediately looked toward the fish-eye lens of the camera and calmly said, “Talk to me people. What’s going on?”

  Backus used the mobile phone to call the store and fill Thorson in on the near miss. I watched on the video as Thorson balled his hand into a fist and lightly bounced it once on the desk. I couldn’t tell if it was a sign of disappointment that the arrest had not gone down or maybe a sign of thanks that he would now get the chance to come face to face with the Poet.

  Most of the next four hours was spent in the car with Backus and Carter. At least I had the backseat so I could stretch. The only break came when they sent me around the corner to a deli on Pico to pick up sandwiches and coffee. I went quickly and missed nothing.

  It was a long day, even with the hourly drive-bys Carter made of the store and the arrival of several customers at different times, which always proved to be tense moments until they were identified as real customers, not Gladden.

  By four, Backus was already talking over plans for the next day with Carter, not giving in to the thought that maybe Gladden wasn’t coming, that maybe he knew something was amiss and had outsmarted the bureau. He told Carter that he had decided he wanted to open a two-way mike so that he didn’t have to use one of the phone lines to communicate with Thorson in the store.

  “I want that fixed by tomorrow,” he said.

  “You got it,” Carter answered. “After we close this down, I’ll go in with technical and get it all fixed up.”

  The car dropped into silence again. I could tell Backus and Carter, the veterans of too many stakeouts to recall, were used to long stretches of silent company. To me, though, it made the time pass all the more slowly. Occasionally I attempted conversation but they never carried it further than a few words.

  Shortly after four a car pulled to the curb behind us. I turned around to look and saw it was Rachel. She got out and got into our car next to me.

  “Well, well,” Backus said. “I had a feeling you wouldn’t stay away for long, Rachel. Are you sure you covered everything you needed to cover in Florida?”

  He was being even but I sensed that he was annoyed that she had rushed back. I think he wanted her in Florida.

  “Everything’s fine, Bob. Anything happening here?”

  “Nope, it’s been slow.”

  When Backus turned back around, she reached over and squeezed my hand on the seat and made a curious face at me. It took me a few moments to realize why.

  “Did you check the mail drop, Rachel?”

  She broke her look away from me and looked at the back of Backus’s head. He had not turned around and she was sitting directly behind him.

  “Yes, Bob, I did,” she said in a voice slightly tinged with exasperation. “It was a dead end. There was nothing in the box. The owner said that he believed a woman, an older woman, came in every month or so and cleaned it out. He said the only mail that ever came looked like bank statements. I think it was Gladden’s mother. She’s probably living somewhere around there but I couldn’t find a listing and there was nothing from Florida DMV.”

  “Maybe you should’ve stayed a little longer and looked a little harder.”

  She was silent a moment. I knew she was still confused by the way Backus was now treating her.

  “Maybe,” she said. “But I think that’s something the agents in Florida can handle. I’m the lead agent on this case. Remember, Bob?”

  “Yes, I remember.”

  The car was silent for a few minutes after that. I spent most of that time staring out my window. When I sensed the tension had dissipated a bit I looked over at Rachel and raised my eyebrows. She raised her hand to reach to my face but then thought better of it and put it down.

  “You shaved.”

  “Yeah.”

  Backus turned around and looked at me, then returned to his normal position.

  “I thought something was different,” he said.

  “How come?” Rachel asked.

  I hiked my shoulders.

  “I don’t know.”

  A voice crackled over the radio.

  “Customer.”

  Carter picked up the mike and said, “What’ve we got?”

  “White male, twenties, blond hair, carrying a box. No vehicle observed. He’s either going in Data or next door for a haircut. He could use one.”

  There was a hair salon directly west of Data Imaging Answers. On the east side was an out-of-business hardware store. The observation agents had been calling out the potential customers all day; most of them ended up going into the salon rather than DIA.

  “He’s going in.”

  I leaned over the seat to look at the monitor a
nd saw the man enter the store with the box. The video frame was a black-and-white image that encompassed the whole showroom. The figure was too grainy and small to be identified as Gladden or not. I held my breath as I had each time a customer had entered. The man walked directly to the desk where Thorson sat. I saw Thorson move his right hand to his midsection, ready to go inside his coat for his weapon if needed.

  “Can I help you?” he asked.

  “Yes, I have these great monthly planners here.” He started reaching into the box. Thorson started standing. “I’m selling them to a lot of your neighbors here.”

  Thorson grabbed the man’s arm to stop him from reaching, then tilted the box down so he could see inside it.

  “I’m not interested,” he said after inspecting the contents.

  The salesman, slightly taken aback by Thorson grabbing him, recovered and completed the sales pitch.

  “Are you sure? Just ten bucks. Something like this’ll run you thirty, thirty-five dollars in the office supply store. It’s genuine Naugahyde and it’s—”

  “Not interested. Thank you.”

  The salesman turned to Coombs sitting behind the other desk.

  “How ’bout you, sir? Let me show you the deluxe mo—”

  “We’re not interested,” Thorson barked. “Now if you would please leave the store, we’re busy here. There’s no soliciting here.”

  “Yeah, I can see. Well, have a nice day to you, too.”

  The man left the store.

  “People,” Thorson said.

  He shook his head as he sat down and didn’t say anything more. Then he yawned. Watching it made me yawn, then Rachel caught it from me.

  “The excitement is getting to Gordo,” Backus commented.

  Me, too. I needed a caffeine fix. If I had been in the newsroom, I would have had at least six cups by this time of day. But because of the stakeout, there had been only one run for food and coffee and that had been three hours earlier.

  I opened the door.

  “I’m going for coffee. You guys want any?”

  “You’re gonna miss it, Jack,” Backus kidded.

  “Yeah, right. Now I know why so many cops get hemorrhoids. Sitting and waiting for nothing.”

  I got out, my knees cracking as I straightened my body. Carter and Backus said they’d pass on the coffee. Rachel said she would love some. I was hoping she wouldn’t say she’d go with me and she didn’t.

  “How do you like it?” I asked, though I knew the answer.

  “Black,” she said, smiling at my act.

  “Okay. Be right back.”

  42

  Carrying four containers of black coffee in a small cardboard box, I stepped through the door of the Data Imaging Answers store to see Thorson’s shocked face. Before he could say anything the phone on his desk started ringing. He picked it up and said, “I know.”

  He held the phone out for me.

  “For you, sport.”

  It was Backus.

  “Jack, get the hell out of there right now!”

  “I will. I just wanted to drop off some coffee to these guys. You saw Gordo, he’s falling asleep, it’s so boring in here.”

  “Very funny, Jack, but get out. Our agreement was that you would do things my way and I would protect the story. Now, please, do as—you’ve got a customer. Tell Thorson. It’s a woman.”

  I held the phone against my chest and looked at Thorson.

  “Customer on the way. But it’s a woman.”

  I held the receiver back up.

  “Okay, I’m out of here,” I said to Backus.

  I hung the phone up and took one of the coffee containers out of the box and put it on Thorson’s desk. I heard the door open behind me, the sound of traffic going by on Pico getting momentarily louder and then buffered again by the closed glass. Without turning around to look at the customer I went over to the desk where Coombs was sitting.

  “Coffee?”

  “Thank you very much.”

  I put another cup down and reached into the box for packets of sugar and powdered cream and a stirring straw. When I turned around I saw the woman standing in front of Thorson’s desk, digging through a big black purse. She had fluffy blond hair in a Dolly Parton cascade. An obvious wig. She wore a white blouse over a short skirt and black stockings. She was tall, even without the high heels. I noticed that when she had opened the door to the shop a strong odor of perfume entered with her.

  “Ah,” she said, finding what she was looking for. “I’m here to pick this up for my boss.”

  She placed a folded yellow sheet on the desk in front of Thorson. He looked over at Coombs, an attempt to signal that Coombs should take over this transaction.

  “Take it easy, Gordo,” I said.

  As I started for the door I looked over at Thorson, expecting him to reply to my repeated use of the nickname Backus had used for him. I saw Thorson looking at the now unfolded sheet she had given him and his eyes fixed on something. I saw his eyes glance at the west wall of the store. I knew he was looking at the camera. At Backus. He then looked up at the woman. I was behind her at this point and could only see Thorson’s eyes just over her shoulder. He was rising and I saw his mouth coming open in a silent O. His right arm was coming up and he was reaching inside his jacket. Then I saw her right arm coming up from the bag. When it cleared her torso I saw the knife grasped in her hand.

  She brought the knife down well before Thorson had his arm out of his jacket. I heard his strangled cry as the knife plunged into his throat. He started falling back, a spray of arterial blood going up, hitting her in the shoulder as she leaned all the way over the desk reaching for something.

  She straightened up and spun around, Thorson’s gun in hand.

  “Nobody fuckin’ move!”

  The woman’s voice was gone, replaced by the near hysterical and taut voice of the cornered male animal. He aimed the gun at Coombs and then swung it around at me.

  “Get away from that door. Get in here!”

  I dropped the box with the two coffee containers, raised my hands and moved away from the door, further into the showroom. The man in the dress then wheeled again on Coombs, who shrieked.

  “No! Please, they’re watching, no!”

  “Who’s watching? Who?”

  “They’re watching on the camera!”

  “Who?”

  “The FBI, Gladden,” I said in as calm a tone as I could muster, which probably wasn’t too far removed from the same shriek that Coombs had emitted.

  “Can they hear?”

  “Yes, they can hear.”

  “FBI!” Gladden yelled. “FBI, you got one dead already. You come in here and you’ll get two more.”

  He then turned to the display table and aimed Thorson’s gun at the video camera with the red light on. He fired three times until he hit it and it flew backward off the table, breaking apart.

  “Get over here,” he yelled at me. “Where are the keys?”

  “Keys to what?”

  “The goddamn store.”

  “Take it easy. I don’t work here.”

  “Then who does?”

  He turned the gun on Coombs.

  “In my pocket. The keys are in my pocket.”

  “Go lock that front door. You try to run through and I’ll shoot you down like the camera.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Coombs did as he was told and then Gladden ordered both of us to the back of the showroom and told us to sit on the floor against the door to the rear storage room, blocking anybody from charging through. He then turned over both desks so they would act as blinds and maybe even barriers against bullets from outside the front windows. He crouched down behind the desk where Thorson had been.

  I could see Thorson’s body from my position. Most of his previously white shirt was soaked in blood. There was no movement and his eyes were half closed and fixed. The handle of a knife still protruded from his throat. I shuddered at the sight, realizing that a moment ago
the man was alive and that whether I liked him or not, I knew him. Now he was dead.

  The thought occurred to me then that Backus must be panicked. With the video out, he might not know Thorson’s status. If he believed Thorson was alive and there was a chance he could be saved, I could expect the critical response team to start coming through with stun grenades and everything else at any moment. If they believed Thorson to be dead, I might as well settle in for what could be a long night.

  “You don’t work here,” Gladden said to me. “Who are you? Do I know you?”

  I hesitated. Who was I? Did I tell this man the truth?

  “You’re FBI.”

  “No. I’m not FBI. I’m a reporter.”

  “A reporter? You came for my story, is that it?”

  “If you want to give it. If you want to talk to the FBI, put that phone over there on the floor back on its hook. They’ll call on that line.”

  He looked over at the phone that had come apart on the floor when he had overturned the desk. Just then it began emitting the sharp tone signaling it was off the hook. He could reach the line without moving out of cover. He dragged the phone over and hung it up. He looked at me.

  “I recognize you,” he said. “You—”

  The phone rang and he picked it up.

  “Talk,” he commanded.

  There was a long silence until he finally responded to whatever had been said.

  “Well, well, Agent Backus, good to make your acquaintance again. I have learned a lot about you since we last met in Florida. And Dad, of course. Read his book, I always hoped we would talk again . . . You and I. . . . No, you see, that would be impossible because I have these two hostages here. You fuck with me, Bob, and I fuck with them in ways you won’t believe when you come in here. You remember Attica? Think about that, Agent Backus. Think about how Dad would handle this. I gotta go.”

  He hung up and looked at me. He pulled the wig off and threw it angrily across the showroom.

  “How the hell did you get in here, reporter? The FBI doesn’t let—”

  “You killed my brother. That’s what got me in.”