At a Glance
544 Pages
Large type / large print
24.77 x 15.88 x 4.45
Hardcover
$127.95
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A Barnes & Noble Best Book of 2017
A South Florida Sun-Sentinel Best Mystery of 2017
#1 New York Times bestselling author Michael Connelly introduces Renee Ballard, a fierce young detective fighting to prove herself on the LAPD's toughest beat--the Late Show.
Renee Ballard works the midnight shift in Hollywood, beginning many investigations but finishing few, as each morning she turns everything over to the daytime units. It's a frustrating job for a once up-and-coming detective, but it's no accident. She's been given this beat as punishment after filing a sexual harassment complaint against a supervisor.
But one night Ballard catches two assignments she doesn't want to part with. First, a prostitute is brutally beaten and left for dead in a parking lot. All signs point to a crime of premeditation, not passion, by someone with big evil on his mind. Then she sees a young waitress breathe her last after being caught up in a nightclub shooting. Though dubbed a peripheral victim, the waitress buys Ballard a way in, and this time she is determined not to give up at dawn. Against orders and her partner's wishes, she works both cases by day while maintaining her shift by night.
As the investigations intertwine, Ballard is forced to face her own demons and confront a danger she could never have imagined. To find justice for these victims who can't speak for themselves, she must put not only her career but her life on the line.
Propulsive as a jolt of adrenaline and featuring a bold and defiant new heroien, The Late Show is yet more proof that Michael Connelly is "a master of the genre" (Washington Post).
Industry Reviews
"Any new book by Michael Connelly is a cause for celebration."--Jackie Cooper, Huffington Post
"Ballard is a force that with just one novel will easily be as beloved. There's no doubt Connelly is a master of crime fiction, and The Late Show cements that reputation."--Jeff Ayers, Associated Press
"Det. Renee Ballard is a formidable character, an insightful and tenacious investigator with an unusual background and a sturdy personality to carry a series... Connelly has achieved success as one of the top mystery writers by continuing to keep his storytelling fresh. In The Late Show, he delivers an exciting police procedural with a unique character."--Oline Cogdill, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
"Few writers can capture the gritty streets of L.A.-and the inner workings of the LAPD-like Connelly."--Entertainment Weekly
"It's a sharp move that allows him to shift his perspective in fresh and meaningful ways. Writing about the instantly appealing police Detective Renee Ballard also recharges Connelly, who has never been in better form."--Lloyd Sachs, Chicago Tribune
"More perhaps than any of Connelly's much-honored other titles, this one reveals why his procedurals are the most soulful in the business: because he finds the soul in the smallest details, faithfully executed."--Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
"The most intriguing mystery in The Late Show, though, is Ballard herself. Connelly is too skillful to hand us her resume in one document dump; instead, he fills out her portrait with a subtle hand over the course of the novel, a little background here, a glimpse of her temperament there, the revelation of her unusual living conditions sketched in between."--Colette Bancroft, Tampa Bay Times
"Welcome Renee Ballard to the City of Angels' crime fighting pantheon. . . Connelly excels at writing principled outsiders, and Renee Ballard hews to this archetype."--Paula L. Woods, Los Angeles Times
PRAISE FOR THE LATE SHOW
"The Late Show introduces a terrific female character: Detective Renee Ballard. . . The pacing of Ballard's debut story is breathless. . . Ballard is complicated and driven enough to sustain the series Connelly doubtless has in mind for her." --Janet Maslin, The New York Times
PRAISE FOR MICHAEL CONNELLY:
"Michael Connelly is an undisputed master."--Chuck Leddy
Ballard and Jenkins rolled up on the house on El Centro shortly before midnight. It was the first call of the shift. There was already a patrol cruiser at the curb out front and Ballard recognized the two blue suiters standing on the front porch of the bungalow with a gray-haired woman in a bathrobe. John Stanley was the shiftâs senior lead officer â the street boss â and his partner was Jacob Ross.
âI think this oneâs yours,â Jenkins said.
They had found in their two-year partnership that Ballard was the better of the two at working with female victims. It wasnât that Jenkins was an ogre but Ballard was more understanding of the emotions of female victims. The opposite was true when they rolled up on a case with a male victim.
âRoger that,â Ballard said.
They got out of the car and headed toward the lighted porch. Ballard carried her rover in her hand. As they went up the three steps, Stanley introduced them to the woman. Her name was Leslie Anne Lantana and she was seventy-seven years old. Ballard didnât think there was going to be much for them to do here. Most burglaries amounted to a report, maybe a call for the fingerprint car to come by if they got lucky and saw some indication that the thief had touched surfaces from which latent prints were likely to be pulled.
âMrs. Lantana got a fraud alert e-mail tonight saying someone attempted to charge a purchase on Amazon to her credit card,â Stanley said.
âBut it wasnât you,â Ballard said to Mrs. Lantana, stating the obvious.
âNo, it was on the card I keep for emergencies and I never use it online,â Lantana said. âThatâs why the purchase was flagged. I use a different card for Amazon.â
âOkay,â Ballard said. âDid you call the credit card company?â
âFirst I went to check on the card to see if Iâd lost it, and I found my wallet was missing from my purse. Itâs been stolen.â
âAny idea where or when it was stolen?â
âI went to Ralphs for my groceries yesterday, so I know I had my wallet then. After that I came home and I havenât gone out.â
âDid you use a credit card to pay?â
âNo, cash. I always pay cash at Ralphs. But I did pull out my Ralphs card to get the savings.â
âDo you think you couldâve left your wallet at Ralphs? Maybe at the cash register when you pulled out the card?â
âNo, I donât think so. Iâm very careful about my things. My wallet and my purse. And Iâm not senile.â
âI didnât mean to suggest that, maâam. Iâm just asking questions.â
Ballard moved in another direction, even though she wasnât convinced that Lantana had not left her wallet behind at Ralphs, where it could have been snatched by anybody.
âWho lives here with you, maâam?â she asked.
âNo one,â Lantana said. âI live alone. Except for Cosmo. Heâs my dog.â
âSince you got back from Ralphs yesterday, has anyone knocked on your door or been in the house?â
âNo, nobody.â
âAnd no friends or relatives visited?â
âNo, but they wouldnât have taken my wallet if they had come by.â
âOf course, and I donât mean to imply otherwise. Iâm just trying to get an idea of comings and goings. So youâre saying you have been home the whole time since Ralphs?â
âYes, Iâve been home.â
âWhat about Cosmo? Do you walk Cosmo?â
âSure, twice a day. But I lock the house when I go out and I donât go far. Heâs an old dog and Iâm not getting any younger myself.â
Ballard smiled sympathetically.
âDo you take these walks at the same time every day?â
âYes, we keep a schedule. Itâs better for the dog.â
âAbout how long are your walks?â
âThirty minutes in the morning and usually a little longer in the afternoon. Depending on how we feel.â
Ballard nodded. She knew that all it would have taken for a thief cruising the area south of Santa Monica was to spot the woman walking her dog and follow her home. Heâd keep watch to determine if she lived alone and then come back the next day at the same time when she took the dog out again. Most people didnât realize that their simplest routines made them vulnerable to predators. A practiced thief would be in and out of the house in ten minutes tops.
âHave you looked around to see if anything else is missing, maâam?â Ballard asked.
âNot yet,â Lantana said. âI called the police as soon as I knew my wallet was gone.â
âWell, letâs go in and take a quick look around and see if you notice anything else missing,â Ballard said.
While Ballard escorted Lantana through the house, Jenkins went to check whether the lock on the back door had been tampered with. In Lantanaâs bedroom, there was a dog on a sleeping cushion. He was a boxer mix and his face was white with age. His shining eyes tracked Ballard but he did not get up. He was too old. He emitted a deep-chested growl.
âEverythingâs all right, Cosmo,â Lantana assured him.
âWhat is he, boxer and what?â Ballard asked.
âRidgeback,â Lantana said. âWe think.â
Ballard wasnât sure whether the âweâ referred to Lantana and the dog or somebody else. Maybe Lantana and her veterinarian.
The old woman finished her survey of the house with a look through her jewelry drawer and reported that nothing other than the wallet seemed to be missing. It made Ballard think about Ralphs again, or that the burglar possibly thought he had less time than he actually had to go through the house.
Jenkins rejoined them and said there were no indications that the lock on the front or back door had been picked, jimmied, or in any other way tampered with.
âWhen you walked the dog, did you see anything unusual on the street?â Ballard asked the old woman. âAnybody out of place?â
âNo, nothing unusual,â Lantana said.
âIs there any construction on the street? Workers hanging around?â
âNo, not around here.â
Ballard asked Lantana to show her the e-mail notice she had received from the credit card company. They went to a small nook in the kitchen, where Lantana had a laptop computer, a printer, and filing trays stacked with envelopes. It was obviously the home station, where she took care of paying bills and online ordering. Lantana sat down and pulled up the e-mail alert on her computer screen. Ballard leaned over her shoulder to read it. She then asked Lantana to call the credit card company again.
Lantana made the call on a wall phone with a long cord that stretched to the nook. Eventually the phone was handed to Ballard and she stepped into the hallway with Jenkins, pulling the cord to its full extension. She was talking to a fraud alert specialist with an English-Indian accent. Ballard identified herself as a detective with the Los Angeles Police Department and asked for the shipping address that had been entered for the credit card purchase before it was rejected as possibly fraudulent. The fraud alert specialist said he could not provide that information without court approval.
âWhat do you mean?â Ballard asked. âYou are the fraud alert specialist, right? This was fraud, and if you give me the address, I might be able to do something about it.â
âI am sorry,â the specialist said. âI cannot do this. Our legal office must tell me to do so and they have not.â
âLet me talk to the legal office.â
âThey are closed now. It is lunchtime and they close.â
âThen let me talk to your supervisor.â
Ballard looked at Jenkins and shook her head in frustration.
âLook, itâs all going to the burglary table in the morning,â Jenkins said. âWhy donât you let them deal with it?â
âBecause they wonât deal with it,â Ballard said. âIt will get lost in the stack. They wonât follow up and thatâs not fair to her.â
She nodded toward the kitchen, where the crime victim was sitting and looking forlorn.
âNobody said anything about anything being fair,â Jenkins said. âIt is what it is.â
After five minutes the supervisor came on the line. Ballard explained that they had a fluid situation and needed to move quickly to catch the person who stole Mrs. Lantanaâs credit card. The supervisor explained that the attempted use of the credit card did not go through, so the fraud alert system had worked.
âThere is no need for this âfluid situation,â as you say,â he said.
âThe system only works if we catch the guy,â Ballard said. âDonât you see? Stopping the card from being used is only part of it. That protects your corporate client. It doesnât protect Mrs. Lantana, who had someone inside her house.â
âI am sorry,â the supervisor said. âI cannot help you without documentation from the courts. It is our protocol.â
âWhat is your name?â
âMy name is Irfan.â
âWhere are you, Irfan?â
âHow do you mean?â
âAre you in Mumbai? Delhi? Where?â
âI am in Mumbai, yes.â
âAnd thatâs why you donât give a shit. Because this guyâs never going come into your house and steal your wallet in Mumbai. Thanks very much.â
She stepped back into the kitchen and hung up the phone before the useless supervisor could respond. She turned back to her partner.
âOkay, we go back to the barn, write it up, give it to the burglary table,â she said. âLetâs go.â
2
Ballard and Jenkins didnât make it back to the station to begin writing the report on the Lantana burglary. They were diverted to Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center by the watch commander to check out an assault. Ballard parked in an ambulance slot by the ER entrance, left the grille lights on, and then she and Jenkins entered through the automatic doors. Ballard noted the time for the report she would write later. It was 12:41 a.m. according to the clock over the reception window in the ER waiting room.
There was a P-1 standing there, his skin as white as a vampireâs. Ballard gave him the nod and he came over to brief them. He was a slick sleeve and maybe even a boot and too new in the division for her to know his name.
âWe found her in a lot on Santa Monica by Highland,â the officer stated. âLooked like she had been dumped there. Whoever did it probably thought she was dead. But she was alive and she sort of woke up and was semiconscious for a couple minutes. Somebody had worked her over really good. One of the paramedics said she might have a skull fracture. They have her in the back. My TOâs back there too.â
The assault may have now been elevated to an abduction, and that increased Ballardâs level of interest. She checked the patrolmanâs plate and saw his name was Taylor.
âTaylor, Iâm Ballard,â she said, âand this is Detective Jenkins, fellow denizen of the dark. When did you get to Super Six?â
âFirst deployment actually,â Taylor said.
âRight from the academy? Well, welcome. Youâll have more fun in the Six than youâll have anywhere else. Whoâs your training officer?â
âOfficer Smith, maâam.â
âIâm not your mother. Donât call me maâam.â
âSorry, maâam. I mean â â
âYouâre in good hands with Smitty. Heâs cool. You guys get an ID on the vic?â
âNo, there was no purse or anything but we were trying to talk to her while we were waiting on the paramedics. She was in and out, not making a lot of sense. Sounded like she said her name was Ramona.â
âShe say anything else?â
âYeah, she said âthe upside-down house.ââ
ââThe upside-down houseâ?â
âThatâs what she said. Officer Smith asked if she knew her attacker and she said no. He asked where she was attacked and she said âthe upside-down house.â Like I said, she wasnât making a lot of sense.â
Ballard nodded and thought about what that could mean.
âOkay,â she said. âWeâll go back and check things out.â
Ballard nodded to Jenkins and headed toward the door that led to the ERâs treatment bays. She was wearing a charcoal-gray Van Heusen suit with a chalk pinstripe. She always thought the formality of the suit went well with her light brown skin and sun-streaked hair. And it had an authority that helped overcome her slight stature. She pulled her jacket back enough for the receptionist behind the glass window to see the badge on her belt and open the automatic door.
The intake center consisted of six patient assessment and treatment bays behind closed curtains. Doctors, nurses, and technicians were moving about a command station in the center of the room. There was organized chaos, everybody with a job to do and some unseen hand choreographing it all. It was a busy night, but every night was at Hollywood Pres.
Another patrol officer was standing in front of the curtain for treatment bay 4 and Ballard and Jenkins proceeded directly toward him. He had three hash marks on his sleeves â fifteen years on the department â and Ballard knew him well.
âSmitty, the doc in there?â Ballard asked.
Officer Melvin Smith looked up from his phone, where he had been composing a text.
âBallard, Jenkins, howâs it hanging?â Smith said. Then: âNah, sheâs alone. Theyâre about to take her up to the OR. Fractured skull, brain swelling. They said they need to open her head up to relieve the pressure.â
âI know the feeling,â Jenkins said.
âSo sheâs not talking?â Ballard asked.
âNot anymore,â Smith said. âThey sedated her and I overheard them talking about inducing a coma till the swelling goes down. Hey, howâs Lola, Ballard? Havenât seen her in a while.â
âLolaâs good,â Ballard said. âDid you guys find her, or was it a call?â
âIt was a hot shot,â Smith said. âSomebody mustâve called it in but they were GOA when we got there. The vic was just lying there alone in the parking lot. We thought she was dead when we first rolled up.â
âDid you call anybody out to hold the crime scene?â Ballard asked.
âNah, thereâs nothing there but blood on the asphalt, Ballard,â Smith said. âThis was a body dump.â
âCome on, Smitty, thatâs bullshit. We have to run a scene. Why donât you guys clear here and go hold the lot until we can get a team there. You can sit in the car and do your paperwork or something.â
Smith looked to Jenkins as the senior detective for approval.
âSheâs right,â Jenkins said. âWe have to set up a crime scene.â
âRoger that,â Smith said, his tone revealing he thought the assignment was a waste of time.
Ballard went through the curtain into bay 4. The victim was on her back on a bed, a light green hospital smock over her damaged body. She was tubed in both arms and nose. Ballard had seen plenty of victims of violence over her fourteen years with the department, but this was one of the worst cases she had seen where the victim was still alive. The woman was small and looked to be no more than 120 pounds. Both of her eyes were swollen tightly shut, the orbit of the right eye clearly broken under the skin. The shape of her face was further distorted by swelling down the entire right side, where the skin was abraded. It was clear she had been beaten viciously and dragged across rough terrain â probably the parking lot â on her face. Ballard leaned in close over the bed to study the wound on the lower lip. She saw that it was a deep bite mark that had savagely split the lip. The torn tissue was being held together by two temporary stitches. It would need the attention of a plastic surgeon. If the victim survived.
âJesus Christ,â Ballard said.
She pulled her phone off her belt and opened the camera app. She started taking photos, beginning with a full face shot of the victim, then moving into close-ups of the individual facial wounds. Jenkins watched without comment. He knew how she worked.
Ballard unbuttoned the top of the smock to examine the chest for injuries. Her eyes were drawn to the left side of the torso, where several deep bruises were delineated and straight and appeared to have come from an object rather than someoneâs fists.
âLook at this,â Ballard said. âBrass knuckles?â
Jenkins leaned in.
âLooks like it,â he said. âMaybe.â
He pulled back, disgusted by what he saw. John Jenkins had twenty-five years in and Ballard knew he had been running on empty for a long time when it came to empathy. He was a good detective â when he wanted to be. But he was like a lot of guys who had been around for so long. He just wanted a place to be left alone to do his job. The police headquarters downtown was called the PAB, for Police Administration Building. Guys like Jenkins believed that PAB stood for Politics and Bureaucracy, or Politics and Bullshit, take your pick.
The night-shift assignment was usually awarded to those who had run afoul of the politics and bureaucracy of the department. But Jenkins was a rare volunteer for the eleven-to-seven shift. His wife had cancer and he liked to work during her sleeping hours so he could be home every day when she was awake and needed him.
Ballard took more photos. The victimâs breasts were also damaged and bruised, the nipple on the right side torn, like the lip, by gnashing teeth. The left breast was round and full, the right smaller and flat. Implants, one of which had burst inside the body. Ballard knew it took a hell of an impact to do that. She had seen it only once previously, and that victim was dead.
She gently closed the smock over the victim and checked the hands for defensive wounds. The fingernails were broken and bloody. Deep purple marks and abrasions circled the wrists, indicating that the victim had been bound and held captive long enough to produce chafing wounds. Ballard guessed hours, not minutes. Maybe even days.
She took more photos and it was then that she noticed the length of the victimâs fingers and the wide spread of the knuckles. Santa Monica and Highland â she should have understood. She reached down to the hemline of the gown and raised it. She confirmed that the victim was biologically a man.
âShit, I didnât need to see that,â Jenkins said.
âIf Smitty knew this and didnât tell us, then heâs a fucking asshole,â Ballard said. âIt changes things.â
She shoved the flare of anger aside and got back on track.
âBefore we left the barn, did you see if anybody was working in vice tonight?â she asked.
âUh, yeah, they have something going on,â Jenkins said. âI donât know what. I saw Pistol Pete in the break room, brewing a pot.â
Ballard stepped back from the bed and swiped through the photos on her phone screen until she came to the shot of the victimâs face. She then forwarded the photo in a text to Pete Mendez in the Hollywood vice unit. She included the message:
Recognize him? Ramona? Santa Monica stroll?
Mendez was legendary in the Six, but not for all the right reasons. He had spent most of his career as a UC in vice and as a younger officer was often put out on the stroll posing as a male prostitute. During these decoy operations he was wired for sound because the recording was what made the case and usually caused the suspect to plead guilty to the subsequent charges. A wire recording from one of Mendezâs encounters was still played at retirement parties and unit get-togethers. Mendez had been standing on Santa Monica Boulevard when a would-be customer rolled up. Before agreeing to pay for services, the john asked Mendez a series of questions, including how large his penis was when erect, though he did not use such polite terms.
âAbout six inches,â Mendez responded.
The john was unimpressed and drove on without another word. A few moments later a vice sergeant left his cover location and drove up to Mendez on the street. Their exchange was also recorded.
âMendez, weâre out here to make busts,â the sergeant chided. âNext time a guy asks how long your dick is, exaggerate, for crying out loud.â
âI did,â Mendez said â to his everlasting embarrassment.
Ballard pulled the curtain back to see if Smith was still hanging around but he and Taylor were gone. She walked to the command station to address one of the nurses behind the counter. Jenkins followed.
âBallard, Jenkins, LAPD,â she said. âI need to speak to the doctor who handled the victim in bay four.â
âHeâs in two right now,â the nurse said. âAs soon as heâs out.â
âWhen does the patient go up for surgery?â
âAs soon as space opens.â
âDid they do a rape kit? Anal swabs? We also need to get fingernail clippings. Who can help us with that?â
âThey were trying to save his life â that was the priority. Youâll have to talk to the doctor about the rest.â
âThatâs what Iâm asking. I want to speak to â â
Ballard felt her phone vibrate in her hand and turned away from the nurse. She saw a return text from Mendez. She read his answer out loud to Jenkins.
ââRamona Ramone, dragon. Real name RamĂłn Gutierrez. Had him in here a couple weeks back. Priors longer than his pre-op dick.â Nice way of putting it.â
âConsidering his own dimensions,â Jenkins said.
Drag queens, cross-dressers, and transgenders were all generally referred to as dragons in vice. No distinctions were made. It wasnât nice but it was accepted. Ballard had spent two years on a decoy team in the unit herself. She knew the turf and she knew the slang. It would never go away, no matter how many hours of sensitivity training cops were subjected to.
She looked at Jenkins. Before she could speak, he did.
âNo,â he said.
âNo, what?â she said.
âI know what youâre going to say. Youâre going to say you want to keep this one.â
âItâs a vampire case â has to be worked at night. We turn this over to the sex table, and it will be just like that burglary â it will end up in a stack. Theyâll work it nine to five and nothing will get done.â
âStill no. Itâs not the job.â
It was the main point of contention in their partnership. They worked the midnight shift, the late show, moving from case to case, called to any scene where a detective was needed to take initial reports or sign off on suicides. But they kept no cases. They wrote up the initial reports and turned the cases over to the appropriate investigative units in the morning. Robbery, sexual assault, burglary, auto theft, and so on down the line. Sometimes Ballard wanted to work a case from beginning to end. But it wasnât the job and Jenkins was never inclined to stray one inch from its definition. He was a nine-to-fiver in a midnight-shift job. He had a sick wife at home and he wanted to get home every morning by the time she woke up. He didnât care about overtime â money- or work-wise.
âCome on, what else are we going to do?â Ballard implored.
âWeâre going to check out the crime scene and see if there really is a crime scene,â Jenkins said. âThen we go back to the barn and write up reports on this and the old ladyâs burglary. If weâre lucky, there will be no more callouts and weâll ride the paperwork till dawn. Letâs go.â
He made a move to leave but Ballard didnât follow. He spun and came back to her.
âWhat?â he demanded.
âWhoever did this is big evil, Jenks,â she said. âYou know that.â
âDonât go down that road again, because Iâm not going with you. Weâve seen this a hundred times before. Some guyâs cruising along, doesnât know the territory, sees a chick on the stroll and pulls over. He makes the deal, takes her into the parking lot, and gets buyerâs remorse when he finds a Dodger dog under the miniskirt. He beats the living shit out of the guy and drives on.â
Ballard was shaking her head before he was finished with his summation of the case.
âNot with those bite marks,â she said. âNot if he had brass knuckles. That shows a plan, shows something deep. She was tied up for a long time. This is big evil out there and I want to keep the case and do something for a change.â
Technically he was the senior partner. He made the call on such things. Back at the station Ballard could appeal to command staff if she wanted to, but this was where the decision had to be made for partnership unity.
âIâm going to swing by the crime scene and then go back to start writing,â Jenkins said. âThe break-in goes to the burglary table, and this â this goes to CAPs. Maybe even homicide, because that kid isnât looking too good in there. End of story.â
Decision made, he again turned toward the doors. He had been so long in the job that he still called the individual crime units tables. Back in the â90s thatâs what they were â desks pushed together to create long tables. The burglary table, the crimes against persons table, and so on.
Ballard was about to follow him out, when she remembered something. She went back to the nurse behind the counter.
âWhere are the victimâs clothes?â she asked.
âWe bagged them,â the nurse said. âHold on.â
Jenkins stayed by the door and looked back at her. Ballard held up a finger, telling him to wait. From a drawer at the station the nurse produced a clear plastic bag with whatever belongings were found with the victim. It wasnât much. Some cheap jewelry and sequined clothing. There was a small mace dispenser on a key chain with two keys. No wallet, no cash, no phone. She handed the bag to Ballard.
Ballard gave the nurse a business card and asked to have the doctor call her. She then joined her partner and they were walking through the automatic doors to the sally port when her phone buzzed. She checked the screen. It was the watch commander, Lieutenant Munroe.
âL-T.â
âBallard, you and Jenkins still at Hollywood Pres?â
She noted the urgent tone in his voice. Something was happening. She stopped walking and signaled Jenkins closer.
âJust leaving. Why?â
âPut it on speaker.â
She did.
âOkay, go ahead,â she said.
âWeâve got four on the floor in a club on Sunset,â Munroe said. âSome guy in a booth started shooting the people he was with. An RA is heading your way with a fifth victim that at last report was circling the drain. Ballard, I want you to stay there and see what you can get. Jenkins, Iâm sending Smitty and his boot back to grab you. RHD will no doubt be taking this over but they will need some time to mobilize. Iâve got patrol securing the scene, setting up a command post, and trying to hold witnesses, but most of them scattered when the bullets started flying.â
âWhatâs the location?â Jenkins said.
âThe Dancers over by the Hollywood Athletic Club,â Munroe said. âYou know it?â
âRoger that,â Ballard said.
âGood. Then, Jenkins, get over there. Ballard, you come as soon as you finish up with the fifth victim.â
âL-T, we need to set up a crime scene on this assault case,â Ballard said. âWe sent Smitty and â â
âNot tonight,â Munroe said. âThe Dancers is an all-hands investigation. Every forensic team available is going there.â
âSo we just let this crime scene go?â Ballard asked.
âTurn it over to day shift, Ballard, and let them worry about it tomorrow,â Munroe said. âI need to go now. You have your assignments.â
Munroe hung up without another word. Jenkins gave Ballard a told-you-so look about the crime scene. And as if on cue, the sound of an approaching siren flared in the night. Ballard knew the difference between the siren from a rescue ambulance and from a cop car. This was Smitty and Taylor coming back for Jenkins.
âIâll see you over there,â Jenkins said.
âRight,â Ballard said.
The siren died as the patrol SUV came down the chute to the sally port. Jenkins squeezed into the back and it took off, leaving Ballard standing there with the plastic bag in her hand.
She could now hear the distant sound of a second siren heading her way. An ambulance bringing the fifth victim. Ballard looked back in through the glass doors and noted the time on the ER clock. It was 1:17 a.m. and her shift was barely two hours old.
ISBN: 9780316439923
ISBN-10: 0316439924
Series: Detective Renee Ballard
Published: 18th July 2017
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number of Pages: 544
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: LITTLE BROWN & CO
Country of Publication: US
Edition Number: 1
Edition Type: Large type / large print
Dimensions (cm): 24.77 x 15.88 x 4.45
Weight (kg): 0.73
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Regional postcodes: | $9.99 | $14.95 |
Rural postcodes: | $9.99 | $14.95 |
How to return your order
At Booktopia, we offer hassle-free returns in accordance with our returns policy. If you wish to return an item, please get in touch with Booktopia Customer Care.
Additional postage charges may be applicable.
Defective items
If there is a problem with any of the items received for your order then the Booktopia Customer Care team is ready to assist you.
For more info please visit our Help Centre.