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‘The Trial’ Chapters 9-12


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Illustration by Anson Chan

CHAPTER 9

 

THE KING LOOKED AS common as dirt in his orange jumpsuit and chrome-plated bracelets. But he wasn’t ordinary at all. I thought through my opening approach. I could play up to him, try to get on his side and beguile him with sympathy, a well-tested and successful interview technique. Or I could go badass.

In the end I pitched right down the center.

I looked him in the eyes and said, “Hello again, Mr. Sierra. The ID in your wallet says that you’re Geraldo Rivera.”

He smirked.

“That’s cute. What’s your real name?”

He smirked again.

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“Okay if I call you Jorge Sierra? Facial recognition software says that’s who you are.”

“It’s your party, Officer.”

“That’s Sergeant. Since it’s my party, Mr. Sierra it is. How about we do this the easiest and best way. You answer some questions for me so we can all call it a night. You’re tired. I’m tired. But the internet is crackling. FBI wants you, and so do the Mexican authorities, who are already working on extradition papers. They are salivating.”

“Everyone loves me.”

I put the driver’s licenses of Lucille Stone and Cameron Whittaker on the table.

“What were your relationships to these two women?”

“They both look good to me, but I never saw either one of them before.”

“Before tonight, you mean? We have a witness who saw you kill these women.”

“Don’t know them, never saw them.”

I opened a folder and took out the 81⁄2 x 11 photo of Lucille Stone lying across the bar. “She took four slugs to the chest, three more to the face.”

“How do you say? Tragic.”

“She was your lady friend, right?”

“I have a wife. I don’t have lady friends.”

“Elena Sierra. I hear she lives here in San Francisco with your two children.”

No answer.

“And this woman,” I said, taking out the print of the photo I’d taken of the blond-haired woman lying on the bar floor.

“Cameron Whittaker. I counted three or four bullet holes in her, but could be more.”

His face was expressionless. “A complete stranger to me.”

“Uh-huh. Our witness tells us that these two, your girlfriend and Ms. Whittaker, were very into each other. Kissing and the like.”

Kingfisher scoffed. He truly looked amused. “I’m sorry I didn’t see them. I might have enjoyed to watch. Anyway, they have nothing to do with me.”

I pulled out CSI’s photos of the two dead shooters. “These men. Could you identify them for us? They both have two sets of gang tats but have fake IDs on them. We’d like to notify their families.”

No answer, but if Kingfisher gave a flip about them, you couldn’t tell. I doubted a lie detector could tell.

As for me, my heart was still racing. I was aware of the men behind the glass, and I knew that if I screwed up this interrogation, I would let us all down.

I looked at Richie. He moved his chair a couple of inches back from the table, signaling me that he didn’t want to insert himself into the conversation.

I tried a Richie-like tack.

“See it through my eyes, Mr. Sierra. You have blood spatter on your shirt. Spray, actually. The kind a person would expel onto you if she took a shot to the lung and you were standing right next to her. Your hands tested positive for gunpowder. There were a hundred witnesses. We’ve got three guns and a large number of slugs at our forensics lab, and they’re all going to tell the same story. Any ADA drawn at random could get an indictment in less time than it takes for the judge to say ‘No bail.’”

The little bird with the long beak smiled. I smiled back, then I said, “If you help us, Mr. Sierra, we’ll tell the DA you’ve been cooperative. Maybe we can work it so you spend your time in the supermax prison of your choice. Currently, although it could change in the near future, capital punishment is illegal in California. You can’t be extradited to Mexico until you’ve served your sentence here. Good chance that will never happen, you understand? But you will get to live.”

“I need to use the phone,” Kingfisher said.

I saw the brick wall directly up ahead. I ignored the request for a phone and kept talking.

“Or we don’t fight the extradition warrant. You take the prison shuttle down to Mexico City and let the federales talk to you about many mass murders. Though, frankly, I don’t see you surviving long enough in Mexico to even get to trial.”

“You didn’t hear me?” our prisoner asked. “I want to call my lawyer.”

Richie and I stood up and opened the door for the two jail guards, who came in and took him back to his cell.

Back in the viewing room Conklin said, “You did everything possible, Linds.”

The other men uttered versions of “Too bad” and left me alone with Conklin, Jacobi, Brady, and young Mr. Schein.

I said, “He’s not going to confess. We’ve got nothing. To state the obvious, people are afraid of him, so we have no witnesses. We don’t know if he’s the killer, or even if he is the King.”

“Find out,” said Brady. He had a slight southern drawl, so it came out “Fahnd out.”

We all got the message.

Meeting over.

 

CHAPTER 10

 

IT WAS JUST AFTER 8:00 P.M. when I walked into the apartment where Julie and I live. It’s on Lake Street, not too far from the park.

Mrs. Rose, Julie’s nanny, was snoozing on the big leather sofa, and our HDTV was on mute. Martha, my border collie and dear old friend, jumped to her feet and charged at me, woofing and leaping, overcome with joy.

Mrs. Rose swung her feet to the floor, and Julie let out a wail from her little room.

There was no place like home.

I spent a good hour cuddling with my little girl, chowing down on Gloria Rose’s famous three-protein meat loaf, downing a couple of glasses of Pinot Noir, and giving Martha a back rub.

Once the place was tidy, the baby was asleep, and Mrs. Rose had left for the night, I opened my computer and e-mail.

First up, Charlie Clapper’s ballistics report.

“Three guns recovered, all snubbies,” he wrote, meaning short-barreled .38 Saturday night specials. “Bullets used were soft lead. Squashed to putty, every one of them, no striations. Fingerprints on the guns and shells match the two dead men and the man you booked, identity uncertain. Tats on the dead men are the usual prison-ink variety, with death heads and so forth, and they have both the Los Toros bull insignia and lettering saying Mala Sangre. Photos on file.”

Charlie’s report went on.

“Blood on the clothing of the dead men and your suspect is a match to the blood of the victims positively identified as Cameron Whittaker, white, twenty-five, grade-school substitute teacher, and Lucille Stone, white, twenty-eight. ID says she was VP of marketing at Solar Juice, a software firm in the city of Sunnyvale.

“That’s all I’ve got, Lindsay. Sorry I don’t have better news. Chas.”

I phoned Richie, and Cindy picked up.

My reporter friend was a cross between an adorable, girly journalist and a pit bull, so she said, “I want to work on this Kingfisher story, Linds. Tell Rich it’s okay for him to share with me.”

I snorted a laugh, then said, “May I speak with him?”

“Will you? Share?”

“Not yet. We’ll see.”

“Fine,” Cindy huffed. “Thanks.”

Richie got on the phone.

He said, “I’ve got something that could lead to motive.”

“Tell me.”

“I spoke with the girlfriend’s mother. She says Lucy was seeing Sierra but broke it off with him about a month ago. Right after that Lucy believed that Sierra was dead. I mean, we all did, right?”

“Correct.”

“According to Lucy Stone’s mother, Sierra went to Lucy’s apartment yesterday and Lucy wouldn’t let him in. Mrs. Stone said her daughter called her and told her that Sierra was angry and threatening. Apparently, Lucy was afraid.”

“He could have staked her out. Followed her to the Vault.”

“Probably, yeah. I asked Mrs. Stone if she could ID Sierra. And she said—”

“Let me guess. ‘No.’ ”

“Bingo. However…”

“Don’t tease me, Richie.”

He laughed. “Here ya go. Mrs. Stone said that the King’s wife, Elena Sierra, has been living under the name Maura Steele. I got her number and address on Nob Hill.”

A lead. An actual lead.

I told Richie he was the greatest. He laughed again. Must be nice to have such a sunny disposition.

After hanging up, I checked the locks on the door and windows, double-checked the alarm, looked in on my darling Julie, and put my gun on my night table.

I whistled for Martha.

She bounded into the bedroom and onto the bed.

“Night-night, sweet Martha.”

I turned off the light and tried to sleep.

 

 

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Illustration by Anson Chan

CHAPTER 11

 

WE MET IN THE SQUAD'S break room the next morning: Conklin, Brady, ADA Schein, and me.

Schein was thirty-six, married, and a father of two. He reported directly to DA Len “Red Dog” Parisi, and he’d been pitching no-hitters since he took the job, sending the accused to jail every time he took the mound. Putting Kingfisher away would be Schein’s ticket to a five-star law firm if he wanted it. He was suited up for the next big thing even now, close shaved and natty in this shabby setting, and he was all business. I liked it. I liked him.

Schein said, “Summarizing what we have: A 911 tape of a male with a Spanish accent reporting that he’s seen Kingfisher at the Vault, and we presume that that’s the man we arrested. The tipster said he was a kitchen worker but could have been anyone. He called from a burner phone, and this witness hasn’t stepped forward.”

Conklin and I nodded. Schein went on.

“We have a witness who saw the run-up to the shooting but didn’t see the actual event.”

I said, “We’ve got blood on the suspect’s shirt.”

“Good. But a juror is going to ask if he could have gotten that blood spray if he was near the victim but he didn’t fire the weapon.”

Schein shrugged. “What can I say. Yeah. Bottom line, twenty-four hours from now we get a ‘proceed to prosecution’ from the grand jury, or our suspect goes out of our hands and into the lap of a higher or different jurisdiction.”

“Spell out exactly what you need,” said Brady. He was making a list with a red grease pencil on a lined yellow pad.

“We need legally sufficient evidence and probable cause,” said Schein. “And I can be persuasive up to a point.”

“We have to positively ID our man as Jorge Sierra?”

“That’s the price of admission. Without that, no hearing.”

“Additionally,” said Brady, “we get a witness to the shooting or to Sierra’s intent to kill.”

“That would nail it.”

When the coffee containers and doughnut box were in the trash and we were alone at last, Rich said, “Cindy should run it in the Chron online.”

“Like, ‘SFPD needs info from anyone who was at the Vault on Wednesday night and saw the shooting’?”

“Yep,” said Rich. “It’s worked before.”

 

CHAPTER 12

 

RICH WENT BACK TO the crime scene for another look, and I called the former Mrs. Jorge Sierra, now Ms. Maura Steele. She didn’t answer the phone, so I signed out a squad car and drove to her address in Nob Hill.

I badged the doorman and asked him to ring up to Ms. Sierra-a.k.a.-Steele’s apartment.

He said, “You just missed her.”

“This is important police business,” I said. “Where can I find her?”

“She went to the gym. She usually gets back at around ten o’clock.”

It was quarter to. I took a seat in a wingback chair with a view of the street through two-story-tall plate-glass windows and saw the black limo stop at the curb. A liveried driver got out, went around to the sidewalk side of the car, and opened the rear door.

A very attractive woman in her late twenties or early thirties got out and headed toward the lobby doors while she went for the keys in her bag.

Ms. Steele was slim and fine boned, with short, dark, curly hair. She wore a smart shearling coat over her red tracksuit. I shot a look at the doorman and he nodded. When she came through the door, I introduced myself and showed her my badge.

“Police? What’s this about?”

“Jorge Sierra,” I said.

She drew back. Fear flickered in her eyes, and her face tightened.

She said, “I don’t know anyone by that name.”

“Please, Ms. Steele. Don’t make me take you to the station for questioning. I just need you to ID a photograph.”

The doorman was fiddling with papers at the front desk, trying to look as though he wasn’t paying attention. He looked like Matt Damon but didn’t have Damon’s talent.

“Come upstairs with me,” Ms. Steele said to me.

I followed her into the elevator, which opened directly into her sumptuous apartment. It was almost blindingly luxurious, with its Persian carpets, expensive furnishings, and what looked to me like good art against a backdrop of the Golden Gate Bridge and San Francisco Bay.

I’d looked her up before getting into the car. Ms. Steele didn’t have a job now and had no listing under Sierra or Steele on LinkedIn, Facebook, or Who’s Who in Business. Odds were, she was living on the spoils of her marriage to one of the richest men west of the Rockies.

Steele didn’t ask me to sit down.

“I want to be absolutely clear,” she said. “If you quote me or depose me or in any way try to put me on the record, I will deny everything. I’m still married. I can’t testify.”

I took the mug shot out of my pocket and held it up for her to see. “Is this Jorge Sierra?” I asked. “Known as Kingfisher?”

She began nodding like a bobblehead on crack. I can’t say I didn’t understand her terror. I’d felt something like it myself.

I said, “Thank you.”

I asked follow-up questions as she walked with me back toward the elevator door. Had her husband been in touch with her? When was the last time she’d spoken with him? Any idea why he would have killed two women in a nightclub?

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She stopped moving and answered only the last question.

“Because he is crazy. Because he is mental when it comes to women. I tried to leave him and make a run for the US border, but when he caught me, he did this.”

She lifted her top so that her torso was exposed. There was a large scar on her body, about fifteen inches wide by ten inches long, shirring her skin from under her breasts to her navel. It looked like a burn made by a white-hot iron in the shape of a particular bird with a prominent beak. A kingfisher.

“He wanted any man I ever met to know that I belonged to him. Don’t forget your promise. And don’t let him go. If he gets out, call me. Okay?”

“Deal,” I said. “That’s a deal.”

NEXT: Chapters 13-16

 

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