Chapter 43
TO BE HONEST, my recurring dream was sometimes more real than reality. More focused, more magnified, and usually in high-definition color.
I ran across the broken landscape toward the back ramp of the CH-46. The powerful helicopter was actually the easiest for the Afghans to bring down—their heat-seeking missiles would rather lock on to its engines than the sun. Men screamed in pain, and the crump sound of mortars exploding rang in my ears. I stood at the lip of the ramp, felt horror as I looked inside and saw—
Jesus, I was ripped from the dream, from some kind of closure, by a loud humming noise.
My eyes flashed open, and I saw my cell phone vibrating less than two feet from my face.
I palmed the phone and stared at it, my heart still thudding. The time was 9:35. The caller ID read “R. Del Rio.”
I put the phone to my ear.
“Rick. I overslept. I never do that.”
“That’s all right. I have to tell you something, buddy. You’re not going to like it.”
I swung my legs over the side of the bed. My knees felt shaky, as if I’d really been running over rock and rubble. My mouth tasted like gunpowder.
“Go ahead. I’m listening.”
“It’s about Shelby,” Rick said. “She wasn’t exactly who you thought she was.”
Now I was wide fucking awake. “What does that mean? What did you find out? Let me have it, Rick.”
“She was a hooker,” Del Rio blurted. “More of a high-class party girl. Whatever. And Jack, she went back to work after she married Cushman.”
“That’s crazy. Who said that about Shelby?”
“Jack. Jack, calm down. I wouldn’t lie to you. Cruz and I talked to some credible sources. Get dressed. I’ll be out front of your house in fifteen minutes. We’ve got a witness to interview.”
Ten minutes later, I threw my briefcase into the backseat of one of the fleet cars, a Mercedes S class. Rick was at the wheel. He handed me a container of coffee.
“Shelby was not a hooker. I’m sure she wasn’t. That’s bullshit,” I said.
“You think I’m lying? Why would I lie to you, Jack?”
“I didn’t say that.”
“Buckle up,” he said. “Let’s get to the bottom of this. Let’s find out who murdered her and why they did it.”
Del Rio drove the car through the smog-gray morning up into the hills. The neighborhood got richer as we climbed.
Mansions worth millions were set on lush grounds with staggering views. Del Rio slowed the car and pulled up to the high wrought-iron gates in front of one of the great houses in Beverly Hills.
Since the early 1940s, this mansion on Benedict Canyon Road had been owned by a notorious gossip columnist, an Oscar-winning film director, and a Saudi prince.
Now the sprawling Mediterranean-style villa was masquerading as “the Benedict Spa.”
But I knew, the LAPD knew, and men of means from all over the world knew it too—this cliff-hanging spread was a glorified whorehouse, currently occupied by Glenda Treat, madam to the stars and star makers. The landlord was none other than Ray Noccia.
I heard myself say to Rick, “You’re not telling me that Shelby worked here?”
Rick nodded once.
“Ms. Treat isn’t expecting us,” he said. “We have to ask her about Shelby, let it come from the horse’s mouth. I suggest you turn on that charm thing you do so well.”
“I don’t feel too charming this morning.”
“Just work it,” Del Rio said.