area. Being the head of Special Prosecutions obviously had its perks. Being the heir apparent to the top job did as well.
O’Shea welcomed them from behind his desk, standing up to shake hands. He was about forty and handsome with jet-black hair. He was short, as Bosch already knew, even though he had never met him before. He had noticed while catching some of the TV coverage of the Waits prelim that most of the reporters who gathered around O’Shea in the hallway outside the courtroom were taller than the man they pointed their microphones at. Personally, Bosch liked short prosecutors. They were always trying to make up for something and usually it was the defendant who ended up paying the price.
Everybody took seats, O’Shea behind his desk, Bosch and Rider in chairs facing him, and Olivas to the right side of the desk in a chair positioned in front of a stack of RICK O’SHEA ALL THE WAY posters leaning against the wall.
“Thank you for coming in, Detectives,” O’Shea said. “Let’s start by clearing the air a little bit. Freddy tells me you two got off to a rough start.”
He was looking at Bosch as he spoke.
“I don’t have any problem with Freddy,” Bosch said. “I don’t even know Freddy enough to call him Freddy.”
“I should tell you that any reluctance on his part to fill you in on what we have here came directly from me because of the sensitive nature of what we are doing. So if you are angry, be angry with me.”
“I’m not angry,” Bosch said. “I’m happy. Ask my partner—this is me when I’m happy.”
Rider nodded.
“He’s happy,” she said. “Definitely happy.”
“Okay, then,” O’Shea said. “Everybody’s happy. So let’s get down to business.”
O’Shea reached over and put his hand above a thick accordion file placed on the right side of his desk. It was open and Bosch saw that it contained several individual files with blue tabs on them. Bosch was too far away to read them—especially without putting on the glasses he had recently begun carrying with him.
“Are you familiar with the Raynard Waits prosecution?” O’Shea asked.
Bosch and Rider nodded.
“It would have been kind of hard to miss,” Bosch said.
O’Shea nodded and offered a slight smile.
“Yes, we have pushed it out in front of the cameras. The guy’s a butcher. A very evil man. We’ve said from the start that we are going for the death penalty on it.”
“From what I’ve heard and seen, he’s a poster boy for it,” Rider said encouragingly.
O’Shea nodded somberly.
“That’s one reason why you are here. Before I explain what we have going, let me ask you to tell me about your investigation of the Marie Gesto case. Freddy said you’ve had the file out of Archives three times in the past year. Is there something active?”
Bosch cleared his throat after deciding to give first and then receive.
“You could say I’ve had the case for thirteen years. I caught it back in ’ninety-three, when she went missing.”
“But nothing ever came of it?”
Bosch shook his head.
“We had no body. All we ever found was her car and that was not enough. We never made anybody for it.”
“Not even a suspect?”
“We looked at a lot of people, one in particular. But we couldn’t make the connections and so nobody rose to the level of active suspect. Then I retired in ’oh-two and it went into Archives. A couple years go by and things don’t work out the way I thought they would in retirement and I come back on the job. That was last year.”
Bosch didn’t think it was necessary to tell O’Shea that he had copied the Gesto file and taken it with him, along with several other open cases, when he left his badge behind and walked out the door in 2002. Copying the files had been an infraction of department regs, and the fewer people who knew that the better.
“In the last year I pulled the Gesto file every time I had a little time to work it,” he continued. “But there’s no