The Trial (Women's Murder Club 15.50)
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.
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.”