With
Harry retired Mickey immediately asks Harry to work for him on the defence of a
former gang member, Da’Quan Foster, who is now an artist and teacher. He has
been charged with brutally raping and murdering Lexi Parks, a city manager,
whose husband is a Sheriff’s deputy.
The
trial is six weeks away and Mickey needs a skilled investigator. His regular
investigator, Cisco, has been injured in a motorcycle accident and cannot work
with Mickey.
Harry
tells Mickey he already has a retirement project – restoring a 1950 Harley motorcycle.
While Harry genuinely wants to restore the motorcycle no one believes it is enough to
occupy him.
Mickey
tells Harry that Foster is innocent. Considering the evidence includes the DNA
of the accused (semen found in and on the victim) Harry is skeptical. Through
his career he has heard the guilty protesting innocence. Yet Foster is now a
well-regarded artist, conducts art programs for children and has a wife and two
young children. There is a stirring in Harry that all is not right.
At
the same time Harry struggles with the concept of going to work for a defence
lawyer. He knows that he will be ostracized by former colleagues if does
defence work. As a police officer Harry felt contempt for officers who worked
for accused after leaving the force.
With
his customary enthusiasm Mickey assures Harry that if he does not believe
Foster did not commit the crime he need not continue to work for the defence.
It is a shrewd assurance. Harry does not want to work to create reasonable
doubt. He will only work a case for the defence to find the real murderer
thereby clearing the client.
Mickey
arranges for Harry to have access to the murder book of the investigating officers.
With his customary thoroughness Harry reviews the book. He is impressed that
the officers have done more then assemble the evidence that implicates Foster. They have
carefully reviewed facts and individuals around the victim and not found
evidence that would suggest a different killer.
Harry
is uneasy that the investigators are unable to find a crossing between Foster
and Parks. The nature of the murder strongly suggests it was a planned killing.
It was not a random act of violence.
Harry
explains to Mickey the importance of the crossing:
“Motive and
opportunity. They’ve got DNA that puts your man in that house and at that crime
scene. But how did he get there? Why did he get there? This woman led a fairly
public life. City Hall hearings, council meetings, public events, and so on.
According to the records, they looked at hundreds of hours of video and they
don’t have one single frame that has both Lexi Parks and Da’Quann Foster in it.”
After
poring over the book Harry is led to wonder about a couple of issues. He asks
to meet Foster and his interrogation skills provide a lead.
Mickey
is not at the interview as he has been arrested on an alleged driving while
under the influence charge. It is false but Mickey spends a night in jail and
receives considerable media attention on his release. Being Mickey, who lives
by the principle that all publicity is good publicity, he walks out the front
door and gladly faces the assembled crowd of microphones.
At
home Harry is trying to appreciate the final days Maddie will be with him
before she graduates from high school. It is a time of gleeful anticipation for
Maddie and dread for Harry that all parents who have had children graduate from
high school will appreciate. Maddie will soon be in university and Harry can
see the emptiness ahead.
In
a nice touch of connectedness Maddie will be rooming with Hayley, Mickey’s
daughter, at Chapman University in Orange County.
Connelly
weaves another excellent murder mystery. My only regret is that he is staying
with the approach of one dimensional bad guys. Excellent would become great
with at least some complexity to the killers. This reservation does not
diminish my love for Connelly’s books. I eagerly await this year’s new book. I
hope it will see Harry and Mickey together again. They are a formidable team.
****
A book I'm very much looking forward to, Bill!
ReplyDeleteJose Ignacio: Thanks for the comment. I look forward to your review.
DeleteThey are, indeed, a formidable team, Bill. And this does sound like an excellent addition to the series. It's always great to see Harry Bosch in action, too; I'm really looking forward to reading this one.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. Give yourself some reading time. You are going to want to keep reading.
DeleteI am so far behind with this series I don't think I will ever catch up... but I enjoyed the review.
ReplyDeleteMoira: Thanks for the comment. I have read 21 of Connelly's books in the last 17 years. He is a steady writer of brilliance.
DeleteWell, I'll certainly move up The Crossing on my TBR list. It sounds very good.
ReplyDeleteI've read several Harry Bosch books, liked most but stopped reading The Burning Room, too much police procedural, not enough character development.
I've read all of the Mickey Haller books, and so I'll read this one, which has the added ingredient of Harry Bosch. It should be a good one.
Kathy D.: Thanks for the comment. The Crossing is one of the best Connelly mysteries in recent years.
DeleteYour post sent me to the library website to put this book on reserve. It will be a wait; lots of other people ahead of me.
ReplyDeleteA good legal mystery is always fun for me, between my having worked in a civil liberties law office and having started reading and watching Perry Mason as a teenager.
I do suggest Pleasantville by Attica Locke.
Also, a British writer's blog suggests The Plea by
Steve Cavanaugh.
Kathy D.: Thanks for the further comment. I think you could tell some good legal stories from your work experience.
DeleteI recall you recommending Pleasantville in past comments. I shall keep an eye out for it in bookstores.