The Overlook - Michael Connelly [26]
“What was said?”
“I don’t know. It was just what woke me up.”
“How far were you from the overlook?”
“I don’t know. Like fifty meters, I think. I was pretty far away.”
“What was said after you were awake and could hear?”
“Nothing. They stopped.”
“All right, then what did you see when you woke up?”
“I saw three cars parked by the clearing. One was a Porsche and the other two were bigger. I don’t know the kind but they were sort of the same.”
“Did you see the men on the overlook?”
“No, I didn’t see anybody. It was too dark out there. But then I heard a voice again and it was coming from over there. In the dark. It was like a yell. Right at the moment I looked, there were two quick flashes and shots. Like muffled shots. I could see somebody in the clearing on his knees. You know, in the flash of light. But it was so quick that was all I saw.”
Bosch nodded.
“This is good, Jesse. You’re doing good. Let’s just go over this part again so we have it right. You were asleep and then voices woke you up and you looked out and saw the three cars. Do I have that right?”
“Yes.”
“Okay, good. Then you heard a voice again and you looked toward the overlook. Just then the shots were fired. Is all of that right?”
“Right.”
Bosch nodded. But he knew that Mitford might be simply telling Bosch what he wanted to hear. He had to test the kid to make sure that wasn’t happening.
“Now, you said that in the flash from the gun you saw the victim drop to his knees, is that right?”
“No, not exactly.”
“Then tell me exactly what you saw.”
“I think he was on his knees already. It was so fast I wouldn’t have seen him drop to his knees like you said. I think he was already kneeling.”
Bosch nodded. Mitford had passed the first test.
“Okay, good point. Now let’s talk about what you heard. You said you heard somebody yell right before the shots, right?”
“Right.”
“Okay, what did that person yell?”
The young man thought for a moment and then shook his head.
“I’m not sure.”
“Okay, that’s all right. We don’t want to say anything we’re not sure about. Let’s try an exercise and see if that helps. Close your eyes.”
“What?”
“Just close your eyes,” Bosch said. “Think about what you saw. Try to bring up the visual memory and the audio will follow. You are looking at the three cars and then a voice pulls your attention toward the overlook. What did the voice say?”
Bosch spoke calmly and soothingly. Mitford followed his instructions and closed his eyes. Bosch waited.
“I’m not sure,” the young man finally said. “I can’t get it all. I think he was saying something about Allah and then he shot the guy.”
Bosch held perfectly still for a moment before responding.
“Allah? You mean the Arabic word Allah?”
“I’m not sure. I think so.”
“What else did you hear?”
“Nothing else. The shots cut it off, you know? He started yelling about Allah and then the shots drowned the rest out.”
“You mean like Allah Akbar, is that what he yelled?”
“I don’t know. I just heard the Allah part.”
“Could you tell if he had an accent?”
“An accent? I couldn’t tell. I only heard the one thing.”
“British? Arabic?”
“I really couldn’t tell. I was too far away and I only heard the one word.”
Bosch thought about this for a few moments. He remembered what he had read about the cockpit recordings from the 9/11 attacks. The terrorists called out Allah Akbar—“God is greatest”—at the last moment. Did one of Stanley Kent’s killers do the same?
Again, he knew he had to be careful and thorough. Much of the investigation could hinge on the one word Mitford thought he had heard from the overlook.
“Jesse, what did Detective Ferras tell you about this case before he put you in this room?”
The witness shrugged.
“He didn’t tell me anything, really.”
“He didn’t tell you what we think we’re looking at here or what direction the case may be going?”
“No, none of that.”
Bosch looked at him for a few moments.
“Okay, Jesse,” he finally said. “What happened next?”
“After the shots somebody ran from the clearing to the cars. There was a streetlight out there and I saw him. He