It is sad that a great cat like detective Jimmy Robertson had to go through Schmucks as thesis. The black ice smuggling ring, coordinated by the manager of Asesal Branch Hector Zorillo and enabled by the department of the Sheriff of Lancaster, strives as a wet combat in the dark once Bosch receives the fall of Garrity. Anyone that is not good, it is better to check the shadows of your home. Because Bosch, the silent samurai, will be waiting for you there.
It was Garrity whose phone call attracted Jimmy to the Taco truck, and it was Zorillo who pressed the trigger. And once Bosch puts the Armer, “Balls on your court now,” he tells Chandler and his officers while delivering Garrity in custody, it’s just a matter of time for the latter. The look that gives the day and its people indicates how to “believe it when I see it” feels Bosch about his ability to prosecute. But at least he ate his work to expose the Zorillo-Garrity connection answered by Jimmy’s death. With this episode of its second level or Bosch: LegacyIt’s time to start finishing things, anyway. And Bosch has a larger murder fish in the form of Finar to fry.
It’s fun when Maddie arrives at her father’s house for a visit, just to find a cheerful band or assault consultants. She takes Gurbizs and Mo talking to Harry, the map of Topo from Northern Mexico Espina on the table, the nearby burn telephone pile and tactical gears scattered. Just although he knows what he means, this is how justice looks in one way or another, he has to ask. But although Bosch, already in another way, does not respond to his daughter, he doesn’t lie either. He is fulfilling his promise to Siobhan Murphy, and will aim to do the same for Maddie. But not vocalizing the results, it can also retain some denial.
While Bosch and Gurbizs take a private plane to Tecatar, just on the other side of the border, and are found in the dusty airfield with a mo on the ground, Maddie is trying to handle the consequences of her that she puts to the family. Vásquez is in a bad mood and quiet, mainly because her sister and mother blame her in some way by Albert’s turn to a crime life. “I gave him a chance, and the song on my face,” Queen tells them, but they stay bitter. And very soon Maddie is breaking a Bar Vásquez’s fight began with an aggressive rande, just to burn her frustrations.
In Tecate, Finbar has a plan to load its cash flow in a local singing casino before escaping further south in Mexico. But the boiling look of determination that he saw in the eyes of Bosch took the assailants to the hills on his hole, and they observe him while loading his stolen car with survival equipment. “Display it directly,” Gurbizs asks Harry while waiting. “Is this killing or capturing?” Because the former Silver Wolf’s special companion, he also knows that boiling aspect. He knows where he usually drives. And where it usually does. But this time, even with an innocent murderer like McShane, Maddie could have Goths with his father. “We bring it back. I want to look her in the eye when we get home.”
Bosch does not need the shadows of a corrupt policeman to fall. He and Gurbizs are wrapped on Finbar Heavy, but a blow makes the trick and are on the airfield for extraction and, presumably, another prison to Chandler. But in the middle of the hard earth of a Tecate Sidetrack, while an McShane does not boast of killing children, justice in one way or another has their own ideas. Gurbizs made his own promise to Maddie, that he would bring his father back to her. And he understands and respects that his old friend gave him his word. But nothing in any of those prayers says it is to the same rules. And Gurbizs executes McShane while Bosch looks severely.
Anti -annual? Maybe a little. The meaning was always that Bosch would get his man, again, in one way or another. It’s just that the other was a bit different. And it’s not how to finish, that shit, it didn’t work. But back in Los Angeles, and like Bosch: Legacy He anticipates its end, the way it was developed acquires greater meaning. Harry called Siobhan and told him the news. She didn’t ask how she got off. I didn’t need to do it. The definitive closure was the justice that asked Harry, and that was delivered. But that is when Maddie approaches the house that the things of Fingbar assume their greatest resonance. “Not by my hand,” he said simply. And that was a sufficient statement to close the case for both.
In his retirement, although he is still arranged and can take the measures he considers necessary, Harry Bosch has finally shown part of the reinvestment that Maddie has always preached. And yet, she also learned some of this. Doing the right thing for her partner, certainly, supporting her, even while Vásquez processes the entire Albert matter. But also about what is needed to not only live in gray, but survive there. It is a challenge. But it is better than dying in the dark.
Johnny loftus (@Johnnyloftus.bsky.social) is a Chicago -based writer. A veteran of the weekly alternative trenches, his work has also appeared in Entertainment Weekly, Pitchfork, All Music Guide and The Village Voice.