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Kate nodded. “Yeah.” She walked back to the Subaru and pulled her own cell phone from her day pack. Jim’s jaw dropped about six inches. She ignored him and called Brendan McCord.

She dropped Jim at the state courthouse. He sat in the car for a moment. “Two people, connected to the case you’re working on, both dead within a day of each other,” he said.

“I know,” she said a little grimly. “I’m glad I didn’t bring Johnny in with me.”

“Kate,” he said, and caught her chin in one hand and pulled her face around so she had to look at him. “It occurs to me that you could be in some danger.”

She let a slow smile spread across her face, and instead of pulling away like any normal Kate Shugak would have done, she leaned into his grip and purred, her lips touching his as they moved. “Were you thinking I’d need my very own personal bodyguard?”

“Ah shit,” he said, and kissed her hard. “Take care of yourself, damn it.” He opened the door and something-he didn’t know what-stopped him half in and half out of the car. Over his shoulder he said gruffly, “I should be out of here before five. You want to meet somewhere for dinner?”

She spent two hours going back over the case file, reexamining the record of the chain of events, the eyewitness testimony, the physical evidence. She reread the trial transcript, resetting her internal bullshit monitor up a notch to filter out all the extraneous information that was a part of every criminal trial (e.g., Q: “Where were you at 8:00 P.M. the evening of the twelfth, Miss Doe?” A: “Well, I was having dinner with my friends right after work-you know Sally is going through a really rough time with her boyfriend and Margie said we should show our support by giving her a good time-and boy I can tell you the margaritas at La Mex are the way to go, and anyway I didn’t get home until 7:00 p.m. and my mother called the minute I walked in the door, and she and Dad are thinking about retiring to Flagstaff next year and they wanted to know what I thought of the area and how often I could get down there, and when she finally hung up, Carrie-that’s my dog, named for the girl on Sex and the City, you know?-anyway Carrie really had to go, so I took her for a walk, and then I ran into Paul, the hunk who lives two doors down, and we were talking, and gosh, ”Kate could just imagine the adorable giggle‘-I guess I was talking to Paul about then. We kind of, you know, hit it off?“).

Unfortunately, none of the facts had changed since the last time Kate had visited them. Victoria was the one who had called in the fire, and, according to the statements of the firefighters, she was found sitting outside the burning house, crying and clutching fifteen-year-old Charlotte. Cowell had dabbled with the notion that the older, deceased brother, William, had set the fire to try to kill Oliver, the younger brother, motive determined to be an unnamed schoolgirl they were both in love with, which sounded like such a ludicrous stretch that even the judge had made fun of him. Of course, Cowell had also, in the best tradition of defense attorneys, speculated on the motives of everyone involved, up to and including the firefighters.

Only Victoria had any motive that could be supported by evidence however circumstantial. And only Victoria had not spoken in her own defense.

Why not?

“What?” Victoria said. “You’re afraid you won’t be paid?”

Kate looked at the proud chin, which was trembling a little now, and forbore to answer in kind. “I’m so sorry,” she said again.

Victoria was sitting in her usual fashion, straight-backed, head up, fixing Kate with a fierce, fearless eye. Kate felt that same reluctant admiration that she had before, but she needed answers and she needed them now. “I’ve been doing some research, Ms. Muravieff. Thirty-two years ago, your father laid off over a thousand Bannister employees and replaced them with contract hires. A company isn’t required to pay the same benefits to a contract employee as a union employee-health benefits, a retirement plan, workman’s comp, things like that. What’s more, he did it in the middle of the construction of the TransAlaska Pipeline, the biggest cost-plus contract in the history of this planet, when union members had the pipeline consortium by the short hairs and twisted them to their heart’s content. Teamsters rioted at Isabel Pass when they were refused steak for lunch, seven-ninety-eighters refused to share living space with other unions, and electricians walked thirty at a time when the plumbers got Sundays off with pay and they didn’t. Average union wage with overtime was something like twelve hundred dollars a week, back when twelve hundred dollars a week was real money. They were pretty much sitting up and begging to be slapped down, and your father was the first one to do so. He was hailed as a hero by every corporate owner in the state, and his action was a snowball that started a landslide, leading to the beginning of privatization of state services.”

Kate paused. Victoria’s breath was coming a little faster, but her expression was graven in stone. “You were quoted in the press as being adamantly opposed to that action. You marched with the employees. There are pictures of you holding a sign that read ‘People Before Profits.” You excoriated your father in the newspapers, on radio and television, all over the state. You even made it to the Washington state papers, and I found at least one op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal. They hammered you, but consider the source.“

Jolted out of her grief, Victoria said involuntarily, “You’ve done your homework.”

“It’s what I do,” Kate said, who was still nauseated from yet another dose of microfiche. “Did your action against your father have something to do with the fire at your home and the death of your son?”

“No,” Victoria said. She sounded very calm, a little too calm.

“He was probably at that fund-raiser you and Charlotte went to that evening. He probably knew you would be there. Maybe he didn’t mean to kill anyone. Maybe it was just supposed to be a warning to you, to shut you up, to stop you organizing the peons, so he could continue to rip off the average Alaskan Joe in the best tradition of robber barons since J. P. Morgan. It’s not like it’s a new story in American history, after all. At least your father spent what he ripped off right here in the state, instead of retiring Outside to spend it all in Palm Springs.”

“No,” Victoria said, refusing the carrot. She wouldn’t implicate her father even if it meant exonerating herself.

Kate tried very hard not to lose her temper. For one thing, it wasn’t fair. Kate could walk away, Victoria couldn’t. For another, it was usually unproductive of anything except fear in her target. Although Victoria did not look noticeably fearful. “Look, Ms. Muravieff,” Kate said tightly, “it’s obvious that the death of your daughter Tuesday night is connected in some way to the death of your son William thirty-one years ago.”

“I don’t see why,” Victoria said with flinty composure.

“Come now,” Kate said a little impatiently. “I show up and start asking questions about a thirty-one-year-old homicide, moreover a closed case, a case for which someone has been convicted and imprisoned, and suddenly people related to the case start dying, including the one who hired me to ask the questions. Seems like, gosh, cause and effect.”

“I don’t know what you want from me,” Victoria said, and waved a hand at her surroundings. “It’s not like I could have seen anything. I don’t get out much, you know.”

“There has been another death,” Kate said, and placed on the table in front of Victoria the head shot O’Leary had given her. “Someone killed him hours before my associate had a chance to ask him any questions, and then tried to kill my associate, as well.”