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“Trust me,” Gage said, “she didn’t notice. You should see her office at UC Berkeley. The head of her department tells people it looks less like a professor’s office and more like one of the archeological sites she works at.”

F aith and Gage walked hand-in-hand up the sidewalk to where Gage had parked his car before Viz had driven them and Socorro to the cemetery.

“Viz was right,” Gage said. “She doesn’t have a clue who Charlie really was.”

Faith looked up at him through clear hazel eyes framed by her slim face and auburn hair.

“Do you think it’s willful?” Faith asked.

“Probably not. I suspect there was just an unbridgeable chasm between them.”

Faith glanced back toward the house. “I’m wondering whether she decided at some point in their marriage it was emotionally safer to be oblivious. I got the feeling talking to her that she’s spent the last twenty years hiding inside of her children’s books where lessons were taught by stubbed toes and missing bracelets and grandmothers’ stern looks-”

“And not by a gunshot that cuts a husband down in the street.”

Gage pressed the remote on his key chain and unlocked the car.

“It hasn’t even crossed her mind yet,” Gage said, as he opened Faith’s door, “that there might be a connection between the shooting and the burglary.”

Chapter 7

The big man is pissed,” the caller said, in a voice both sarcastic and frustrated.

“I don’t give a rat’s ass,” the Texan answered. “I did the best I could in the time I had. There was no way I could haul out every damn computer in the place. He had a couple in his office, one in his bedroom, and a server somewhere in the house I couldn’t even find.”

“He wants you to go back in.”

“There’s nothing there.”

“What do you mean, there’s nothing there?”

“Just what I said. A rental van showed up a few hours later. A couple of guys cleaned out the place and took it all to Graham Gage’s office.”

“Damn.”

“I made some calls. Palmer was the brother-in-law of a guy who works for Gage. Got the job through his sister.”

“Go get it. Take somebody with you this time.”

“What? You said he wanted me to do it alone. If he’d let me take somebody in the first place we wouldn’t be in this mess.”

The man laughed. “Let’s say our leader has engaged in a soul-searching reconsideration.”

“What is it about these suits? They think it’s just a little harmless chess game, until something goes sour and they panic like schoolgirls in a high wind, their little dresses flapping up in their faces.”

“What’ll I tell him?”

“Tell him two people, twice as much money-in cash and in advance.”

“Where?”

“Same place.”

“Leave a hundred grand in a paper bag?”

“I’ll be watching. Nobody’s walking away with my money.”

“And keep an eye on Gage. If he gets too far into this thing, we’ll need to do some damage control.”

Chapter 8

Thanks for coming over.”

Gage settled into a wingback chair across from Judge Brandon Meyer in his eighteenth floor chambers in the Federal Building. In the orange glow of the setting September sun, the judge’s angular features and dark eyes made him seem lizardlike as he sat perched behind the expanse of his desk.

Looking past Meyer, Gage spotted a worn paperback on the credenza, its spine shadowed under the day’s legal newspaper. He smiled to himself when he saw that it was Longarm: Frontier Justice, one of a series popular among judges who needed to excite themselves with fictional gunslinging before striding onto the bench, and was handed off from judge to judge as furtively as child pornography or balloons of cocaine.

“How many people do you have over there now?” Meyer asked.

“Twenty, plus support staff.”

Gage watched Meyer adopt a nostalgic expression.

“I remember when it was just you, and Faith helping out with the books. Now you’ve got people working on cases all over the world.”

“And I remember when you were prosecuting petty thefts and DUIs at the Hall of Justice. Now international corporations fight their battles in your courtroom.”

Meyer forced a sigh. “Seems like a generation ago.”

“It was.”

Meyer had been a San Francisco County prosecutor, and then a white-collar defense attorney whose strengths were stealth and strategy, not knowledge of the law, and whose temperament, Gage had recognized from the beginning, would never transition from the mercenary to the judicial. Even a decade later, no one in the Federal Building viewed his appointment to the bench as anything more than his brother’s reward for funneling money to swing-state Republicans.

“Landon appreciated your work on his last campaign,” Meyer said.

“I didn’t work on his campaign.”

Meyer drew back. “He told me he hired you to find a mole on his staff who was sabotaging his computer network.”

“I didn’t work on the campaign. I only made sure he could continue campaigning. There’s a difference.”

Meyer made a weak effort to suppress a smirk, and then said, “A believer in the purity of the process.”

Gage felt a wave of revulsion. Justice depended on that kind of belief and a commitment to act on it, and a judge should respect the process more than anyone-but he knew an argument with Meyer would be futile, so he just said:

“Something like that.”

Meyer shrugged. “I never understood your relationship with my brother. He’d spend fifty-one weeks a year talking policy, but come back from a week fishing with you up at your cabin thinking he was some kind of political philosopher instead of a politician.”

“It was just him trying out some ideas,” Gage said, “not me imposing any on him, and it was also a long time ago.”

“Well, it stuck.” Meyer smirked, again. “You know what he took to read on the flight to the trade meeting in Beijing last month?”

“I’ve hardly talked to him in years, and then only about campaign-”

“Thomas Hobbes and St. Augustine.” Meyer pulled on the edge of the desk to tilt his chair forward, then pushed himself to his feet, his face screwed up in preparation for the snide follow-through. “As though the solution to the debt crisis can be found in the goddamn Leviathan or in the pathetic musings of a sexual compulsive. He would’ve been better off with Calvin and Hobbes instead of Hobbes and Augustine.”

Meyer scowled and scratched the back of his neck as though chagrined at having taken a wrong turn into an intellectual cul-de-sac.

“You want something to drink?” Meyer asked.

“No, thanks.”

“You mind?”

Gage shook his head.

Meyer walked over to the bookcase on the opposite wall, then poured two fingers of Scotch into a highball glass. He took a sip as he returned to his chair.

“Socorro told me you’re wrapping up Charlie’s practice,” Meyer said.

“There’s not much left.”

“Why you?”

“His brother-in-law works for me, Hector McBride.”

“The giant who was with the DEA?”

“Same one. Socorro and Faith were friends as undergrads at Berkeley.”

“I heard McBride turned down a promotion and resigned on the same day.” Meyer smiled. It seemed almost genuine. “Of course, I never understood in the first place how somebody as huge as Mount Rushmore could do undercover work. Why’d he leave?”

“He figured out the drug war was just a succession of losing battles. He joined the army after 9/11 and went off to Afghanistan, then came to work for me.” Gage tilted his head toward Meyer’s courtroom. “I heard you’re done with criminal cases, too.”

Meyer assumed a sympathetic pose. “I never relished sentencing poor Mexican kids to ten or twenty years for trying to feed their families by packing a few kilos of cocaine across the desert, so I grabbed at the chance to get out.”

He completed his lie with a smile so insincere it almost made Gage wince.