"Like what? You used to be better-looking?"
"You used to be cleverer. Tell me something else."
"All right. What?"
"Andrea told me Mrs. Manion said it all came down that Monday afternoon after the judge called her to set up the meeting at his house. So my question is this: How do you hire somebody to kill two people on no notice? Like, 'Oh, by the way, Mr. Shiu, after you pick up the laundry, would you mind dropping by Judge Palmer's house and shooting him and his girlfriend?' I don't see how that happens."
Juhle held up a finger. "Aha! This is cool. I haven't told you about this?"
"I guess not."
"She'd felt him out before. Ward gave this to us. Evidently they'd had a problem at the house last year, some whack job deciding they owed him money or at least they needed to give him a bunch because they had so much of it. Anyway, he came onto the property here in the city a couple of times, and as you yourself have seen, their security can be pretty persuasive."
"At least."
Juhle nodded. "So they busted him and sent him on his way, but he showed up again, so they busted him again, and then again. The guy seemed basically harmless, but he was turning into a real nuisance. So one time when Ward's gone, out traveling again, the guy comes up while Carol's pulling out of the driveway, taking Todd to school. And he kind of goes off on the kid. Why does he deserve everything he's got? And so on. But evidently it got personal and pretty threatening, and Carol decided she wanted him taken care of."
"Tell me Shiu killed him."
"Can't do it, because he didn't. But what he did do was beat the living shit out of the guy and leave him in a Dumpster downtown. Out of uniform, random homeless beating, right? No record of any of it, of course, but Ward noticed the guy wasn't around anymore when he got home, and asked Carol about it. And she told him. So after Ward got over the worst of the shock last month, he remembered it and told us."
"She pay him?"
"Ten grand. Ward himself paid it out as a Christmas bonus. But the bottom line is it worked. The guy never came back."
"I can't blame him. That kind of rudeness, I don't think I would have, either."
Their waiter arrived with the food, and for a few minutes, they chowed into the succulent shellfish-garlic, cream, wine, parsley. Killer.
After a few minutes of bliss, Hunt took a break from the food. "So how's Todd?"
"Hanging in there, I guess. He's with Ward and his nanny."
"And how old's Ward?"
"I don't know. Seventy? Seventy-one?"
"Christ. The poor kid."
"The poor rich kid, Wyatt. I wouldn't lose any sleep over him. He'll be well taken care of, don't worry."
Hunt put down his fork. "Not to sound too sensitive or anything, Dev, but he won't be loved, and that's kind of the main thing, you know?"
Juhle was picking the meat out of the mussels, using one of his earlier shells. He popped his latest morsel and chewed for a moment. "Yeah, but so few of us are," he said, "present company excluded, of course." After a minute, he shrugged. "He'll get over it, Wyatt. Most people do."
"Except the ones who don't."
Juhle considered, swallowed, drank some club soda. "Right," he said, "except for them."
Wes Farrell's T-shirt read, THIS IS WHAT A FEMINIST LOOKS LIKE. His girlfriend Sam Duncan wore one saying, ANGER MANAGEMENT CLASSES PISS ME OFF. Neither was wearing theirs under work garb but right out loud and proud of it. It was that kind of day-yet another rare warm one, a Saturday in late July.
And it was that kind of party at Hunt's warehouse.
The celebration was over the announcement that Devin Juhle had been named San Francisco Police Officer of the Year. He'd had his formal dinner with the police brass, his family, and a roomful of his fellow lawmen at Gino & Carlo's in North Beach last weekend, but this party was different.
Hunt had a barbecue going in the alley out the back door and a pony keg of Gordon Biersch on ice in the kitchen sink. The garage door to the front of the place was all the way up. The warehouse itself had been rocking for over an hour now with everything from the Beatles and Rolling Stones to Tom Petty, Toby Keith, Jimmy Buffett, Ray Charles. Juhle and his two boys, Eric and Brendan, were playing basketball on the inside court with Mickey, Jason, and Craig. The people Hunt worked with every day as well as the other ex officio Hunt Club members-Sam, Wes, Jason, and Amy-were all in attendance, as well as Juhle's wife, Connie, of course, and their daughter, Alexa.
Hunt was turning sausages and flipping burgers as Connie-pert and pretty in a yellow sundress-sidled up to him. "So where's the famous Andrea Parisi?" she asked. "I thought I was finally going to get to meet her in person."
"I don't know. To tell you the truth I thought she'd be here by now. She's probably just running late with work."
"On a Saturday?"
Hunt smiled, shook his head. "I don't know if you realized, Con, but lawyers don't differentiate between days of the week. They just work all the time. Saturday, Tuesday night, four in the morning, you name it, they're working." He gestured back inside. "Even Wes, Amy, Jason, those guys in there. They're working right now, I guarantee it."
"I'm glad I didn't decide to do that."
"Me, too. But Andrea did."
Connie hesitated. "And you like her? She likes you?"
"Well, I saved her life after all, so she's kind of obligated to be at least nice to me. But, hey, here you go. You can ask her yourself."
Andrea Parisi, accompanied by Richard Tombo, appeared at the head of the alley. In espadrilles, culottes, and a sleeveless tangerine T-shirt, she looked impossibly desirable even from a distance. As they got closer, Hunt realized that even close-up she showed little if any of the effects of her eighty hours without food or fluids. Her hair gleamed in the sun; her face had regained its color.
Connie turned back to Hunt, gave him an approving nod. "Okay, then," she said.
They made the introductions, then Hunt went inside and brought out a beer in a plastic cup for Tombo and a glass of white wine for Andrea. They made small talk, while Hunt attended to the grill. The first round was about ready, and Connie went inside to make the announcement to the rest of the guests.
Hunt moved some of the food around and smiled at the latest arrivals. "Burger, sausage, tri-tip, potato salad, and condiments inside. We've got it all. What are you both having?"
Tombo, as if on cue, said, "I'm having a bathroom run. Back in a flash."
Leaving Andrea alone with him, wearing a look he couldn't read. "Still time for rare if you decide quick," he said. But then, at her pained expression, he stopped fiddling at the grill. "Are you all right?" he asked.
"Fine," she said. She sipped some of her wine. "When you're done serving here, though, can we talk for a minute?"
"Sure."
"This is a little awkward," she said.
He'd delivered his platter of food inside and now was back out in the alley with her, halfway down to the street, away from his back door and his friends.
"I can handle awkward. What's up?"
"Well." She took a breath. "The truth is, Wyatt, I've got an offer."
"Offers are good."
"Sometimes they are. This is one of those times." Speaking more quickly now, wanting to get it all out in a hurry, she went on, "You know how everything was, I mean with the Trial TV people, before I got…before I disappeared? I mean, Spencer wasn't going to be able to help me. It wasn't going to happen."
"Right."
"Well, this is…I mean, you couldn't plan something like this, but when I was gone, missing…you know this, I kind of became a story."
"No 'kind of' about it. You were hot."
"I was hot," she admitted with a rueful look. "And then when it turned out I'd been kidnapped and then getting rescued the way I did…the way that you did, I mean…all of that, you know. Then all the interviews and stories."