Hardy turned it over.
The light was right and the painting leapt out at him through the grain of the plywood: the boat by the wharf with the small boy fishing with a broken pole from the flying bridge. ‘What is this?’ he asked.
Graham shrugged. He was holding another box, waiting for Hardy to put the painting into the trunk and resume loading. ‘One of Sal’s.’
‘Your dad painted this?’
Graham put his box down and came over, looking at the painting. ‘He was pretty good, wasn’t he?’
Hardy thought so. But more, he was interested in the background. ‘Where was this?’
‘His berth at the Wharf. When he still had the Signing Bonus – that’s his boat, there. You can still make out the name. See?’
‘What’s this, then?’ Hardy was pointing at the burned-out building in the background.
‘The old Grotto. Right after it burned down.’
‘Is that when he lost his boat? Did it get caught in the fire or something?’
‘No. I think he sold it for parts a long time later. It just wore out.’
‘But it looks worn out here, in this picture. Which would have been at the same time.’
A gust of wind came up, nearly pulling the board out of Hardy’s hands. Graham was shaking his head, placing something. ‘No,’ he said, ‘I know he painted it after the fire. We were in the Manor. He did it out in the garage.’ He stared at it for another beat. ‘He always loved that painting.’
‘And obviously it was hanging in his apartment?’
A nod. ‘Over the couch.’ Hardy was still mesmerized. ‘What?’ Graham asked.
‘It’s just a powerful image.’
Graham agreed. ‘Sal was pretty good. Maybe I’ll hang it in my place. You want to grab that last box?’
The evidence lockup was in the bowels of the Hall, a huge room that smelled like an old library where people would occasionally change their oil. With its gray-green paint and interior cyclone fence, its bare-bulb lighting and cacophonous resonance, it had all of the building’s usual institutional charm and then some.
Sarah was waiting by the sign-out counter. Out of force of habit Hardy had brought along his lawyer’s briefcase and leaned over to place it at his feet. When he looked up, he was initially shocked by the casual kiss of greeting that she and Graham gave each other. Then he realized that the duty officer down here probably wouldn’t recognize Graham anyway, and even if he did, why would he care? Graham was a free citizen again – he could kiss a cop if he wanted to.
It only took a couple of minutes. There was some paperwork that Sarah, as arresting inspector of record, had to sign.
‘So where’s Marcel?’ Hardy asked.
Sarah gave him the bad eye. ‘I took the afternoon off,’ she said, which answered his question. The ostracism over her involvement with a murder suspect was, he suspected, just beginning. In the week after the trial the story about her and Graham had hit the press with a fury.
Hardy didn’t think anyone here today wanted to pursue it, so he turned back to the counter. There were three cardboard boxes: two filled with the miscellaneous papers from Sal’s apartment, and the third, the smallest one, with the contents of the safe, carefully labeled S. Russo. #97-0101254, Safe. Evans/Lainer, Homicide in indelible black marker.
Graham opened this last one first and peered inside, then looked up and nodded, a shaky smile in place.
‘Still there?’ Sarah asked.
‘Most of it, at least.’
Sarah spoke to Hardy. ‘I told him it wouldn’t get stolen out of evidence. He didn’t believe me.’
‘She has a trusting heart,’ Graham said.
‘Lucky for you.’ Hardy pulled back the flaps and started laying the money out on the counter – stacks of hundred-dollar bills. ‘But it couldn’t hurt to check before we leave.’
Under the bulging eyes of the duty officer, who asked if they had arranged for a guard out of the building, Hardy took out the tightly wrapped bundles, ten of them.
Next he reached back in and pulled out a shoe box, blew the dust off, opened it. The baseball cards didn’t even fill it; newspaper was stuffed in at the end and on the sides to keep them from shaking around. Hardy reached in again and picked up the second shoe box and Graham put his hand in and rummaged around.
‘How about if we put the money back in?’ Sarah asked.
Hardy nodded. ‘How about if we put everything back in? It’s all here. Take it somewhere safe.’
‘That’s our plan,’ Graham said. He lifted out the old belt and dropped one end to let it hang, then put it around his waist. ‘You think I could find somebody to put a new buckle on this thing?’
Obviously, Graham was thinking of a memento of his father, although perhaps this belt wasn’t his most stylish option; it was of unfinished black leather, heavy and thick. Graham held it around his waist. ‘Little big for me, though.’ He sucked in his washboard stomach. He smiled, turned to Hardy. ‘It might fit you. You want to try it?’
Hardy iced him a smile. ‘I’d respond appropriately except that there’s a woman present.’
In the back lot they loaded the boxes into the backseat of Graham’s BMW, the trunk having been filled at the storage place. With Sarah as armed escort Graham planned to get himself a new safety deposit box ASAP, then they’d take the rest of the stuff to his place up on Edgewood and decide what they’d do from there.
Graham had asked if he wanted a lift back uptown, but Hardy wanted to call his Joan Singleterry connection again. He had not told Graham about the call; no sense in getting his hopes up if it was a dead end.
The Beemer was idling and Graham and Sarah were ready to go. Hardy couldn’t stop himself from asking, ‘What have you found out about the cards?’
‘I’m checking out the trade shows. It looks like they’re going to bring in forty or fifty.’
‘And you’re splitting that with George and Debra too?’
Graham gave him a shrug. ‘Without Singleterry, I’m afraid, it’s their money. What can I do?’
Sarah leaned over from the passenger side. ‘He’s even thinking of declaring his softball earnings.’
Hardy deadpanned. ‘Whoa! Don’t get all carried away on me now.’
‘I’ve reformed.’ Graham was dead serious. ‘I’m reporting every cent of income I make for the rest of my life. I’m going back and filing amended returns. I am never ever under any circumstances spending one more night in jail.’
Hardy nodded. ‘Here’s a perfect example of the beauty of our criminal system. You go to jail for a few months, you come out a better person.’
Back at his office he punched in the number again, and this time it picked up on the second ring.
‘Hello, Jeanne Walsh?’
‘Yes.’ A young woman’s voice. The crying of a baby in the background.
‘You called me in response to an advertisement in the newspaper?’
‘That’s right, I did. What’s this about? Do I get the reward? I could seriously use a reward.’
‘It’s possible,’ he temporized. ‘Actually, though, we were trying to find Joan Singleterry herself. Do you know her?’
‘Of course. That’s why I called. Joan Singleterry was my mother.’ The past tense sprang up at Hardy, immediately amplified. ‘She died about four years ago.’
‘Would you mind answering some questions about her?’
‘No. I don’t mind at all. Can I ask who I’m talking to, though?’
Hardy apologized. ‘My name is Dismas Hardy. I’m a lawyer in San Francisco.’
‘San Francisco? That’s a long way away.’
‘Where are you?’
‘Eureka.’
Hardy had been doodling on his legal pad. Now he decided to take a couple of notes. Eureka was an old lumber port, the county seat of Humboldt County, California, three hundred miles up the coast.