wouldn't hesitate to accuse them of murder if it would help get his client off. And if they had, or if one of them had, in fact, murdered Ron Nolan…

'Okay, then here's another angle you might want to put in your pipe and smoke,' Hardy said. 'Moses is of the opinion-again, based on nothing, but still, he's not dumb-he thinks that Nolan killed the Khalils because it was his job. They were Iraqi, and he worked for this company that does a lot of business in Iraq. Allstrong Security, which is evidently-'

But Glitsky put a hand on his arm, stopping him. 'Allstrong Security?'

'Yeah, headquartered here and in-'

'I know where they are, Diz. I know who they are.' Unconsciously, he tightened his grip on Hardy's arm. 'Nolan worked for Allstrong? How could I not have heard about that?'

'Maybe because it's a small detail about a trial in another county three years ago. Could that be it? And why would it have mattered, anyway?'

But Glitsky, a muscle working in his jaw, was inside himself, putting something together. He let go of Hardy's arm, staring ahead of himself into the darkness.

'Abe? Talk to me.'

Slowly, he began to spin it out, as though to himself. 'I'd bet my life it's close to the same time frame, something like three years ago, right? But I'll check that.'

'What?'

Still, Glitsky hesitated. 'We had a homicide here in the city of a guy who'd been over in Iraq working for Allstrong. His name, if memory serves, was Arnold Zwick. Somebody snapped his neck in an alley down in the Mish. Left his wallet on him.'

'All right. And this means…'

'No, wait. The same weekend, a day or two later I think, three more guys, all together, all muggers with sheets, turn up dead on the street in the Tenderloin. Two of 'em with their necks broken.'

'Three broken necks?'

'That's what we said. Batiste thought it might be a serial killer starting out, but nothing else happened. No clues, no suspects. Eventually it all just went away.'

'So what was the deal with Allstrong?'

'Nothing, really.' Glitsky still trying to process his memory. 'We never found anything, anyway. The investigation never went anywhere.'

'But?'

'But witnesses told us Zwick seemed to be rolling in cash before he got killed. But we never found any of it, except a couple of hundred in his wallet. Debra Schiff thought he'd embezzled it from Allstrong in Iraq, then split. They were getting paid mostly in cash back then. Her theory was that Allstrong sent somebody back over here to find Zwick, make an example of him, get the money back. But as I say, we never got a lick of proof.'

'And now you're thinking…'

'I'm not thinking anything yet. Except maybe Moses might not be all wrong about Nolan.'

Hardy sat, elbows on his knees, mulling over this new information. 'Let me ask you this, Abe. You've got friends in the FBI, right?'

Glitsky hit a one-note chuckle. 'Local cops like myself don't have what you call bosom buddies in the FBI, Diz. But I know a few guys, yeah.'

'Maybe you could ask them a couple of discreet questions?'

'About this Khalil case?'

Hardy shrugged.

'And what,' Glitsky asked, 'makes you think they'd tell me anything at all about that? Especially if they've kept something about it hidden all this time?'

'Well,' Hardy said, 'I know the two agents who were involved in my case. Maybe you could just put in a good word and see if they'd talk to me.'

'I could do that, sure. Which doesn't guarantee they will.'

'No, I know that. But it might help.'

Glitsky shrugged. 'Couldn't hurt, unless it does. And we'll never know either way, anyway. But I'll put in the word.'

At that moment, the back door opened behind them. Frannie was standing there holding Zachary, with Treya in the hallway behind her.

'What are you guys plotting out here?' Frannie asked.

'Violent overthrow of the government,' Hardy replied. 'It's time we took control and fixed everything.'

'Good idea,' Treya said. 'Maybe Abe could start the revolution with that squeak in our refrigerator door. It's been driving me crazy for weeks.'

When they got home, while Frannie was in the bathroom getting ready for bed, Hardy moseyed on downstairs and picked up the telephone in the kitchen. After three rings, he got the answering machine for the Hunt Club, Wyatt's private investigation agency.

'Wyatt.' His voice a whisper. 'I just wanted to give you a heads-up about the Khalils. You might want to keep a low profile. And if you find out if and when somebody talked to the FBI, go easy from there. Get as much detail as you can, but if you meet any resistance at all, don't make anybody mad at you. Just report back to me. We don't want to raise any flags with them. If you're getting the impression that the risk factor's gone up around this thing, that would be accurate. So be careful. Just treat that as the word of the day-careful.'

When he got back upstairs to the bedroom, Frannie was in her pajamas in the bed. She put her book down. 'Where'd you go off to?'

'Just downstairs, locking up, that's all.'

She gave him a quizzical look. 'Is everything okay?'

'Fine,' Hardy said. 'Everything's fine.'

34

The questions ate away at Hardy for the rest of the weekend, and at seven-thirty Monday morning he called Darrel Bracco on his cell phone from home. The inspector seemed glad to hear from him at such an early hour, and told Hardy that they still hadn't located Hanna Bowen's diary but that yesterday he'd talked to one of Hanna's best friends, a woman named Nora Bonner, and gotten what he called pretty strong corroboration for Jenna's opinion that her mother had not been suicidal. Bonner and Hanna had gone out to dinner two days before she died, and all she'd been able to talk about was what she kept calling her husband's murder.

'Hanna didn't by any chance mention who she thought had killed him?'

'She thought it was something he was working on, but didn't know what. Evidently, he didn't talk about his cases at home.'

'So why did she think it was that?'

'The last couple of days, he told her he thought he was onto something big, that he might actually be doing some real good.'

'But he didn't say what it was?'

'He didn't want to jinx it before he had some answers.'

'So why didn't she, Hanna, tell that to the police earlier? If Charlie was looking into something big-'

'Because nobody was looking at Charlie's case, that's why. It wasn't a homicide, remember?'

'All right,' Hardy said, 'let me ask you this. If Hanna was trying to find what Charlie was doing, how was she investigating it?'

'That's what I'm trying to find out. If it were me, I'd probably have gone to Bowen's secretary. Or maybe he was using a private eye. But the problem is this is all ancient history now. Bowen's gone most of a year. Who's gonna know, or remember?'

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