'The secretary might.'

'Right. And she was?'

'It'll be in his admin records. While we're looking in the files anyway. Then you just track her, or him, down. Hopefully still in town, probably with another firm. Or-here's a possible shortcut-maybe the daughter knew.'

'That's worth checking. I'll ask her.' Bracco paused. 'Can I ask you one?'

'Sure.'

'Last time we talked at your office, you didn't seem too enthusiastic about the odds of getting anything out of all this. Now you're calling me before I'm in at work. Did something happen I might want to know about?'

Hardy took a beat. 'That's a fair question. The answer is yeah, although it's all still pretty nebulous. I'm working on the appeal for one of Bowen's cases that was hanging fire when he disappeared. Evan Scholler. Some of the witnesses I'm hoping to talk to might have developed a motive to kill Bowen.'

'You're shitting me.'

'It's a long way from established, but it's something I'm looking at. I talked to Glitsky about it over the weekend.'

'What does he say?'

'What does Abe usually say?'

'Not much.'

'That's what he said this time too. But I'm thinking if you can find some independent confirmation looking into Hanna's last days, maybe that she had tried to contact these same people-'

'What are their names?'

'It's a family. The Khalils.' Hardy spelled it for him. 'The father and mother were killed about four years ago in Redwood City, and everybody thought my guy Scholler had done it. Now, maybe not.'

'So these Khalils killed their own parents?'

'No, but they might have killed the guy Scholler got sent up for. If you're keeping score, his name was Ron Nolan. Anyway, I've got my investigator looking into this too. So, yeah, I'd say it's heating up, but it might all fizzle and go away.'

'I should talk to these people too. The Khalils.'

'Well.' Hardy temporized. 'First we've got to find out exactly who we're talking about, and at this point, we don't have any idea. It's a big family. And you're already well along on Hanna's last hours. If you get something solid there, you're ahead of me and then you've really got something to talk to these people about. Meanwhile, I keep scratching. And call you if I get anything real.'

'With respect, sir. If Charlie Bowen's a murder, it's police work.'

'I couldn't agree more, Inspector. I'm just trying to find grounds that'll fly for my appeal. But Hanna Bowen's murder, if it was that, is police work too. And it's way fresher.'

Bracco paused a little longer this time. 'We ought to stay in touch.'

'That's my plan. If you notice, I made this phone call, for example. I've got no desire to work your case, Inspector. Really. I just want to get my client out of jail.'

Bracco let out a little laugh. 'God, that just sounds so wrong. My clients, all I want to do is put 'em in jail.'

At lunchtime, Hardy was down the Peninsula again. Though he might have been able to get the information from his client, Everett Washburn also knew Tara Wheatley's address and phone number and even where she worked. He'd left a message, identifying himself as Evan's attorney, and she'd called right back on her break and agreed to meet him in front of her school at a quarter to noon.

As soon as he saw her, as she walked out of the building and got close to where he'd parked, Hardy understood a lot better what all the fuss had been about. He'd just read a book called Silent Joe by one of his favorite authors, T. Jefferson Parker, where one of the underlying concepts was the idea of the woman who possessed what one of the characters called 'the Unknown Thing'-an attractive force so powerful that it altered the orbit of every man it encountered. It wasn't mere physical beauty or sexuality, though they both were part of it. It was something bigger, more inclusive, subtler, and far more dangerous.

Whatever the Unknown Thing was, Tara Wheatley had it in spades.

When she got to the passenger door, she stopped and beamed a smile down at Hardy that, at another time in his life, would have melted him. She wore sunglasses against the bright day. Her hair was down. The plain pale- orange cotton dress she wore revealed nothing-it came to below her knees-and yet stirred something that, to his old bones, felt primal.

'What is it about guys and convertibles?' she asked. 'I'm assuming you're Mr. Hardy.'

'That's me.'

Hardy started to reach over the seat, but she opened the door on her own-bare tanned legs and sandals-and plopped herself in. Hardy had the rogue thought that it was lucky she was teaching fifth-graders-any further into adolescence and her boy students would probably riot.

'Where to?' Hardy put the car in gear, got moving. 'Can I buy you lunch someplace?'

She shook her head. 'I've only got one period off for lunch-forty-five minutes. Just away from here, anywhere. Wherever you find shade.'

Out of the parking lot, he turned right and crested a hill, following the main road until it dipped into an area where the homes were surrounded with old oaks.

'You can turn anywhere in here,' she said.

Hardy did as he was told, and parked at the curb on a shady street in an established neighborhood of large attractive homes set on small lots. As soon as he'd set the brake and turned the motor off, she turned toward him in her seat, her near leg tucked up under her. 'Sorry to hustle you out of the lot back there,' she said, 'but people don't need to see me talking to another man outside the school. I'm already pretty much the fallen woman. I almost lost the job over it back during the trial.'

'Over what? Having a boyfriend?'

'Having two boyfriends, Mr. Hardy. Not exactly at the same time, but close enough for some people.'

'Who?'

'Suburban moms, Mr. Hardy. Never underestimate the power. Some of them really never liked me. I think I must have threatened them somehow, though I don't know how or why that would be.' Hardy had a pretty good idea, but he said nothing. 'Anyway, thank God the nuns supported me. I love the work. I love my kids. But you didn't drive down here to talk about me. What can I do for you? Is everything all right with Evan?'

This had been her first question to him on the phone this morning, too, as soon as she'd heard who he was. But this time the question prompted an unexpected one from him. 'Have you not seen him recently?'

Clearly, the answer made her uncomfortable. 'Two weeks.'

'That's not so bad.'

She shrugged. 'It's not good. Not if he's the man you love, and he is. But he's already been in prison for two years, and in jail another year before the trial.' She lowered her head, shook it slowly back and forth, let out a deep sigh. 'It's a hard one, the whole thing.'

'I can imagine.'

'I mean,' she went on, 'if he stays in prison. I don't know what we're supposed to do. He won't marry me. I've offered that a hundred times. I think he's starting to lose hope. I don't know what he wants out of me anymore. Sometimes I'm not even sure what I want. I know I wanted him-I do want him-but I wanted a life with him. You know? Not this.' Suddenly her eyes flashed. 'But I'm not giving up on us. I'm not. Don't think that. It's just…it's so hard. It's so endless.'

'I believe you,' Hardy said.

She raised her eyes and looked over at Hardy. 'Do you think you're going to have any luck? Do you think he's ever going to get out?'

'To be completely honest with you, I don't know. I don't want to give you any false hopes, but I'm starting to think we might have a prayer.'

'Is that what was so urgent?'

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