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"That was a police decision, sir. Not mine."

"All right, all right. I'm not going to split hairs with you on that. But what I am concerned about, and the reason I called you directly, is one of my reporters here told me that you're planning on using some kind of fancy legal strategy to go to the grand jury and get my boy behind bars again."

"I can't comment on that, sir. Grand jury proceedings are confidential."

"So you're not going to confirm to me that you're planning on taking a case to the grand jury and yanking Ro back into jail?"

"I'm neither going to confirm or deny it. I'm not going to comment."

"Well, you'll understand if that makes me feel just a little bit as if you're going to go ahead and do it."

"It's no comment, sir. Either way. I can't undermine the foundation of how the grand jury works."

"My reporter had it on very good authority," Curtlee said.

"Well, whoever told her has a big mouth. You want to tell me who that was?"

"Even if I did know, and I don't, I couldn't reveal my reporter's source. You know that."

"Well, then," Farrell said, "I guess we've both got our secrets."

A silence hung on the line. Then: "I want to make something very clear to you, Farrell. You and I had a deal about my son not going back to jail…"

"Not saying we did, sir, but if we did, that was before he started killing people."

"Oh, make some sense, Farrell. You believe that?"

"The evidence inclines that way."

"Fuck. There's no evidence or Glitsky would have his ass in chains already. So don't give me evidence. So here's what I'm saying to you. I don't want this grand jury thing to move forward. It would be a bad thing for you personally if it did."

"Are you threatening me, Cliff? 'Cause we've done some very recent research into the legal penalties for making threats to officers of the court."

"Now you're threatening me. All I'm saying is you'll be happier if this grand jury thing stops right now. Assuming it's going on, of course. And if it's not, then there's nothing either of us has to worry about." Eztli and Ro were stationed at the bar at MoMo's, a popular eatery where they'd just had lunch across the street from where the Giants played ball. Eztli didn't drink much, but here in the early afternoon Ro had already put away four shots of Jack Daniel's and a couple of draft beers along with sharing two joints of Eztli's very good marijuana. Still, the younger man seemed little the worse for wear.

Ro was chatting up one of the cocktail waitresses named Tiffany, a fresh-faced, young, tawny-haired woman with a terrific smile and an aggressive bosom. "No, it's absolutely true," he was saying. "I was away for nine years."

"No way." She looked past him at Eztli. "Is this the truth?"

"Yes, ma'am," he said. "And finally released on appeal."

"Oh my God," she said. "I mean, it's cool and all that they finally let you out, but nine years! How could you have stood that?"

"I just kept telling everybody who'd listen that I was innocent," Ro said. "I guess I just never lost faith that this is maybe the one country in the world where if you're truly not guilty, you can finally get to some kind of justice. Sometimes it takes a while, but I've got to believe that the system really does work."

Tiffany touched the back of his hand, resting there on the bar, with a well-lacquered perfect fingernail. "Well, you are way more together around it than I think I could ever be. If it were me, all I'd think about was how much of my life I'd lost. I'd be just so incredibly bitter, I think."

"That's one way I could be, I suppose, but really, think about what a waste that would be. I mean, look at me now, sitting in a terrific restaurant in the world's greatest city, young and healthy, having a conversation with a beautiful woman…"

"Oh, now…"

Ro held up his good hand. "It ain't braggin' if it's the truth, dear. I hope I'm not being too forward, just stating an obvious fact. And my real point is I don't want to spend one day of my life looking back in regret. All that other stuff is behind me. I'd rather be looking forward with hope. And life is so good right now, my goal is to work like the devil to keep it that way forever. Are you allowed to drink if you're still on your shift? Can I buy you one?"

She tossed her hair and favored him with a megawatt smile. "I'm sorry, I can't." Again, she brushed the back of his hand with her fingers. "Back in a second," she said, "I've got to run, check my tables."

After she'd moved off, Ro turned to Eztli. "You were right. I thought if I mentioned prison, she'd run like the wind."

He shrugged. "Some do. Most don't. Depends on how you play it."

"If things work out from here," Ro said, "I'll just get a cab home from her place. Or stay there and catch up with you tomorrow."

"Cool. Whatever." The cell phone chirped at his belt and Eztli picked it up, read the screen, and said, "Your dad." "He's living with a woman named Sam Duncan," Cliff said. "She runs the Rape Crisis Counseling Center out on Haight Street."

"You've got to be kidding me," Eztli said. "Given everything, that is just too perfect."

"I know it is. You couldn't have made it up any better. But it doesn't really matter what she does. The point is that Sheila has talked to some of her sources at the Hall of Justice and she tells me that Farrell's going ahead with some more legal shenanigans, now with the grand jury, that he thinks will wind up getting Ro back in jail and without any possibility of bail."

"How many times can they keep putting us through this?"

"Evidently as often as they want."

"So how would you like me to handle it?"

"Well, the idea is that we want to get the message to Farrell, but we don't want anything that he can point to as even a remote personal threat, the way Glitsky did. The way they're all charged up down there at the Hall, Sheila says, one of them stubs their toe, they're going to try to connect it to Ro and get him back downtown. I think what we've got to do is make Farrell see that it's in his best interest to just back the fuck off, give up on the grand jury nonsense, use his brain."

"And you think this woman is how we get to him?"

"I don't think we want to have her be hurt, Ez. I don't think that would accomplish anything, other than get 'em all more rabid down there. But I'm thinking, maybe some damage at the place she works, nothing serious, but so that Farrell can't help but get the message. I'll leave it to your discretion."

"And what's the time frame?"

"Whatever's comfortable for you. Do what you do, get your plan together. Next couple or three days, maybe, but it's flexible." Glitsky was talking to Bob Grassilli in Missing Persons. Outside Bob's window, the day had grown blustery again, and inside the small office the whistle of the wind reverberated with an insistent regularity. Grassilli was a career desk cop in his midforties, balding, and a good forty pounds over his ideal fighting trim. He smiled easily under his reddish brush of a mustache.

"I don't even know if this is where I'd look, Abe. Eight or nine years is a pretty cold trail. You've tried all the usual databases, I'm assuming."

Glitsky nodded. "Driver's license, Social, immigration, you name it. I've been on it for a couple of hours already. So now I'm thinking what if she got married and changed her name?"

"She'd still have her same driver's license number. And passport, I'm assuming. You say she's legal?"

"She came up from Guatemala on a work visa. That was still in effect when she went into witness protection. Afterward, I don't know."

"Did she become a citizen?"

"Again. Don't know."

"Well, if she did, there'll be a record of that someplace. Which of course is worthless if she later changed her name. But did you ever think maybe she just went back home? She's a crime victim here, right? Maybe she just doesn't want to be here anymore."