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Porzolkiewski folded his hands behind his head, and then stared down.

“What a sweetheart. What she ever saw in me… There is an expression I remember from when I was a boy in Poland. Milo?s?c spada znienacka. Love comes unexpected, and that’s how she came to me.”

He dropped his hands to the table and looked up again. “I don’t get it. Why are you here?”

“I went by your shop and talked to your night clerk.”

“Suzanne.”

“Suzanne. She said she filled in for you for an afternoon three days before Charlie Palmer died.”

“Why’d you believe her, when you wouldn’t believe me?”

“She showed me the delivery receipts she signed. Some of them were time-stamped by the food service companies.”

“I told you I didn’t do it.”

Gage held his palms up at Porzolkiewski.

“I’m not ready to go that far,” Gage said. “Once you knew the layout of Charlie’s house, it would’ve been easy to sneak back in.”

“But I didn’t sneak back in. I didn’t. There was no need to. The guy was a wreck. He fell apart the moment he saw me.”

“You mean he was terrified, thinking you were going to finish him off.”

“That’s not what-” Porzolkiewski caught himself. “I’m not talking about that. It has nothing to do with why I’m in here.”

“So what happened when you went into Charlie’s bedroom?”

“He acted like he knew I’d be coming. Maybe he heard the physical therapist talking to me. It was weird. The therapist looked at me like he knew who I was.”

Porzolkiewski paused, then shook away the thought.

“Who knows? Anyway, Charlie tries to say something, but gets all choked up, sort of gagging. I thought he was going to suffocate himself. The therapist came running in and propped him up to get him through it. He said I should leave, so I did.”

Porzolkiewski patted his thigh. “I even had Meyer’s wallet in my pocket. I was going to give it to him or trade it to him. But then I forgot about it until I got home that night.”

“What about the ten thousand dollars you told me you got for the wallet?”

“It wasn’t for the wallet. It was for not telling the media about what I found inside. Do the math. Meyer plus condom plus Tenderloin equals some really bad press, for him and his brother both.”

“Who gave you the money?”

“I don’t know his name. He had a Texas accent. Looked like that country singer, the one who always wears the pastel shirts and pressed Levi’s. The guy who sang ‘I Hate Everything.’ I love that song. It’s practically my anthem.”

“George Strait?”

“Yeah, except younger and darker hair. And doesn’t smile.”

“What did you tell him about the wallet?”

“I said I threw it in the bay.”

“Where’s the money he gave you?”

“In the bank. I divided it up into six thousand dollars and four thousand dollars and deposited it. I didn’t want the bank reporting a suspicious transaction to the feds. Ten grand in cash all at once.”

“It was a suspicious transaction.”

Porzolkiewski smiled. “But I didn’t want them to know it.”

Gage took a September calendar out of the folder. “Here’s the test question. Did you go back to Charlie’s house?”

“You going to walk out?”

“That’s up to you.”

“Yeah, I went back. The night before he died.”

“You passed the test. The police neighborhood canvass turned up a neighbor who described your Corona right down to the missing hubcaps. A wreck like that in a neighborhood like Russian Hill is practically probable cause.”

“But I didn’t go inside the house.” Porzolkiewski raised his right hand. “I swear. I didn’t go in.”

“I know that, too. The neighbor was watching you the whole time, cell phone already with 911 punched in, thumb poised to press send, just waiting for you to get out of the car. Until I talked to Jeffrey Stark-”

Gage felt the conflict between Stark’s story and Porzolkiewski’s, but wasn’t ready to challenge him and maybe provoke him into marching out again. There were things Gage needed to find out, even before he confronted Stark again.

“Who’s Jeffrey Stark?”

“The physical therapist. I thought you’d driven over to see if Charlie was still alive.”

“No. I wanted to go yell at him, make him confess. Looking pathetic isn’t a confession, but…”

Porzolkiewski’s voice faded and he pursed his lips.

“But what?”

“But then I saw his wife through the living room window. Is she Mexican or something?”

“Half.”

“Anyway, I saw her sitting by herself, just staring. Made me think of my wife. It kind of took the wind out of me.” Porzolkiewski shook his head. “I regretted it later, after he was dead. I figured I missed my chance to force him to tell the truth. I was still pissed off when you came by the house the first time.”

Gage removed photocopies of a list of names, some in English and some in Arabic, and numbers on a scrap of paper and of both sides of a credit card, then slid them across the table.

“Why didn’t you give me copies of these?” Gage asked. “They were found in Meyer’s wallet when the police searched your house.

Porzolkiewski glanced at the pages.

“I figured I’d keep something for leverage if I needed it,” Porzolkiewski said. “All these names and numbers must mean something. And the credit card didn’t seem right.”

“What didn’t look right?” Gage already knew the answer, but was more interested in how far Porzolkiewski had gotten.

“The expiration date. It was like the way my parents wrote them in Poland. Instead of writing the month, then the day. They did it the other way around. I think they still do it like that in Europe.” Porzolkiewski tapped date on the card. “See? Instead of March 30, it’s 30 March.”

Gage pointed at the list of Arabic names. “You figure out what all these mean?”

“Other than it looking like he was involved with some kind of terrorists?” Porzolkiewski cocked his head toward Gage. “They make any sense to you?”

“No. But I’ll find out.” Gage changed the subject. “What are you going to do in court tomorrow?”

“It depends on whether you’re getting me out of here.”

“I’m a long way from that. You’ve lied to me too many times. You still could’ve done it or hired someone else. And you were in the Delta at the right time to poison Karopian.”

Porzolkiewski’s face flushed and he pushed himself to his feet.

“Not that again.” Gage shook his head and pointed at the chair. “Sit.”

Porzolkiewski glared at Gage, then dropped back down.

“It’s going to take some time,” Gage said.

“How much time?”

“I don’t know.”

“Maybe my next phone call should be to the San Francisco Chronicle.”

“What are you going to say? TIMCO, the San Francisco Police Department, a respected lawyer, and a federal judge conspired to frame you for murdering two people who you hated for covering up the unproven cause of an explosion that killed your son fourteen years ago? And combine that with your recent trip to the psych ward-”

“What do you want me to do? Just sit on my hands?”

“Exactly.”

“What do I say in court?”

“Tell the judge you need a couple of weeks to hire a lawyer. He’ll be so thrilled you’re finally talking, he’ll give it to you.”

“Should I get one?”

“You guilty?”

“No. I’m not guilty.”

“Then don’t waste the money.”

“It won’t cost me anything.”

“How do you figure?”

Porzolkiewski smirked. “A bunch of those media-hungry cable TV lawyers contacted Suzanne at the store. Any of them will represent me for free just to keep their faces on television. They’re excited as hell. They all think I’m a serial murderer.”

“Instead of what?”

Porzolkiewski paused for a moment, then shrugged and sighed.

“I guess that’s up to you.”

Chapter 55

It’s the White House calling,” Landon Meyer’s secretary announced over the intercom.