12
Evan Delaney paused at the foot of the
marble staircase. She wanted to look meek and inconspicuous.
Luckily, in the vaulted echo chamber of San Francisco City Hall,
that wasn’t hard. City Hall looked like the U.S. Capitol, but
gaudier. It had a gilded dome. It flashed a little leg. She backed
against the banister and watched the man in the pin-striped suit
descend the stairs toward her.
The word ambush had a lovely ring to it. It
was full of hope.
The man came down the stairs slowly, his white hair
bouffanting like a televangelist’s. He was surrounded by minions.
He was a mortgage banker who had been testifying before the San
Francisco Board of Supervisors. He had also been a client of the
dead lawyer Phelps Wylie, and he was her last hope for an
interview.
He drew near. She stepped out from the
banister.
“Mr. Higgins, I have some questions about Phelps
Wylie,” she said.
The minions rushed to block her, like a flannel
wall. She persisted, batting them away as if they were Brooks
Brothers moths.
“Mr. Higgins, do you have any comment on your
lawyer’s death?”
He swept past her, down the stairs, into the
cavernous foyer, and out the door.
She followed him to the street. Higgins climbed
into a waiting car and zoomed away. The car disappeared into
traffic, followed by the minion swarm.
Ambush? Strikeout. None of Wylie’s clients wanted
to speak to her. Only a few had even bothered to give her a
no-comment. The rest had deflected her calls. Higgins had been her
final shot.
Maybe it was time to go home. She turned and headed
for the parking garage. She could already hear her credit card,
shrieking in pain. And then her phone beeped.
It was a text message from Jo. She slowed. No—it
was three messages. She opened the first, and stopped.
I found Wylie’s 2nd cell. He was carjacked. Drove
to Sierras under DURESS.
Evan’s lips parted.
Wylie recorded conversation during drive. 2nd
person in car. FORCED HIM.
“Oh my God.”
More to come.
She opened the second message. It included Wylie’s
cell phone number and forwarded his call list. Data
corrupted, Jo warned, and, indeed, Recent Calls turned up as
incomplete phone numbers. But most had the first seven digits,
including area codes.
Jo’s third message included the log-in information
for her voicemail service.
Sent Wylie’s recording to my voice mail. Log in
and listen. Must take cell to Tuolumne sheriffs in Sonora. Will
call when get better signal.
She smiled at her phone. “Oh, Jo. I knew there was
a reason I liked you.”
Pulse racing, she tried to phone Jo back. She got a
recording. The number you are calling is out of range. Please
try again later.
A misty wind gusted. She found a seat on a nearby
bench and, with trepidation, called Jo’s voice mail and logged
in.
She heard Wylie’s voice. “Where are we
going?”
A chill inched up her back. She closed her eyes,
and listened to Wylie’s desperate attempt to save himself and to
leave a trail of evidence behind.
A new voice entered the conversation. “Shut
up.”
It was a creepy reply from across Wylie’s car,
swaddled in engine noise. The hairs on her arms stood up.
“—punishment.”
She couldn’t tell if the voice belonged to a man or
a woman. But its tone, flat and imperative, frightened her.
The recording ended. She opened her eyes, stunned.
Jo had sent her a message in a bottle—from a dead man. Wylie had
tried to tell people what was happening to him, even as he was
being driven into the mountains to his death. He must have feared
what lay up the road. But he kept talking.
She slung her backpack over her shoulder and headed
to a Starbucks across from the Civic Center Plaza. On a legal pad
she cross-referenced the corrupted data from Wylie’s Recent Calls
list. Different portions of each number had been lost, almost like
a glass of milk had spilled across the screen. But she quickly saw
that Wylie had called only a few numbers from the second cell
phone. And he had received calls from only a handful of numbers. By
cross-referencing, in most cases, she could assemble the entire
number.
None of them belonged to Wylie’s clients, friends,
or family.
She went online, pulled up a crisscross directory,
and tried to put names to the numbers she had pieced together. No
luck.
Time to cold-call.
She got out her phone and dialed the first number
on the list. The number rang three times, paused, and rang again
with a new tone, as though the call were being forwarded. A woman
picked up.
“Ragnarok Investments.”
The voice was brusque, sharp. Impatient.
Evan paused. Was Wylie using the second cell
phone for sex or for bad business? “I’m calling about the
charity drive—for Our Lady of Perpetual Sorrow church.”
The Ragnarok woman hung up.
Evan stared at the phone. Now, wasn’t that
interesting.
She turned to her computer and typed
Ragnarok.