âUp late last night?' Carly asked Lang as she scooted into the passenger side of Lang's car.
He nodded. But her face still had the look of inquiry. He smiled.
âA Korean film about some young man who occupied people's homes when they weren't there and had a fetish for golf,' Lang said.
âAn art film?'
âYes. Korean art film. I was in the mood for Korean movies.'
âYou were in the mood for it?' she asked.
âI had kimchee tartar sauce on my fish sandwich.'
âYou are impressionable, then?'
âI must be. And I like themes. I watch
The Godfather
, I want a pizza or linguine, that sort of thing.'
âDid I tell you that Nathan Malone admitted to killing a man?'
âYes.'
âYou're not shocked?'
âNo, I suppose not,' Lang said. âWhy did he kill?'
âPassion, maybe.'
âWell, let's hope he's not in a passionate mood this morning.'
âWhat are we going to ask the dangerous and deadly Mr Malone?' Carly asked.
âAbout Frank Wiley. About the exhibition. Maybe there was a book in the works. Maybe Warfield's book was illustrated. Maybe with Wiley's photographs.'
She nodded. âI thought that too. Not just Malone. Somebody else would have to know what Wiley was up to.'
âA publisher, maybe. If there was a book. A printer and a framer if there was an exhibition,' Lang said. âMalone was OK with me coming along?'
âI think he's interested in the story â or at least what we know of it. He's a writer, his curiosity is involved; he's part of it, his ego is involved.'
âAnd if he didn't do it, he has to begin to worry if there's a pattern and if he fits it.'
Malone answered the door himself. He looked relaxed in slacks and a sweatshirt over a blue, button-down shirt. While his face revealed his true age, his movement was that of a younger man.
He looked at Lang and then at Carly.
Smiling, he said, âAfter the last time you felt you needed a bodyguard?'
âThis is Noah Lang, my partner,' Carly said.
Lang and Malone shook hands.
âMy wife has gone to the market,' he said, âso we have the house to ourselves.' He led them back to his office. âI bared my soul to Ms Paladino when last she was here.' He stopped, turned, looked at Carly. âI'm not sure there's anything left.'
âSince we talked,' Carly said as they continued their walk to his office at the back of the house, âFrank Wiley has been murdered.'
âYes, I heard. But I know nothing of it.'
They arrived. Malone sat in his desk chair, allowing Lang and Carly to take the two upholstered âguest' chairs.
âMaybe you know more than you think you do,' Lang said.
âThat's very kind of you, but as a writer I'm more inclined to know less than I think I do.'
âYou worked with both of them â Warfield and Wiley â on a book,' Carly said.
âI did. The third of a trio,' Malone said. âI'll let you in on a little secret. We didn't sit on the floor in the living room, eat popcorn, and put a book together with scissors and glue. Warfield went off to write his part. I did mine. And Wiley did what he had to do with the photographs. The publisher has people who put these things together. Once we understood what our role was, we hardly spoke.'
âYou didn't pal around with them?'
âAt one time, as I told your partner, Warfield and I closed a few bars. But Wiley was all light and dark and Warfield and I were boisterous boasters who used, or tried to use, words as swords, and argued about subjects Wiley had absolutely no interest in. Then I grew up, got married, and became mature and stuffy. Warfield was left to cause chaos in the china shop all on his own.'
âYou had no dealings with Wiley after the book?' Carly asked.
âI'd see him around. He'd begun to photograph buildings, so it wasn't unusual to see him. Before that he was obsessed with portraits.'
âHe take a photo of you?' Lang asked.
âYes. Many.' Malone smiled, stifled a laugh.
âSome humorous ones, I take it.' Lang said.
âProbably most of them. But somewhere floating in the universe may be a naked photograph of me, thankfully of my much younger self. Even so, it's as if the world hasn't suffered enough. It was during all that summer of love stuff. We were supposed to be comfortable with our bodies. You're too young to remember.'
âYou know anything about Wiley's latest project?' Carly asked. âWhat it was about? Maybe he came to you for a little collaboration?'
âNo. He wouldn't have. And if he did, I wouldn't have. In the end my life was only tenuously attached to the North Beach he loved. The neighborhood began to loom less large in my life. It was just a few years. Some nice years. But it would be misleading to put me with the writers and artists who were an integral part of North Beach history.'
âAll right,' Carly said. âThank you for seeing us.'
âYou find out anything?' he asked.
âNo. We're stymied,' she said.
âAnd the police? What are they thinking?'
âThey're trudging through the evidence. We're not in the know.' It was a small lie, she thought. But after the article in the
Fog City Voice
, she was more cautious.
He nodded, stood. It was the signal to leave.
âThank you again,' Carly said, standing up.
Malone followed them to the door.
âGood luck,' he called after them.
âThe wife was there,' Carly said once they were outside. âShe was in a robe carrying a glass of something and having a hard time moving down the hall. She looked sloshed.'
âNot at the market?' Lang said, smiling.
Twenty
âLunch?' Noah said as they went to the car.
âOne track mind,' she said.
âNo, not really. I have other tracks. Food, movies and . . . OK, let's just say two tracks.'
L'Osteria El Forno was a tiny storefront restaurant tucked away amid the tourist spots on Columbus in North Beach.
It was her choice, but Lang had eaten there before and thought it was a perfect place to lunch â if they could get in. What was it, he thought, that Yogi Berra said about such places: âNobody goes there anymore. It's too crowded.'
Maybe because it was still early, there was a surprisingly short wait to sit at one of the nine or so tables inside. None of them, it seemed, were more than a few feet from the kitchen. The place had high ceilings and the patina that comes from age was real not cosmetic. The walls were an appropriately faded Tuscan sun color and the waiter was young and handsome and smiling and Italian.
âSo this means you'll have to watch
The Godfather
or
Goodfellas
tonight?' Carly asked. âMaybe a Fellini film?'
âDepends on what I have for dinner. If I go to a German restaurant, I might watch
Das Boot
.'
âAre there German restaurants still around?'
âYes. Shroeder's downtown. Schnitzel House, South of Market. Suppenküche in Hayes Valley. There's an East German place . . . Walzwerk . . . on South Van Ness.'
âYou are a walking city guide.'
âI'm a male living alone . . . nearly alone . . . Buddha doesn't cook.'
She ordered some sort of fresh, cold salmon dish and he ordered the pumpkin ravioli and a glass of Sangiovese. They shared a small cheese, tomato and basil pizza.
âDo you ever eat anything green?' she asked.
âBasil is green,' Lang said.
âC'mon,' she said.
âOn St Patrick's day.'
âWhat do you think of Malone?'
âSeems too sane, too self-satisfied. That's just a gut feeling. That doesn't take him off the list. But he said something interesting that may seem obvious now. The publisher puts a book together. If â and it's a big “if” â Wiley had a publisher to follow up on his planned exhibition, they might have something interesting.'
She nodded. âAnd if we could get into Wiley's, we could look at the photographs that are part of the exhibition and get a sense of . . . something.'
âCan we get in?' Lang asked.
âOne way or another,' she said.
âI like your attitude.'
âThat's because it's your attitude.'
âI won't hold that against you.'
There were no police visible on the short, usually empty street where Frank Wiley lived and died. The afternoon sun provided no cover for their climb. At the top they were greeted with what they expected. Criss-crossed yellow crime tape provided a spiderweb of forbiddance.
âDo we?' Carly asked.
âNo.'
âWhat do we do?'
âWe get a stapler, a couple of flashlights and come back tonight.'
âThis was a trial run?'
âWe needed to find out what we needed. Let's get some gelato.'
âWe need gelato?'
âNeed?'
âYou have no idea what you're doing to me. I'll get big as a house. What did you get from Hawkes?'
âAttitude. He doesn't know anything and he doesn't really care to know anything if you can believe him.'
âDo you believe him?' Carly asked as they turned on to Columbus.
âI don't know what I believe.'
âSome good news,' Carly said as they dodged the mix of neighborhood inhabitants and tourists in shorts and baseball caps. âBrozynski, according to Inspector Gratelli, isn't very mobile. I noticed that when I visited with him. I just thought he was too lazy. Apparently, he took a tumble and smashed some vertebrae. The timing was such that it's doubtful the guy has the agility to be the murderer. Not for sure, but reasonable doubt. And I had that anyway.'
âThe murders sell newspapers, Carly. Sort of like a mortician killing off a few folks because business is slow. Lime,' Lang said when they entered the shop and noticed the vast array of flavors.' He looked at Carly. âGreen. Are you happy?'
âThrilled. My life could end now.'
âI take it Gratelli called you. What else did he say?'
âNothing.'
Carly had the pistachio gelato with dark chocolate as the second dip. She spooned a bite.
âA nosy question,' she said.
âThat's what we're paid for.'
âBut this is personal. You don't have to answer.'
âI'm so grateful.'
âYou ever thought of being a dad?'
âToo late.'
She thought about saying âNot really', but decided that might imply something she wasn't ready to imply.
âYou ever regret not having kids?' she asked.
âI try to minimize regrets. The great philosopher Sinatra.'
âYou mean “shoobee doobee do”?'
âI was thinking of something else, but yeah, that will do.'
âYou'd have made a great dad,' Carly said. She watched his face to see if she was going too far. But he continued to be a bit of a mystery.
âWhy's that?'
âYou are so even-keeled.'
âYou said I was “lackadaisical” earlier.'
âSensitive too.'
âYou want to be a mother?'
âA great defense is a good offense. No, I'm too selfish. And I don't have a green thumb or whatever color of thumb I'm supposed to have to raise children.'
âLet's meet back here tonight, at eight,' Lang said. âWe'll go in under the cover of darkness. Wear dark clothing.'
âAnd a mask?' she asked, smiling.
Carly was feeling better. The kind of damp cloud that seemed to have occupied her brain was gone. Having Lang fully on board and whittling down the names on the suspect list gave her a sense of optimism.
Mickey Warfield
Marshall Hawkes
Marlene Berensen
Richard Sumaoang
Ralph Chiu
Nathan Malone
That was the list now. And it was progress she could relate to William Blake. Sweet William, she thought as she climbed the steps to the office. She admonished herself for her momentary lapse into sentimentality. In her many years at Vogel Security, she would have never imagined her life to have taken such an odd turn. Living was no longer abstract. It was real. And she believed she was beginning to like the idea. But it was not without risk. That was obvious now.
Inside the office, Thanh looked like a punk mechanic. He was wearing black coveralls. His hair was slicked back in early rock style.
He smiled. âYou lose Noah?'
âHe's parking the car,' Carly said. âYou look like you're ready for anything.'
Lang was in the doorway.
âPerfect,' Lang said to Thanh.
âOf course it's perfect,' Thanh said. âBut what did
you
mean by it?'
âYou're dressed for the break-in tonight.'
âFinally, some fun.'
Carly looked at them, shook her head, but she wasn't really perturbed or confused or disgusted or anything of the sort. She just had an image to keep up.
Lang was feeling antsy. He decided to revisit Marlene Berensen. This time he would drop by her place unannounced. The car registration listed an address on Mallorca in the Marina. Though it would be difficult to find a parking space â that was true all over town, except for the tops of some steep hills â it was even more difficult to get to the ritzy neighborhood from South of Market by bus.