him.”
“Maybe I did pile it on a little. But this is such a classically good move. It’s actually got some moral underpinnings.”
“Alway a plus.” Hardy drank from his bottled water. He put the bottle down on his desk, took a deep breath, let it out. A longer silence settled in the space. The plantation shutters over the office windows weren’t drawn, and outside the shafts of early evening sun suddenly seemed glaringly bright in contrast to the muted office lighting. Finally Hardy spoke. “I bet you can guess what’s going through my mind.”
Her face tight with tension, Wu nodded, but answered confidently enough. “I’ll be seeing Andrew first thing again tomorrow morning and tie it up tight. Believe me, he definitely got it by the time I left today. He sees it.”
“He’ll admit?”
“I’m sure he will.”
“You’re sure he will. But Allan Boscacci thinks he already has? Is that right?”
“No. Not that he already has. Just that he will.”
“But Boscacci’s acted on that. And he’ll expect you to do what you promised in return?”
“And I will. Andrew will. He’ll see there’s no other real option. He already sees it, I’m sure.”
“You’re sure.” Hardy cast his eyes at his ceiling, brought them down and ran a hand over his cheek. Now he looked over at his young associate. He knew that she was still suffering over the loss of her father, laboring under who knew what other pressures. The last thing Hardy wanted to do was kill her initiative or micromanage her cases to death, but for a moment he was tempted to have her call Boscacci right there from his office. Clear the air with the DA’s office, at least. Let the chief assistant know that the deal might not be as solid as he’d been led to believe. Later, privately, Hardy could even plead Wu’s pain and suffering to Boscacci, and this might somehow mitigate the consequences if things went wrong, which according to Murphy’s Law they must, since they could.
On the other hand, he didn’t want to send a no-confidence message to one of his bright young lights. He himself had carved his own niche in San Francisco’s legal world by being somewhat of a loose cannon, taking risks beyond those which, he knew, any responsible boss would have approved. He strongly believed in the advice of Admiral Nelson, “Always go right at ’em.” Ask permission later. That’s what victorious sea captains—and winners in general—always did.
Didn’t they?
Hardy gave his associate a last, ambiguous look that mingled worry and hope, and she responded with a quick bob of her head. “Don’t worry, sir. It’ll happen.”
“I tell you what, Wu,” he said. “I’m sure hoping you’re right.”
Hardy parked on Bryant Street across from the Hall of Justice. Traffic was light and curb space, so precious during the workday, was everywhere. Behind him, the sun was going down with a gaudy splash. The usual sunset gale had started up off the Bay and it whistled by the windows of his car, throwing pages of newspapers, candy wrappers, random grit and other debris through the long shadows in front of him.
He checked his watch. Glitsky was ten minutes late.
Hardy had paged him, their signal, before he’d left his office. He wasn’t thrilled at having to wait. It gave him too much time to think about what Wu had done. He pushed the knob in his dash, turned up the latest Fleetwood Mac, who’d somehow managed to lift themselves off the oldies heap and get back in the game again.
Wu’s situation? It would play the way it played.
“Sorry I’m late.” Glitsky opened the door and slid into the seat beside him.
Lost in the music, Hardy hadn’t seen him leave the Hall or approach the car. Now he found himself mildly surprised by the sight of his friend in full uniform. In the nearly dozen years during which Glitsky had been the lieutenant in charge of the homicide detail, he hadn’t often worn his blues, preferring instead the more informal
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