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Authors: Marcia Muller

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BOOK: A Wild and Lonely Place
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Chloe Love and Kahlil Lateef.

“Sharon?” Morland nudged me with his elbow. I looked at the screen.

THE MARINA GREEN AT FIVE-THIRTY, THEN. DO NOT FORGET; I WILL BE WATCHING YOU.

Twenty-nine

The Marina Green extends several long blocks east from the St. Francis Yacht Club to the Gashouse Cove boat slips next to
Fort Mason. In between stretch a level lawn and bayside esplanade. On the clear, sun-shot days that are fairly standard in
a district that has always reminded me of a Mediterranean village, the grass is dotted with picnickers, lovers, kite-flyers,
and sun-worshippers. Joggers, walkers, dog-walkers, and bench-sitters crowd the esplanade. Tourists photograph the elegant
yawls and cabin cruisers or poke around the small clapboard building that sits midway on the seawall and is used by the navy
as a sonar tracking station. The views, from the Golden Gate to Alcatraz, are postcard-perfect. It is a place of joy and peace.

But not so at five-twenty in the morning after a harrowing, foggy night. Not so when a sociopath riding an enormous power
rush is dictating the terms of your behavior—and watching you.

The nighttime sky was beginning to gray, backlighting the spires of Russian Hill. The fog had retreated to the Gate and lay
like a dirty smear between the reddish towers of the bridge. Scattered lights twinkled on the Marin hills and the beacon on
Alcatraz flashed. The wind blew cold and steady off the Bay.

On the lawn some hundred yards from my car an SFPD helicopter idled—red lights winking, an unarmed officer at its controls.
Marina Boulevard was cordoned off for two blocks between Webster and Steiner Streets. The ever-present press and curious residents
drawn by the activity massed against the barricades. Here, on my side, the Green lay dark and deserted.

I got out of the MG and peered into the shadows. He was somewhere in them, not far away.

The task force had followed Lateef’s instructions to the letter, except for the team of sharpshooters smuggled into an apartment
building facing the Green and now stationed on its roof. They would do nothing to jeopardize Joslyn, and there would be no
heroics—least of all on my part. I was playing it straight all the way.

I turned from the MG and started toward the phone booth by the boat slips. The hooded sweatshirt I’d borrowed from one of
the women on the task force to conceal the body wire I wore was much too big; I rolled up its sleeves some as I walked. I’d
objected to the wire at first, afraid Lateef would somehow realize I was relaying his instructions to the task force, but
now I was glad I’d given in. It made me feel less alone out here.

I still didn’t understand Lateef’s insistence on dealing only with me. Was it because I was Adah’s friend and would do everything
I could to make this operation go smoothly? Or was there some other factor working here—something I’d yet to figure out?

Another thing that puzzled me: how had he known he was actually dealing with me? He hadn’t asked any question that only I
could answer, but he’d demonstrated himself too clever to proceed this far on blind faith. Something in our initial exchange
had reassured him, but I was damned if I knew what.

Five twenty-four now. I reached the phone booth on the walk next to the slips. “In position,” I said into the wire. Behind
me mooring lines creaked as the craft rode on a light swell; a buoy bonged monotonously in the channel. Again I peered into
the shadows, searching for a sign of him and knowing I would see none. Finally I gave it up, listened to the drifting murmur
of voices from the barricades, watched the trickle of traffic on the distant bridge.

Five twenty-six now. God, I was sick of dancing attendance on him!

In my peripheral vision I caught a motion inside the MG, where Hamid was shackled and handcuffed to the seat-belt support.
Unnecessary precautions, since he—while still sullen—was cooperating fully, but Parkhurst wouldn’t let him out of task force
custody otherwise. I’d tried to get Hamid to talk on the way here, but all he’d told me was to go fuck myself. Brazening it
out, I thought, and he hadn’t even asked me what I’d done with his daughter. Neither, for that matter, had Ambassador Jalil;
from the way he’d turned the subject aside when I’d broached it, I gathered he considered Habiba an inconvenient detail that
was best ignored.

Poor kid. The Azadis wouldn’t want the motherless offspring of a drunken American and a murderer. And now that she’d ceased
to be the prize in a bitter mother-son tug-of-war, she no longer interested her father.

Five twenty-seven.

My body tingled from an excess of adrenaline. My head ached and my eyes stung from lack of sleep. My hair hung limp to my
shoulders. I hadn’t washed or brushed my teeth since late yesterday afternoon at All Souls. I felt and probably looked like
hell.

Five twenty-eight. Time now.

Deliberately I began to shut down my thoughts and emotions. I tuned out everything, even physical discomfort, and strove for
the kind of focus I achieved in the cockpit. I let myself open to one, and only one, stimulus: fear. Accepted it, allowed
it to boost me to a new level of awareness.

Getting high. As high as he must be right now.

Five twenty-nine.

I stared fixedly at the phone. Its burnished surface reflected the graying sky behind me. “Ready,” I said into the wire. And
placed my hand on the receiver.

The phone rang.

“Hello.”

“Is everything in place, Ms. McCone?” The voice was high pitched and unreal, without a trace of an accent. He was using a
distorting device.

“Yes, everything’s as you requested.”

“They are tracing this call, of course, but it will be too brief for that. You have on a body wire.”

Damn! I knew he’d have anticipated that.

“Disconnect it, please. I am watching.”

He must be very close by, using a cellular phone. He could even be mingling among the press beyond one of the barricades.
I hesitated, hating to lose my link to the task force. Then I recalled Parkhurst’s last words to me: “Give him whatever he
wants.”

“All right, I’ll disconnect the wire.” I set down the receiver, unzipped the sweatshirt, ripped the wire free. Held part of
it up so he could see—wherever he was.

On your own now, I thought. It’s just you and him.

I picked up the receiver. “You saw?”

“Yes. Now look in the phone book hanging below the shelf.”

I stepped back, raised the book to the shelf, and opened it. Half the pages had been ripped out, and a mini-cassette recorder
was attached by duct tape to the inside of the cover.

“You have it?” the voice asked.

“Yes.”

“Play the tape. When you finish, erase it and take it with you.”

“Where?”

He hung up.

I replaced the receiver and switched on the recorder. The same strange voice said, “We will resume our conversation now. After
you have listened to this tape and erased it, you will return to your car. At twenty minutes to six there will be a diversion.
While the authorities’ attention is elsewhere, you and Hamid will leave.”

A long pause.

“Come
on
!” I said.

“Look to your right. What do you see?”

A marina.

“Think of what you see. Then think of a drowned bird floating in the water. A drowned
bird.

What does that—oh.

In my dreams Mavis Hamid’s floating form had looked like a bat, but a more appropriate symbol would have been a bird—because
that was what her name meant.

Mavis. And Salt Point Marina.

“By now I believe you will have grasped it, Ms. McCone. I regret being so cryptic, but surely you can appreciate my need for
extreme precaution.”

Another pause, as if he was gathering his thoughts.

“You have forty minutes to arrive there with Hamid. Make sure no one from the task force or the SFPD follows you. I’ll have
fixed the gate so it will remain open; come in and bring Hamid aboard the yawl. I’m sure you remember her name.”

The
Freia
.

“Now erase the tape and go back to your car.”

The helicopter, the police cordons: all a sham to confuse the authorities. The phone call and recorded message: his method
of getting Hamid and me alone.

And Adah?
Was
she alive, or was that another of his lies?

Give him whatever he wants.

I rewound the tape and pressed the erase button.

* * *

As I slipped behind the wheel of the MG Hamid said, “So what did the lunatic demand this time?” His voice was steady but underscored
by fear.

My watch said five thirty-eight.

“I asked—”

“I heard you. There’s been a change of plans. In about two minutes we’re going to take a ride. I’ll need you to watch and
make sure nobody—fed or cop—follows us.”

“Oh, no! I will not go anywhere without—”

I motioned at his handcuffs. “You don’t have much choice in the matter, now do you?”

Hamid looked away and slouched lower in the seat.

I kept my eyes on the second hand as it inched around. What sort of diversion—

A muffled thump, like a potato sounds when it blows up in the oven.

Hamid jerked. I looked around him in time to see the lid fly off a dumpster halfway between the helicopter and the St. Francis
Yacht Club. Flames shot into the air and debris rained down on the esplanade.

“What the hell?” Hamid said.

Another thump, and a second dumpster exploded.

An SFPD car started up and careened around the barricade at Webster Street. A press van followed. Spectators surged through
the tape and over the sawhorses as the uniforms struggled to control them.

On the Green, flames shot high from heaps of burning rubble. The roof of the small clapboard naval tracking station caught
fire. An SFFD hook and ladder that had been stationed on Webster pulled out, lights flashing.

I started the MG.

The fire truck turned onto the boulevard, cutting a swath through the people racing along the pavement. I shot out of the
parking lot in its wake. In the rearview mirror I saw a task force car attempting to follow. The foot traffic blocked it as
I took a hard left and crashed past the barricade onto Fillmore.

“You watch out the rear window,” I told Hamid.

His face was pale. Wordlessly he nodded and looked back.

Not much traffic here on the side street. Intersection clear at Beach, clear at North Point.

Fillmore between North Point and Bay! What’s that address where the bastard was making his bombs? There it is, that peculiar-looking
Bavarian-style building with the For Sale sign.

Nobody coming, slide across Bay Street.

“Anybody behind us?”

“No.”

“Keep watching.”

What’s the best way out of town? Lombard to Gough and over the hill to the freeway? Yes.

Peculiar-looking Bavarian-style building with a For Sale sign. The one across the back fence from Adah’s. That must be how…

I turned left on the tail end of the yellow light at Lombard, jumbled words and phrases that I’d heard over the past ten days
bubbling up from my subconscious in no logical order.

Mr. Duck…sure makes a lot of trash…he is having trouble selling it…I’m heading out now to confirm it…waddles in and waddles
out…probably the most kind and decent person I’ve ever known…it’s too damn close to home for comfort…one of those funny European
cars…stumbled onto a lead…by coincidence…left him an apartment building…she went to bat for me…someday I’m going to pick through
it, too…you’d give him over, just like that?

“Mr. Duck,” I said softly.

No wonder the bomber hadn’t questioned my identity when we’d talked on the computer; I’d told him something only the two of
us knew.

I ran the red and turned right on Gough.

“Hamid,” I said, “where were you before you showed up at Leila’s last night?”

“In a bar. I stopped for a quick beer, and the special report about the bombing came on. I just kept drinking.”

“No, before that.”

“The consulate. I thought Habiba might be there. If she was I planned to play that game you used to get her away from me at
Jumbie Cay. Too bad I didn’t remember it until afterwards; I wouldn’t be in this mess now. Anyway, I had a cab waiting around
the block, but Habiba wasn’t there. And my mother wouldn’t loan me any money; she wouldn’t even give me a glass of water.”

“Then what did you do?”

“Went down the Peninsula to a friend of Leila’s. She arranged for me to stay with him, but when I got there he wasn’t home.
The place was so damned depressing that I decided to go back to the city. I was sure Leila would make me a loan if I could
get to her when Sandy wasn’t around. I left her friend a note and walked down the hill to Brisbane. And that’s when I stopped
for a beer and found out how close I’d come to being killed.”

How close
he’d
come to being killed. No grief for his mother or the others who’d died in the explosion.

We crested the hill onto Gough. Into the homestretch to the freeway now, traffic light, and still no one following.

I asked, “So you never saw Leila’s friend?”

“No.”

And he hadn’t been in that back room at Newton’s bungalow last night.

Adah had.

Thirty

There were a number of cars in the parking lot at Salt Point Marina, but quite a few of the boats were gone. Holiday weekend,
I thought, carefree start of summer—for some people.

I pulled into a space at the far side of the pavement, turned off the MG, and checked my watch. Ten of the allotted forty
minutes remained.

“We’ll be going into the marina soon,” I said to Hamid. “He wants us on board Eric Sparling’s sailboat.”

“Do you have a plan?”

“We’ll take our cues from him. I think I know him well enough that I may be able to push some of the right buttons.”

“Kahlil doesn’t
have
buttons.”

“He’s also not the bomber.”

Hamid stared at me. “I thought they were sure he was. What about that picture of him and Chloe that Parkhurst said they found
in that apartment?”

BOOK: A Wild and Lonely Place
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