assumed she was guilty. There were insinuations of police incompetence and collusion, of her sleeping with the chief of police, a happily married Irish-man with six children.
âI heard her, Cheney,â Frank Paulette said, but he repeated her name aloud, as if he really didnât believe it. âJulia Ransom,â he said again. âWell, my boy, you never do things halfway, do you?â Frank fell silent. Cheney heard Frankâs wife shouting at him in the background to take out the garbage, heard his son laughing now and the crowd screaming because Kobe Bryant had just scored a three-pointerâno more miracle in the making, at least in this game.
Cheney gave Frank the address, to which Frank said, âI know the damned address. Iâll be there in twenty, Cheney. Keep our lady safe. You sure this wasnât a mugger?â
Cheney nearly smiled at the hopefulness in Frankâs voice.
âSorry, Frank. He was out to kill her.â
âIâll get a couple of cars over there to keep an eye on her.â
âYeah, okay.â Cheney punched off his cell, slipped it into August Ransomâs pants pocket.
âThe police are coming?â
âYes. Captain Frank Paulette.â
âI thought just about all of them had questioned me, but I donât know him.â
âLook, I had no choice. Someone tried to kill you. Frankâs a good guy, Iâve known him for nearly four years, almost as long as Iâve lived in San Francisco. He wonât badger you or treat you likeââ
He stalled. She said nothing at all.
He saw sheâd spread her leather jacket over the back of an antique chair older than Waterloo, his sports coat on a matching chair beside it.
He said, âI spread out the rest of my wet clothes in the bathroom.â
âIâll take care of them. I have a special dry cleaners whoâll fix up your sports coat and your slacks. Hereâs a jacket for you in the meantime.â
âThank you.â
She nodded and strode firmly out of the bedroom, wearing old baggy jeans, a red 49ers sweatshirt, and blue Nike running shoes. Sheâd pulled her damp hair into a ponytail, hair the color of his ancient mahogany desk, dark and rich. She wasnât wearing any makeup. She looked very young.
Cheney walked down the long hallway after her, wearing the dark blue cashmere jacket sheâd handed him. She paused a moment after heâd shrugged into it, then slowly nodded. He saw she was tall, with long legs that ate up that endless carpet. He bet she could move in those running shoes of hers.
He could have been enjoying the cioppino with some nice crunchy French bread, but no, Frank was right. Cheney never managed to do anything halfway. Julia Ransom, Dr. August Ransomâs widow. Well, it would soon cease to be his problem.
She turned at the bottom of the stairs to look up at him. âYou look fine in Augustâs clothes. Again, no matter what you think of meânow that you know who I amâthank you for saving me. Iâll have your clothes cleaned and sent to you. How do you know a local police officer?â
âIâm a cop too, just not local.â
âSo youâre a tourist cop?â
âActually, no.â
A dark eyebrow remained raised.
She didnât remember? Understandable, he thought, and shrugged. âIâm federal. Iâm Special Agent Cheney Stone, FBI, with the San Francisco Field Office.â
She stared at him a moment, then threw back her head and laughed until she almost choked. She knuckled her eyes with her fists, like his teenaged niece.
She said, once sheâd caught her breath, âI remember now, you yelled that to the guy who was going to kill me. Oh dear, Iâve got to call Wallace Tammerlane and tell him I wonât make it for our dinner.â
He watched her dash to a lovely table set against the corridor wall that held a telephone and a vase of fresh azaleas.