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"Thank you," I said.
"For what?"
"For the advice."
"You going to take it?"
"No."
"I didn't imagine you would," she said. "But it was serious advice. What do you want to know."
"Everything you can tell me," I said.
Rita leaned forward and spoke so softly that I had to lean forward too.
"He is a legendary lawyer," Rita said. "You know that. He is the finest criminal defense lawyer I have ever seen. He's so smart, he's so... what is he... he's so... he wants so badly to win that he commits everything to every defense. Nothing else matters to him as much as getting his client acquitted. He will do anything to win. And he's that way regardless of the merit of his client's case, or, for that matter, the merit of the client."
"He's represented some very bad people," I said.
"The worst, and he's won for them. And the best, and he's won for them."
"And it's made him rich."
Rita finished her martini and ordered another one. I was still dawdling with mine. Martinis make me sleepy. Consumed at lunch they tend to blow my day, as is true at breakfast.
"Yes. Actually, I think he was always rich. I think his family had money. But he has certainly enlarged his net worth over the years."
"And he was a judge," I said.
"Yes. Interestingly, he was not a terribly good judge. He is not judicious. He is not a great legal mind. He is a great litigator. But his judicial rulings were frequently reversed on appeal. He hadn't the patience, or, I guess, the sense of fairness, of"-again Rita looked for a word-"of decency," she said, "that makes a good judge."
"How'd he feel about being overruled?"
"It is said to have driven him mad," Rita said. "Have you met him?"
"Yes."
"Has he an ego?"
"A lot bigger than he is," I said.
"It's what made him so good as a litigator. The ego. He needed to win."
Rita had picked up the menu and looked at it as she talked. Now she paused to read it.
"Lobster sandwich looks good," she said.
"You going to have it?" I said.
"Oh, G.o.d no," she said. "With these hips, what are you crazy?"
"Those are elegant hips," I said.
Rita snorted and put down the menu.
"I'll have the green salad," she told the waiter, "dressing on the side."
I ordered the lobster sandwich.
"You're doing that to be mean," Rita said.
"I like lobster sandwiches. What's Ronan doing at Taft?"
"Ego. He may be the greatest criminal lawyer in the world. But criminal lawyers tend to represent criminals. And some of the dirt maybe rubs off. I think he took the professorship at Taft because it was prestigious."
"Does he actually teach," I said.
Rita shrugged.
"Taft's trying to build the law school. One way to do that is to attract a superstar. As you know, one of the prime perks of any teaching job is not to teach. Ronan is a superstar. My guess is that he probably lectures once a week. I think he would enjoy lecturing."
"How about the wife?"
"Don't know much about her. She's not his first wife. She's a lot younger, and the couple of times I've seen her she was a knockout."
"So why is he so dangerous?" I said.
"Because in any adversarial circ.u.mstance he will do anything to win. He is very wealthy and he is hugely connected, including all the bad guys he's defended."
The waiter came with Rita's salad and my lobster sandwich, with mayo, on sourdough bread. Rita ate some salad. I had a bite of my lobster sandwich.
"Pig," she said.
I nodded modestly.
"So how come you are involved with Ronan?" Rita said.
"His wife and three other women are suing Susan's ex-husband for s.e.xual hara.s.sment."
"Susan's ex-husband?"
"Yes. Guy named Brad Sterling. He changed it from Silverman."
"Yeah. Swell. I was thinking of changing mine to Fire."
"Fire Fiore?" I said.
"No, idiot, Rita Fire, attorney-at-law. So what's your deal with Sterling Silverman?"
"Susan asked me to see if I could help him out. She says he's on the brink of dissolution."
Rita stared at me. "Susan asked you to save her ex-husband?"
"In a manner of speaking."
"And you're doing it?"
"I'm looking into it."
"And you have to go against Francis Ronan to do it?"
"Maybe."
Rita stared at me some more.
"Are you out of your f.u.c.king mind?" Rita said.
"Not yet."
Rita started to speak and stopped and started again and stopped without saying anything. She sat silently shaking her head.
"You told Hawk about this yet?" she said finally.
"Yeah."
"He have any comment?"
"He said, 'Umm."'
"You got any idea what he meant by that?"
"I think he was implying that this enterprise fraught with peril."
"Umm," Rita said.
"Maybe," I said.
"You say you've met Ronan?"
"Yeah."
Rita smiled. "And did you get along?"
"Not really well," I said.
She smiled wider. "Were you properly respectful?"
"I told him he was an annoying little twerp," I said.
Rita laughed out loud, and a couple of people in tweed clothing looked up from their scrod and stared at her. Rita met their look and held it, and they looked quickly back at their scrod.
"I don't mean to laugh," Rita said. "It is actually quite serious, but G.o.dd.a.m.n! You and Francis Ronan." She shook her head still smiling. "A match made in heaven," she said. "You're as arrogant as he is."
"And taller," I said.
"Be careful with him," Rita said. "Be carefuller than you have ever been with anybody."
"Sure," I said. "And maybe he needs to be careful of me."
Rita looked at her gla.s.s, discovered a little undrunk martini in the bottom. She picked it up and drained it and put the gla.s.s down carefully in the exact same spot where she had picked it up.
"Maybe," she said.
chapter eight.
ACCORDING TO THE list Sterling's secretary had given me, there were three other women in the hara.s.sment suit: Olivia Hanson, Marcia Albright, and Penny Putnam. Penny Putnam lived in an apartment on the water where the Charlestown Navy Yard used to be. I decided to visit her first. It was close and I like alliteration.
Penny's address was a big rambling gray clapboard while-trim apartment complex on Pier 7. There was parking under, and the front door was a flight up. A big pretty woman answered the door. I asked if she were Penny Putnam, and she said that she was. She smiled. She was friendly. I could tell she liked me. I asked if I could ask a few questions about the s.e.xual hara.s.sment suit she was involved in, and the valves of her attention closed like a stone.
"I'm sorry," she said. "I have no comment."
"Why not?" I said.
The door closed more firmly than the valves of her attention. So the trip shouldn't be a complete waste of time, I stood for a moment and looked across the harbor at the downtown waterfront. Nice view. Then I turned and went back to my car and drove away. I was still sure she liked me. Her rejection was circ.u.mstantial.
I went across the Charlestown Bridge and picked up the Central Artery near North Station. They had built a third tunnel under the Harbor and were in the process of dismantling the Central Artery and putting it underground. The result was that City Square had disappeared and there were convoluted detours from Charlestown to Mattapan. It was always exciting to see where you would end up.
Marcia Albright lived in Quincy, and Olivia Hanson lived in Malden. I figured I'd get the Southeast Expressway over with, so I headed for Quincy. Marcia's place was very much like Penny's-an apartment complex with a water view, only Marcia's was brick. I never did find out what Marcia looked like. I got as far as the intercom and was told that she had no comment and the line went dead. Only because I'm methodical, I went back up the expressway, over the Mystic River Bridge, and a short haul up Route 1 to another apartment complex. This one, in Malden, designed to look like, I guess, a Moorish castle. If you got in just the right place, there was a view of the Saugus River.
Olivia Hanson was much nicer than Penny or Marcia. She actually came out into the vestibule and spoke with me.
"Oh, no," she said. "I'm terribly sorry. But I really couldn't comment on the lawsuit."
"On advice of counsel?" I said.
"Whatever," she said and gave me a lovely smile. She was smallish and perky and had a lot of blonde hair. "Are you a lawyer?"
"No," I said. "I'm a detective."
"Really? Can I see a badge or something?"
I showed her my license.