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They meticulously covered their tracks and were finished in ten minutes.
Hearsay was released from the closet, and the men crept into the carport. They backed quickly out the driveway and sped into the night.
As the baked pompano was served, the BMW parked quietly next to the restaurant. The driver fished through his pockets and found the key to a maroon Jaguar, property of Mr. Kendall Mahan, attorney-at-law. The two technicians locked the BMW and slid into the Jag. The Mahans lived much closer than the McDeeres, and judging from the floor plans, the job would be quicker.
On the fifth floor of the Bendini Building, Marcus stared at a panel of blinking lights and waited for some signal from 1231 East Meadowbrook. The dinner party had broken up thirty minutes earlier, and it was time to listen. A tiny yellow light flashed weakly, and he draped a headset over his ears. He pushed a b.u.t.ton to record. He waited. A green light beside the code McD6 began flashing. It was the bedroom wall. The signals grew clearer, voices, at first faint, then very clear. He increased the volume. And listened.
"Jill Mahan is a b.i.t.c.h," the female, Mrs. McDeere, was saying. "The more she drank, the b.i.t.c.hier she got."
"I think she's a blue blood of some sort," Mr. McDeere replied.
"Her husband is okay, but she's a real snot," Mrs. McDeere said.
"Are you drunk?" asked Mr. McDeere.
"Almost. I'm ready for pa.s.sionate s.e.x."
Marcus increased the volume and leaned toward the blinking lights.
"Take your clothes off," demanded Mrs. McDeere.
"We haven't done this in a while," said Mr. McDeere.
Marcus stood and hovered above the switches and lights.
"And whose fault is that?" she asked.
"I haven't forgotten how. You're beautiful."
"Get in the bed," she said.
Marcus turned the dial marked VOLUME VOLUME until it would go no farther. He smiled at the lights and breathed heavily. He loved these a.s.sociates, fresh from law school and full of energy. He smiled at the sounds of their lovemaking. He closed his eyes and watched them. until it would go no farther. He smiled at the lights and breathed heavily. He loved these a.s.sociates, fresh from law school and full of energy. He smiled at the sounds of their lovemaking. He closed his eyes and watched them.
9.
The Capps crisis pa.s.sed in two weeks without disaster, thanks largely to a string of eighteen-hour days by the newest member of the firm, a member who had not yet pa.s.sed the bar exam and who was too busy practicing law to worry about it. In July he billed an average of fifty-nine hours a week, a firm record for a nonlawyer. Avery proudly informed the partners at the monthly meeting that McDeere's work was remarkable for a rookie. The Capps deal was closed three days ahead of schedule, thanks to McDeere. The doc.u.ments totaled four hundred pages, all perfect, all meticulously researched, drafted and redrafted by McDeere. Koker-Hanks would close within a month, thanks to McDeere, and the firm would earn close to a quarter of a mill. He was a machine.
Oliver Lambert expressed concern over his study habits. The bar exam was less than three weeks away, and it was obvious to all that McDeere was not ready. He had canceled half his review sessions in July and had logged less than twenty hours. Avery said not to worry, his boy would be ready.
Fifteen days before the exam, Mitch finally complained. He was about to flunk it, he explained to Avery over lunch at the Manhattan Club, and he needed time to study. Lots of time. He could cram it in for the next two weeks and pa.s.s by the hair of his a.s.s. But he had to be left alone. No deadlines. No emergencies. No all-nighters. He pleaded. Avery listened carefully, and apologized. He promised to ignore him for the next two weeks. Mitch said thanks.
On the first Monday in August, a firm meeting was called in the main library on the first floor. It was the meeting room, the largest of the four libraries, the showplace. Half the lawyers sat around the antique cherry conference table with twenty chairs under it. The rest stood next to the shelves of thick leather law books which had not been opened in decades. Every member was present, even Nathan Locke. He arrived late and stood next to the door by himself. He spoke to no one, and no one looked at him. Mitch stole a glance at Black Eyes when possible.
The mood was somber. No smiles. Beth Kozinski and Laura Hodge were escorted through the door by Oliver Lambert. They were seated at the front of the room facing a wall where two veiled portraits hung. They held hands and tried to smile. Mr. Lambert stood with his back to the wall and faced the small audience.
He spoke softly, his rich baritone exuding sympathy and compa.s.sion. He almost whispered at first, but the power of his voice made every sound and every syllable clear throughout the room. He looked at the two widows and told of the deep sadness the firm felt, how they would always be taken care of as long as there was a firm. He talked of Marty and Joe, of their first few years with the firm, of their importance to the firm, of the vast voids their deaths created. He spoke of their love for their families, their dedication to their homes.
The man was eloquent. He spoke in prose, with no forethought as to what the next sentence would be. The widows cried softly and wiped their eyes. And then some of the closer ones, Lamar Quin and Doug Turney, began to sniffle.
When he had said enough, he unveiled the portrait of Martin Kozinski. It was an emotional moment. There were more tears. There would be a scholarship established at the Chicago Law School in his name. The firm would set up trusts for his children's education. The family would be taken care of. Beth bit her lip, but cried louder. The seasoned, hardened, tough-as-nails negotiators of the great Bendini firm swallowed rapidly and avoided looking at each other. Only Nathan Locke was unmoved. He glared at the wall with his penetrating lasers and ignored the ceremony.
Then the portrait of Joe Hodge, and a similar biography, similar scholarship and trust funds. Mitch had heard a rumor that Hodge purchased a two-million-dollar life insurance policy four months before his death.
When the eulogies were complete, Nathan Locke disappeared through the door. The lawyers surrounded the widows and offered quiet words and embraces. Mitch did not know them and had nothing to say. He walked to the front wall and examined the paintings. Next to those of Kozinski and Hodge were three slightly smaller, but equally dignified portraits. The one of the woman caught his attention. The bra.s.s plate read: "Alice Knauss 19481977."
"She was a mistake," Avery said under his breath as he stepped next to his a.s.sociate.
"What do you mean?" Mitch asked.
"Typical female lawyer. Came here from Harvard, number one in her cla.s.s and carrying a chip because she was a female. Thought every man alive was a s.e.xist and it was her mission in life to eliminate discrimination. Super-b.i.t.c.h. After six months we all hated her but couldn't get rid of her. She forced two partners into early retirement. Milligan still blames her for his heart attack. He was her partner."
"Was she a good lawyer?"
"Very good, but it was impossible to appreciate her talents. She was so contentious about everything."
"What happened to her?"
"Car wreck. Killed by a drunk driver. It was really tragic."
"Was she the first woman?"
"Yes, and the last, unless we get sued."
Mitch nodded to the next portrait. "Who was he?"
"Robert Lamm. He was a good friend of mine. Emory Law School in Atlanta. He was about three years ahead of me."
"What happened?"
"No one knows. He was an avid hunter. We hunted moose in Wyoming one winter. In 1972 he was deer hunting in Arkansas and turned up missing. They found him a month later in a ravine with a hole through his head. Autopsy said the bullet entered through the rear of his skull and blew away most of his face. They speculate the shot was fired from a high-powered rifle at long range. It was probably an accident, but we'll never know. I could never imagine anyone wanting to kill Bobby Lamm."
The last portrait was of John Mickel, 19501984. "What happened to him?" Mitch whispered.
"Probably the most tragic of all. He was not a strong man, and the pressure got to him. He drank a lot, and started drugs. Then his wife left him and they had a bitter divorce. The firm was embarra.s.sed. After he had been here ten years, he began to fear he would not become a partner. The drinking got worse. We spent a small fortune on treatment, shrinks, everything. But nothing worked. He became depressed, then suicidal. He wrote a seven-page suicide note and blew his brains out."
"That's terrible."
"Sure was."
"Where'd they find him?"
Avery cleared his throat and glanced around the room. "In your office."
"What!"
"Yeah, but they cleaned it up."
"You're kidding!"
"No, I'm serious. It was years ago, and the office has been used since then. It's okay."
Mitch was speechless.
"You're not superst.i.tious, are you?" Avery asked with a nasty grin.
"Of course not."
"I guess I should've told you, but it's not something we talk about."
"Can I change offices?"
"Sure. Just flunk the bar exam and we'll give you one of those paralegal offices in the bas.e.m.e.nt."
"If I flunk it, it'll be because of you."
"Yes, but you won't flunk it, will you?"
"If you can pa.s.s it, so can I."
From 5 A.M. A.M. to 7 to 7 A.M. A.M. the Bendini Building was empty and quiet. Nathan Locke arrived around six, but went straight to his office and locked the door. At seven, the a.s.sociates began appearing and voices could be heard. By seven-thirty the firm had a quorum, and a handful of secretaries punched in. By eight the halls were full and it was chaos as usual. Concentration became difficult. Interruptions were routine. Phones beeped incessantly. By nine, all lawyers, paralegals, clerks and secretaries were either present or accounted for. the Bendini Building was empty and quiet. Nathan Locke arrived around six, but went straight to his office and locked the door. At seven, the a.s.sociates began appearing and voices could be heard. By seven-thirty the firm had a quorum, and a handful of secretaries punched in. By eight the halls were full and it was chaos as usual. Concentration became difficult. Interruptions were routine. Phones beeped incessantly. By nine, all lawyers, paralegals, clerks and secretaries were either present or accounted for.
Mitch treasured the solitude of the early hours. He moved his clock up thirty minutes and began waking Dutch at five, instead of five-thirty. After making two pots of coffee, he roamed the dark halls flipping light switches and inspecting the building. Occasionally, on a clear morning, he would stand before the window in Lamar's office and watch the dawn break over the mighty Mississippi below. He would count the barges lined neatly before their tugboats plowing slowly up-river. He watched the trucks inch across the bridge in the distance. But he wasted little time. He dictated letters, briefs, summaries, memorandums and a hundred other doc.u.ments for Nina to type and Avery to review. He crammed for the bar exam.
The morning after the ceremony for the dead lawyers, he found himself in the library on the first floor looking for a treatise when he again noticed the five portraits. He walked to the wall and stared at them, remembering the brief obituaries given by Avery. Five dead lawyers in twenty years. It was a dangerous place to work. On a legal pad he scribbled their names and the years they died. It was five-thirty.
Something moved in the hallway, and he jerked to his right. In the darkness he saw Black Eyes watching. He stepped forward to the door and glared at Mitch. "What are you doing?" he demanded.
Mitch faced him and attempted a smile. "Good morning to you. It happens I am studying for the bar exam."
Locke glanced at the portraits and then stared at Mitch. "I see. Why are you so interested in them?"
"Just curious. This firm has had its share of tragedy."
"They're all dead. A real tragedy will occur if you don't pa.s.s the bar exam."
"I intend to pa.s.s it."
"I've heard otherwise. Your study habits are causing concern among the partners."
"Are the partners concerned about my excessive billing?"
"Don't get smart. You were told the bar exam has priority over everything. An employee with no license is of no use to this firm."
Mitch thought of a dozen smart retorts, but let it pa.s.s. Locke stepped backward and disappeared. In his office with the door closed, Mitch hid the names and dates in a drawer and opened a review book on const.i.tutional law.
10.
The Sat.u.r.day after the bar exam Mitch avoided his office and his house and spent the morning digging in the flower beds and waiting. With the remodeling complete, the house was now presentable, and of course the first guests had to be her parents. Abby had cleaned and polished for a week, and it was now time. She promised they wouldn't stay long, no more than a few hours. He promised to be as nice as possible.
Mitch had washed and waxed both new cars and they looked as if they had just left the showroom. The lawn had been manicured by a kid down the street. Mr. Rice had applied fertilizer for a month and it looked like a puttin' green, as he liked to say.
At noon they arrived, and he reluctantly left the flower beds. He smiled and greeted them and excused himself to go clean up. He could tell they were uncomfortable, and he wanted it that way. He took a long shower as Abby showed them every piece of furniture and every inch of wallpaper. These things impressed the Sutherlands. Small things always did. They dwelt on the things others did or did not have. He was the president of a small county bank that had been on the verge of collapse for ten years. She was too good to work and had spent all of her adult life seeking social advancement in a town where there was none to be had. She had traced her ancestry to royalty in one of the old countries, and this had always impressed the coal miners in Danesboro, Kentucky. With so much blue blood in her veins, it had fallen her duty to do nothing but drink hot tea, play bridge, talk of her husband's money, condemn the less fortunate and work tirelessly in the Garden Club. He was a stuffed shirt who jumped when she barked and lived in eternal fear of making her mad. As a team they had relentlessly pushed their daughter from birth to be the best, achieve the best, but most importantly, marry the best. Their daughter had rebelled and married a poor kid with no family except a crazy mother and a criminal brother.
"Nice place you've got here, Mitch," Mr. Sutherland said in an effort to break the ice. They sat for lunch and began pa.s.sing dishes.
"Thanks." Nothing else, just thanks. He concentrated on the food. There would be no smiles from him at lunch. The less he said, the more uncomfortable they would be. He wanted them to feel awkward, guilty, wrong. He wanted them to sweat, to bleed. It had been their decision to boycott the wedding. It had been their stones cast, not his.
"Everything is so lovely," her mother gushed in his direction.
"Thanks."
"We're so proud of it, Mother," Abby said.
The conversation immediately went to the remodeling. The men ate in silence as the women chattered on and on about what the decorator did to this room and that one. At times, Abby was almost desperate to fill in the gaps with words about whatever came to mind. Mitch almost felt sorry for her, but he kept his eyes on the table. The b.u.t.ter knife could have cut the tension.
"So you've found a job?" Mrs. Sutherland asked.
"Yes. I start a week from Monday. I'll be teaching third-graders at St. Andrew's Episcopal School."
"Teaching doesn't pay much," her father blurted.
He's relentless, thought Mitch.
"I'm not concerned with money, Dad. I'm a teacher. To me, it's the most important profession in the world. If I wanted money, I would've gone to medical school."
"Third-graders," her mother said. "That's such a cute age. You'll be wanting children before long."
Mitch had already decided that if anything would attract these people to Memphis on a regular basis, it was grandchildren. And he had decided he could wait a long time. He had never been around children. There were no nieces or nephews, except for maybe a few unknown ones Ray had scattered around the country. And he had developed no affinity for children.
"Maybe in a few years, Mother." Maybe after they're both dead, thought Mitch. "You want children, don't you, Mitch?" asked the mother-in-law.
"Maybe in a few years."
Mr. Sutherland pushed his plate away and lit a cigarette. The issue of smoking had been repeatedly discussed in the days before the visit. Mitch wanted it banned completely from his house, especially by these people. They had argued vehemently, and Abby won.
"How was the bar exam?" the father-in-law asked.
This could be interesting, Mitch thought. "Grueling." Abby chewed her food nervously.
"Do you think you pa.s.sed?"
"I hope so."
"When will you know?"