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“I didn’t move the Queen’s Pawn because that would have exposed your King and made him vulnerable to attack. Too much risk without good reason.”
I booed.
“Exactly.” He smiled, then it faded. “You know, Rita, you took a risk-too much risk-in that gambit of yours at City Hall. I should never have agreed to it.”
But you did. “You didn’t have a choice,” I said, and let it go at that.
“I am grateful to you. Thank you, if I haven’t said so already.”
“You have, and you’re welcome, but I didn’t do it for you. I did it for me. I had a good reason.”
He paused. “That’s just what Paul said, you know, when I took him to task for going to City Hall after you. He said he couldn’t just sit back and see you harmed. That’s the kind of man my son is, Rita.”
I felt a guilty twinge. “I do appreciate what he did.”
“I know you do. But I also know he’s moved out. He told me you two were having problems. The stress of the trial, the demands of your two careers.”
I guessed Paul hadn’t told him about Patricia. Wise move. “Is that what he said?”
He nodded. “He wants to come home, Rita.”
“I understand that.” Paul left messages on the machine every day, but I didn’t call back.
“He loves you very much.”
“I understand that, too.”
“You have a lot invested in this relationship, a lot of time. You own a house together, you’ve made a life together.”
Hadn’t I heard this somewhere before? “Like you and Kate.”
“Yes. Like Kate and me. Although I feel terrible for what happened with Patricia, I’m lucky to have Kate. We’re happy together.”
I thought of Kate’s French plates, the figures facing each other on the kitchen walls. “And you want me to take Paul back.”
“I do. Whatever he has done, whatever is your point of disagreement, there is one fact that ca
Ouch. “So I should take him back, out of guilt?”
“Of course not. But the point is, how many men would do something like that?”
I thought of Tobin, wondering. “Did Paul put you up to this?”
“No. In fact, it would be more accurate to say that I put him up to this.”
“What do you mean?”
“It’s your move, Rita,” Fiske said, and looked beyond me, over my shoulder. I twisted around.
There, in the open doorway, with a look of surprise on his bruised face, stood Paul.
31
My secretary Janine shivered with excitement as she closed the door behind her. “Are you ready?” she asked, mascaraed eyes agleam.
“Ready.” I nodded and sipped a steaming mug of coffee. It felt good to be in the office again. My gray couch was covered with case files, large trial exhibits were stuffed between the cabinet and chair, and correspondence wafted on my desk in white drifts, like new fallen snow. Everything in disorder. I wiggled my toes happily.
“Are you sure you’re ready?”
“Show me, child.”
“Okay, here goes.” She strode to the front of my desk and yanked up her black blouse to the edge of an orange bra. Sure enough, pierced through the tender pink fold of her navel was a golden ring. It glinted cruelly in the morning sunshine. “Cool, huh?” she bubbled.
Not what immediately came to mind. I leaned closer and caught a whiff of baby powder and the Body Shop’s vanilla oil. “You did this over the weekend?”
“Yeah? It’s my sixth hole?”
“You sound like a golf course.” I stared at her belly button. The new hole looked puffy and red.
“I have three in one ear, two in the other, and this one makes six?”
Not counting the one in your head. “Did you put anything on it to clean it, like a salve or antibiotic?”
“The man put some stuff on it, like Goop?”
Goop. I was guessing motor oil. “What about this morning, did you put anything on it?”
“Just spit?”
Jesus. I’d stop by Thrift Drug for her at lunch. “Did it hurt when he pierced it?”
“Not hardly?”
“You mean it hardly hurt?”
“Right?”
“You’re brave, child,” I said, meaning it, and Janine beamed down at me over her perforated midriff.
“Not as brave as you? I mean, I used to think you were kind of, like, boring? Only into work?”
Oh.
“But now I think you’re kind of, like, cool. And brave. You totally inspired me.”
I was more surprised by the form than the substance. “Janine, did you hear that?”
“What?”
“The way you just said what you said.”
She nodded. “A sentence goes down at the end. Like you told me.”
I was about to congratulate her, but just then the door burst open and slammed back against the wall. Janine gasped and dropped her blouse. My managing partner, Mack, was standing in the doorway, puffing like an aging gunslinger in a tight double-breasted suit. I’d expected to hear from him, but not until my second cup of coffee.
“Knocking is always appreciated,” I offered.
“We have to talk, Rita,” Mack said sternly, then his gaze shifted to Janine. “Privately.”
“Oh, let her stay. She’s tougher than the both of us, trust me on this.”
“Privately,” he repeated, but a jittery Janine was already squeezing past him and out the door, closing it behind her.
“That wasn’t very nice,” I said, when we were alone.
“I’m not feeling very nice.”
“You’re never feeling very nice, Mack.”
“Wrong. I feel nice when I win.”
“Me, too.”
He folded his thick arms over his chest and stepped closer. Mack’s morning smells weren’t as pleasant as Janine’s; he reeked of high finance and double-dealing. “I understand you’re not giving interviews over the Hamilton matter. You canceled the Good Morning America appearance and the Court-TV. What’s the idea?”
I set down my coffee. “I’m busy. I have my own cases to work and clients to call back, some of whom have been waiting two weeks. And I have to pick up Neosporin for Janine.”
“None of that is as important as those interviews.”
“To who? Whom?”
“To me.”
“I see. Well, my clients are more important to me. In fact, my secretary’s bellybutton is more important to me.”
“This isn’t fu
“I don’t think so either. By the way, did you know that there was no raise in my distribution this month? I opened the envelope this morning and it was exactly the same as before the midcourse correction. Wasn’t I corrected, Mack?”
“No.”
“We had a deal, as I remember.”
“We did not.”
Dick. “Say what?”
“You didn’t accept my offer that morning. The Committee made the distributions as they saw fit.”
“I had my secretary call and tell you the same day!”
“I didn’t get a message from you or your secretary about that.”
“But you reassigned my cases.”
“She didn’t mention anything about the increase.”
Terrific. Her navel she remembered, my raise she forgot. “So what? You saw I kept the representation, didn’t you? You had me in the papers every day, you got the mileage you wanted. Don’t play games with me, Mack. I deserve that raise.”
His eyes narrowed. “I understand. No raise, no interviews?”
“I’m flexing. You impressed?” Turnabout was fair play, wasn’t it? “The whole thing is in your control, Mack.”
“This is ridiculous.”
“It’s your choice, boss.”
He leaned over the cloth chair in front of my desk. “Christ! What’s the point, Rita? You don’t care about the money. You don’t need the money.”
“It’s the principle of the thing. General principles. They’re in the United States Code. You got the index?”
“I don’t understand a word you’re saying.”
“You don’t understand general principles, Mack? The first one is ‘Keep your word’-you said you were going to give me a raise, do it. Another general principle is ‘Don’t quit.’ The third is ‘Don’t fink on your friends.’ And there’s always my personal favorite, ‘Get up and get it yourself.’ Shall I go on?”