Mean Streak

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Mean Streak Page 4

by Carolyn Wheat


  Brooklyn state court, where I knew all the plunges, all the curves, all the acceleration points, was the old Blue Streak. The Southern District, the federal court, was the Mean Streak. It was bigger, scarier, with curves I didn’t anticipate, speeds I might not be ready for. But I had to try it. I couldn’t spend my life on the kiddie rides, afraid to test myself on the big one. I explained this as best I could to Lani, and then we sat in silence, a silence I broke by asking, “What else have they got on Riordan?”

  “Word on the street is that Fat Jack is on tape telling Eddie Fitz the money came directly from Matt Riordan.”

  Tape. They had a tape. Maybe tapes plural.

  “Is Riordan himself on tape?” I tried to keep my voice neutral, but the panic edged through. Lani’s smile was one part pity, two parts innocent malice.

  “I hear your client’s golden voice is on at least two of the tapes,” she replied. “But the bulk of their case is Eddie Fitz and Fat Jack.”

  My defense jelled as I sat across from my old buddy. I saw myself at counsel table, flanked on one side by Matt Riordan—and on the other by the slimeball known on the street as Fat Jack.

  Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, the evidence is clear that Jack Vance, known for obvious reasons as Fat Jack, knowingly and deliberately paid money to a corrupt court clerk in return for grand jury minutes. This was a crime. This was wrong.

  And we have Fat Jack’s word—and only Fat Jack’s word, ladies and gentlemen, because Eddie Fitzgerald was only repeating the words Fat Jack said to him—that the money came from Matt Riordan.

  It would be a mudslinging contest between Fat Jack and Matt Riordan—and there was little doubt in my mind that the jury would have no trouble choosing which man to trust.

  Our whole defense would depend upon the fat man sitting next to Matt.

  I could handle this, I decided; the Mean Streak wasn’t as scary as it looked.

  CHAPTER THREE

  “You said there wouldn’t be a little black suit,” I protested through clenched teeth. “You said I could be myself.”

  “I forgot that your idea of dressing for success is a hand-sewn Afghan smock from the Daily Planet catalogue,” Riordan replied with a wry smile. He sat on a red plush stool; I stood before a beveled three-way mirror in my stocking feet. An Ann Taylor suit in a deep charcoal with faint chalk stripes hung from my frame like a burlap sack.

  “It’s too boxy,” I said. My voice held exactly the same shade of sullen resentment I’d used at age ten when shopping at Horne’s with my mother.

  “True,” Riordan agreed in a cheerful tone that steadfastly refused to acknowledge my mood. “A woman in a suit should always look as if she’s not wearing anything underneath. There should be a provocative little hint of cross-dressing, of feminine charms hidden under a deceptively masculine wrapping.”

  “When the hell did you start writing for Women’s Wear Daily?” I shot back. I felt like a fool. Worse, I felt like Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, like Eliza Doolittle, like the original Galatea, like every woman who has ever let a man dictate to her how she should present herself. Riordan had hired a lawyer, not a mannequin, and it was about time I—

  “Everything counts,” my client said in a low voice. The testiness in his tone was overlaid by an intense conviction. As much as Matt Riordan was capable of speaking directly from the heart, he was speaking that way now. “I know you think it’s enough to know the law, to be quick on your feet, to care about your cases. But when I say everything counts, I mean everything, including physical appearance. And yours,” he went on, “could stand a little improvement. More Manhattan, less Brooklyn. More Wall Street, less Legal Aid.”

  “More Jane Pauley, less me,” I muttered. But the sullen edge left my voice; I was just bantering now.

  Everything counts. That was Riordan in a nutshell. His own appearance was a matter of constant, meticulous concern. I’d given him a tie one Christmas; he’d never worn it, and when I asked why, he told me. At length. He was only doing to me what he’d always done to himself.

  “Just try on the next suit,” Riordan begged. “I think the amethyst raw silk has possibilities.”

  It did. Believe it or not, I looked great in the thing. It had a peplum and a rounded forties collar with rhinestone clips. Very period, nipped at the waist with a straight skirt that ended just above the knees. Short enough to show leg; long enough for a woman who hadn’t worn a miniskirt since the last time they were in style.

  Pearl-gray pumps, gray hose with just a touch of lavender, silver earrings, and a haircut that cost more than my last year’s entire beauty shop budget—and I was finally ready for prime time.

  We grabbed a cappuccino at a little place on Madison Avenue. I had six shopping bags filled with silk items, two shoe bags holding Louis Jourdan pumps, and a wardrobe of scarves in colors like eggplant and teal. I was also under orders to wear only my most conservative, absolutely real jewelry. No craft fair finds in hammered silver, no handmade Navajo turquoise, no images of animals.

  I had appointments for a facial, a leg waxing, and a manicure. Was I preparing to try a case or enter the Miss America contest? I absentmindedly raised a hand to my hair, intending to run my fingers through it, but instead of the real thing, I now had a headful of doll hair, sprayed into plastic straw. I grimaced and lowered my hand.

  Would Riordan have done the same—minus the leg waxing—if he’d hired a male lawyer? Looking at his razor-cut hair, well-groomed nails, and impeccable wardrobe, I knew the answer: He sure as hell would. And that, somehow, made it all right.

  Halfway through my first cup of the foamy, caffeine-laden brew, Matt began to talk about his father. I was so surprised, I put the cup down onto the saucer with an audible clatter and stared at my companion. He had never, but never, mentioned his parents or his childhood to me in all the years we’d been together.

  “We were living in Hell’s Kitchen back then,” he said. “In those days, wives didn’t work unless their husbands were seriously deficient.”

  I nodded; my own mother hadn’t begun her career in real estate until both her children were in college.

  “So we lived on my father’s bus-driver salary,” he went on. “Which meant we were just a little bit poorer than some of the other people on the block, a little richer than others. My father used to lay bets with the bartender at the Shannon Bar and Grill over on Tenth Avenue. Never won much. Hell, he never won a damned thing, which was why my mother used to cry when he’d come home with half his paycheck riding on some broken-down nag out at Aqueduct. He’d always tell her that one day his horse would come in, and when it did, we could move out of the neighborhood and go to the Bronx, where things were good.”

  I laughed aloud. The idea of the Bronx, the city’s most dangerous borough, being a good place to raise kids was a concept totally new to me.

  “Hey, don’t laugh,” he protested, but the smile lines around his eyes forgave me. “In those days, moving to Parkchester was the best thing that could happen to an Irish family. My parents talked about the Bronx as if it were the Promised Land.”

  It came to me that the reason Matt was talking to me about his family was that I was now his lawyer. What he’d kept hidden from his sometime girlfriend could be spoken about with his legal representative. We were closer as lawyer and client than we’d ever been as lovers.

  “One day it happened. The horse he’d bet on came in first. Forty to one odds. He’d put down a thousand bucks, more than he’d ever bet before. He said it was because he had a tip from the jockey’s second cousin’s best friend, but who cared how it happened? The really important thing was that he’d won, that he was going to get forty thousand dollars and we were going to move to the Bronx.”

  I happened to know Matt had never lived in the Bronx.

  “Something went wrong,” I guessed. “What was it?”

  “The bartender who took the bet worked for the Westies,” he said. “They were behind the whole betting operation. Not
that we in the neighborhood ever called them Westies—that was a name the press made up. But forty thousand bucks was an amount they just couldn’t see paying off on. They welshed on the bet, and when my father went to the Shannon to collect, they beat him up. Badly. He was in the hospital two weeks, and when he came home, he couldn’t talk because his jaw was wired. The night he came home,” Matt went on, his own jaw clenching with remembered anger, “the very night, he had us pack up all our things and move out. We slunk out of the neighborhood like a bunch of thieves, as if he’d done something wrong. He didn’t have what it took to stand up to them.”

  “Didn’t he go to the police?” I asked. “Not about the bet,” I clarified. “I know the cops couldn’t have done anything to help him collect on an illegal bet. But beating someone up is a crime, right?”

  “That’s the part I could never forget,” Matt said. His smooth-as-silk voice grew ragged as he finished the tale. “Or forgive. The neighborhood cop, Tommy Mackay, stopped by and talked to my father. Told him, sure, he could file a complaint, but he went on to say that the cops couldn’t protect him twenty-four hours a day, and maybe it would be better for all concerned if he made a complaint that a couple of niggers beat him up. That, by the way, was his precise wording: ‘a couple of niggers.’ When Tommy knew what the whole neighborhood knew: that Pop was beaten up by the Westies because he’d dared to ask for his money from the bet. As we left the neighborhood that night, as all my clothes and toys went into a rented truck and we drove up Broadway to Inwood as if we’d done something wrong, I swore to God I’d never take that kind of shit in my own life. And I swore that I’d show cops like Tommy that they couldn’t push people around like they pushed my father.”

  I said nothing for a full minute, then quietly asked, “So you think Nick Lazarus is a little like Tommy the cop? Pushing people around just because he can?”

  “I do,” my client replied. “And I’m counting on you to help me show him he can’t. I’m not sneaking out of the neighborhood this time, no matter what the bullies try to do to me.”

  We went to court two days later. Nick Lazarus had filed his indictment and Matt was charged with bribing a federal official.

  We were mobbed on the way into the courthouse. The reporters and minicams behind the police barricades were waiting for me this time. No cameras were allowed inside the sacred precincts of the federal courthouse; they would have to garner their sound bites on the steps before trial began. Ginger Hsu of Channel Five thrust a mike into my face and asked, “What do you think your client’s chances of acquittal are, Ms. Jameson?”

  I mouthed a “No comment” and pushed past the crowd. I was almost at the top of the stairs when I felt a tug on my silk-clad sleeve. I turned; Matt had my arm. He stopped me and motioned toward the steps below us.

  About halfway up, standing in the exact spot where the minicams would get a nice shot of the impressive courthouse columns behind him, stood Nick Lazarus. I couldn’t hear the words, but every one of the reporters listened, microphones poised, as he spoke. Next to him, Davia Singer wore a carefully schooled expression of neutrality on her thin face. It was the kind of expression a wife wears in public when her husband flirts with the waitress, a wait-till-I-get-you-home look. It was the expression my face undoubtedly would have worn if my boss had hogged the cameras on my case.

  Riordan stepped toward the knot of reporters. I wanted to grab his sleeve and pull him back, but he was too quick for me. By the time I caught up, he was at the edge of the crowd. I caught the last few words out of Nick Lazarus’ mouth: “Matt Riordan is a cancer in this courthouse,” he intoned, “and this trial will remove that cancer once and for all.”

  He’s no Cancer, I thought with flippant irrelevance, he’s a Scorpio. I had no idea what Matt was going to say, but it was clear to me he wasn’t going to let Lazarus have the last word with the press.

  Carlos Ruiz of Channel Seven stood next to Riordan. He nudged his cameraman, who turned the lens toward my client. Other reporters and camera people realized Riordan was nearby, and soon all the lenses were focused on him, all the mikes were poised and waiting for his reply to the insulting challenge just issued by the prosecution.

  Ruiz was known for his cocky, street-kid style. Geraldo Lite. “So, Riordan,” he began, “this Lazarus dude says you’re a cancer. That true, or what, man?”

  It was the perfect setup; if Riordan had paid Ruiz to ask the question, it couldn’t have gone better. “A cancer?” he quipped. “At best, I’m a hernia. A pain in the you-know-what. And you want to know something?”

  By now all the reporters had zeroed in on Matt; Lazarus stood alone, flanked only by Davia Singer.

  Matt’s resonant voice lowered just a tad, making them edge in a little closer. Emphasizing the fact that the reporters were hanging on his every word, Lazarus forgotten. “It’s my job to be a pain in the you-know-what. And Nick Lazarus doesn’t like it when I do my job, so he’s trumped up this case to teach me a lesson. Well, you wait and see who learns a lesson here. Just wait and see. That’s my advice to all of you.”

  There were more questions, but Matt waved them away with a friendly smile. He turned and strode back up the steps, without a backward glance to see whether or not I was following.

  It wasn’t until we reached the landing at the top of the stairs that he acknowledged my existence. He wheeled on me so suddenly, I took a step backwards. His face was a mottled red and the veins stood out in his neck. He shoved me behind one of the massive pillars and pinned me against the smooth marble with a sinewy arm.

  “You will never, ever use the words ‘no comment’ again while you are my lawyer,” he said in a thick voice, biting off each word. “This is a media case and the only way we are going to win is to play the media as carefully as we play the judge and jury. If you have a problem with that, say so now and I’ll find somebody else to represent me.”

  When I’d agreed to take Matt’s case, I had no idea I’d be riding the Mean Streak outside the courtroom as well as inside. I nodded, too upset to speak, but knowing he was right. As long as Lazarus intended to try his case on the courthouse steps, we had to do the same.

  I had to do the same. I should have been the one to talk to the reporters, not Matt. It was my place, not his. He had only stepped up to the plate after I’d struck out.

  I had to get a hit next time, or admit I wasn’t ready for the bigs.

  I pushed open the giant carved wooden door to the courtroom with the name Justice de Freitas on the identifying plaque, and stepped onto the big roller coaster.

  I’d thrown up my popcorn and cotton candy after my first ride on the real Mean Streak; walking into my first-ever federal courtroom, representing the most famous defendant I’d ever had, I felt the same queasiness in my stomach. Of course, I reassured myself, this time I hadn’t had five beers and two joints before getting on the roller coaster.

  I reminded myself I’d gone back later for a second ride. By the time we’d left Cedar Point, the Mean Streak was my new favorite. I hoped I’d feel the same way about high-profile federal cases sometime before the verdict came in.

  Davia Singer sat at the prosecution table with her file spread out before her in neat, orderly stacks of paper. I gazed at her as I made my way up the aisle toward the defense table. What kind of lawyer was she? I wondered. How would we play against one another at trial?

  Davia. A soft, evocative name. A name that promised loose curls framing an olive-skinned face with huge dark eyes. A name that promised a soft, slightly accented voice. A name that held mystery, femininity, yet conveyed the strength of a David.

  Which left me playing the uncoveted role of Goliath.

  Lazarus stood aside and smiled as Riordan and I walked through the heavy door. It was the smile of a predator who sees his prey coming within claw range. I smiled back, beaming confidently. If there was one thing I’d learned from the man who was now my client, it was to radiate confidence no matter what. In fact, the more scared you were,
the more important it was to make people think you had the world by the tail.

  I stepped up to the defense table and set my briefcase on its shiny surface. I opened it and pulled out a yellow legal pad and a nearly-empty manila folder. I set them carefully on the table, marking my territory as instinctively as a cat.

  I had to make the courtroom as much mine as Davia Singer’s. I opened my card case, took out a card with my name and address on it, and walked up to the court reporter. I handed it to him with a smile and told him I’d want the arraignment minutes as soon as possible. “I’m willing to pay rush rates,” I added.

  This was Riordan’s idea. It was the legal equivalent of handing the maitre d’ a big tip to insure good service.

  The courtroom was filling up. The reporters were print people, for the most part; without cameras in the courtroom, the television types were limited in their coverage. I recognized Village Voice columnist Jesse Winthrop, the grand old man of New York City muckraking, in the first row. He still resembled an urban Jewish John Brown, with deep-set eyes that burned with indignation.

  The rest of the rows were occupied by well-dressed young lawyers. Probably Singer’s cheering section; baby U.S. Attorneys eager to see the aging gunslinger Matt Riordan brought down by one of their own. She was a new import from Brooklyn, I’d recently learned. She’d transferred from the quieter precincts of the Eastern District to the goldfish bowl of the Southern.

  The huge door swung open and a grossly fat man waddled up the aisle, trailed by a ferret of a man with a bald pate and a furtive glance. Fat Jack Vance, Riordan’s bail bondsman, had arrived, along with his lawyer, a Baxter Street hack named Sid Margolies.

  “All rise. The United States District Court in and for the Southern District of New York is now in session. All those who have business before this court draw near and give your attention.”

  I rose, my heart thudding with anticipation. Judge de Freitas stepped forward and took the bench. He was a small, neat man with liver spots on his bald crown. With his sad eyes and sagging jowls, he bore an uncanny resemblance to the late Adlai Stevenson. He had taught Evidence before his elevation to the bench; one of his prize students at Fordham Law School had been a young Matt Riordan.

 

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