by Amanda Lance
Body of Law
Volume One
Amanda Lance
Copyright
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by an information storage and retrieval system - except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review to be printed in a magazine or newspaper - without permission in writing from Amanda Lance
Table of Contents
Copyright
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Chapter 1
Violet
At fifty-two stories, the Wilson Tower was one of the tallest in Chicago. Unlike the other skyscrapers in the neighborhood, its blue glass exterior provided rainbow reflections when equally shiny cars and the morning sunlight hit it just right. If that weren’t obnoxious enough, everyone who passed by on foot was rewarded with semi-accurate reflections of themselves.
I hated that more than anything, knowing I couldn’t avoid looking at myself. I hadn’t even started yet and I was already making compromises, sacrificing my casual look by sculpting my hair into a well-centered bun. I did at least leave my crooked bangs out in the open, and only traded my usual lack of make-up for some mascara and eyeshadow.
My clothes, though, were another matter. Since I refused to give myself over completely to corporate America, a few trips to the Goodwill helped me piece together a few different arrangements of blazers and dress pants to go along with my mediocre collection of tops. The only problem with saving so much money and helping the needy was the lack of accuracy in the sizes. And more than once, my attempts at hemming resulted in swearing — and throwing needles across the room. I sighed and tried to adjust the belt on my skirt. For whatever reason, I could memorize case law like no one else in my class, but any attempts at being domestic and I was dead in the water.
I approached the entrance to the building and, without any hesitation, the large doorman let me inside. I smiled my thanks and bypassed the security desk for the elevators. After three rounds of intern interviews, I knew where I needed to be—even if it wasn’t where I wanted to be.
The last thing I had ever envisioned when entering law school was working for an international criminal law firm like Gardner, Burke and Gates. I had been fighting for the downtrodden my entire life— my dad had spent my childhood bad-mouthing conglomerate firms, emphasizing the importance of humility over wealth, generosity over power, and empathy as an alternative to personal gain. To him, one person could spend their entire life trying to make the world a better place and probably still not make up for their own mistakes. For all of his own self-righteousness, however, Dad did say in the end that raising me was the best thing he’d ever done.
What would he think if he could see me now? How disappointed would he be?
The elevator opened up to a well-lit lobby, completely contemporary in every sense of the word. Granite flooring paved the way to leather furniture, baskets of fresh fruit on display on every horizontal surface. The same wood paneling that surrounded the elevator doors matched the paneling here, framing the bronze sign with the partners’ name on it. Anyone else would have been intimidated by this display, or excited to be chosen for a paid internship with one of the city’s most prestigious criminal law firms. But all I felt was a unique sense of self-disappointment. I reminded myself that this was a paid internship, that it was good for my resume… and that I was only selling a little piece of my soul.
Mistaking my disgust for nervousness, my expression caught the attention of a pretty receptionist wearing an expensive-looking business suit. She tilted her head at me and flashed a smile, her lips layered in ruby red lipstick.
“Gardner, Burke, and Gates—hold one moment please.” Admittedly, putting someone on hold for me did make me feel a little more welcome but I tried not to put too much stock in it. She pulled the speaker of her headset away and beamed up at me.
“Hello there! Summer associate?”
I looked down at my scuffed dress shoes. “What gave me away?”
Still smiling, she pushed out her chair and stood up. “Honestly?”
I nodded intently. If I was going to give away some of my morals for this job, I was going to take everything thrown my way; even observations from the law firm’s receptionist.
“It’s the bag. Even the part-time paralegals have a few good knockoffs.”
I looked down at my messenger bag and swallowed hard. I wasn’t exactly sentimental, but I was practical, and after four years in college and two in law school, I trusted the bag I’d bought at Target a lot more than a trendy one.
“Oh, right.” I straightened my posture and followed her as she led me down the hall. “I’ll keep that in mind.”
The long hallway was lined with offices. No bigger than cubicles, the ones I could see into all looked exactly the same, other than a few personal effects on display in an attempt to personalize the sterile space.
“This is where we store our first year associates,” the receptionist said. “The other side of the lobby has two conference rooms. You probably won’t be seeing any of those, but you should know where they are. Floor forty-nine is accounting and research, floor fifty is civil, and fifty-one and fifty-two are the criminal lawyers and the partners’ offices.”
Leaving me at the doorway of a room no bigger than a classroom, she extended her slim hand to me before smiling once more. “I’m Nicky by the way—head of reception. If any of my people give you a hard time, just let me know.”
I opened my mouth to say thanks, but she was already gone.
Though I was ten minutes early, I was the last one there—the final of five summer associates. As I expected, we were well diversified, too. The other female in our group had a pretty complexion, her ethnicity a cross between Hindi and what I thought might be Italian. I nodded a hello, but her gaze at me was cold, conceding at best.
So much for female solidarity.
The other interns in the group gave me looks that were just as hard. I didn’t blame them. It had been made clear to all of us when we applied for the session that only one of us would be offered a job at the end of the semester. All that was needed for a reality show was a cash prize and a few cameras. Most of us glared at each other like we wanted to rip each other’s throats out. I did my best to look just as intimidating but failed when I realized how ridiculous it all was. It was too easy to imagine suspense music cutting away to commercials.
After thirty minutes of intimidating stares around the room, a suit walked in wearing clothes that looked like they belonged on a storefront mannequin. If I had to guess, I would have said his shoes alone were worth more than two months rent for me. But if that didn’t tip me off about him being a jerk-off, him strutting in to bark at us while staring at his phone certainly would have.
“Okay, people, here we go. I’m Quinn Morgan, your mentor for this session. I’ll be your mother, father, priest, and rabbi. Forget whatever god you worship because I’m your new deity from now until August.”
I thought those last two statements were a little contradictory, but I knew better than to say anything. My other fellow associates, however, did not.
�
�Sir, I was just wondering—”
“Stop.” Quinn Morgan held up a single finger, but still didn’t look up from the phone. In the otherwise silent room, I could hear the muted sounds of the Candy Crush theme music. “From this point on, none of you will speak unless spoken to. I’d hit you upside the head with a rolled up newspaper and rub your nose in shit, but HR says we can’t do that anymore…”
Some of us looked at each other. But most of us kept staring wide-eyed at our new supposed deity. He wasn’t particularly unattractive, but his bronzed complexion was undermined by circular tan lines around his eyes, a clear sign of too much time in a tanning bed, and I instantly found the sound of his voice annoying. It sounded like the result of a nose job gone bad.
“Now, stand up, walk with me, stay with me and above all, keep your mouths shut.”
Like kids on a field trip, we walked in a line, listening to all the rules Quinn Morgan preached to us about copy machines and coffee breaks. It wasn’t anything I hadn’t anticipated, but I would have been lying if I’d said I wasn’t amused by the way he mastered levels 35 of 36 of Candy Crush while lecturing us about using our cell phones without permission.
“Normally, you’d each be assigned to a division,” he said, “but with our current employment situation in criminal, at least two of you will be going up there.”
Pure joy radiated from the colleagues behind and in front of me at this announcement and, just as quickly, I felt a mild sense of guilt. Here I was, living the dream for any second year law student and I didn’t even want it. When I’d submitted my application, I’d doubted I was going to be accepted, much less considered. At the time, I knew a white female had less of a chance than anyone else, but I also didn’t want to put all my eggs into one basket when I went to apply for a summer internship.
Dropping us off one by one, Quinn Morgan shoved us off the elevator and told us who we should look for. Without admitting it to myself, the expressions of the young man and woman he dropped off at research were enjoyable to see—disappointment outlined with hatred for the rest of us. The remaining three of us looked at each other, knowing full well the odds were now in our favor.
In my imagination, I pictured the young man beside me breaking out karate moves and taking us out—Quinn Morgan included—before casually walking off the elevator. Meanwhile, my female companion stared at me with the wrath of Vishnu himself. I, on the other hand, didn’t display a single ounce of aggression. I confirmed this by glancing at my reflection on the elevator door.
“Okay, people here we are. Continue following, no talking…”
Clearly, no expense was spared on the floors for criminal law. Less contemporary and more futuristic in its décor, it had black granite uniting walls, and windows. The glass end tables and black leather furniture that welcomed visitors to the floor were enhanced by white flowers in matching crystal vases.
Okay, so this lobby was just a little bit intimidating.
Once again, Quinn Morgan shoved us off, assigning us to various tasks for third and fourth year attorneys who needed things done. Wide-eyed and stomach flurrying, I took in the sights of Armani suits and Jimmy Choo heels and people chattering in Japanese on headsets. I had to admit, there were a lot of things to distract yourself from the fact that you were putting criminals back on the street.
I looked around me and once again clutched my bag. I was a lone soul standing in a field of soldiers and I didn’t even have a weapon. Where were the other summer associates? And, more importantly, why hadn’t I been assigned something?
“Blondie.” At last, Quinn Morgan looked up from his phone. “I have something special in mind for you. Follow me and above all—”
“Keep my mouth shut?”
He gave me a wry smile but immediately went back to his phone.
I swallowed hard and tried to smile. Great.
Back out in the lobby, a receptionist—clearly under Nicky’s influence, judging by the lipstick—was busy entertaining two bodies in suits. Though the older gentleman was a complete snowbird, he was dressed to the nines, sporting a pinstripe suit with a bright red tie and ascot. Laughing warmly at something the receptionist said, he pushed up his thick glasses and glanced in my general direction. This alerted the attention of the other suit beside him, whose posture stiffened when he said something else.
Even from behind I could see how in shape he was, his suit clearly tailored to fit his tall, masculine frame. His golden-brown hair was perfectly cut, right up to his short sideburns, and when he turned I could see the rest of his face was nearly as perfect. And yet, it wasn’t just the sharp nose and deeply embedded brown eyes that took my breath away.
It was the fact that I had known Sebastian Scott my entire life.
Chapter 2
Violet
Well, my entire life was an exaggeration. Still, considering how intense my crush on Sebastian Scott had been, it certainly felt that way. Figments of him remained in my memory from my teenage years, capsulated right there between Dad grading papers and my first genuine attempts at cooking. Even before Mom died, Dad couldn’t help but take his work home with him. And to him, the young undergrad was just like one of the many law books he lugged home, day after day.
Sebastian had been one of my dad’s favorite projects. And as far as I knew, he was the only project that failed.
***
“Vi, are you done with your homework?” From somewhere on the other side of the house, my father’s voice called out to me. Without hesitation, I dropped my pencil and headed for the kitchen, more curious than anything at the exotic smells wafting toward me.
“There you are.” Dad smiled at me the moment I walked into the room. Marrying late, he hadn’t expected to outlive his young wife, let alone be a single father. Still, I always thought he did a decent job of it. “Set the table for me, will you? And add another plate—we might have a guest.”
Excited at the prospect of meeting someone new, I hopped to attention, scurrying to the cupboard where we kept our mismatched dinnerware. “A guest?”
“One of my students, a very promising undergrad…”
I rolled my eyes and searched for forks and spoons. According to Dad, all of his students were either “very promising” or showed “exceptional potential.” These were things I’d heard so often that I'd just stopped listening. Instead, I focused on folding napkins and arranging glassware. It was only after a minute that I realized he was looking at me with one of his brows furrowed—a trademark of his paternal concern.
“Violet, do me one more favor, okay?”
Uh-oh. I knew that voice—the overprotective Dad voice. “Sure?”
“If Sebastian does end up coming over tonight, just be a little wary of what he says. Maybe don’t take him so seriously. I understand he can be quite a flirt with the co-eds—”
I shook my head, moving to take the wooden spoon out of Dad’s hands and take over the chili. “I’m fourteen Dad. I can practically take care of myself.”
He laughed and ruffled my hair. “Tell me about it. Sometimes I think—”
Dad stepped aside to cough then, a memory that stood out as the first of many coughing fits in a long series that led to his end.
I was sure my face was revealing every emotion I was feeling, but Sebastian’s remained stoic and cold, almost as if he didn’t remember me at all. Instantly, my insides reeled at the thought, but I didn’t know why. It seemed like he was eying me suspiciously, but I did my best to meet his gaze.
“Ah, Sebastian, I think this one is yours. Sebastian, meet Violet Donovan, top of her class at Illinois State University, and highly recommended by the staff at UCL.”
It took me a minute to recognize the snowbird as Roger Gardner, the most famous lawyer in Chicago, but after I did, I went back to staring at Sebastian. Apparently, Dad’s reputation had gotten me further than I’d thought. A well-known district attorney before he’d retired to teach, Dad had probably run into Roger Gardner more than once. If that was the
case, I was probably in for more sludge work than I could have imagined.
Roger smiled in my direction but I only shrugged. The subtle mention of my father made me more uncomfortable than I anticipated.
Rolling his eyes, Sebastian switched his briefcase from one hand to the other. It was the most I’d seen him move in the few seconds we’d spent staring at each other and the tension between us flat lined. Instantly, however, our moment was interrupted by the fountain of words that was Quinn Morgan.
“Mr. Gardner, sir, always a pleasure to see you sir. Did you catch the game last night, sir? I really thought the Cubs had it there—”
Gardner sighed. “Go away, Morgan.”
“Yes, sir.”
Sebastian raised his hand and waved to Quinn with flimsy fingers. For a second, I thought I sensed a moment between the two, but ignored it—office gossip was something I didn’t want to get caught up in. Despite the tension, I extended my hand to Gardner and put on my best smile.
“Mr. Gardner, it’s such a pleasure to meet you in person. I’ve read so many things about you, I almost feel like I know you.”
It might have felt a little like ass-kissing, but it wasn’t untrue, either. The top criminal defense attorney in the city, Roger Gardner was just as well known in the criminal underworld as he had been in my study classes. For the hard-nosed bad guy I always imagined him to be, however, his handshake was subtle, his eyes kind. Maybe it was this approach that had won the juries over—after all, who would argue with a well-dressed grandpa?
“The feeling is mutual, Ms. Donovan.” He looked back and forth at the two of us and smiled. “I’m sure you’ll learn a lot from Sebastian here.”
I automatically panicked. “I t-thought Mr. Morgan—”
“Morgan has enough on his plate,” Gardner said. “Besides, Sebastian here got to skip his year as the mentor for the summer associates team, so he gets to make up for it now.”
Gardner turned to leave and was only two steps away from us when Sebastian dropped his briefcase and tried to catch-up to him. “Roger? Roger? Is this really necessary?” He looked back at me and sighed, like he had never been more annoyed in his life. “I understand I may have been a bit out of line in court the other day, but this? You’re sticking me with this infant of a girl who can’t even dress herself? If I wasn’t so tired, I’d be downright pleased with my ability to piss you off.”