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Final judgment lm-5

Page 12

by Joel Goldman

“We don’t sell newspapers in the casino, but I do read them. Were you looking for me or did you just get lucky?”

  “Dumb luck. The only kind I have these days. One of your employees ends up dead in the trunk of my client’s car and you and I end up at the same party talking about it. Are those odds optimistic or suicidal?”

  “It doesn’t matter since we aren’t talking about it. I wouldn’t take them either way.”

  “I’d like to talk to you about Charles Rockley.”

  “I don’t blame you. But it’s a police matter and I can’t involve my company in your client’s problems.”

  “Rockley was your employee. Doesn’t that make his murder your problem?”

  “We have hundreds of employees. Somebody is always getting married, getting divorced, getting sick, or getting well. Some of them die. We send them all a card.”

  “Who are you sending a card to for Rockley?”

  Webb put one hand in his pants pocket, running his other hand across his chest and under his neck. “I don’t know anything about his family. My HR director takes care of that.”

  “Sure,” Mason said. “All those employees. Must be hard for you to get to know every one of them.”

  “It’s part of my job. I do the best I can.”

  “But you knew Charles Rockley better than most because another one of your employees, Carol Hill, sued him and Galaxy for sexual harassment. Vince Bongiovanni told me all about it.”

  Webb blinked once, his only concession to the card Mason had played. “Then you should talk to Mr. Bongiovanni. He doesn’t have to keep personnel matters confidential. I do.”

  “How about Johnny Keegan? Let’s talk about him. What are the odds that two of your employees would be murdered in the same week and that one of them was having an affair with Carol Hill and the other one wished he was?”

  Webb cocked his head at Mason, applying a thin smile, his voice dropping to a frozen register. “Too long for you to play them,” he said.

  THIRTY-THREE

  Webb walked past Mason before he could respond, the crowd swallowing him. Mason parsed their conversation, looking for what was meant even if it hadn’t been said. Webb had a ready answer to Mason’s questions about Rockley. No doubt the cops had been to see him and Webb surely had told them about Carol Hill’s sexual harassment claim. All that made sense. And it made sense that Mason would take advantage of their meeting to ask Webb about Rockley. Webb could anticipate all that and be ready for Mason’s questions knowing he’d have to answer them sooner or later.

  Webb wasn’t ready to talk about Johnny Keegan, although the cops would have tied Keegan back to Galaxy by now-probably talked to Webb, maybe even told Webb that Mason’s name had been found on a piece of paper in Keegan’s dead hand. They would have asked Webb what he knew about Keegan, Webb saying not much, that his HR director would send a card. Then, Mason wondered, why did Webb’s temperature drop when he asked him about Keegan?

  Unable to answer his question, Mason elbowed and shouldered his way past pockets of people, renewing his search for Abby. He reached the center of the foyer without finding her, pressing on toward the name tag tables. He was about to ask one of the young women if she’d seen Abby when he saw Lari Prillman pick up her name tag.

  She was a head shorter than Mason; her harvest-colored hair was swept back, a stunning white gold and diamond chain cradling her bare neck. Her dress was off the shoulder, the look favoring her well-toned arms and slender frame. She was older than Mason, five to ten years, he guessed, but she hadn’t conceded anything to the calendar. She looked fresh, full, and vital, carrying herself with the square-shouldered assurance of a woman who knew it. Mason had never met her but understood the lasting impression she made on clients and jurors.

  “You don’t have one,” she said to him.

  “One what?” Mason asked.

  “A name tag. I hate these bloody things. I can’t pin it on a dress like this without stabbing my breast. Here,” she said, returning the name tag to the woman who’d given it to her. “Save it for next time.”

  “I’m Lou Mason.”

  “Lari Prillman,” she said, extending her hand.

  “I know. I read your name tag.”

  He shook her hand. Her grasp was cool and firm, though she quickly let go.

  “And I’ve read your press clippings. You represent Avery Fish. I would have been here earlier except the police stopped by to tell me that an employee of one of my clients was found dead in the trunk of your client’s car. Is our meeting a coincidence or were you looking for me?”

  “Your client asked me the same thing not ten minutes ago.”

  “Al and I are sitting at the same table tonight. I’ll have to remind him not to talk to lawyers. What did you tell him?”

  He smiled. She didn’t. He cocked his head, tried the smile again. She didn’t melt. He’d blown the chance to talk with Carol Hill earlier in the day, hadn’t learned much from Al Webb, and didn’t want to waste his chance with Lari Prillman. Charm wasn’t working. Pragmatism might.

  “Our meeting is strictly coincidence, but opportunity is usually like that. Your client is too good a poker player to have told me anything. But you and I may be able to help each other.”

  She smiled at last. “Straightforward answers and a straightforward proposition. I like that. It’s a little crowded here. Let’s find someplace to talk.”

  Mason followed her through the crowd. She managed to greet and be greeted without slowing down as people made way for her. They took the escalator down two flights to the lobby, finding a pair of softly padded leather chairs angled on either side of a pie-slice-shaped table hidden in a far corner of the bar. A lamp muted by an opaque shade separated and shadowed them. They couldn’t have had more privacy unless they rented a room.

  “What did Al Webb really tell you?” she asked Mason.

  “Not much. He said his HR director sends out lots of cards to the employees. You should tell him that doesn’t count as a fringe benefit. I was hoping you’d tell me something useful about Charles Rockley.”

  “I’ll tell you what I told the police. Charles Rockley worked for the Galaxy Casino for the last year. No one at Galaxy knows anything about his murder, and no one has ever heard of Mr. Fish.”

  “That’s very helpful. Saves me the trouble of asking all those employees what they know about Rockley and my client. Must be a couple of thousand of them. The cops tell you about Rockley while you’re getting dressed for the party and you manage to interview all of the employees and still make it here on time. That’s good work.”

  She clenched her jaw, straining her makeup.

  “I charge my clients too much money to screw around every time an employee gets into trouble, and I contribute too much to the Republican Party to spend my evening trading shots with you. A gaming company can’t afford to be drawn into a murder investigation. I can’t help you with yours. Nice to meet you,” she said, and stood, ready to go.

  “How about two murder investigations?”

  She looked down at him, the color fading from her cheeks for an instant before she recovered. Her eyes narrowed.

  “I’m listening.”

  “A bartender who worked at the Galaxy named Johnny Keegan was killed last night after he got off work.”

  She drew a short breath at the mention of Keegan’s name. “The police didn’t say anything about that.”

  “Imagine that; the police not telling a lawyer everything. You and your client should have a lot to talk about over dinner. Did you give the police Rockley’s personnel file?”

  “I told them we’d respond to a subpoena.”

  “Just the kind of cooperation the cops love. Make them jump through hoops. That’s what you call not screwing around. You’ll get a subpoena Monday morning for everything Galaxy has on Rockley and Keegan. They won’t just draw you and your client into these murders; they’ll shrink-wrap you in them.”

  She planted a hand on her hip. “If you’ve
got something to say, get to the point. I paid for that rubber chicken dinner upstairs.”

  “Vince Bongiovanni told me that Rockley, Keegan, and Carol Hill were playing she loves me, she loves me not. Carol said loves me to Keegan and loves me not to Rockley. Rockley was a sore loser. Carol sued Rockley and Galaxy for sexual harassment.”

  “If you talked to Vince then you know I defended the case for Galaxy. The arbitration was last week. We’ll have a decision next month.”

  “Then you know that Carol’s husband is seriously pissed. Both boyfriends end up dead. It won’t take the cops long to connect the dots.”

  “From what I read in the paper, they’ve already connected Rockley’s dots to your client. Why do I care if he or the husband did it?”

  “Sometimes the sure thing is a sucker bet. The cops are going to be crawling all over your client’s boat and your office as soon as they can get a judge to sign the search warrants. I’d clear my calendar for next week if I was you.”

  She took her seat again and leaned toward him, the glow of the lamp softening her features. “What do you want?”

  “I want to see those files before the cops do.”

  “Why?”

  “Whoever killed Rockley dumped the body in my client’s car. There may be something in them that helps me find out why.”

  “And how does that help my client?”

  “It might not. I won’t know until I see the files. If there’s nothing in there that points to someone besides Carol Hill’s husband, the cops will treat the whole thing as a cheap domestic drama. That’s good for my client and it keeps Galaxy out of the mix except for the bad luck of hiring those losers.”

  “Then I should give the police what they want and tell you to piss off.”

  Mason smiled, this time drawing a venomous one from her. “Unless the cops are wrong about my client and the husband. Then it’s all about Galaxy. We both need to know what’s in those files.”

  “You forget. I already know what’s in the files.”

  “You were defending a sexual harassment case. This is murder. Everything looks different.”

  She studied him for a moment, giving nothing away. If she knew about the conversations Fiori taped with him and Judge Carter, she wouldn’t let him see the files. It would make more sense to cooperate with the police than give Mason access to anything. Especially after she found out that Keegan had died with his hand around Mason’s name and phone number-something Mason assumed she would eventually learn.

  “After dinner,” she said. “Meet me at my office.” She opened her purse, handed him a business card, and left him sitting in the shadows.

  THIRTY-FOUR

  By the time Mason got back upstairs, the crowd was streaming into the ballroom, people threading their way among the closely packed tables. Abby found him, her eyes wide, breathing like she’d just finished a set of wind sprints.

  “I’ve been looking all over for you,” she said. “Where have you been?”

  “Makes us even. I was looking for you until I was buttonholed by another lawyer wanting to talk about a case. She dragged me downstairs to the lobby and held me hostage.”

  “She?” Abby asked, arching an eyebrow.

  “Jealous?”

  “If she wants you, she can have you,” Abby answered, the gleam in her eye exposing the playful lie. “C’mon, I want you to meet someone.”

  The head table was set on a raised dais at the front of the ballroom. As Abby led Mason closer he recognized the mayor, a couple of city councilmen, a few state representatives, a congressman, the governor, and Senator Josh Seeley, most of whom were accompanied by their spouses. The highest-ranking office holders were at the center of the table with lesser lights strung out to the end. Patrick Ortiz and his wife were at the end of the table next to the stairs leading up to the stage. Mason clapped him on the shoulder as he followed Abby toward the senator and his wife.

  Mason had never met Seeley. He hadn’t purposely avoided it, but he hadn’t pursued the opportunity either. Mason and Abby had still been together when she started working on Seeley’s primary campaign. He’d told her that he was too busy when she invited him to campaign events, which was sometimes true. The rest of the truth was that he would rather have a tooth pulled slowly than stand in a crowd and shout slogans or be solicited for a contribution while chitchatting about core values over cocktails.

  Later, when his relationship with Abby hit the skids, there were no invitations to decline. Instead, he watched her on television, hovering at Seeley’s shoulder; throwing her arms around his neck on election night. Seeley was married, his wife a good-looking woman with high cheekbones and knowing eyes she burned into the back of her husband’s head as he and Abby embraced. At least that was the way Mason read the scene. He suppressed his jealousy, hopeful that Abby wouldn’t sleep with a married man, especially one who was her boss and a United States senator.

  None of which made Mason look forward to the meeting that was about to happen. Seeley rose from his chair. He was taller than Mason, his silver hair, blue eyes, and dimpled chin straight out of central casting. Mrs. Seeley kept her seat, the temperature at her chair hovering at the freezing mark.

  “Abby,” the senator said, grasping her by the shoulders, then quickly letting go when his wife shot him a glance. “Wonderful job on the arrangements, as always. Introduce me to your friend.”

  “Senator and Mrs. Seeley. I’d like you to meet my boyfriend, Lou Mason.”

  “Boyfriend,” Seeley boomed, shaking his hand. “Good for you, Mason. I was worried that Abby was going to wither away in the service of my constituents.”

  Seeley had been a wealthy businessman before running for the Senate, his first shot at elective office. Some said he bought the election. Others said every candidate buys their election; Seeley just used his own money. Seeley was in his early sixties, the current Mrs. Seeley his second wife and ten years his junior. Mason wondered if she’d earned her position at the expense of the first Mrs. Seeley, making her naturally suspicious.

  Mason didn’t blame her, especially since Abby had never once introduced him to anyone as her boyfriend. It was a term he bet she hadn’t used since the eighth grade, and her use of it now made him feel the fool, more so in light of their recent rocky history. She had brought him to the dinner to calm the fears of her boss’s nervous wife. He didn’t know whether the fears were justified, only that he wanted no part of this charade. He wondered if their afternoon delight had been part of the script or whether Abby had ad-libbed that to give her performance tonight the ring of truth.

  He wanted to punch the senator in the mouth, yank Abby off the stage, and get the hell out of Dodge, with apologies to Mrs. Seeley. Abby slid her arm around his, squeezing it. He felt the plea in her grip and swallowed hard.

  “Nice to meet you, Senator,” he said, matching Seeley’s grin and grip. Turning to Mrs. Seeley, he added, “A pleasure,” and offered her his hand.

  She looked up at him, her lips pursed. “You’re the boyfriend?”

  “So I’m told.”

  “Be careful what you wish for,” she said and turned away.

  Abby murmured to him as they walked to their table. “Thank you. I’ll explain later.”

  He didn’t reply because a formal dinner with one thousand of his closest friends was not exactly the time or place for a come-to-Jesus session with Abby. He chewed his food slowly so that he wouldn’t drink as much as he wanted to, though getting drunk was more appealing than the chicken Kiev he was pushing around his plate.

  Lari Prillman was the other reason he didn’t get drunk. He surveyed the room, catching a glimpse of her at a table several rows away from his. Al Webb sat next to her, their heads tilted together, Lari pointing her index finger at his chest like it was a steak knife. He looked their way again somewhere between the salad and the chicken. Webb was gone.

  He kept tabs on Lari throughout the evening but still maintained a passable line of small talk with the a
ccountant sitting on one side of him while avoiding eye contact with Abby. Dessert was served at ten o’clock, the speeches moments away. Lari stood and looked directly at him as if she’d been watching him the entire evening as well.

  “Is that her?” Abby asked.

  “Who?”

  “The woman who just gave you that look. Is she the lawyer you were talking with earlier?”

  “I didn’t realize you were paying such close attention.”

  “Since you’ve hardly spoken to me all evening, I’ve got to pay attention. What’s eating you?”

  Mason pushed back from table, dipping his chin, keeping his voice low. “Look, I don’t know what’s going on between you and Seeley…”

  “Nothing’s going on!”

  Mason nodded, trying to read her, afraid that he couldn’t. “I’m sorry. I’ve got to go. You’ll have to take a cab home,” he said, getting up.

  She stood next to him, taking his hand. “Will you call me?”

  He squeezed her hand and let go without answering.

  THIRTY-FIVE

  Mason pulled Lari Prillman’s business card from his pocket, pleased that her office was in one of the Crown Center high-rises. He could walk there, maybe even get back before the speeches were over and sort things out with Abby.

  Lari was waiting for him outside the ballroom, a fur coat slung over one arm. She held it out to him so he could help her put it on. It was a polite gesture he couldn’t refuse and a subtle reminder that this was her show, not his.

  “I hope I didn’t disrupt your evening,” she said as they walked outside, the air sharp, the afternoon warmth an uncertain memory, distant stars lost in a fog of ground light.

  “Not at all.”

  “Your friend didn’t look too happy to see you go.”

  Mason let out an exasperated breath, the cold crystallizing, then vaporizing his frustration. “How do women do that?”

  “Do what?”

  “I told the woman I was with-her name is Abby-that I’d talked with a lawyer, a woman lawyer, earlier in the evening about a case. She saw you stand up and look at me, and she knows you were the woman. You take one look at her and tell me she isn’t happy.”

 

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