One More Time

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One More Time Page 15

by Deborah Cooke


  “Working, because somebody has to,” she said bitterly.

  “Look, Leslie…”

  Leslie could hear that he was preparing to negotiate something, but she wasn’t inclined to give him another chance right now, not considering where he was and how little he was telling her about what he had done.

  She was too angry.

  “Ooops, gotta go. Give my love to Sharan.” Leslie blew a kiss into the receiver then chucked it into the cradle. She shoved a piece of chocolate into her mouth. There’s only so much truth a person can face after being sheltered from it for so long.

  Leslie gathered her stuff and left her office, telling herself that she didn’t care that the phone didn’t ring before she got to the end of the hall. She was leaving early and she didn’t care who knew it. Thank God she had underwires to hold her up straight.

  In fact, she left the building with a certain aplomb.

  * * *

  Matt met his brother in the usual colorless featureless room reserved for meetings between lawyers and their incarcerated clients. He was in a sour mood after that morning call to Leslie, not particularly inclined to kiss his younger brother’s booboos better. He was tapping his toe with impatience when Zach was ushered into his company.

  “It’s about time you got here,” Zach complained and Matt’s back went up.

  The two guards exchanged a glance and Matt saw that they were already used to his brother’s expectations. And they were bemused by it. They gave the usual instructions about where they would be and how to summon them and Matt nodded, letting Zach fume.

  “Good to see you, too,” Matt said with forced politeness, as if they were strangers instead of brothers. “Maybe you’d like to sit down.”

  “Nice shiner! How does the other guy look?”

  “Shut up and sit down.”

  “Jeez, no sense of humor today.” Zach sat. “What’s wrong with you?”

  “There’s nothing wrong with me.”

  “Yeah? Then why do you seem so officious? More like James than yourself.” Zach grinned and lounged in his chair.

  Matt considered his brother, the man so accustomed to having everyone else clean up his mistakes. He had a sudden conviction that he might not be so helpful this time. “Imagine that someone could be less than thrilled to be summoned the length of the country to serve your whim, with no hope of compensation.”

  That made Zach pause, but then he braced his elbows on the table. He was too handsome for his own good, this kid, and too smooth to have ever gotten what he deserved. Even after a couple of days in the can, he had a certain rakish charm. “You’ve got to get me out of here, Matt. These guys are apes. It’s got to be a violation of my constitutional rights to be detained for so long on trumped-up charges.”

  “I can only assume that you have told them as much.”

  “Well, yeah! I’m an innocent citizen…”

  Matt glanced at the charges. “With five pounds of pot in your backpack, just because.”

  “Look, it wasn’t even my stuff…”

  “Be serious, Zach. You had it in your backpack, which was apparently zipped closed.”

  “I am serious! It was a plant, no pun intended. Somebody set me up. What do you think I am—stupid? I never carry that much at once, even when I’m selling, because you’re dead meat if you get caught.”

  Matt couldn’t resist the impulse to pointedly look around. “Clearly.”

  Zach scowled. “This is no time for joking! Look, I’m in a jam and I need your help.”

  Matt tapped his finger on the table between them. “Correction, Zach: you’re in deep shit. Three counts of resisting arrest, one count of assaulting a police officer—”

  “He deserved it! He was twisting my arm behind my back, so I decked him.”

  “Good plan. It always makes things go better for you when you’re innocent, if indeed you are, if you can manage to deck a cop who’s doing his job.”

  “Wow, you’re cranky today. No sex in Belmont these days?”

  Matt lowered his voice to a growl. “Shut the fuck up and do it now.”

  Zach swallowed. “It was just a joke…”

  “Too bad it wasn’t funny, then.” Matt flipped through the dossier he’d assembled upstairs. “Let’s see: driving under the influence, possession of marijuana, intent to traffic marijuana, soliciting… You were having yourself a good time for a Tuesday night, weren’t you?”

  “I was at a party, that’s all.” Zach sat back, displeased with something. Whether it was the litany of charges or Matt’s attitude, Matt couldn’t say.

  And he didn’t much care.

  Especially when Zach criticized him again. “So, where were you? I’ve been here two and a half days. I called James Tuesday night.”

  “Wednesday morning, actually.”

  “So? Did you walk from Boston? It’s Thursday.”

  Matt forced a thin smile, determined as he was not to lose his temper. “You heard, perhaps, that Father is dead.”

  Zach sat back, folding his arms across his chest. “It’s not like anyone would care. Don’t tell me you were too busy crying to get your ass on a plane and come to help me out.”

  That was it. Matt leaned abruptly across the table and seized Zach by the shirt collar. He had always been strong and fury made him stronger. He lifted his little brother so that his butt came off the chair and gave him a shake. “You stupid bastard,” he snarled, then once he started, he couldn’t stop. “Let me tell you about Father’s death. Let me tell you what it’s like to be summoned to a man’s study, a man who eats his gun while you’re en route.”

  “Jesus, I didn’t know…”

  “Let me tell you about the library at Gray Gables, all those books behind his desk dripping with blood and little bits of his brains.”

  Zach swallowed and averted his gaze. “Jesus, Matt, give it a rest.”

  “Let me tell you how he looked with his head exploded. Let me tell you about the smell…”

  Zach looked at Matt with fear in his eyes.

  “So, the timing is a little inconvenient for you maybe, but I’ll be seeing—and smelling—that scene for the rest of my life.” He released his brother abruptly, tossed him back into his chair, then straightened his own tie. “Sorry to hear that his suicide didn’t suit your schedule.”

  “You never lose your temper like that,” Zach said with care, as if Matt had become unpredictable.

  “Maybe that was my mistake.” He sat down and riffled through the paperwork. “So, I can’t defend you here, because I’m not admitted in Louisiana, but as your brother, I can offer you some advice.”

  “Don’t you know anybody here? James always knew somebody…”

  “Then it’s too bad that he’s not inclined to help you out anymore. Guess you went to that well too many times, huh?”

  “What is this, Honesty Day?”

  Matt ignored that. “What you want to do is admit to the possession and pay the fine—or do the time, however it shakes out here—and I’ll guess that they’ll blink on the intent to traffic since they don’t have much more than an assumption that one person couldn’t use that much…”

  “But didn’t you hear me? I’m innocent!”

  Matt laughed a low humorless laugh. “Yeah, right. I’m not sure you can get around the assault charges, seeing as they were police officers in uniform and you’ve obviously been busy making friends during your time here.”

  “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  “You may be the favored prince in Mom’s kingdom, but being demanding in this place isn’t going to get you far. You should have used some of that charm to have them think you a nice guy, instead of working to persuade them that you’re a selfish prick.”

  “Hey, don’t mince words on my behalf.”

  “I won’t.”

  The pair glared at each other, then Zach shook his head and grinned. “You know, I was expecting you to come in here with this all fixed up, that I would, you know, walk
out of here with you today, but I got a feeling that’s not going to happen.”

  Matt closed the folder and dropped it into his briefcase. “Your day in court is Tuesday. I’d suggest you do yourself a favor and play nice with the locals over the weekend. A little sympathy for your cause could go a long way to mitigating the fines and…”

  “Tuesday? Tuesday! What kind of shit is that?” Zach was on his feet, outraged as a toddler denied a chocolate in the check-out line. “I’m not staying here for the weekend. I’ve got things to do. I have a date. And besides, I’m innocent! Didn’t you hear me? I’m innocent!”

  Matt didn’t’ have to call the guards: they were already at the door, courtesy of Zach’s shouting.

  “Zach, this would be a lot easier if you just admitted the truth.”

  “Okay, okay, resisting arrest: absolutely.” Zach raised his hands. “Because I should never have been arrested. Otherwise, I’m as innocent as the day I was born.”

  Matt had long been of the opinion that Zach had been born looking for trouble, but it seemed a bad time to mention as much. “Well, you can tell the judge that on Tuesday. Maybe he’ll even believe you. Have a good weekend.”

  “You’re leaving? You’re leaving, just like that? Leaving me here?” Zach sputtered and the guards grinned. “What kind of help is that?”

  “You know enough about the law to know that there’s process.”

  “I know enough about the law to know that a citizen shouldn’t have to do time for something he never did.” Zach straightened and gave Matt a disparaging glance, but Matt marched to the door.

  “Maybe you’re just not a good enough lawyer to get the job done,” Zach called after him. “I heard you lost to James this week. What was the matter—couldn’t you make it in court?”

  Matt felt something come to a boil within him, but he turned a cool stare on his youngest brother. He walked slowly across the room, noting how Zach flinched. He clenched his fist and raised it slowly to Zach’s chin, pushing it to a slight angle. “Lucky for you, you’re in jail, little brother,” he whispered, then waited until Zach’s gaze flickered.

  He paced crisply to the barred door, then paused to deliver his parting shot. “Well, then, you should be glad that you don’t have to put up with me anymore. You’re on your own, Zach. Maybe you can wring some value out of those two years of law school that Father paid for.”

  And he turned and left.

  “You’re not abandoning me!”

  “No, I’m leaving you to your own formidable resources. I understand they’re quite impressive.”

  One guard liked that one; Matt could tell by his snicker.

  “I’ll call James!”

  Matt kept walking. “He didn’t come the last time you called and he won’t come the next time, either. Maybe you don’t know that he promised Jimmy that he wouldn’t be bending the rules for you anymore: you know that anything James promises to his kids is inviolable.”

  Zach swore because he did know that.

  Matt was almost at the end of the corridor when the inevitable shout of protest came from behind him.

  “You bastard! I’ll get you for this!”

  Matt shook his head as the last guard opened the last gate. “It’s just like when we were kids,” he said with a smile.

  “’Cept you grew up,” she said with an answering smile and an appreciative glance.

  The fact was that Matt had thought Zach should be left to his own resources for a long time. In a way, he was glad to be the one to have done it. It hadn’t been easy and he shouldn’t have lost his temper, but maybe that had been necessary for Zach to take it seriously.

  Matt took a deep breath and deliberately pushed his brother’s plight out of his thoughts. He heard a bird sing and decided to walk, as it was such a beautiful afternoon.

  Maybe he’d cook fish for dinner. There had to be a good seafood market here and he could go for some ceviche.

  Chapter Eight

  Mrs. Beaton was peering through her lacy drapes when Leslie started up her own front walk. Instead of playing the neighborhood game of pretending to not notice what other people are doing—or even their presence—Leslie gave the nosy widow a cavalier wave.

  Mrs. Beaton disappeared in record speed, only a slight sway to the drapes revealing that she had ever been at the window. Leslie imagined her hyperventilating beneath her window and imagined it would be a while before Mrs. Beaton watched so closely again.

  She might have found that more amusing if the front door of her house hadn’t been standing open. This was strange and unusual on a Thursday afternoon, in case you aren’t sure. Leslie might have blamed Annette, but there were boxes in the foyer.

  And a moving truck parked at the curb.

  Leslie’s first thought was that they were being robbed.

  Her second was that it must be true that thieves weren’t often clever. She and Matt didn’t have much worth stealing in terms of its resale value—few electronic toys, no new ones, no jewelry, cash or booze.

  Still, it was all theirs.

  Leslie ran into the house, forgetting everything she’d ever read about not surprising villains in one’s own home. She dodged boxes and shouted for Annette, which wasn’t, in hindsight, the most circumspect way of finding out what was going on.

  To her dismay, Annette didn’t answer.

  To her relief, the Coxwell furniture was right where it belonged: there were just boxes and other pieces of furniture in between. Come to think of it, some of it looked familiar, as if it had come from another Coxwell residence. Leslie heard the sound of an argument in the kitchen and was reassured: thieves surely wouldn’t pause to argue.

  She made her way toward the kitchen, trying not to think that it would fit her luck to end up confronting the only two stupid violent thieves in the greater Boston area.

  “I’m telling you, lady, we don’t have a lot of time.” Leslie reached the kitchen door in time to see a burly stranger tapped his watch. “I gotta know where you want all this stuff, so me and my boys can get this job done and get back to punch out. Everybody’s ready to finish this day, that’s for sure.” He glared at his opponent.

  Which proved to be Leslie’s mother-in-law, Beverly Coxwell.

  Beverly glared back. “Well, you’re mistaken if you think that I have any desire to prolong this interaction. Your hourly rates are appallingly high, outrageous really…”

  “And we can argue about them while you’re racking up more of them, or you can tell me where you want all this stuff, I can get done, and we can stop the clock. You’re lucky we were able to accommodate you on such short notice.”

  Beverly shook a finger at the mover, who had to be a foot taller than her and three times her weight. “You are impertinent…”

  “And you’re drunk. Nobody’s perfect. Where do you want this junk?”

  “It is not junk. That table, in particular, is a very nice example of a Biedermeier.”

  Leslie chose that moment to clear her throat and declare her presence. “Hi. Maybe someone could tell me what’s going on.”

  “Leslie!” Beverly swept across the kitchen, giving Leslie an air kiss on each cheek. They might have been meeting at a swish garden party, all flowing chiffon, broad-brimmed hats and little tiny sandwiches. It was odd to be greeted this way in her own currently-crowded kitchen, which made Leslie suspect the show of affection was for the mover’s benefit.

  Something was different about Beverly, but Leslie couldn’t put her finger on it right away.

  “I’m so glad to see you,” Beverly declared, for possibly the first time in their entire relationship. Leslie blinked because her words even sounded sincere. “I just know that you’ll have this arranged in no time at all. You are the most organized person alive, after all.”

  It was on the tip of Leslie’s tongue to observe that she was only welcome because she was useful, but that would have been bitchy. She chose to be less confrontational.

  For the moment.
r />   “What exactly am I arranging?” Leslie glanced around at the boxes.

  “Didn’t James phone you?”

  “No. Why would James phone me?”

  “To tell you, of course, that I was very rudely evicted today from my condo rental and to explain that the only possible solution to the dilemma under the circumstances was for me to stay here.” Beverly waved a hand, as if this was painfully evident.

  Ipso facto. Leslie could imagine her brother-in-law making the same cavalier gesture, although she found it hard to believe that he would have made the same conclusion. James was usually quite gracious about respecting boundaries.

  He hadn’t gotten that from his mother, who seemed to think that everyone around her was ‘staff’.

  Maybe she only thought Leslie was ‘staff’, seeing as Leslie never had been and never would be of the same social circle as the Coxwells. And Leslie’d probably never learn enough of those little cavalier gestures to fool anyone into thinking she belonged in those circles.

  Beverly gestured to the large man behind her, who watched this exchange with a measure of amusement. “Hence the movers who, I don’t need to tell you, charge an outrageous hourly fee. It would be best, Leslie, if you could promptly tell them where you want everything so they could get finished as quickly as possible.”

  Her expectations clear, Beverly turned as if she meant to leave.

  The mover covered his smile with one meaty paw as he watched Leslie struggle to find the words.

  Or at least some polite ones. “I don’t mean to be slow, Beverly, but maybe you could confirm to me just what ‘everything’ is?”

  She blinked. “Well, everything.”

  “Are we talking about the entire contents of your condo? That’s what they’re moving into my house?”

  “Well, where else would I put it?”

  Leslie bit her tongue, because she was about to ask her mother-in-law if she could spell ‘storage locker’.

  That would be bitchy.

  The mover tapped his toe and looked at his watch.

  “I suppose some of it could be put in storage,” Leslie suggested.

  Beverly arched a brow. “Not all of it. The antiques need to be in a temperature and humidity controlled environment, and it’s much simpler to store them here. I’ll need my clothes and personal effects, after all. Anything else, of course, could be put into storage, if you could just sort them out. I haven’t had the time today, with being so rushed.”

 

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