Solomon versus Lord svl-1
Page 8
Over herbal tea and sugar-free rice pudding, Bruce had said: “General counsel and executive vice president of BRV. How does that sound, sweetie?”
Like a sellout, that's how.
Maybe Bruce was trying to tell her something in a roundabout way. Maybe he thought she didn't have the chops to be a trial lawyer. What if he was right? Maybe she'd get shit on in every trial, one way or another. Maybe she should just do what Bruce wanted. Which meant relying on him, being totally dependent, emotionally and financially. And that meant, she realized, violating a promise she had made to herself when she was twelve years old, just after her father died.
I will never depend on any man. I swear I won't.
She remembered the very first to-do list she'd written on her very first note card.
1. Study hard.
2. Stay away from boys.
3. Make lots of money.
Okay, so she'd only gone one for three. She'd pocketed a summa cum laude parchment. As for the boys, a girl's gotta have fun, right? And her net worth, well, that was printed in red ink.
Still, she had her membership card in the Florida Bar. She would rebound from getting fired. She wouldn't be like her mother, who had relied so totally on Victoria's father and had been let down so hard. A man who spent lavishly on his wife and only child. A man who could, on a moment's notice, swoop up the family for an impromptu cruise, his valet racing aboard with their bags while the ship's horn bleated visitors ashore.
Victoria remembered her father as a barrel-chested man with a mane of wavy, silver hair and a joyous, rippling laugh like a stream pouring over boulders. Even now, she could smell the rich leather of his handmade Italian shoes, the tang of his cologne, the worsted wools of his tailored suits, laced with cigar smoke.
“What's Daddy's little girl want for her birthday?” he once asked.
“A horse,” she answered.
Poof. Like magic. A Shetland pony with a silky white mane.
A dollhouse? Poof. The size of a bungalow, it was fit for a princess, the daughter of a king.
Fireworks? Poof. Rockets soaring from the front lawn, turning the neighborhood into a carnival.
Until it all went to hell, to use her mother's expression.
How could it have happened? Lord-Griffin Construction Company was booming. Her father and his partner, Harold Griffin, were building high-rise condos on both coasts of Florida, making tons of money, living in a pate and white wine world. The two couples-Harold and Phyllis Griffin, Nelson and Irene Lord-were best friends. Their two children-Hal, Jr., and Victoria-were inseparable from the time they were toddlers. The future seemed preordained. Private jets, Caribbean villas, a life of privilege and comfort.
“Until your father cracked.”
Another one of her mother's expressions.
There had been a grand jury investigation. A scandal in the Broward County Building and Zoning Department. Allegations of code violations and payoffs, bribery and extortion. Nelson was subpoenaed to testify.
Then, one horrible night, the call to Victoria at boarding school. Her mother's voice: “Your father's gone.”
Gone where? For how long?
Gone forever.
The fall was twenty-two stories from the roof of a condo under construction in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea.
Now, thinking back, Victoria realized how those experiences pushed her toward a man of moderate sensibilities. A clearheaded man, and if he was a tad boring, well, that was the trade-off. We don't get to choose our fathers, but we can learn from them in choosing our husbands, she believed. Of one thing she was certain: Bruce would never bail on her or himself. He was as safe and comfy as a terry-cloth bathrobe. She didn't need fireworks on the lawn, and as for fireworks in the bedroom, that never lasted, anyway, right?
In Bruce, she had a man of solid normalcy. A straight-arrow of a man who adored her. So even if he didn't comprehend how getting fired had crushed her self-confidence and wounded her pride, even if he didn't say precisely the right things, she forgave him.
Victoria banged the palm of her hand against the side of the printer. It didn't say “Ouch,” and the green light still didn't come on. Dammit, she had to get her resumes out. How long could she go without a paycheck? She was afraid to look at the monthly statement from the bank.
No problem. I can always find the hidden diamonds.
The thought brought a rueful smile to Victoria's face. It's what her mother always said when money was tight. The “hidden diamonds” reflected The Queen's dreamy personality, Victoria thought. Her apartment-now Victoria's-was on an upper floor of the first high-rise built on Brickell Avenue, overlooking Biscayne Bay. Victoria remembered her mother telling her tales about the apartment's first tenant, long before the building converted to condo and the street turned into a forest of ritzy skyscrapers.
“Murph the Surf lived here,” her mother had said, with a tone of awe.
She explained that Jack Murphy was a surfer, violinist, tennis pro
… and amateur jewel thief. Victoria listened with wide eyes to the tale of Murph pulling a massive heist-breaking into a New York museum and spiriting away the Star of India, the world's largest sapphire, plus a bunch of diamonds.
“They caught Murph, got back the Star of India and most of the other jewels,” her mother told her. “Most, but not all.” This is where The Queen would lower her voice, as if people in the next apartment were listening through the walls. “He hid the rest of the diamonds right here, right in this building. If things get tough, no problem. I can always find the hidden diamonds.”
From time to time, usually after a bit of sherry, The Queen would chisel holes in the stucco walls, pop open recessed ceilings, and pry the covers off old light fixtures. But the diamonds, if they existed at all, seemed destined to be hidden longer than the treasures of King Tut.
These days, Irene Lord's diamonds came from a succession of wealthy, older suitors. She chose not to marry any of them, content to be escorted to various glam spots around the world. The last time she had called, The Queen was happily ensconced in a fancy spa in Johannesburg, recovering from her latest installments of plastic surgery. She informed Victoria she wouldn't be home for Christmas, something about a side trip to Zurich for injections of sheep hormones.
Victoria believed she had a more practical streak than her mother. At least, that's what she told herself as the TROUBLE light on the printer flashed red.
Damn the printer and damn the legal profession and damn Steve Solomon.
Yep, thoughts of Murph the Surf had morphed into thoughts of Steve the Sleaze. He'd gotten her fired.
No. Strike that. It wasn't Solomon's fault. He had warned her, even while he taunted her for her inability to act spontaneously.
“Sometimes you have to wing it.”
And he'd been right, damn him. If only she had a second chance, she could handle it. She would slough off his stunts with a patient smile and a wry comment. The judge would admire her aplomb. The jury would sympathize, poor girl having to put up with such an obnoxious prick. But there would be no second chance. What was it about Solomon that so provoked her?
The ringing doorbell interrupted her thoughts.
“Who is it?”
“George Clooney!” cried a woman's voice. “Naked and bearing gifts.”
Victoria unlatched the door. “With a three-day beard?”
“Just enough to chafe your inner thighs.” Jacqueline Tuttle laughed and breezed in, carrying a cardboard tray from Starbucks. “Which reminds me, do you have any Monistat in the medicine chest?”
“I don't think so.”
“Damn. Last time I sit in the Jacuzzi for three hours.” Jacqueline placed the tray on the kitchen table. “Frappuccinos, extra whipped cream, carrot cake with double icing.”
“You're a godsend, Jackie. I'm starving.”
“I was in the neighborhood. Got the listing on a penthouse at the Santa Maria. Two million five.”
“Great.”
 
; “Plus I'm showing a three-bedroom at Bristol Tower at noon and checking an open house at Espirito Santo at one. Ever notice that the way Bristol Tower tapers at the top, it looks like a forty-story penis?”
“No, but now that you mention it…”
“Circumcised, of course.” Jackie's laugh crackled like kindling on a fire. She looked around the apartment, which was unusually dark for a bayfront condo. “You ever think about updating this place?”
“I can't afford to update my manicure, and if I don't get my resumes out-”
“That's what we need to talk about. I've got some advice for you.”
Uh-oh, Victoria thought. Jackie Tuttle might be her best friend, but sometimes Victoria wondered what the two of them had in common. Jackie was uninhibited and bawdy and laughed loud and often. Victoria had never seen her depressed, not even when her slime of an ex-boyfriend, Carlos, wrecked her BMW convertible on the Don Shula Expressway while getting head from a Hooters girl he'd picked up at an airport bar.
“No problem,” Jackie had told Victoria. “I get a new car from the insurance. The cop who investigated the accident asked me out. And Carlos' reattachment surgery didn't take.”
That was Jackie, making a Prada purse out of a sow's ear.
She was five-foot-ten and had a wild mane of dyed red hair. She owned a collection of immense dangling earrings, some of which reached her shoulders and enough Blahnik, Choos, and Chanel shoes, boots, sandals, stilettos, flats, pumps, and Mary Janes to make Sarah Jessica Parker jealous.
Today she wore a leather mini with a cropped tank top and knee-high Stephanie Kelian boots in a soft, buttery suede. Most women Jackie's size would have shied away from such an outfit. Jackie didn't care. She was happily, gloriously plump, with natural breasts she called her “bazooms,” which jiggled when she laughed and popped out of her top when she water-skied. Just above her left breast was a small tattoo of Cupid, firing an arrow at whoever happened to be in close proximity.
Jackie was a real estate broker, specializing in what she called the “king-of-the-jungle market,” high-end, waterfront condos that appealed to rich, single men. The real estate license allowed her to run a credit check on any potential buyer or potential spouse in about thirty seconds. This was useful, given all the poseurs, phonies, and outright felons masquerading as legitimate candidates for matrimony. She told Victoria she'd never known how many deadbeats leased Porsches until she logged onto the credit databases. Jackie's own credit report would show that she made lots of money and spent even more.
Now, just what crazy advice did Jackie have?
“Don't send out your resume,” Jackie said, slurping her Frappuccino through the straw. “Go out on your own. Open your own shop.”
“And where do I get my clients?”
“Katrina Barksdale, for starters. She likes you.”
“She likes to play tennis with me. We've never even talked about law.”
Jackie tore off a chunk of carrot cake. “Look, if I killed my husband, should I ever be so lucky to have one, I'd hire you in a minute.”
“I'd have to rent an office, print stationery, hire a secretary.. ..”
“Whatev,” Jackie said. “How much do you have in the bank?”
“In round numbers?”
“Yeah.
“Overdrawn.”
“I could lend you some money.”
“You? You have money?”
Jackie licked icing from her upper lip. “If I sell all my Jimmy Choos on eBay.” She laughed, and then, as great friends sometimes do, she seemed to read Victoria's mind. “You could always work for Bruce.”
“I've thought about it.”
“But…?”
“Wouldn't that be cowardly? I get smacked around in court, so I hide in a back office?”
“C'mon, Vic. You don't have to prove anything. You're marrying Mr. Perfect. Let him pay the freight.”
Sure, it would be so easy, Victoria thought. Take the pressure off, slide papers from the in-box to the out-box. What's the most stress she'd face?
“There's a problem, Ms. Lord. That signature from the bank isn't notarized.”
Maybe she should just say yes. Who could blame her?
But she said: “Can't do it.”
“Okay, but if I were marrying a guy like Bruce, I'd never work another day in my life. 'Course, you don't know what it's like in the husband hunt these days.”
“You'll find someone.”
“Easy for you to say. You've bagged your big game. Nothing out there but Peter Pans, commitment phobes, momma's boys, and brats. Sometimes all in the same package.”
“Just take your time,” Victoria said.
“Did I mention guys who don't know they're gay?”
“Is that possible?”
“Or guys who expect blow jobs if they splurge for stone crabs?”
“No way.”
“It's true. Right after the key lime pie.”
“I'm lucky to have Bruce,” Victoria said. “I know that.”
“Lucky? I'm so jealous, my contacts are turning green.”
Relationships were based on good fortune-or bad-Victoria thought. What were the odds she'd be reaching toward a high shelf for Lisa Scottoline's latest courtroom novel just as a tall, blond man walked by? Bruce had plucked Killer Smile from the shelf, insisted on paying for it, and invited her for coffee. Books amp; Books, she now figured, was a better place to meet a guy than a South Beach club.
Jackie was right. Bruce was a prize. Handsome and stable, kind and giving. And literate, even if his reading habits gravitated toward Saving Taxes Through Offshore Trusts.
“I'll bet you don't even have a punch list for Bruce,” Jackie said.
“What do you mean?”
“Change orders. Every guy I meet, I write down all the changes he needs to make to meet Minimum Husband Standards. Say a guy's favorite music is the theme from Monday Night Football.”
“You're making this up.”
“Last Friday. Blind date at the Blue Door. It's gotten so bad I'm gonna stay home and pet the kitty.”
“I give it a week.”
“I mean it, Vic. No more dating. Just me and my…” She made a buzzing sound. “Leetle friend.”
Again, the doorbell rang, and Victoria headed for the foyer. “Maybe that's George Clooney.”
This time, it was a deliveryman bearing gifts: a tropical bouquet, a bottle of Cristal, and a mystery box wrapped in silver foil. Victoria carried the goodies back to the dining table.
“Bruce is the most thoughtful man in the world,” Jackie said.
“True,” Victoria said, fishing the plastic spear out of the flowers and examining the envelope. “But it's not from him.”
“Who, then? Open, open!”
Victoria tore open the envelope, pulled out the card. “The most irritating man in the world.”
“Solomon? That defense lawyer?”
“He's been leaving messages, asking me out to lunch. He says he's going to help me find a job, but what he really wants is for me to get him the Barksdale case.”
“All the more reason to get it for yourself.”
Could she do it? Victoria wondered. Grab the phone and solicit the case? It would be so unlike her…
“So what's in the box?” Jackie demanded.
Victoria removed the foil, opened the box, and pulled out a single Gucci snakeskin pump. “My left shoe,” she said.
“If the right one's under that bad boy's bed, I'm gonna tell Bruce.”
“I left the shoes in court. Solomon won't give me the other one unless I return his calls.”
“Does he have a foot fetish?” Jackie examined the two-and-a-half-inch heel with a critical eye. “And more important, is he cute?”
“I suppose, if you like that kind of look.”
“What kind?”
“Like a fox. A dangerous, bushy-tailed fox-”
“Ooh.”
“With this look in his eyes, like he's playing some trick on
the world.”
“He sounds divine. Maybe you should introduce us.”
“What happened to staying home and petting the kitty?”
“Dead batteries.”
“Believe me, you don't want to get mixed up with Solomon.”
“I'm not talking about forever. I'm talking about a horny Tuesday night.”
“Jac-kie,” Victoria chastised her in a tone reminiscent of The Queen. “You can do a lot better than Steve Solomon.”
“Are you keeping that bad boy for yourself?”
“Are you crazy? I'm marrying Bruce in a month.”
“One last fling with a wholly inappropriate man. It's de rigueur.”
“Says who?”
“Cosmo.” Jackie grabbed the rest of the carrot cake, and with a mouth full of icing said: “Wouldn't you love to see Solomon's face if you got Katrina as a client?”
It was a tantalizing thought, but could she do it? “I've never handled a murder case.”
“C'mon. Go for it.”
Maybe Jackie was right. Maybe she should be more aggressive, not worry about appearances. As Victoria thought about it, a realization dawned. There were no hidden diamonds. At least none buried in the stucco or tucked inside light fixtures.
The only diamonds we'll ever find are the ones we make ourselves.
She should probably plan what to say, scribble notes on index cards, but to hell with it. She'd do it the way Solomon would.
Moving quickly so she couldn't change her mind, Victoria flipped open her cell phone.
“What are you doing?” Jackie asked.
“Winging it,” Victoria said.
Ten
AMBUSH ON KUMQUAT STREET
Victoria hit the brakes, and her aging Ford Taurus swerved into the oncoming lane, barely missing a two-foot-long green iguana wiggling across the asphalt. It made her think of that other lizard, the shoe-stealing Steve Solomon. Except, had he been slithering by, she would have floored it. Squish.
There was Loquat Avenue. Where the hell was Kumquat? The streets were not well lighted, and Victoria was lost after dark somewhere in Coconut Grove. She'd been distracted, practicing what she would say to Solomon if she could ever find his house.