for the next few days.”
   “Hello,” Nancy said, smiling at Byron. He nodded
   shyly and continued silently up the hallway to the law
   library.
   “So, what will you be working on, Nancy?” Henry
   turned back to Nancy.
   “Just clearing some old files off the computer, so my
   dad can keep all you guys at work on his new case,”
   Nancy said.
   “All which guys?” came a strong, female voice from
   the hallway. A tall woman walked into the reception
   room. “Are you flirting again, Henry? I thought I gave
   you some research to do.” Nancy wondered if the
   woman was teasing Henry, or if she was serious.
   “Yes, Ms. Warner, I was just on my way,” Henry
   replied quickly. “And, I'd like you to meet—”
   “That's all right, Henry,” Ms. Hanson said, shooing
   him out. “I'll take care of the introductions. Blaine, this
   is Nancy Drew, Carson's daughter. I'm sure you've
   heard about her.”
   “Ah, Sherlock Holmes Junior. Yes, indeed, Ms.
   Drew, I've heard a lot about you. Your father has told
   me about some of your exploits as a junior detective.”
   Nancy noticed that Blaine's tone of voice was
   formal. Her manner wasn't exactly cold, but it certainly
   wasn't warm, Nancy thought as Blaine held out a hand
   to shake Nancy's.
   “And I've heard a lot about you,” Nancy said,
   shaking hands with a firm grip. “My dad has said he
   hopes you'll be a role model for me, so that I'll follow
   in both your footsteps and become a lawyer.”
   Blaine's comment about Nancy's being a junior
   detective bothered Nancy a little, but she decided not
   to let it get to her. Maybe it's Blaine's attempt at
   humor, she thought.
   “I see,” Blaine said. “And to what do we owe the
   honor of your presence in the office today?”
   “I'm just helping with some filing so my dad can
   concentrate on the Harris case,” Nancy replied. “I'll be
   working here for only a few days before I go visit my
   friend George and do some sailing. I'm really looking
   forward to it.”
   “Well, right now you can look forward to this,” her
   father said as he entered from his office with a stack of
   files in his arms. “Oh, good morning, Blaine. I'm glad
   you two have had a chance to meet. And if you
   wouldn't mind, Blaine, I'd like to go over some of these
   files on the Harris case now.”
   “Right away, Mr. Drew,” Blaine replied. Without
   excusing herself, Blaine followed Carson into his
   private office and closed the door behind them.
   Ms. Hanson smiled at Nancy. “You'll need a
   temporary password to get into the computer system,
   Nancy.” She handed Nancy a piece of paper with some
   information written on it. “Here it is.”
   “Thanks, Ms. Hanson. I'd better get started.” Nancy
   carried the stack of files her father had given her into
   the law library.
   Mr. Drew's office law library was lined with oak
   bookshelves, which were filled with heavy volumes of
   law books and old case files.
   Since most legal research was now conducted on-
   line, Mr. Drew had turned his law library into the
   office computer center, too. In the center of the room
   was a long oak table with several stations on either side.
   Each station had a pull-out keyboard tray under a
   monitor, and special file boxes for storing floppy disks.
   Nancy chose a computer station, turned on the
   machine, and waited for it to boot up. She looked
   through the first file of papers her father had given her
   and saw they were the papers for Bob Jamison, the
   man who had called to ask her father to settle his case
   earlier that morning. She noted that he had come in to
   see her father for the first time just the week before.
   I wonder what made him want to settle so soon?
   Nancy asked herself as she began the time-consuming
   process of searching through all the memos and
   documents related to the settled case. Then she copied
   the files off the computer and onto floppy disks for
   storage. Finally she cleared the files off the main
   computer system.
   It was a tedious job that required a lot of cross-
   checking to make sure she hadn't missed any files.
   Often, the documents were not clearly labeled, and
   Nancy found she had to read a number of letters and
   memos to make sure they did relate to the case.
   She learned that Bob Jamison was a building
   contractor injured in a fall from a faulty ladder. He had
   been offered a low settlement by the manufacturer's
   insurance company.
   When she had transferred all the Jamison files to
   storage disks, she read about more people who had
   settled cases.
   Jeannette King was a bank manager. She had sued
   her employer because she'd claimed she had been
   passed over for a promotion that she felt she deserved.
   The new job had been given to a male employee with
   much less experience. She'd dropped the suit and
   accepted a raise in pay as a settlement. James Fox was
   a local councilman, who was well-known as a crime
   fighter. He had agreed to settle a case in which he had
   been injured in a car accident. Harriet Wasser was a
   landlord who'd agreed to sell a building to her tenants
   rather than confront them in court.
   Nancy couldn't find any notes about the previous
   criminal cases her father had said he had handled for
   these clients. She wrote the four names down on a list
   and put it in her portfolio.
   Nancy decided that when she had a break in her
   file-copying work she would look up the old criminal
   case files in the storage area.
   After a couple of hours Nancy interrupted her file
   copying to do something a little different. The stacks of
   material her father had given her included copies of
   the settlement letters prepared by her father and his
   legal assistants. Nancy's father had asked her to
   transmit these letters via E-mail to Williams & Brown,
   the law firm representing the opposition in all the
   recently settled cases. Original copies of the letters and
   other documents would have to be hand-delivered
   later.
   Nancy exited the directory listing the settled cases
   and returned to the main computer directory. She
   entered the “virtual mailroom.” There she addressed
   the copies of the settlement documents to the phone
   number listed for Williams & Brown and dialed them
   on the modem.
   She heard the familiar whirring and whine as the
   computer modem dialed the computer at the other end
   of the line, waiting until a metallic click confirmed that
   she had a connection. Then Nancy pressed the Send
   key to transmit the files.
   Nancy read through the information on the screen
   as it was being sent through the phone lines to the
   other office: law firm name; phone num
ber; address;
   name of her father's client and Williams & Brown's
   client.
   When the transmissions were complete, Nancy
   returned to her file copying. She pressed the key to
   view one of the files.
   Suddenly Nancy was looking at an E-mail log file
   with a list of all E-mail sent regarding the settled cases.
   She saw several transmissions to the same computer
   phone number she had just E-mailed, that of Williams
   & Brown.
   Nancy furrowed her brow. “That's odd,” she
   muttered to herself. What was disturbing her about the
   information in this file? Then her eyes opened wide.
   The dates! She checked to see if her memory was
   correct. Bob Jamison had come in the past week, and
   on that same day someone in her father's office had
   transmitted E-mail to someone at Williams & Brown.
   Nancy checked the dates of the first visits of all the
   clients. In each case, someone had transmitted E-mail
   to Williams & Brown on the first day the case had been
   received.
   Nancy sat back in her chair and thought for a
   second. She had learned a lot about the law over the
   years from her father. She knew that anything that a
   client told a lawyer was called privileged information.
   That meant the information was secret. Was someone
   from her father's office sending privileged information
   to help Williams & Brown?
   3. An Unexpected Encounter
   Don't jump to conclusions, Nancy scolded herself. She
   knew attorneys on both sides of a case must share
   information with each other at some point during a
   trial.
   Nancy looked up at the rustle of papers and saw that
   Byron Thomas, the intern, had sat down at one of the
   other computer stations in the library. He popped a
   floppy disk into his computer, looked up at Nancy,
   then quickly back at his computer screen.
   Nancy stood up to stretch her legs, then walked over
   to Byron. “Excuse me. Do you mind if I ask you a
   question?” she said.
   “Go ahead,” he replied. Nancy noticed that he had
   put some handwritten papers inside one of the heavy
   law books sitting on the desk next to the computer.
   “What is it?” he asked. He did not look up at her as he
   continued to type on the computer keyboard.
   “You're a law student, right?” Nancy asked. “So,
   maybe you know the answer to this one. When does
   one lawyer have to share information about his case
   with the other side?”
   Byron continued tapping away at the keyboard as he
   answered Nancy's question. “It usually doesn't happen
   until well into the trial, when the judge orders it.
   Sometimes you have to send a list of documents, or of
   witnesses who will testify. But that's about it.”
   “Is there material one lawyer's office would need to
   send to the opposing attorney's law firm on the first day
   a client comes into their office?” Nancy persisted.
   “The first day?” Byron asked, lifting his eyes from
   his work for the first time. She noticed he had deep
   brown eyes behind his tortoise-shell-framed glasses.
   “Absolutely nothing. Well—maybe just notification that
   you'll be representing the client. But even that usually
   doesn't go out for a day or two after you've signed an
   agreement with your client. Why do you ask?”
   “Oh, no reason,” Nancy said quickly. “I was just
   curious. I want to learn as much as I can while I'm
   here.”
   Maybe it was just a notification letter, she thought to
   herself. I don't want to blow this out of proportion. She
   changed the subject. “So, when do you graduate from
   law school?” she asked.
   “Next year, I hope,” Byron said, returning to his
   computer screen.
   “It's a lot of work isn't it?” Nancy asked.
   “It sure is. And a lot of money, too,” Byron said
   bitterly. “My parents are helping, but even with loans
   and summer jobs and work-study, I'm barely making it.
   I had to take last year off to earn money to pay this
   year's tuition. It's going to take me more than five years
   to get this law degree.”
   “You must really love the law to go through all of
   this,” Nancy said.
   “It's my parents' idea, really.” Byron closed his eyes
   for a moment and ran his fingers through his hair.
   “They just want what's best for me, I guess,” he said.
   Nancy thought he didn't sound convinced.
   Just then the door to the law library opened, and
   Nancy's father walked in. “I see you've met Byron.”
   “Yes,” Nancy said. “We were just discussing how
   hard it is to get through law school.”
   “I hope you didn't make it sound too difficult,”
   Nancy's father said with a twinkle in his eye. “And I'm
   afraid Byron's going to be jealous of your next
   assignment, Nancy. I'm sending you out for some fresh
   air. You'll be seeing enough of each other in this stuffy
   library for the next few days, anyway.”
   Carson handed Nancy a manila envelope, stuffed
   with papers. “Here are some of the signed and
   notarized settlement documents on those cases.
   There'll be more to come in the next few days, all for
   Williams and Brown.”
   “I already E-mailed them the files you noted in the
   folders,” Nancy said. “In fact, there's something I
   wanted to ask you about—”
   “I'm afraid it'll have to wait until later,” Mr. Drew
   said. “I need you to hand-deliver these documents to
   their offices as soon as possible. They're waiting for
   them. Not everything can be done by E-mail,” he
   added with a smile.
   “Williams and Brown's offices are located in that
   new high-rise at the corner of Maple and Grove,
   right?” Nancy asked her father.
   “Right,” he replied.
   Nancy took the package, said good-bye to Byron,
   and waved to Ms. Hanson on her way out of the office.
   She didn't bother to put on her suit jacket, figuring that
   the day had become even warmer while she was in the
   office.
   Nancy walked through the streets of the old
   downtown area. She squinted against the reflections of
   the strong sunlight on the mirrored surface of the new
   steel-and-glass building in which the Williams &
   Brown offices were located. Pretty fancy, she thought,
   as she entered the cool marble lobby, blinking in the
   sudden darkness.
   The central hall of the new building was designed as
   an atrium, allowing pedestrians to look up and see
   plants and interior offices high overhead. Nancy
   walked up to the uniformed lobby guards at the
   security desk.
   “What floor is Williams and Brown?” she asked. “I
   have to deliver these papers.”
   “Fifteen, miss. You'll need a pass for the elevator
   bank.” The security guard handed her a sticker with
   the date on it and “W&B” at the top. She put the
 />
   sticker on her blouse and headed for the elevator bank
   marked 11-20. There she stood with a crowd of office
   workers waiting to go upstairs.
   Next to her, two men in business suits were in
   conversation. “You guys are the best,” one of the men
   said. “I'm impressed with how you manage to settle
   these cases so early and so advantageously. I'll be sure
   to recommend you to my colleagues.” He patted the
   other man on the back.
   The two men entered the elevator with Nancy, and
   all three rode up to Williams & Brown. The second
   man replied, “We're a family firm, you know. My
   partner's son, John Junior, joined us just last year after
   he graduated from Walker Law. We all work together
   for the benefit of our clients. I'm glad you're satisfied.”
   The elevator doors opened directly into the plush
   reception area of Williams & Brown. As the two men
   walked through, the receptionist called, “Hello, Mr.
   Williams.” Nancy realized she had been in the elevator
   with one of the partners of the firm. Nancy guessed
   from their conversation that the other man was from an
   insurance company.
   Nancy walked over to the receptionist and gave her
   the manila envelope with an explanation of what it was.
   The receptionist thanked Nancy and assured her that
   the files would reach the proper people.
   Nancy looked around the Williams & Brown office
   reception area, noting the leather-and-steel couches,
   the deep carpeting, the elegantly carved mahogany
   bookcases, and the oil paintings hanging on the walls.
   Pretty impressive, Nancy thought to herself.
   On her way out, Nancy was joined in the elevator
   waiting area by a handsome young man about Byron
   Thomas's age, dressed in a carefully tailored suit. His
   brown hair curled around his collar. He was with an
   older man, who had just exited from the other partner's
   private office.
   “Well, son,” the older man said, “Bill tells me you're
   doing a great job handling these insurance cases. I'm
   sure it will benefit the firm as a whole, and it's a big
   improvement over your performance at Walker Law.
   I'm proud of you.”
   “Thanks, Dad,” the young man replied smugly. “It's
   nice to be appreciated.”
   Nancy kept her mouth shut, but she realized this
   must be the other partner, John Brown, and his son.
   Nancy knew that a trial could be expensive for an
   insurance company. Williams & Brown could save their
   
 
 The Thirteenth Pearl Page 2