“Mr. Mallon will see you now,” the receptionist announced in a pronounced British accent.
“Will he now,” Matt muttered to himself, wondering if the accent had been a requirement in the original job description.
The Jeremy Mallon who met Matt at his office door was clearly the worse for wear. His face was drawn and pale, his slightly bloodshot eyes enveloped in gray hollows. The odor of mouthwash hung heavily about him, and Matt suspected he had spent a goodly portion of the previous night in his cups.
“You wired for sound this time?” Mallon asked after closing the door.
“Why should I bother with that? I have the tape I need.”
“You threatened Phelps to get that tape. You threw a baseball at his head.”
“Jeremy, at six or seven feet, if I was throwing at his head, Roger would have been awarded first base and a bed in intensive care.”
“How do I know the wire actually worked? How do I know there’s anything at all on that tape?”
Matt grinned ruefully.
“Always the lawyer,” he said. “Well, first of all, Jeremy, it makes no difference if I have that tape or not. Once a bar overseers investigator is pointed in the right direction, he won’t have to be any rocket scientist to figure out what’s been going on. And second, I didn’t come over here to blackmail you. I came over to get the case against my client discharged once and for all.”
“Done,” Mallon interjected quickly.
“Are you speaking for the Graysons?”
“You may assume that.”
“I also want to know exactly what changed to prompt you to instruct Phelps to settle in the first place.”
“I might be able to tell you that. First, though, I’d like it if we could come to some sort of an understanding.”
“Like what?”
“Like we have a position open in this firm. You want it, it’s yours. Junior partner for two years, then full. Guaranteed one fifty a year to start.”
“Thousand?”
“Of course.” He withdrew a document from his desk. “I’ve had the contract drawn up. The guarantee is spelled out in it. I’ve already signed it. Just sign it at the bottom, and your name’s on the door.”
Matt glanced at the two pages. They were titled simply: AGREEMENT. They might just as well have been titled: SET FOR LIFE. He thought about Harry and what income like this, at this stage of the game, would mean to them both.
“You don’t have much of a poker face,” Mallon said.
Matt folded the agreement and slipped it into his inside jacket pocket.
“I’ll have to study this,” he said. “Now, I want to know why you offered to quit the Baldwin case.”
“Because you were starting to win. That’s why.”
“That’s bullshit.” Matt stood to leave.
“Wait. Wait. Will you just cool your jets?”
Matt stayed where he was. He did not sit back down.
“Okay, okay,” Mallon said. “I grant you the case is still a tossup. But you were coming on strong. Too strong. And I realized that I made a mistake in preparing the case.”
“Namely?”
“Will you sit back down, for chrissakes? Thank you. Namely, I should never have gotten involved with that egomaniac Ettinger. It was an accident that I called the bastard to begin with. He was on TV so much, I figured he was a giant in the field of holistic healing.”
“He is.”
“No, Matt. What he is, is a liar. And a vindictive liar at that. It wasn’t until after we went to that Chinese guy’s shop that Ettinger admitted he and your client had been lovers for three years. He says he didn’t think it was that important. Not important? I mean, give me a break. My take is that he wanted desperately to get even with her, so he insisted on being part of the team. Who cares that his past relationship to the defendant makes him about as useful to me as a pair of cement running shoes? Then he conveniently neglects to tell me that his fucking diet powder was invented by some guy who just happened to be working at the Medical Center of Boston.”
“You mean Pramod Singh?”
“Yes, I mean Pramod Singh. Oh, this Ettinger is beautiful, Matt. Just beautiful.”
“What do you know about the powder?”
“I don’t understand what you’re driving at. I don’t know anything about the powder.”
Again Matt stood to leave.
“Okay, okay,” Mallon said, waving Daniels back to his seat. “Where in the hell did Phelps find you anyhow? In some South Chicago junkyard?”
“He underestimated me.”
“I’ll say. Well, the only thing I know about Ettinger’s powder—and that’s the truth—is that something very screwy is going on with the money all those chubby people are sending in.”
“Go on.”
“After you brought up the diet powder thing at Ettinger’s deposition, I asked him to tell me everything about it. He didn’t, of course, but I really didn’t expect him to. Goddamn egomaniac. So I started to do some checking. I put a couple of my sharpest people on it. According to the charts on Ettinger’s office wall and the quantity of product rolling out of his shipping operation each day, that powder is taking off like a space shuttle. Ten thousand orders a week now, and rising. Four million bucks a month.”
“So?”
“So we can’t find the money.”
“What?”
“Those TV shows of his are being aired all over the country. But the addresses to send checks to and the phone numbers to call in orders to are different for different areas. There are at least eight of them. L.A., Chicago, Florida, New York. Somehow the orders find their way to Ettinger’s place in Hillsborough—you know, Xanadu. But the money’s going every which way.”
“Explain.”
“I’m assuming you’re going to accept that partnership offer, Matt.”
“It’s a safe assumption. Tell me about the money.”
“It moves around faster than the pea in a shell game. There’s an office in each area—at least eight of ’em. Maybe more. The money gets deposited in one area bank. Then it gets wire-transferred to another. Eventually it ends up in banks in the Caribbean and Europe—maybe a dozen of them. Then it begins to work its way back to Ettinger. But from what we can tell so far, the amount that comes back to him isn’t close to the amount that goes out. It’s like he’s a junior partner in all this. We don’t have enough money ourselves to bribe all the bankers we’d have to to sort out how Ettinger or Singh or whoever it is set up this laundry, or where the rest of the money is. But one thing has come to light that has big potential for us. I mean big. In addition to Ettinger’s paychecks, the Xanadu Foundation has received extensive support from someone named T.J. McGrath. Maybe a million bucks’ worth so far.”
“And?”
“And Crunchy Granola General—you know, MCB—has been saved from bankruptcy by a huge grant from something called the McGrath Foundation. Until last week, goddamn Paris guarded the name of that foundation like it was the combination to his family safe. Saturday he’s blowing up a building on the hospital grounds and starting construction on a new research facility. He’s paying for the whole extravaganza with McGrath Foundation money. Is this coincidence?”
really going on, we may be able to put Glenn Paris and his motley crew out of business for good. Do you know what kind of bonus is waiting for us if we can pull this off for Everwell? Can you spell yacht?”
Matt grinned.
“I always was very good at spelling,” he said. “Is that all you know about the powder?”
“So far. My people are still working on it. When can I expect to get that signed agreement back?”
“Within the day. I promise.”
“Excellent. We’re all looking forward to having you on board.”
“A most appropriate figure of speech.” Matt tried unsuccessfully to think of a way to avoid shaking hands with the man.
“Cheerio,” he said to the receptionist as he headed through the
art gallery and out to the elevators.
He left the plush office building and had not walked half a block when he came to a grizzled old man pushing a shopping cart full of bulging plastic bags, empty bottles, and other junk.
“G’day,” Matt said, handing over a five-dollar bill. “How’re you doing?”
“Can’t complain, Bucko. Can’t complain,” the old man said with a broad grin.
He wore a red bandana around his tangled gray hair and had a rolled-up green plastic bag looped around his neck. The bag was tied in a four-in-hand knot that was actually quite passable. In addition to, perhaps, a new tie, he also needed dental care in the worst way.
“What’s your name?” Matt asked.
“Siggins,” the man said. “Alfie Siggins.”
“Well, Mr. Siggins, I have good news for you.” He took out Mallon’s agreement, crossed off his own name, wrote in Alfie’s, and helped him sign it. “See that building over there? Number one hundred? Go on up to the twenty-ninth floor, show the receptionist this contract, and tell her that you are Mr. Mallon’s new partner. If the security guard tries to stop you, just show that to him. Sell it back to them if you want. But don’t sell it cheap.”
“What do I have to lose, Bucko?” Alfie Siggins said.
“You got nothing to lose, Alfie,” Matt replied. “Nothing at all. Here, take this ol’ rabbit’s foot for luck. It’s on a roll.”
Matt watched until the man and his shopping cart disappeared into number 100 Federal Plaza. Then he headed for the lot where he kept his car. Phelps’s tape would be in the hands of the Board of Bar Overseers within a day. Now it was time to let Sarah know that thanks to the plaintiff’s expert witness, she was no longer the defendant in a malpractice suit. Then, provided she was not on call, he would beg her to celebrate their victory by going for a walk together, boldly and unabashedly holding hands in public.
• • •
Sarah was summoned to Glenn Paris’s office, where she was informed that, until further notice, she was no longer a resident physician on the staff of the Medical Center of Boston. The joint executive committee decision did not come as much of a surprise, and she took the news with little emotion. In truth, she was drained almost beyond feeling—beaten by an unknown adversary who had systematically, methodically destroyed her. What few believers she still had at MCB could hardly be expected to stand by her after this latest movement in her carefully orchestrated decimation. Now there was really nowhere for her to go but home. Later she would call Matt. He would understand she had been set up once again.… At least he might.
Before going up to clean out her locker, Sarah stopped by the labor and delivery floor to see Annalee. A uniformed private security guard, posted by her door, firmly and not too politely refused to allow her in. She returned to the nurses’ station and wrote a note to Annalee reaffirming her innocence, and explaining as best she could what had been done to both of them. She had just finished the note and was searching for an envelope, when one of the nurses handed her one. She was about to thank the woman for the envelope when she realized that DR. SARAH BALDWIN was typed on the front of it.
“A pink lady just dropped this off for you,” the nurse said, referring to one of the salmon-jacketed volunteers.
She turned and left before Sarah could voice any acknowledgment.
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN LEARNING ABOUT RATTLESNAKE POISONING, GO TO ROOM 512 THAYER. I WILL CALL YOU THERE AT EXACTLY SIX P.M. TELL NO ONE ABOUT THIS UNTIL YOU HEAR WHAT I HAVE TO SAY. YOU WERE FRAMED.
The note was neatly typed and unsigned.
Sarah glanced at her watch. Five fifty-five. She folded the note and the one she had written to Annalee, and thrust them both into her pocket. Then she raced through the tunnel to the Thayer Building and took the elevator to the fifth floor. Room 512 was at the very end. It was exactly six when she reached the door. Inside, the phone was ringing. Without knocking, Sarah hurried into the dark room and across to the bedside phone. As she reached it, the door slammed shut behind her. The blackness was immediate and total. Before she could react, a blanket was thrown around her from behind, and she was thrown facefirst onto the bed. She cried out and tried to resist, but the blanket and the weight of her assailant made movement almost impossible.
“Please, no!” she cried.
The man on top of her thrust his pelvis tightly onto her buttocks. Then he grabbed her hair in his fist and forced her face into the pillow. An instant later she felt a sharp, needle-stick pain in the back of her scalp.
“Please!” she cried again. “Please, no!”
Her voice was muffled in the soft, feather pillow. Seconds later, a tidal wave of dizziness and nausea washed over her. Her arms and legs began to shake violently. Her breathing grew heavy. The man remained on top of her, although he no longer had to work to hold her down. She was helpless and fighting a rapidly losing battle to maintain consciousness—a losing battle to remain alive.
“Please,” she whimpered. “Please.”
This time there was no sound. No sound at all. Her thoughts quickly dispersed, and the darkness grew even more oppressive. For a few seconds she could hear the gurgle of air being sucked desperately into her lungs. Then that sound, too, disappeared. Relentlessly the oppressive darkness consumed her. Then suddenly, mercifully, her terror vanished.
CHAPTER 36
IT WAS NEARING SIX WHEN ROSA ARRIVED BACK AT THE Brookline apartment building that had, until about two years before, been the home of Warren Fezler. She had interviewed as many of the building’s residents as would answer their doorbells and had then returned to BIO-Vir to see if there was anyone they might have missed who could add to what little she had learned of the man. By and large, her efforts had been fruitless.
According to the few neighbors with whom Rosa had been able to speak, Fezler had been a quiet, most unobtrusive tenant until one day he simply did not return home. His furniture had been put in storage and eventually auctioned off. The secretary at the rental agency swore that no rental application was ever thrown out for at least five years after a tenant moved away. But apparently Warren Fezler’s was an exception. Rosa glanced up at the apartment building. It was dinnertime. Perhaps people were home now at some of the no-answers. Perhaps one of those she had interviewed had remembered something. Suarez-type thoroughness demanded one more crack at the neighbors. And before she quit for the day, she knew she would do it. But reluctant to start ringing doorbells again, she wandered off through the gathering evening, searching for some other move that made sense.
Details, she thought, as she headed absently down the street. Think about the man.… Think about Warren Fezler. She had already passed by the smallish, upscale market when she stopped. The air outside the market was rich with the aroma of fresh breads, cut flowers, and bins of fruits. Food! Judging from the descriptions of Fezler, prior to his remarkable transformation he had been 230 pounds or more. Food would quite possibly have been at the epicenter of his life. And if so, a gourmet market not a block from his home would have been the equivalent of a hangout.
Rosa started with the cashiers and worked her way through the employees in the store. With the fourth person she questioned, an older man working behind the meat counter, she hit pay dirt.
“Course I know Warren,” the butcher said. “He was about the nicest guy who ever came in this place. A real sweetheart. Never talked much—he had that speech thing, you know. But he’d give you the shirt off his back.”
“Has he been in recently?”
“Not for a while. A few months, maybe. Probably not since sometime this past summer.”
A few months. Fezler had left his apartment two years ago, yet he continued coming to this little market.
“Any idea why he stopped shopping here, or where I might find him?” Rosa asked.
“Nope. But I’ll bet Mrs. Richardson knows. She’s a sweet old lady. Can’t see much, and can’t walk too well neither. I don’t think she has anyone. Warren used to bring her groce
ries to her to save her a little money. Since he stopped coming around, we’ve had to deliver. Poor old gal. Three dollars a bag hurts someone like her.”
“Bull’s-eye!” Rosa said.
Fifteen minutes later, she was brewing tea and straightening out the kitchen of Elsie Richardson. The spinster, who certainly was ninety and very possibly much older than that, lived in a cluttered two-room basement apartment with three cats, none of whom seemed any younger than she did. She moved with excruciating slowness on swollen feet and ankles, and had only enough vision to make it about her place. But she seemed somehow to be managing. And her mental clarity was spiced with surprising wit.
“It’s Miss, not Mrs.,” she had corrected Rosa. “I kept waiting to marry a man who was smarter than I was, and he never came along … at least not until Mr. Fezler.
“It’s so nice to hear Mr. Fezler’s all right,” she said now. “He hasn’t called in weeks.”
“I don’t know if he’s all right or not, Miss Richardson. I’m trying to find him.”
“I take a little lemon and sugar, dear. The lemon’s on the bottom shelf of the refrigerator. Left-hand side. I know where that is, but I don’t know where Mr. Fezler is. He never said. Such a kind man. Do you know how we met? I fell, that’s how. Right in front of the market. He helped me up and brushed me off. And that was the last time I had to go out to the store. Six dollars a week. That’s what he saved me. To say nothing of the money he gave me. I tried to refuse, but he just left it anyway.”
“He sounds like quite a guy,” Rosa said, flashing on the horrible descriptions of the women who died of DIC. “Miss Richardson, is there any place he might have gone if—if he was in some trouble? Any friends or relatives?”
“None that I can … wait. He has a sister. Her name is … Mary. No, no, not Mary. Martha. ‘My sister Martha.’ He talked about her all the time like that. I can’t believe that I didn’t remember. Oh, I’m so sorry.”
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